Peetz Sisters Scrapbook
Scope and Contents
This scrapbook was started by sisters Sarah and Nellie Peetz, daughters of Captain John and Johanna Peetz of Rock Island, Illinois. Nellie was 14 years old and Sarah was 35 years of age when they began selecting and adhering items to the pages of this large book.
An interesting article about the volume was found in the Rock Island Argus, Monday April 5, 1948 in The Town Crier column.
The scrapbook contains items clipped from newspapers and magazines as well as invitations to events, programs from ceremonies, recitals and concerts, and a few small photographic images. Highlights include postcards from the 1893 World's Fair and intricate Victorian valentines.
Dates
- Creation: 1894-1956
Conditions Governing Access
This collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
Materials are available for use in the Richardson-Sloane Special Collections Center only.
Request permission before copying materials.
Personal digital cameras and scanners are allowed in the Richardson-Sloane Special Collections Center on a case-by-case basis. The items that a researcher may want to scan or photograph must be examined and evaluated for physical condition, copyright issues, and donor restrictions by staff.
Copyright restrictions may apply; please consult Special Collections staff for further information.
The copyright law of the United States (title 17, United States Code) governs the making of reproductions of copyrighted material.
Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a reproduction. One of these specific conditions is that the reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research.” If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a reproduction for purposes in excess of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement.
Biographical / Historical
Miss Sarah Peetz was born to John and Johanna Peetz in January 1859. She died at the age of 91 in April 1950.
Miss Nellie Peetz was born Cornelia in 1879 and lived to age 81, passing in August 1960.
SOURCE URL: https://www.rigov.org/1042/Peetz-House-Capt-John-Johanna-Sommer-Pe
OBTAINED September 18, 2021 by kmo
Peetz House (Capt. John & Johanna [Sommer] Peetz)
628 18th Street Peetz House
Designation
Rock Island's 100 Most Significant Unprotected Structures, 2009
Significance Statement
Very intact Italianate with rounded window hoods.
Architectural Style
Italianate
Construction Date
1868
Architect / Builder
Unknown
Tour Publications
None
Early Years of the Peetz Family
John Peetz emigrated from Bavaria in 1828 and settled in St. Louis, where he had a wife and child who died. Five years later he moved to Rock Island. In 1855, he was married to Miss Johanna Sommer. The couple had 11 children, with two boys and one girl dying young. When the Civil War broke out, John enlisted in the infantry and fought in the battles at Fort Donelson, Shiloh, and Corinth, and was promoted to Captain before he came home. In 1867, he was elected as Rock Island County Sheriff and was a member of the German Old Settlers Association, serving as president for a number of years.
In 1868, John built a large brick home for his family at 628 18th Street. Nellie, the youngest surviving child, was born in that house in 1879, and grew up there with her parents, two brothers and five sisters, including Clara, Lucy, Josephine and Sara.
John was hired as a cashier at the Peoples National Bank when it opened in 1874. After the death of bank founder and president, Bailey Davenport, in 1890, John was chosen to take over Davenport’s role as bank president for one year. He then served as an administrator for Davenport’s substantial estate.
The Next Generation of Peetz Family Members
Johanna Peetz, passed away on March 9, 1883. John died of Bright’s disease on March 18, 1894. That year, Nellie and Sara Peetz began keeping a scrapbook of Rock Island’s history, which included an engraved invitation for the dedication of the soldier’s monument in 1869; an invitation to a military ball in 1879; the election of President McKinley in 1896 and his assassination in 1901.
Nellie worked as an office girl at Deere & Mansur, which later became part of Deere & Company. Even in the summer of 1901, when they suffered a record high of 106 degrees in July, she dressed properly in long, black skirts with at least three petticoats underneath, a long-sleeved shirt with starched collar and cuffs, an ascot tie, heavy stockings, and patent leather shoes. In 1948, Nellie was interviewed by the Rock Island Argus, which printed a number of columns about her cherished scrapbooks. She and her 92-year-old sister, Sara, still lived together in the brick house at 628 18th Street. By that date, the only remaining family member was their sister Lucy, who was married and living in Washington, D.C. Their brother Julius, a Weyerhaeuser executive in Tacoma, Washington, had recently died.
Italianate with High Integrity
The integrity is outstanding in this house, probably because it was owned by the same family for more than 80 years. The narrow windows and paired brackets beneath the eave exemplify the Italianate style. There is an early gable roofed addition on the back, with matching brick and window hoods. The front door has replaced what likely were narrow double doors.
Extent
1.42 Linear Feet (in one oversized flat box) ; 21 x 17 x 3"
Language of Materials
English
Arrangement
The scrapbook appears to be mainly chronological in arrangement.
Physical Location
Range 33 Section 03
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Gift
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Richardson-Sloane Special Collections Center Repository
321 Main Street
Davenport IA 52801-1490 United States
specialcollections@davenportlibrary.com