HISTORY OF IOWA
VOLUME III
EARLY HISTORY OF IOWA COUNTIES
The first legislation providing for the
creation of counties within the limits of the territory which eventually became
the State of Iowa, was an act of the Legislative Assembly of Michigan Territory
in 1834, as follows:
An act to lay off and organize counties west
of the Mississippi River.
Section 1. Be it
enacted by the Legislative Council of the Territoryof Michigan - That all that
district of country which was attached to the Territory of Michigan by an act
of Congress entitled "An act to attach the territory of the United States
west of the Mississippi River and north of the State of Missouri, to the
Territory of Michigan, and to which the Indian title had been extinguished,
which is north of a line to be drawn due west from the lower end of the
Rock Island to the Missouri River, shall constitute a county and be called
Dubuque; said county shall constitute a township which shall be called Julien,
and the seat of justice shall be at the village of Dubuque.
Section 2. All that
part of the district aforesaid which was attached to the Territory of Michigan
situated south of said line to be drawn due west of the lower end of Rock
Island, shall constitute a county and be called Demoine; said county shall
constitute a township and be called Flint Hill; the seat of justice shall be at
such place therein as shall be designated by the judge of the county court of
said county.
Section 4 of the act
provided "That all laws now in force in the county of Iowa* not locally inapplicable,
shall be and are hereby extended to the counties of Dubuque and Demoine and
shall be in force therein."
*This was the name of a
county east of the Mississippi River in that portion of Michigan Territory
which afterwards became the State of Wisconsin.
The Indian title was at that time
extinguished to a region extending form the north line of Missouri to the mouth
of the Upper Iowa River and fifty miles in width west of the Mississippi River.
It will be seen that the two new counties embraced the entire "Black
Hawk Purchase," and were the only counties created within the limits of
the territory embraced in Iowa, by the Legislative Assembly of Michigan, while
it was a part of that Territory. When it became a part of Wisconsin Territory
twenty-two counties were created; and when Iowa Territory was created,
twenty-three additional counties were established. After it was admitted
as a State many changes were made in the boundaries and names of counties and
the remainder of its area was divided into counties until they numbered
ninety-nine.
The organization of the older counties was
provided for by special legislative acts; but the First and Fourth General
Assemblies of the State provided general laws directing the method of county
organization. The Constitution of 1857 gave a measure of stability to the
boundaries of the counties as they then existed and all attempts to create new
counties, divide or change the limits since the adoption of that Constitution
have failed. The act expressly prohibits the creation of a county having
less than four hundred and thirty-two square miles. The counties of
Mitchell, Worth, Winnebago, Emmet, Dickinson and Osceola were each found to
lack sixteen square miles but, by the terms of the Constitution, their boundaries
were not interfered with.
Another clause of the Constitution provides
"That no law changing the boundary lines of any county shall have effect,
until upon being submitted to the people of the counties affected by the change
at a general election, it shall be approved by a majority of votes in each
county cast for and against it." In 1862, notwithstanding this
provision, the General Assembly passed an act authorizing counties to readjust
their boundaries as they might see fit. Acting under this statute the
people of Monona and Crawford counties moved the division line between them six
miles west. The Code Commissioners in 1873, regarding this action as in
conflict with the Constitution, omitted the act from the code and it ceased to
have effect after the 1st of September, of that year.
The Third General Assembly, in 1850, created
twenty-five new counties embracing all of the territory in which counties had
not been established heretofore.
A bill providing for the creation of these
counties was prepared by P. M. Cassady, Senator from the Polk County district,
and was referred to the committee on new counties of which Mr. Casady was a
member.* In the original bill the county now bearing the name of Union
was named "Mason," for Judge Charles Mason. The committee was
opposed to discriminating among the many living men of note in the State and
changed the name to Union. Objection was also made to the name of
Buncombe but when it was explained that it was in honor of a distinguished
officer in the Revolutionary War from North Carolina, it was permitted to
remain. The bill also gave the name of Floyd to the one which is now
Woodbury, to commemorate Sergeant Floyd of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
The House amended the bill by naming that county "Wahkaw."
The committee fixed upon a large number of the names in the following
manner: three were named in honor of colonels who fell in the War with
Mexico - Hardin of Illinois, Clay of Kentucky and Yell of Arkansas. Three
more were named for battle-fields in the same war - Cerro Gordo, Buena Vista
and Palo Alto. Three for Irish patriots - Emmet, Mitchell and O'Brien.
One county was named Worth, for Major-General William J. Worth; one for
General William O. Butler who was the Democratic candidate for Vice-President
in 1848; one for Major Frederick Mills, a talented young lawyer from Burlington
who was killed at the Battle of Cherubusco; one for Edwin Guthrie, an early
pioneer of Fort Madison, who died of wounds received in battle in Mexico.
The Mexican War had closed but two years before this session, the names
of its battle-fields and military officers were so fresh in the memory of the
people that they were liberally drawn upon for names of the new counties.
*Many of the facts in
relation to the naming of these counties were first given to the public in a
paper read by Judge Cassady in 1894, at a session of the Pioneer Lawmakers'
Association.
ADAIR COUNTY was created by act of the Legislature of 1851 from
territory embraced in the original county of Des Moines. It lies in the
third tier north of Missouri and in the third tier east of the Missouri River.
The county is twenty-four miles square and embraces an area of five
hundred seventy-six square miles. The north tier of townships was from
December 31st, 1837, to July 30, 1840, embraced in the old county of Keokuk as
first established. The county was named for General John Adair a
distinguished officer of the War of 1812 and afterwards the sixth Governor of
Kentucky.
Thomas N. Johnson is the first white man known
to have made a home within the limits of the county. He made a claim and
built a log cabin in 1849 on section four in Washington township where, in
1850, he built a mill on a stream running through his farm. In 1850
William Alcorn made a claim on Middle river at a point known as "the upper
crossing." During the same year a Mr. Lyon took a claim and built a
cabin near a large spring in a grove in what became Jefferson township.
In 1851 J. J. Vawter purchased the claim and the grove took his name.
Among the early settlers were William McDonald, who settled at the lower
crossing of Middle River, Alfred Jones in Jackson township, Robert Wilson in
Grand River, George M. Holiday in Jefferson, Joshua Chapman in Richland and
Jacob Bruce in Grove.
In April, 1854, the first election was held in
Alfred Jones' cabin at which George M. Holiday was chosen county judge and John
Gibson, clerk. The first court was held in the cabin of the judge on the
6th of May following. On the 24th of April, 1855, the county-seat was
located at Summerset, a town laid out by G. M. Holiday, D. M. Valentine* and
Abram Ruth, and six miles south of the center of the county. In 1856 by
act of the Legislature the name was changed to Fontanelle.
*D. M. Valentine moved to
Kansas in 1859 where he has been a member of both branches of the Legislature,
District Judge and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court.
The first house in Summerset was a double log
cabin built in June, 1855, by James C. Gibbs for a tavern and post-office.
Mr. Gibbs was the first postmaster in the town and county. A store
was opened in 1856 by Calvin Ballard.
At the time the county was organized the
population was about one hundred fifty. The town of Greenfield, laid out
in September, 1856, by Milton C. Munger is about six miles northeast of
Fontanelle and in 1875 became the county-seat. Matthew Clark built the
first house the same year which was used as a store by A. D. Littleton as well
as a station of the Western Stage Company. The first school in the county
was taught by Miss Huldah Lee in 1857 in the court-house at Fontanelle.
The Congregationalists organized the first church in 1856 at the same
place.
The Chicago and Rock Island Railroad was built
through the extreme northern limits of the county in 1868 upon which the towns
of Adair and Casey were laid out. The first newspaper was established by
James C. Gibbs in 1863 and named the Adair County Register. After
a long and bitter contest extending from 1865 to 1875 the county-seat was
removed from Fontanelle to Greenfield.
ADAMS COUNTY is the third east of the Missouri State line. It
contains twelve Congressional townships, embracing within its limits four
hundred thirty-two square miles. The county was created in 1851 from
territory formerly within Des Moines County and was named for John Adams,
second President of the United States.
