Mettamora, Iowa - A Hamilton County Settlement
By Martin E. Nass
Transcribed for the IAGenWeb Project by Janelle Martin, with permission of Martin "Ed" Nass.
Mettamora - This town was a very large paper town. It was platted in
Sec. 20-89-23 and Sec. 29-89-23 of Williams Township on July 15, 1857,
by William H. Merritt. No reason has ever been found for the name of the
town. Merritt owned the land and developed a huge plat of 121 lots
,which he put up for sale to eastern speculators on the assumption that
the railroad would come through the town. Some lots were sold, but they
all were let go for taxes. The town was never settled, and no buildings
were ever built here.
It might have been otherwise except for one man, John I. Blair. He was
the general superintendent for the Iowa Falls and Sioux City Railroad at
the time the railroad was coming west from Iowa Falls. He approached
Merritt for concessions of money and land for bringing his railroad
through Mettamora. When Merritt turned him down, he ran his railroad
through a different place and platted his own town, which he called
Williams. Mettamora faded quickly from the scene as a possible town.
The plat showed east-west streets of Hamilton, Buchanan, Pierce,
Fillmore, Taylor, Polk, Tyler, Harrison, Van Buren, Jackson, Monroe,
Madison, Jefferson, Adams, and Washington. The north-south streets were
named Vine, Elm, Rock, Broad, Avenue, Merritt, Willson, Safford, and
Grayson.
It is interesting that the street Willson was named for Walter C.
Willson of Webster City, who had a financial interest in setting up
several towns along the possible railroad line. It was Willson himself,
who eventually constructed the railroad from Alden to Webster City in 1869.
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