Christopher,Illinois
Hindmans Drug Store Finis Hinman
R. pH. Christopher, Illinois {etched}
C2371-HA-3-11
$35.00
Wiki data below.
In 1906, the United Coal Mining Company No. 1 mine opened near Christopher. An explosion at the
mine killed eight men on July 27, 1915.[7] The mine was sold to the Old Ben Coal Corporation, and
renamed Old Ben Coal Mine No. 1 in 1916. The mine closed in 1929.[8]

On November 29, 1917, an explosion at Old Ben Coal Corporation's Mine No. 11 killed 17 men

On March 22, 1918 five men who were accused of being "pro-German" became victims of a mob
numbering more than 300 people. They were

Theodore Kunger, a grocer, had been judged by a local court of being disloyal, and ordered to pay a
$100 fine. Having no money, he was put in jail. Later his cell was broken into by a vigilance committee.
Kunger was carried by the mob to the city square where he was made to kiss the U.S. flag before he
was tarred and feathered. He was then returned to jail.
W. R. Jones, Kunger's attorney, was abducted five miles outside Christopher on his way home to
Benton, Illinois. He was brought to the square and compelled to kiss the flag and praise president
Woodrow Wilson, but was spared tar and feathers. He was told to leave town.
Henry Timbrock and Henry Wheeler were also suspected of pro-German sympathies. They too were
taken to the square, made to kiss the flag and tarred and feathered.
The Polish pastor of the local Catholic church, Rev. John Kovalsky, had been accused of making
disloyal remarks. He was taken to the square where he was stripped to the waist and coated with tar
and feathers