The county-seat was located by commissioners a
little north of the center of the county and named Quincy, for John Quincy
Adams, the sixth President. The land upon which the county-seat was
located belonged to Jacob M. B. Miller who laid out the town and deeded to the
county all even numbered lots and a public square, J. R. Holbrook built
the first house in August, 1853, in which he opened a store. The first
white man known to have settled in the county was Ilijah Walters who, in 1849,
took a claim two miles south of Quincy. Samuel Baker, Morgan Warren and
Samuel Hardesty made claims and built cabins soon after.
At the election held in April of that year,
Samuel Baker was chosen county judge and John H. Calvin recorder. In 1853
a French colony composed of socialists purchased about 3,000 acres of
Government land near the East Nodaway River, The people were followers of
Etineen Cabet a French philosopher. The community located here to make
the experiment of owning property in common and governing themselves in
accordance with the socialistic theories of their leader, They organized
a local government consisting of a general assembly composed of the male members
of the community over twenty-one years of age. All property was owned in
common and controlled by a board of directors consisting of a president,
secretary, treasurer and a director of agriculture, industry and clothing.
New members were admitted upon consent of three-quarters of the male
members twenty-one years of age. All were required to surrender their
property to the community, give their services in consideration of a living,
sharing equally the benefits. No money compensation was given for any kind
of service. There was no religious creed and no form of worship but the
members of the colony professed the religion of the primitive Christians.
Sunday was a day of recreation and amusement and in all respects held to
be no more sacred than any other day. The membership after an existence
of nearly half a century numbers about fifty.
In 1855 a town was laid out by D. N. Smith about
five miles south of Quincy which was named Corning, in honor of a New York
politician and capitalist, Erastus Corning. It is on the main line of the
Burlington Railroad and has become the county-seat. The first church in
the county was organized at Quincy in 1856 by the Methodists. In 1859
they organized a seminary at Brookville and in the same year the first newspaper
was established at Corning by D. N. Smith, with L. Raguet as editor, and named
the Corning Sentinel.
Adams County has an undulating surface and is
well watered by the East and West Nodaway rivers and their branches.
One-tenth of the county was originally covered with forests. Coal,
limestone and good building stone abound in portions of the county and it lies
in the famous blue grass region.
ALLAMAKEE COUNTY was established in 1847 by act of the First General
Assembly. The name is of Indian origin says Fulton in his "Red Men
of Iowa"; while other authorities claim that it took its name from
"Allen Makee" a famous Indian trader and trapper who established a
trading post within its limits at an early day. The county was formerly a
part of Fayette and occupies the extreme northeastern portion of the State and,
geologically considered, is the oldest in formation. The eastern boundary
consists of the Mississippi River and the northern is the Minnesota line.
It embraces five townships north and south and from three to four east
and west, containing six hundred fifty-eight squares miles. Much of the
county has a rough surface of hills, ravines and narrow valleys. The
bluffs along the Mississippi River are abrupt and in many places have an altitude
of four hundred feet above the water, thence having a gradual ascent westward
reaching a height of six hundred feet. A large portion of the county was
originally covered with a growth of hazel brush and trees of many varieties.
It is well watered by the Upper Iowa and yellow rivers and numerous
rapidly flowing creeks of pure water. A series of large sloughs extends
along the Mississippi River in width of from one to three miles. The
"Iowa Slough" extends from the northern line of the county to near
Lansing.
Allamakee was in the limits of the "Neutral
Ground" and was long held as a peaceful hunting land over which hostile
tribes of Indians pursued the chase without collisions. It was given to
the Winnebago Indians in 1833, when they were forced to surrender their
Wisconsin homes. In 1846 they exchanged the "Neutral Ground"
for lands in Minnesota and two years later removed to their new homes.
There is a tradition that as early as 1818 some white trappers and Indian
traders made a settlement on the west bank of the Mississippi within the limits
of Allamakee County, remaining there many years. But all traces of their
cabins had disappeared before the first permanent settlers came. It is
known that traders had a station at "Old Mission," long before the
Indian title was extinguished; but no record of their names had been preserved,
As early as 1828 Colonel Zachary Taylor, who was in command at Fort Crawford
(Prairie du Chien), sent a detail of soldiers across the Mississippi River to
erect a saw mill near the mouth of Yellow River where a large amount of lumber
was made for buildings at the fort. Lieutenant Jefferson Davis was among
the officers at Fort Crawford and the future President of the Southern
Confederacy was a frequent visitor to the Iowa shore. In 1835 Colonel
Taylor established an Indian Mission not far from the old saw mill. This
Mission was in charge of Rev. David Lowrey, who endeavored to educate and
civilize the Indians, while Colonel Thomas, in charge of the farm, gave them
instruction in growing crops and raising stock. But little success
attended these efforts. The warriors considered labor degrading and after
a few years the Mission was abandoned.
In 1838 Patrick Keenan and Richard Cassiday
settled in Makee township and William Gamsin and John Haney at Lansing.
In 1839 Henry Johnson, a discharged soldier, built a cabin near the mouth
of Paint Creek where he lived several years with Indian wives.
Johnsonport was named for him. A military road was opened by the
Government about this time, on the west side of the Mississippi between Fort
Crawford and Fort Atkinson and, in 1841, Joel Post obtained permission to keep
a public house in the Government building. Here at the "Half Way
House" he and his wife often entertained Captains E. V. Summer, Nathaniel
Lyon, Lieutenants Alfred Pleasanton and Jefferson Davis at that time young
officers in the regular army but afterwards famous leaders in the War of the
Rebellion. The village of Postville now occupies the ground where the old
public house stood and takes its name from the landlord of pioneer times.
In 1840 Jesse Danley built a dam across the Yellow River and erected a
saw mill. In 1841 Jacob Rynerson settled in the Old Mission and, after
the removal of the Winnebago Indians, the property was purchased by Thomas C.
Linton who was selected sheriff in 1848 to organize the county.
The first county-seat was located a mile and a
half northwest of Rossville and was named Columbus. In 1848 Archy Whaley
settled east of Waukon and William C. Thompson and Professor Whaley came in
1849. The first county officers were chosen the same year; Elias Topliff,
county judge; John B. Twiford, clerk; James M. Sumner, recorder and treasurer.
In 1851 Father Thomas Hore, a Catholic missionary, settled at Wexford where
he founded a colony of his countrymen from Ireland. He there built the
first church in the county. In 1848 H. H. Houghton made a claim where
Lansing stands and in 1851 he and John Hainey laid out the town of Lansing.
The first houses were rude log cabins. The first court was held in
Columbus in July, 1852, by Judge Thomas S. Wilson. In 1851 the first
newspaper was established by W. H. Sumner at Lansing and was named the Intelligencer
and later becoming the Lansing Mirror. In the fall of 1849 G. C.
Shattuck made a claim where Waukon stands. The town was laid out by Mr.
Shattuck in December, 1853, and forty acres deeded to the county upon condition
that it be made county-seat. The proposition was accepted and Waukon
remained the county-seat until 1861 when it was removed to Lansing by a vote of
the people, but in 1867, Waukon again became the county-seat and has so
remained. It was not until 1872 that a railroad was built into the
county, running along the Mississippi River from Dubuque to Lansing.
APPANOOSE COUNTY, originally a part of Demoine, was established in 1843
and temporarily attached to Van Buren. In 1854 it was attached to Davis
and fully organized in August, 1846, at an election held on the third of that
month. It was named for a noted chief of the Sac and Fox Indians.
This county is the fourth west of the Mississippi River in the tier on
the Missouri State line. In size it is twenty-four miles east and west
and about twenty-one and a half north and south, containing five hundred
sixteen square miles. The principal streams are the Chariton River and
its two branches running in a southeasterly direction. The supply of
timber is abundant, consisting of white, black and burr oak, hickory, black
walnut, hard and soft maple, ash, elm and other varieties. A large
portion of the county is underlaid with coal and good building stone is found
in many localities.
