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Moses King Brick and Tile Works

Coordinates: 40°26′02″N 90°47′48″W / 40.43389°N 90.79667°W / 40.43389; -90.79667
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King, Moses, Brick and Tile Works
Two of the kilns, with the factory building in the distance
Moses King Brick and Tile Works is located in Illinois
Moses King Brick and Tile Works
Moses King Brick and Tile Works is located in the United States
Moses King Brick and Tile Works
Location738 N. Coal St., Colchester, Illinois
Coordinates40°26′02″N 90°47′48″W / 40.43389°N 90.79667°W / 40.43389; -90.79667
Area9 acres (3.6 ha)
Built1881 (1881)
Built byKing, Moses
NRHP reference No.01000866[1]
Added to NRHPAugust 8, 2001

The Moses King Brick and Tile Works is a historic brickworks located at 738 North Coal Street in Colchester, Illinois. The complex includes King's Folk Victorian home, four of the original seven beehive kilns, the factory building and its drying tunnels, two exhaust stacks, and various outbuildings. Moses King established the brickworks on his own land, which held one of the county's richest clay deposits, in 1881. The brickworks was a major part of Colchester's clay industry, which developed as a way of using excess coal from the city's more prominent coal mining industry; it eventually became one of the city's main economic drivers, along with coal and the railroad. While coal and clay both declined in Colchester in the twentieth century, the brickworks survived as a producer of buff brick, ultimately becoming the last surviving brickworks in the city. It closed in the 1960s when buff brick declined in favor of colored brick, which could be more easily obtained from other sources.[2]

The brickworks was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 8, 2001.[1]

The Brick and Tile Works is permanently closed and does not allow visitors.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ Schroll, Tim (March 2001). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: King, Moses, Brick and Tile Works" (PDF). Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. Retrieved August 30, 2015.[dead link]