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==History== ===Eric Jansson=== {{main|Eric Jansson}} The village was founded in 1846 by [[Sweden|Swedish]] immigrants affiliated with the [[Pietism|Pietist]] movement, led by [[Erik Jansson|Eric Jansson]]. Prior to founding the [[Bishop Hill Colony]], Jansson preached to his followers in [[Sweden]] about what he considered to be the abominations of the [[Lutheran Church]] and emphasized the doctrine that the faithful were without sin. As Jansson's ideas became more radical, he began to lose support from many of his sympathizers and was forced to leave Sweden in the midst of growing persecution. Jansson had previously sent Olof Olsson, a trusted follower, as an emissary to the [[United States]] to find a suitable location where the [[Janssonists]] could set up a [[utopian]] community centered on their religious beliefs. According to Jansson, this community would become the "New Jerusalem", and their beliefs would soon spread across the world. As a result, 1400 colonists emigrated from Sweden to their new home in western [[Illinois]]. The colony struggled early on after its founding. Many of the first 1000 colonists died from disease on the way to Bishop Hill (named for Eric Jansson's birthplace, [[Biskopskulla]]), while others became disillusioned and stayed in [[New York (state)|New York]]. The quarters in Bishop Hill were cold and crowded and food was scarce. After the first winter, life at the colony began to improve. In the next few years housing was upgraded from dugouts to brick living areas, and crops were planted on {{convert|700|acre|km2}} of land. By 1849, Bishop Hill had constructed a flour mill, two sawmills, a three-story frame church, and various other buildings. The Bishop Hill colony was [[communistic]] in nature, as dictated by Jansson. Thus, everything was owned by everyone and no one had more possessions than another. Work in the colony was highly rigorous and regimented. It wasn't uncommon to see hundreds of people working together in the fields or large groups of laborers engaged in other tasks. ===After Jansson and today=== {{main|Bishop Hill Colony}} The Bishop Hill colony underwent a major upheaval in 1850 after the murder of Eric Jansson. Jansson was assassinated by a former colony member, John Root, who was upset with Jansson for interfering with his marriage to one of Jansson's cousins. After their leader's death, the people of Bishop Hill appointed a group of seven trustees to run the affairs of the colony. Among the trustees were Jonas Olsson and Olof Johnson, who would become the primary leaders of the colony as they had been two of Jansson's closest aides. Under these two men and the rest of the trustees, the colony continued to grow and flourish. The workforce was reorganized to become more efficient and more buildings were erected. However, despite Bishop Hill's success, in 1857 financial problems arose in the midst of accusations of mismanagement against Olof Johnson. Johnson had made several large investments, without colony approval, that had turned out to be disastrous. As Bishop Hill headed for financial ruin, colonists voted to end the communal system. In 1861 the formal [[dissolution (law)|dissolution]] of the colony was official, and many of its people would soon be forced to move away. [[File:Colony Church Bishop Hill Colony.jpg|thumb|Colony Church built in 1848.]] The Janssonist emigrants were a significant group of men and women to move from [[Sweden]] to the United States. Letters home from Janssonists to their friends and family, telling of the fertile agricultural land in the interior of North America, stimulated substantial migration for several decades and contributed to the formation of the [[Swedish-American]] ethnic community of the American [[Midwest]]. Descendants of Eric Jansson still lived in the colony until December 20, 2004, when Eric's great-great-grandson and Bishop Hill volunteer fireman Theodore Arthur Myhre Sr. died south of the Colony while on a fire service call. Other known descendants remain in Illinois. Surviving buildings built by the Janssonists are listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]]. Bishop Hill is interpreted as a living community of Swedish-American heritage. Due to state budget cuts the Bishop Hill State Historic Site was closed for nearly 5 months from December 1, 2008, to April 23, 2009.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.galvanews.com/news/x303479165/BH-state-site-now-re-open |title=BH state site now re-open |publisher=Galva News |first=Doug |last=Boock |date=April 23, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711070556/http://www.galvanews.com/news/x303479165/BH-state-site-now-re-open |archive-date=July 11, 2011 }}</ref>
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