The first known white men within its limits were
a company of United States Dragoons sent from Rock Island in the summer of 1832
to make an examination of the region. One night they camped near a large
spring in the south part of the county near Concinnati. In 1833 Joseph
Shaddon from Missouri went on an excursion through Appanoose where he found an
abundance of deer and wild turkeys. He saw the trail made by the dragoons
the year before near the Chariton. Frequent trips were made by people
from Missouri into Appanoose in search of game and bees but no settlements were
made until the spring of 1838, when Ewing Kirby a young man from Missouri
crossed into the then Indian country with his family and built a cabin near
where Cincinnati now stands. Colonel James Wells a year later made a
claim and built a mill in the southern part of the county. Others came
soon after but, as the country still belonged to the Indians, complaints were
made and a company of dragoons was sent from the Agency on the Des Moines River
to drive the intruders out and burn their buildings. In 1843 William
Cooksey took a claim near the Chariton River, and the next year J. F. Stratton
from Missouri made a claim where Cincinnati stands. Solomon Hobbs, George
Buckner, J. F. Stratton and others came during the following season. They
were mostly young men without families doing their own housework and living in
the most primitive manner. George W. Perkins was the first settler in
Center township and planted the first orchard in the county. Rev. W. S.
Manson preached the first sermon in a log cabin on the west side of the river. About
this time S. F. Wadding opened a store where Centerville now stands.
The Indian title to Appanoose was not
extinguished until 1843 but there was a strip of country about nine miles wide
extending along its southern border which was claimed by Missouri and in this
disputed territory, which was finally awarded to Iowa, settlers were not
molested as they claimed to be in Missouri. The north line of this strip
ran close to where Centerville stands.
On the 1st of April, 1844, the first election
was held in a log cabin built by J. F. Stratton, at which nine votes were
polled. Benjamin Spooner was chosen judge, and J. F. Stratton clerk of
the District Court. In 1846 Centerville was laid out and first named
Chaldea but the citizens were not satisfied with that name and at a house
raising held not long after there was a large gathering and a proposition was
made to change it. Dr. W. S. Manson, who was a great admirer of Governor
Senter of Tennessee, proposed in an eloquent speech to change the name to
Senterville in honor of the Governor. A petition was signed by those
present to that effect and forwarded to the Legislature. The committee to
which it was referred reported in favor of the change, but thinking to correct
an error in orthography in the bill, spelled the name Centerville, and in that
shape it became a law, to the great chagrin of the admirers of Governor Senter.
The first house in the town was built by S. F. Waddington who opened a
store in it. The Methodists organized the first church in the county with
Rev. Hugh Gibson, pastor. Amos Harris was the first lawyer and Dr. W. S.
Manson the first physician in the new town.
In October, 1856, the first newspaper in the
county was established by Fair Brothers and named the Appanoose Chief, published
at Centerville. In 1868 the town of Moulton was laid out on the line of
the North Missouri Railroad, twelve miles southeast of Centerville. This
was the first railroad in the county, built in 1869.
AUBUDON COUNTY was created by act of the Legislature of 1851 out of the
then large county of Keokuk. It was named for John J. Audubon the
naturalist and in 1853 was attached to Cass and divided into civil townships.
It lies in the third tier east of the Missouri River and in the fourth
north of the State of Missouri, contains twelve congressional townships and has
a superficial area of four hundred forty-six square miles.
The first settlement within its limits was made
in March, 1851, by Nathaniel Hamlin, John S. Jenkins and Arthur Decker, with
their families, who took claims in a fine body of timber which became known as
Hamlin's Grove. In the fall of the same year Dr. S. M. Ballord and B. M.
Hyatt made claims in another body of timber which was named Big Grove.
William Powell the same year took a claim where Exira stands.
The county was organized in 1855, and the seat
of justice located on the 20th of June on section twenty-two, township
seventy-eight, range thirty-five west. Here a town was laid out and named
Dayton. An election was held April 2d, 1855, at the house of John S.
Jenkins at which Samuel Lewis was chosen county judge. In 1861 the
county-seat was removed to a new town called Viola, laid out by D. M. Harris
and David Edgerton; but the name was soon changed to Exira, in honor of a lady
then living in the county. Dayton soon after disappeared from the map and
its site became a farm. Oakfield was laid out in 1857 by E. D. Bradley
who then opened the first store in the county. Oakfield took its name
from a large oak grove which originally covered the town site on the east bank
of the Nishnabotna River. The first newspaper in the county was
established at Audubon City in December, 1860, and was named the Audubon
Pioneer. Its proprietor was John C. Brown, who was killed in the war
of the Rebellion at the Battle of Milliken's Bend where he was serving as
captain of Company I, Twenty-third Iowa Volunteers. East Nishnabotna is
the largest stream running through the county from north to south, with
numerous branches which afford a good supply of water. The surface of the
county is rolling with deep ravines in places. The soil is very fertile
producing abundant crops of grass, grain, fruit and vegetables. A branch
of the Rock Island Railroad from Atlantic was the first to enter the county.
BANCROFT COUNTY was created by act of the Legislature in 1851 from a
portion of old Fayette and embraced the twelve northern townships of what is
now Kossuth County, extending to the Minnesota line, making an area of
four hundred four square miles. The county was named in honor of George
Bancroft, the historian. In January, 1853, it was attached to Boone
County for election, revenue and judicial purposes. In 1855 by act of the
General Assembly it was made a part of Kossuth and Bancroft County ceased to exist.
The county was one vast level prairie through which the east fork of the
Des Moines River flowed and its lands in early times were considered too wet
for profitable cultivation but in later years the soil has been found to be
exceedingly productive and has been converted into fine farms of increasing
value. No county-seat was established during the brief period that
Bancroft had an existence and no organization of a county government was
perfected.
BELKNAP COUNTY was created by act of the General Assembly in 1874,
embracing townships seventy-four, seventy-five, seventy-six and seventy-seven
in ranges thirty-eight, thirty-nine and forty in the eastern portion of
Pottawattamie County. In compliance with the Constitution the proposition
to establish this county was submitted to a vote of the electors residing in
the county of Pottawattamie which it was proposed to divide and at this
election was rejected so that Belknap County ceased to exist. The name
was given in honor of General William W. Belknap, a distinguished Iowa officer
in the Civil War and afterwards Secretary of War in the Cabinet of President U.
S. Grant.
BENTON COUNTY was created by act of the Legislature of Wisconsin
Territory in 1837 and embraced at that time all of the territory between its
northern and southern lines west to the Missouri River and was attached to
Jackson County temporarily. It was named for Thomas H. Benton who was for
thirty years United States Senator from Missouri. In November, 1840,
Benton County was attached to Linn and in February, 1843, was reduced in size
to its present limits, containing twenty congressional townships, making seven
hundred twenty square miles.
The first pioneers who made homes in the county
were James Scott and Samuel Lockhart who, in the spring of 1839, took claims
near where the village of Marysville stands. Several families from
Indiana soon settled in that vicinity and the place was known as "Hoosier
Point." The same year Samuel Parker made a claim embracing a body of
timber which was called "Parker's Grove." Gilman Clark located
a mile east of where Shellsburg stands and L. F. North, John Smith and George
Wright settled in the vicinity during the year, opening farms.
The county was organized in May, 1846, and the
county-seat located where a new town named Fremont was laid out. A log
court-house was erected two stories in height. The name of the town was
afterwards changed to Vinton, in honor of Plynn Vinton, a member of Congress
from Ohio, who paid fifty dollars for the honor. A portion of the county
on the east side was embraced in the "Black Hawk Purchase" and was
therefore opened to settlement several years before the remainder. The
early settlements were made on this strip, which was on the extreme frontier,
by a band of desperadoes who found shelter in the Indian country beyond, and
preyed upon the property of the pioneers for several years. It was
impossible to arrest and punish these thieves and murderers and finally the
settlers organized a "vigilance committee," hunted them down and by
lynch law rid the county of them.
The first election was held in August, 1843,
when the county was attached to Linn. The first officers were chosen at
an election held at Parker's Grove in 1846, when twenty-nine votes were polled.
James Mitchell was chosen county judge, John Royal sheriff, and David
Pratt clerk. The first court was held in May, 1847, at the house of
Thomas Way at which Judge J. P. Carlton presided. Among the attorneys
present were Norman W. Isbel, I. M. Preston and D. P. Palmer. A school
was opened near Marysville and a saw mill built on Mud Creek soon after the
first settlers erected their log cabins. In October, 1846, a post-office
was established at Vinton with Stephen Holcomb as postmaster. In early
days a fine grove of red cedars stood on the banks of the Cedar River but a
vandal squatter named Thompson cut them down and sold the logs down the river.
