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History of Cherokee County


The first settlement in Cherokee County was made in 1856. Robert Perry now a resident of Pilot township, located his farm that year, a few days before Carlton Corbett, one of Cherokee's wealthy citizens, the advance agent for a Massachusetts colony, selected a location for the entire colony. The prospect of the railroad largely induced these men to locate, but the panic of the following year delayed its construction up to 1870. During the first twelve years, at no time did the population exceed fifty, but when in '68 and '69 the railroad became a certainty, people began to flock in and in 1870 the census returns gave it a population of 1900; now it cannot be less than six or seven thousand, the vote last fall being 1200. The people are principally American, with a good percentage of foreigners, especially Germans, there is a Norwegian settlement and an Irish settlement, made up almost exclusively of these nationalities and throughout the county there is an admixture of all classes. They are in general, a thrifty, careful hardworking people; who are bettering their social position each year; the buildings among the farmers are generally of native timber, usually exclusively frame. In some cases they are actually luxurious, as high as $4000 having been expended in their erection. So far as known to the writer, there is not a sod house in the county, while there are dozens as pleasant looking farm homes as ever greeted the eye, many of them being surrounded by forest and fruit trees.

Source:  History of Cherokee County, Published by Cherokee County Historical Society, based on Cherokee Times articles, January 1878

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