A few years later several similar groves were destroyed in like manner.
It was from these and other groves that the Cedar River derived its name.
The first newspaper in the county was
established in January, 1855, by Frederick Lyman and S. C. Foster and named the
Vinton Eagle. The Presbyterians organized the first church at
Vinton in 1852, with Rev. Hohn Summerson as pastor. In 1858 Thomas
Drummond the young editor of the Vinton Eagle was a member of the
Legislature and secured the passage of an act locating the Asylum for the Blind
at Vinton. In 1861 the town of Belle Plaine was laid out on the line of
the Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska Railroad which had just been extended through
the southern part of the county. Another town was also laid out on this
line the same year, named Blairstown, for John I. Blair, who was the president
of the construction company.
In 1854 Jacob Cantonwine laid out a town on Bear
Creek which was named Shellsburg for a city in Pennsylvania. Norway was
laid out in 1863 on the line of the Northwestern Railroad and this named at the
request of Osborn Tuttle who gave five acres of land to the railroad company.
Benton County is well watered by the Cedar and Iowa rivers and their
tributaries which furnish water power in many places. Native timber is
found along the streams and the prairie soil is of the best quality.
Building stone is quite abundant along the Cedar River and granite
boulders are found in many sections of the county.
BLACK HAWK COUNTY, created on the 17th of February, 1847, by act of the
General Assembly, lies in the third tier south of the Minnesota line and fourth
west of the Mississippi River and contains sixteen congressional townships
embracing an area of five hundred seventy-six square miles. It was
attached to Buchanan in 1851.
The first white settler was Paul Somaneux, a
French trader who, in the summer of 1837, ascended the Cedar River to the
rapids where Cedar Falls stands, there built a cabin and opened a profitable
trade with the Indians in furs and skins. Robert Stuart, another trader,
reached the rapids the same season and engaged in traffic with the Indians.
In 1844 William Chambers of Louisa County came to the rapids, built a
cabin and also opened trade with Indians, but none of these earliest settlers
engaged in farming. In the spring of 1845 William Sturgis and wife of
Michigan and A. E. Adams and wife of Johnson County made an excursion of the
Cedar River in search of good water power. They were charmed with the
beauty of the valley and finding excellent water power at the rapids, took
claims on the river banks where Cedar Falls now stands. Mr. Sturgis soon began
to construct a dam across the river and for many years the settlement was known
as "Sturgis Falls." In May, John Hamilton and his sons came to
the new settlement and took claims. George Hanna and family, John Melrose
and William Virden soon after took claims near Black Hawk Creek, while E. G.
Young and James Newell settled in the northern part of the county. In
February, 1847, John W. Overman, D. C. Overman and J. F. Barrick came to
Sturgis Falls, purchased the water power and land belonging with it, finished the
dam and erected a sawmill. In 1851 a town was laid out and named Cedar
Falls. Andrew Mularky opened a store in his log cabin, the first in the
county, which was known as the "Black Hawk store." In 1846 Mrs.
J. F. Taylor opened the first school with six pupils. For many years the
site of Cedar Falls was covered with beautiful forest trees which gradually
disappeared.
The county remained unorganized until the summer
of 1853 when the first election was held for county officers with the following
result: J. R. Pratt was chosen county judge; Aaron Dow, treasurer; John
H. Brooks, clerk, and John Virden, sheriff. The county-seat was located
at Cedar Falls. The first term of district court was held in June, 1854,
at which Judge Thomas S. Wilson presided. On the 11th of July, 1853, W.
H. McClure and S. H. Packard established the first newspaper in the county at
Cedar Falls with A. F. Brown as editor.
In June, 1846, James Virden and Charles Mullan
located claims on the west side of the river about seven miles below Cedar
Falls at a point known as Prairie Rapids and erected a cabin. In the fall
they with G. W. Hanna and J. H. Brooks laid out a town which they named
Waterloo. The first store was opened by Nelson Francher in his log cabin
and a public house by Seth Lake in another cabin. Charles Mullan was the
first postmaster and in 1853 Eliza May taught the first school.
In 1854 James Eggers built a dam across the
river at Waterloo and erected a sawmill. In 1856 George W. Couch built a
flouring-mill. The spring and summer of 1858 were noted for heavy rains
which raised the streams to flood height and a small steamer at Cedar Rapids
came up to Waterloo loaded with freight afterward making several trips.
In 1855 a movement was inaugurated to remove the county-seat from Cedar
Falls to Waterloo. At an election held for that purpose three hundred
eighty-eight votes were cast for Waterloo and two hundred sixty for Cedar
Falls. The removal was delayed several months by legal proceedings.
A newspaper was established at Waterloo in December, 1855, by William
Haddock named the Iowa State Register. After the close of the
Civil War a home for soldiers' orphans was established at Cedar Falls.
In June, 1855, Jesse Wasson laid out the town of
La Porte in the southern part of the county. The Cedar River runs
diagonally through the county from north to south and the Wapsipinicon runs
through the northeastern portion, both having many tributaries. The
county was named for the famous Sac chief. In 1861 the Dubuque and Sioux
City Railroad was completed to Cedar Falls. The Burlington and Cedar
Rapids road follows up the valley of the Cedar River.
BOONE COUNTY is near the geographical center of the State, lying in
the fifth tier from its north line, in the eighth west of the Mississippi River
and containing sixteen congressional townships with an area of five hundred
seventy-six square miles. It was created by act of the Legislature in
January, 1846, and named for Captain Nathan Boone who, in 1832, commanded a company
of Rangers in an expedition which explored the Des Moines and Boone River
valleys. Lysander W. Babbitt, a young man with the expedition, was so
fascinated with the beauty of this region, that in the spring so 1842 he, with
two companions, went into the Boone valley where they spent several months
hunting and exploring. They traveled nearly to the headwaters of the
Boone, then crossed to the Des Moines and camped where Moingona stands.
There they found the ruins of an Indian village, near which they made
claims. They were at one time robbed of their furs by a band of Sioux
Indians and finding it dangerous to remain so far from white settlements,
surrounded by roving bands of Sioux, early in the winter of 1844 prudently
abandoned their claims and returned to a settled country. They were the
first white men to select homes in Boone County. In 1846 another member
of Captain Boone's company, Charles G. Gaston, with his family ascended the Des
Moines valley as far as Elk Rapids where he made a claim and built a log cabin.
Soon after John Pea, James Hull, J. M. Crooks and others built cabins in
that vicinity along a creek three miles north of Boonsboro. Benjamin
Williams the same year took a claim near where Madrid stands.
The county was organized in 1849 and attached to
Polk. In 1851 commissioners were appointed to locate the county-seat and,
as there was no town yet laid out, they drove a stake in the ground near where
the first courthouse was afterward built and there established the county-seat.
A town was laid out and, upon the suggestion of S. B. McCall, named
Boonsboro and a public sale of lots was made in October, 1851. Samuel B.
McCall was the sheriff selected to organize the county, an at the first
election John M. Wayne was chosen clerk; John M. Crooks, treasurer; S. H.
Bowers, sheriff, and W. C. Hull, prosecuting attorney. The first term of
court was held in Boonsboro in October, 1851, at which Judge William McKay
presided. The first building in the town was a two story log house erected
by W. C. Hull on the east side of the public square.
In 1865 the Cedar Rapids and Missouri River
Railroad was extended in the county to the new town of Montana which had been
laid out by John I. Blair and other builders of the railroad. This
town was a mile east of Boonsboro and the citizens of the county-seat were
required to pay a large bonus to secure the road. Feeling sure of the
road, they declined to pay the amount demanded and the construction company
turned the road toward the southwest following the valley of Honey Creek,
leaving Boonsboro a mile or more from the line. Then began a life and
death struggle between the proprietors of Montana and the citizens of Boonsboro
for supremacy which lasted for many years. Buildings were erected in each
town but in the end the citizens of Boonsboro began to move to Montana, its
name was changed to Boone and the old county-seat became a suburb of the new
city which had absorbed its business and much of its population.
The first newspaper was established by Capron and Sanders in July, 1856,
at Boonsboro and named the Boone County News. Its editor,
Luther C. Sanders, was one of the sharpest paragraphists in the State among the
pioneer editors.
The Des Moines River flows through the county
from north to south, with a heavy body of excellent timber growing along its
banks, under which are found extensive deposits of coal. The soil of the
entire county is of unsurpassed fertility.
BREMER COUNTY was organized from a portion of the extensive territory
at one time embraced in the original county of Fayette. It lies in the
third tier west of the Mississippi River, in the third tier south of the
Minnesota line and contains but twelve townships six miles square, giving it an
area of about four hundred thirty-two square miles. In 1845 Charles
McCaffrey of Scott County made a claim in the valley of the Cedar River at the
"Big Woods," near where the village of Jefferson stands. He
built a cabin and opened a farm and during the year other claims were made in
that vicinity by George Beeler, Andrew Sample, J. H. Messenger and others.
The early settlements were within the limits of the Winnebago reservation
and the last of the Indians remained until 1851. In 1850 Jacob Hess and
Frederick Cretzmeyer settled on the west side of the Cedar River where the town
of Waverly stands.
The county was established in 1851 by act of the
General Assembly and at the suggestion of General A. K. Eaton, then a member
from Delaware County, was named for the Swedish author Frederika Bremer.
It was first attached to Buchanan County for revenue, election and
judicial purposes. In 1853 William P. Hamon settled on the east bank of
the Cedar River and laid out the town of Waverly. A log farm was built
across the river, a sawmill and log hotel erected. The commissioners
located the county-seat the same year at the new town. John T. Barrick
located six miles south of Waverly in the spring of 1853 and laid out the town
of Janesville, named for his wife, Jane. This was the first town laid out
in the county and there the first newspaper was established in 1855, named the Bremer
County Herald and published by Phineas V. Swan. The county was
organized in 1853 and had at that time but eighty-two voters. The first
officers were Jeremiah Ferris, county judge; Austin Ferris, sheriff; John
Hunter, treasurer; and Herman A. Miles, clerk.
The first newspaper at Waverly was established
on the 6th of March, 1856, by Herman A. Miles and was called the Waverly
Republican. Richard Miles taught the first school in the county in
1853 in a log house in Jefferson township. Judge Thomas S. Wilson held
the first term of court at Waverly in June, 1854.
BUCHANAN COUNTY is in the third tier west of the Mississippi River and in
the third south of the Minnesota line; embraces an area of five hundred and
seventy-six square miles and is divided into twenty congressional townships.
It was established in December, 1837, and at that time contained all of
that portion of the original county of Dubuque lying directly west from
Delaware to the Missouri River. The county was named for James Buchanan,
afterwards President of the United States. The name was suggested by S.
P. Stoughton a prominent Democrat of the new county. In 1843 the
territory was reduced to its present limits.
The first white man known to have settled in the
county was William Bennett who with his family came from Delaware County in
February, 1842, took a claim and built a log cabin on the east bank of the
Wapsipinicon River where Quasqueton was afterwards laid out. Soon after
S. G. and S. H. Sanford and Ezra Allen took claims in the same vicinity.
Early in the spring Dr. Edward Brewer, R. B. Clarik and Frederick Kessler
joined the first settlers. In 1845 a post-office was established named
Quasqueton with William Richards as postmaster. The town was laid out by
D. S. Davis in 1847, the name being of Indian origin and signifying "rapid
water." In 1847 the commissioners selected to locate a county-seat,
chose the site where Independence stands. Rufus B. Clark was the first to
call attention to this spot as a beautiful location for a town and ,
associating himself with N. A. McClure and S. P. Stoughton, entered a quarter
section of land embracing the water power and a portion of the ground upon
which Independence was built. In March, 1847, Mr. Clark built a log cabin
on the land thus entered which was the first house in Independence. A dam
was built across the river, a sawmill erected, a store opened and a post-office
secured by the proprietors of the new town during the year 1848. Mr.
Clark kept a hotel in his two-room log cabin while Mr. Stoughton opened a store
and kept the post-office in his cabin. Edward Brewster practiced medicine
and kept a school in his house.
The county was organized in 1848 by the election
of the following officers: Elijah Beardsley, judge; E. D. Phelps,
sheriff; S. P. Stoughton, clerk; and Elijah Beardsley, prosecuting attorney.
The first term of the District Court was held in April, 1849, by James
Grant, judge of the Third District. In May, 1855, B. F. Parker and James
Hillery issued the first number of a newspaper named the Independence
Civilian. In December, 1856, Jacob Rich and Mr. Jordon began the
publication of the Quasqueton Guardian in the rival town. The
first railroad built into the county was the Dubuque and Sioux City, which
reached Independence in December, 1859.
During the session of the Legislature of 1868,
Senator William G. Donnan secured the passage of an act providing for the
location and building of an additional Hospital for the Insane at Independence.
BUENA VISTA COUNTY is located in the third tier from the western boundary
of the State and in the third south of the Minnesota line; it contains sixteen
congressional townships, making an area of five hundred seventy-six square
miles. This territory was originally a part of the counties of Dubuque
and Buchanan but in 1851 was formed into a county and named to commemorate the
Battle of Buena Vista. It was first attached to the county of Wahkaw (now
Woodbury) in 1853.
In May, 1856, Abner Bell of New Jersey and his
brother-in law, W. K. Weaver and family, and John W. Tucker settled in the
northern part of the county near the Little Sioux River at a point called
Sioux Rapids. Soon after Arthur T. Reeves, Moses Van Kirk, James H.
Gleason and Moses Lewis took claims in the vicinity. In the spring of
1857 the settlers were plundered by a band of Sioux Indians under Inkpadutah
while on their way to massacre the colony at Okoboji and Spirit lakes.
The men overpowered by the savages while the women were most brutally
treated but no one was killed.
In 1859 the county government was organized by
the election of the following officers: A. T. Reeves, judge; W. K.
Weaver, treasurer; J. W. Tucker, clerk; and Abner Bell, sheriff. In 1860
the county-seat was located by commissioners in the northwest quarter of
section eighteen, township ninety-three, range thirty-six on land belonging to
W. S. Lee and the town named Prairieville but no buildings were erected and it
never advanced beyond a paper town.
While the county was sparsely settled some of
the officials entered into a conspiracy to enrich themselves by levying and
collecting taxes in large amounts for building bridges, school-houses and the
making of other public improvements. Contracts were let to friends of
these officials at enormous prices and the profits divided. Schoolhouses
were built on unsettled prairies, non-resident taxes appropriated and when finished
the houses were occupied by favored settlers for residences. Hundreds of
thousands of dollars of county warrants were issued of which no record was
kept, then sold and traded for property. County and school bonds were
beautifully engraved and sold through brokers at a discount which tempted
eastern buyers to invest in securities which bore ten per cent interest.
When other settlers came and saw how business had been managed, the
perpetrators of the frauds fled, leaving enormous debts standing against the
county and school districts. For many years suits were pending in the
courts for the collection of these fraudulent bonds and warrants and great
odium was brought upon the county. None of the perpetrators of these
crimes were brought to justice. But after the year 1865 the county
government passed under the control of honest settlers and the frauds ceased.
In 1858 a Mr. Barnes laid out the town of Sioux
Rapids near the Little Sioux River and, being a man of property, hoped to be
able to build up an important place. In 1859 the Sioux Indians were again
threatening the frontier settlements and Mr. Barnes sent his son-in-law to Fort
Dodge to procure arms for the defense of the settlers. While traveling
over the unsettled prairies he was overtaken by a blizzard and so badly frozen
that both feet had to be amputated. Mr. Barnes was so disheartened by
this calamity that he abandoned his town enterprise and left the country.
"Barnes" township and "Barnes Grove" perpetuate his
memory. For many years Sioux Rapids was the county-seat. In 1870
the town of Strom Lake was laid out on the north shore of the beautiful lake of
that name. The original proprietor was John I. Blair, the builder of the
Iowa Falls and Sioux City Railroad, which was the first in the county. The
lake is about two miles wide by five miles long, having its outlet in the Boyer
River. In October, 1870, Vestal and Young established the Storm Lake
Pilot, a weekly newspaper, in the new town. The Little Sioux River
runs through the north part of the county and in early days its bluffs were
covered with timber.
BUNCOMBE COUNTY was established in 1851 and named for an officer in the
War of the Revolution. It was the extreme northwestern county in the
State. While bearing this name there were no permanent settlers within
its limits but for eleven years it appeared on the map of Iowa as Buncombe
County until at the extra session of the Ninth General Assembly in September,
1862, it was changed to Lyon.
BUTLER COUNTY is in the third tier south of the Minnesota line, in the
fourth west of the Mississippi River, and contains sixteen congressional
townships, making an area of five hundred seventy-six square miles. It
was taken from territory formerly embraced in the counties of Fayette and
Buchanan, was established in 1851 and named for General William O. Butler, an
officer in the Mexican War and Democratic candidate for Vice-President in 1848.
The first white men who settled in the county
were two brothers, Harrison and Volney Carpenter who, in 1850, went from Linn
County up the Cedar and Shellrock rivers hunting and trapping. They were
charmed with the country and made claims and built a log cabin in a grove where
the town of Shellrock stands. In September of the same year Henry J.
Hicks and Robert T. Crowell, from Wisconsin, settled at Coon Grove near where
Clarksville has since been built. During the winter these pioneers
carried on their backs supplies for their families from Cedar Falls. They
found support through hunting, trapping and fishing until land could be brought
under cultivation. In 1851 Jeremiah Perrin, M. A.. Taylor, Mahlon B. and
William S. Wamsley, Seth Hilton and others came and also entered land.
In 1853 the county-seat was located at
Clarksville, a town laid out by Thomas and Jeremiah Clark and D. C. Hilton, and
name for the proprietors; the plat embraced forty acres.
The first county officers were: John
Palmer, judge; W. C. Burton, clerk; Abner G. Clark, treasurer; R. T. Corwell,
sheriff, and Hardin Baird, prosecuting attorney. The permanent
organization of the county was made in October, 1854. A post-office was
established at Coon Grove in 1853 of which Abner G. Clark was the first
postmaster; later this settlement became Clarksville. In the spring of
1855 Miss Malinda Searls opened the first school in a log cabin at Clarksville.
J. D. Thompson, judge of the Thirteenth District held the first term of
court in the county in October, 1857. In July, 1858, Palmer and James
established a newspaper at Clarksville, naming it the Butler County
Transcript. This was the first paper in the county. The Dubuque
and Sioux City Railroad was built through the south part of the county in 1865.
CALHOUN COUNTY is in the fourth tier from the north line of the State, also
in the fourth east of the Missouri River and has sixteen townships, each six
miles square, making a total area of five hundred seventy-six square miles.
It was originally named Fox but at the session of the Legislature of 1853
a change was made to Calhoun, in honor of the famous South Carolina Senator.
Twin Lakes, lying in the northern part of the county, cover an area of
about seventeen hundred acres and vary in depth from three to twenty feet.
The northern lake is about half a mile wide and two and one-half miles in
length.
Ebeneezer Comstock was the first white settler
in the county. In April, 1854, he moved with his family into the grove
where Lake City has since been built and here made his log cabin. His
nearest trading point was Des Moines, eighty-five miles distant. He was
soon joined by John Condron, J. C. Smith and Peter Smith from Cass County,
Michigan.
In August, 1855, the county was organized by the
election of Peter Smith, judge; Christian Smith, treasurer; Joel Golden, clerk;
William Oxenford, sheriff; and Ebeneezer Comstock, prosecuting attorney.
The election was held at the house of Christopher Smith and the entire
population of the county was less than one hundred. The county-seat was
located by a vote of the people in April, 1856, and Charles Amy was employed to
survey and plat a town which was named Lake City. The first house on the
plat was built by him in 1857 and the first store was opened the same year by
Peter Smith and Daniel Reed in a log cabin. In 1856 David Reed taught the
first school near Lake City and the Methodists organized the first religious
society the same year.
For many years in the early history of the
county Charles Amy was its treasurer and by honest and economical management of
the officials the warrants of the county were always kept at par and no debt
was incurred, a condition of affairs rare among the counties of northwestern
Iowa.
In June, 1859, Judge A. W. Hubbard held the
first term of court in the county. In June, 1871, B. F. Gue of Fort Dodge
established the first newspaper at Lake City named the Calhoun County
Pioneer of which E. W. Wood was the editor and manager. In early days
a good wagon road was graded from Lake City to Fort Dodge and the streams were
bridged for a distance of about forty miles over unsettled prairies. In
1870 the first line of railroad was built into the county, running through the
northern townships. It was the main line of the Iowa Falls and Sioux City
road and the towns of Manson and Pomeroy were built upon it. In the
spring of 1876 the county-seat was relocated on land belonging to Colonel J. M.
Rockwell nearer the center of the county where a town was laid out and named
Rockwell City. A court-house was built in the spring of 1877. A
railroad reached the new county-seat in 1882.
CARROLL COUNTY was at one time a part of the large territory of Benton
but, in 1851, was established by act of the Legislature and named for Charles
Carroll, one of t he signers of the Declaration of Independence. It lies
in the third tier east of the Missouri River, in the fifth south of the
Minnesota line and contains sixteen congressional townships, making an area of
five hundred and seventy-six square miles.
In 1854 Enos Buttrick of Greene County made a
claim and built the first log cabin in the limits of Carroll, on section two,
township eighty-two, range thirty-four. The old Indian trail known as the
"War Path," a dividing line between the Sioux and Pottawattamie
hunting grounds, ran through townships eighty-two to eighty-five, range
thirty-six. It was a well beaten path visible for many years after the
Indians were removed from the State. The penalty was death for any Indian
who should be found hunting on the land belonging to the other tribe. The
old battle-field where the last conflict took place between these hostile
tribes was near Crescent Lake in Carroll County.
In July, 1855, the first steps were taken toward
organizing a county government in Carroll and at the August election the
following officers were chosen: A. J. Cain, judge; Levi Thompson, clerk;
James White, treasurer; J. Y. Anderson, sheriff, and L. M. Curdy, prosecuting
attorney. The population at that time was about one hundred. The
first school was opened by Jane L. Hill in the spring of 1856 at Carrollton, a
town which was that year laid out on the middle branch of the Raccoon River in
the southern part of the county. It became the first county-seat and O.
H. Manning here established a paper named the Carroll Enterprise.
The Methodists organized the first church in the county at this place.
A term of court was held here by Judge M. F. Moore in November, 1858.
The Northwestern Railroad was built in 1867 and a new town laid out on
its line near the geographical center of the county named Carroll, which soon became
the county-seat. The Carroll Herald was started the following year
by J. F. H. Sugg.
CASS COUNTY lies in the second tier east of the Missouri River in the third north
of the south line of the State and contains sixteen townships, making an area
of five hundred seventy-six squares miles. It was within the limits of
Demoine County from 1834 to 1836 and was a part of the old county of Keokuk
from 1837 to 1840. By act of the Legislature of 1851 Cass County was
established with its present boundaries. The first white settlers within
its limits were Mormons who stopped there on their exodus from Nauvoo in
1845-6. They established a station near the west bank of the Nishnabotna
River, two and a half miles west of the point where Lewis stands. It was
near the old Indian village of the Pottawattamies and was named Indiantown.
For many years this was the chief trading post on that route from the
Mississippi to the Missouri River.
The first permanent settlers in the county were
Jeremiah Bradshaw, V. M. Conrad, Peter Hedges, David Chapman, Joseph Everly and
J. M. Watson who took claims near Indiantown in 1852. Here Bradshaw
opened the first store in the county and a post-office was established called
Cold Springs. In the summer of 1852 R. D. McGeehon built a log cabin and
opened a farm near Turkey Creek. The first election was held at Uniontown
in August, 1852, at which but thirteen votes were polled. The county
officers were chosen in 1853, consisting of Jeremiah Bradshaw, judge; V. M.
Conrad, treasurer; C. E. Woodward, clerk; Francis E. Ball, sheriff.
Thomas G. Palmer and Milton Richards were chosen commissioners to locate
the county-seat and on the 11th of March, 1853, selected the site where Lewis
stands. This town was laid out on the east side of the Nishnabotna River
the next year and became the county-seat. The first house was built by S.
M. Tucker and the first newspaper was established by J. C. Brown in 1861, named
the Cass County Gazette. In 1868 the town of Atlantic was located
on the line of the Rock Island Railroad which was built through the northern
part of the county in that year. After a bitter contest the county-seat
was removed from Lewis to Atlantic in November, 1869. Anita and Wiota
were located on the line of the Rock Island Railroad.
CEDAR COUNTY was established from territory embraced in the original
county of Dubuque and lies in the second tier west of the Mississippi River and
in the fifth north of the Missouri boundary line. It contains sixteen
townships, making an area of five hundred and seventy-six square miles, and was
named for the Cedar River which flows through the county in a southeasterly
direction.
The first white man known to have traveled
through this county was Colonel George Davenport who, in 1831, established a
trading post on the west side of the Cedar River just above the mouth of Rock
Creek. Poweshiek, a chief of the Fox Indians, had a village in that
vicinity where he made his headquarters and here Colonel Davenport, through his
agents, carried on a profitable trade with the Fox Indians. The first
claims made in the county were taken by Colonel Davenport, Antoine LeClaire,
Major William Gordon and Alexander McGregor. These men went about
twenty-five miles west of Davenport to a fine body of timber which was
afterward named "Posten's Grove" and staked out claims embracing all
of the timber land. From there they passed on to Onion Grove and took
possession of that timber land by the same process, all for purposes of
speculation. Neglecting to comply with the claim laws, however, by making
actual settlement, they were unable to hold these valuable lands. A few
months later David W. Walton of Indiana made a claim on Sugar Creek, a name he
gave to the stream owing to the sugar maples growing along its banks. He
built a cabin and early the following spring moved his family to the new home.
They were probably the first permanent settlers in the county. In
May, 1836, Enos Nye of Ohio took a claim on the bank of Cedar River four miles
west of Walton's. In June, 1836, Andrew Crawford and Robert G. Roberts
made claims in the central part of the county. In July of the same year
James Posten made a claim in the eastern part of the county in the grove which
bears his name. George McCoy and Stephen Toney settled on the east bank
of the Cedar River n 1836 where McCoy established a ferry. In August
McCoy and Toney laid out a town which they named Rochester, for the city of
that name in New York. Benjamin Nye opened the first store and built a
mill near the mouth of Rock Creek. Rev. Martin Baker, a Christian
minister, was the pioneer preacher in the county, beginning services in 1836.
Moses B. Church taught the first school in 1837 at the house of Colonel
Henry Hardman.
In 1837 Rochester was made the county-seat and
there the first election was held in March, 1838, at which the following
officers were elected: Christian Holderman, treasurer; Robert G. Roberts,
register, and Richard Ransford, J. M. Oaks and Joseph Wilford, commissioners.
The first court was held in May, 1838, at Rochester, Judge David Irwin
presiding. In 1839 commissioners were chosen by the Legislature to select
a location for permanent county-seat. The site was located near the
geographical center of the county and named Tipton for General John Tipton,
United States Senator from Indiana. A town was platted in 1840 by John G.
Tolman, the county surveyor, on a claim made in 1836 by William M. Knott, and
the first sale of lots took place on the 15th of June. A fierce contest
was waged for several years between Rochester and Tipton for the county-seat
which was finally settled by a vote of the people in 1852 in favor of Tipton.
On the 6th of April, 1850, the first newspaper
was established in Tipton named the Tipton Times and Cedar County Conservative
which was succeeded in 1853 by the Cedar County Advertiser. In
1855 the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad was built from Davenport through the
southern part of the county. Previous to 1853 the county had voted aid to
the Lyons and Iowa Central Railroad Company which proposed to build from Lyons
by way of Tipton to Iowa City. This company caused grading to be done
near Tipton and secured bonds of the county for $20,000 to aid the work but
never built the road.
CERRO GORDO COUNTY lies in the second tier south of the Minnesota line, in
the fifth west of the Mississippi River and is twenty-four miles square
embracing twenty-four congressional townships, making an area of five hundred
seventy-six square miles. It was established from the original county of
Fayette in 1851 and named for battle-field of the Mexican War.
In July, 1851, Joseph Hewitt and James
Dickinson, who were hunting near Clear Lake, were so delighted with the
beautiful country bordering it that they built cabins on the south and west shores
and, sending for their families, became the first white settlers in the new
county. They were fifty miles from the nearest neighbor and were
frequently visited by parties of Winnebago Indians who came to the lake to hunt
and trap. In 1853 David and Edwin Wright made claims about three miles
north of where Mason City stands. In September of the same year Anson C.
Owens settled at a grove which bears his name in the eastern part of the
county. James and Robert Serrine took claims at the east end of Clear
Lake the same year. John B. Long and John L. McMillan soon after settled
on the ground where Mason City stands. Clear Lake is a beautiful body of
water about six miles long by two miles wide and its greatest depth is about
twenty-five feet. The Shellrock River flows through the northeastern
portion of the county.
In 1854 the town of Mason City was laid out and
the first store was opened by J. L. McMillan one of the proprietors of the new
town site. The town of Clear Lake was laid out in the fall of 1856 by
James Dickinson on the east end of the lake which bears the same name.
Judge Samuel Murdock of the District Court in
1855 appointed commissioners to locate the county-seat. They selected
Mason City. Most of the early settlers in that town were members of the
Masonic order and the settlement was first called "Masonic Grove" but
when the town was platted in 1854 was named Mason City, by and for that
fraternity. The first school in the county was taught by Liza Gardner, a
daughter of Rowland Gardner who, with most of his family, perished in the
Spirit Lake massacre in the spring of 1857. Eliza was fortunately absent
from home at the time and thus escaped the fate of her father's family.
The first newspaper in the county was
established at Mason City by Datus E. Coon in 1858, and named the Cerro
Gordo Press. Its proprietor became a prominent officer in the Union
army during the Civil War. The first railroad was completed from McGregor
to Clear Lake, through Mason City, in 1870 by the Milwaukee and St. Paul
Company.
CHEROKEE COUNTY is in the second tier east of the west boundary of the
State and in the third south of the Minnesota line, is twenty-four miles square
and contains five hundred seventy-six square miles. Its territory was at
one time divided between Fayette and Dubuque counties but in 1851 it was
established with the present boundaries as Cherokee County, being named for a
southern tribe of Indians. It was first attached to Wahkaw County in
1853.
In 1856 a colony from Milford, Massachusetts,
selected lands near the center of Cherokee County for a settlement. There
were about fifty members of the association most of whom were mechanics.
The following named members with their families moved onto their lands
the same year: Dr. Dwight Russell, Dr. Slocum, G. W. Lebourvean, B. W.
Sawtell, Lysander Sawtell, Albert Simon, Daniel Wheeler, Lemuel Parkhurst,
Albert Phipps, Carlton Corbett, J. A. Brown, A. J. Slayton, Robert Hammond and
Benjamin Holbrook. Each member took about a hundred acres of the lands
which had been entered. A large body of timber was taken along the Little
Sioux River which was divided among the members of the colony. Dr. Dwight
Russell built the first house, a log cabin in which nine families were sheltered
until additional houses could be erected.
During the year 1856 twelve families formed
another settlement in the southern part of the county near the Little Sioux
River, in the vicinity of Pilot Rock. This immense rock was in early days
a well-known landmark which could be seen at a great distance over the
unsettled prairies. It was a red granite boulder about sixty feet long by
forty wide rising above the surface about twenty feet, near the river on the
east side of a high point of land. Many mounds are found in this county
north of the town of Cherokee which are believed to be the work of the ancient
"mound builders."
The first colony laid out the town of Cherokee
on the west side of the Little Sioux River in 1856 and it became the
county-seat. In the spring of 1857 Inkpaduta's band of Sioux Indians on
their way to perpetrate the massacre at Okoboji, robbed many of the settlers in
Cherokee County and killed many of their cattle. Later in the season a
stockade was erected at Cherokee for protection and a company of soldiers
stationed to protect the settlements in that part of the State.
The county was organized in August, 1857, and at
the election the following persons were chosen for the first county officials:
A. P. Thayer, judge; B. W. Sawtell, clerk; G. W. Labourvean, treasurer
and recorder; S. W. Hayward, sheriff; and Carlton Corbett, prosecuting
attorney. The Iowa Falls and Sioux City Railroad was built through the
county in 1870 and in January of that year J. P. Ford issued the first number
of the Cherokee Chief. The railroad was located some distance from
the old town and gradually a new town grew up near the station. One of
the Hospitals for the Insane has been recently located at Cherokee.
CHICKASAW COUNTY at one time a part of Fayette, was created by act of the
Legislature in 1851, and named for a southern tribe of Indians. When
first established Chickasaw extended three miles further north than its present
boundary which was fixed in 1855. It lies in the third tier west of the
Mississippi River and in the second south of Minnesota with an area of five
hundred four square miles.
The first settlement within its limits was made
in 1848 by Truman Merritt near Greenwood. In 1852 J. A. Bird and John
Bird made claims near the junction of the Little Cedar and the Red Cedar River.
They there built a cabin and during the season several other families
took claims near them. In 1854 James Jared took a claim on the land where
New Hampton now stands and before the close of the year settlements were made
in other parts of the county in the vicinity of woodland. Chickasaw was
attached to Fayette until 1853 when John Bird was authorized by the judge of
Fayette County to organize the county. The first legal election was held
in August at which the following officers were chosen: James Lyon, judge;
S. C. Goddard, clerk; John Campbell, treasurer and recorder; Andrew Sample,
sheriff; and N. D. Babcock, prosecuting attorney. In 1854 the county-seat
was located at Bradford, a new town near the southwest corner of the county.
The first term of court was held there in June, 1854, by Judge T. S.
Wilson of Dubuque. New Hampton was laid out near the geographical center
of the county and soon became a competitor for the county-seat. The first
attempt at removal was defeated but in 1858 New Hampton was successful.
The first newspaper in the county was
established at Jacksonville in 1857 by Isaac Watson and was called the
Chickasaw County Republican but after three years it was suspended. In
1860 W. E. Beach started the Courier at New Hampton. Nashua is the second
town of importance and is located on the Cedar River in the southwestern corner
of the county. The first railroad to enter the county was the Milwaukee
and St. Paul which runs through New Hampton.
CLARKE COUNTY lies in the second tier north of the Missouri line, in
the seventh west of the Mississippi River and contains twelve congressional
townships embracing an area of four hundred thirty-two square miles. It
was originally a part of Demoine County but in January, 1846, the new county
was established and named for James Clarke who was then Governor of Iowa
Territory. The boundaries formerly included the east half of Union County
but did not then embrace the eastern tier of townships. In 1849 the
boundaries were changed and the county assumed its present form. In 1846,
when the Mormon exodus from Nauvoo took place, John and James Longley and John
Conger, with their families, became separated from one of the trains and camped
six miles south of where Osceola stands. Not being able to find the train
they decided to remain where they were, open farms and make homes. The
place was long known as "Lost Camp" and became the first settlement
in Clarke county. In the spring they found other families of Mormons who
had made homes but a few miles from them and all remained and became prosperous
farmers. In 1850 Robert Jamison, A. Colier, Bernard and James G. Arnold,
J. Ellis, John Shearer and William Overton settled in the southern part of the
county. Soon after a colony from Van Buren County came and laid out the
town of Hopeville near the west line of the county, settling in that vicinity.
In 1851 the county was organized by the election
of the following officers: John A. Lindsley, judge; Alonzo R. Williams, clerk;
G. W. Glenn, treasurer, and Ivison Ellis, sheriff. The commissioners
chosen to locate the county-seat selected a farm entered by George W. Howe,
which was purchased for one hundred dollars and the town of Osceola laid out
upon it. George W. Howe built the first house in Osceola in 1851 in which
he opened the first store in the county. At a sale of lots in October
eighty-five were sold at an average price of twenty-two dollars each. The
first term of court was held in 1853 by Judge J. S. Townsend. At the
general election in August, 1852, but eighty-one votes were polled. The
first newspaper was established in 1858 by G. S. Pike and T. R. Oldham and
named the Osceola Courier. The Burlington and Missouri Railroad
was built through the county and through the town of Osceola, and completed to
the Missouri River in 1868.
CLAY COUNTY is in the second tier south of the Minnesota line, in the third east
of the western boundary of the State and contains sixteen congressional
townships embracing an area of five hundred seventy-six square miles. It
was created in 1851 and named for Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Clay, Jr., who was
killed at the Battle of Buena Vista in the Mexican War. In January, 1853,
Clay County was attached to Wahkaw for judicial and election purposes.
In July, 1856, the first white settlers came and
took claims in the woods on the south side of the Little Sioux River in the
southwest corner of the county. They were Christian Kirchner and Andrew
S. Mead with their families and John J. Bicknell. They built cabins and
broke up prairie for farms. In the fall Ezra Wilcox, James Bicknell and
two brothers named Gillett brought their families and settled in the same
vicinity. A town was laid out on the river bluff and named Peterson which
became the first county-seat. In the spring of 1857 Inkpaduta's band of
Sioux Indians stopped in this settlement, robbed the people, killed or drove
off about fifty head of cattle and fourteen horses belonging to Kirchner, Mead
and Gillett, shot their hogs and destroyed much other property. The
settlers were so few in number that they were unable to defend their homes and
possessions. A deep show covered the ground, the cold was intense and the
few isolated settlers had all they could do to defend their families from the
savages.
The county was organized in October, 1858, by
the election of the following officers: C. C. Smeltzer, judge; S. M.
Foreman, treasurer, and E. M. Wilcox, clerk. John A. Kirchner built a dam
across the river and erected the first saw and grist mill in that part of the
State. The public business was recklessly managed for many years,
fastening a heavy indebtedness upon the county which brought it into bad repute
and retarded settlement. The officials who were responsible for these disreputable
transactions were, as the county settled up, dislodged from the control of the
county business and the large bonded indebtedness was declared illegal by the
courts. In 1859 George E. Spencer of Jasper County made a claim on the
west side of the Little Sioux River near the geographical center of the county,
laid out a town giving it his own name.* In 1869 the town
of Spencer was established on the east side of the river where a flourishing
town grew up which became the county-seat. In 1878 the Milwaukee and St.
Paul Railroad was built through the county from east to west through the town
of Spencer. The first newspaper was the Clay County News which was
established at Spencer in January, 1871.
*George E. Spencer became a
distinguished officer in the Civil War, and after peace was established settled
in Alabama, where he was elected to the United States Senate.
CLAYTON COUNTY is the first west of the Mississippi River in the second
tier south of Minnesota and contains twenty-four townships making an area of
seven hundred ninety-two square miles. It was first created in December,
1837, and then contained a portion of the present county of Allamakee.
The county was named for John M Clayton a United States Senator from
Delaware.
The first settlement (after the Spanish grant to
Basil Giard in 1795) was made by Robert Hetfield, William D. Grant and William
W. Wyman and families in the spring of 1832. They made claims on the
north side of the Turkey River about four miles from its mouth. In 1836
other settlers came, among whom was Dr. Frederick Andros, who took a claim
about a mile southeast of where Granavillo stands. John W. Gillett and a
Mr. Loomis took claims in the same vicinity and opened farms. The same
year Elisha Boardman settled upon the land where Elkader has been built.
Prairie La Porte was laid out in 1837 and in 1847 the name was changed to
Guttenburg. It was the first county-seat where the first term of court
was held in a log cabin occupied by Herman Graybill and family. It convened
in May, 1838, and was presided over by Judge Charles Dunn. At this time a
portion of Minnesota was embraced in Wisconsin Territory and in the county of
Clayton.
The county was fully organized in the fall of
1838. In 1843 the county-seat was removed to the new town of Jacksonville
and in 1846 the name was changed to Garnavillo. In 1847 the town of
Elkader was platted by Thompson, Davis and Sage who built a mill on the Turkey
River at that place. The first houses were built by Elisha Boardman and
H. D. Bronson in 1836 on the land where the new town was located. Elkader
first became the county-seat in 1856, lost it for a time but permanently
regained it in 1860. In 1855 Elias H. Williams was elected first county
judge.
The first newspaper published between Dubuque
and St. Paul on the west side of the Mississippi River was the Clayton County
Herald. It was established in January, 1853, by H. S. Granger at
Garnavillo and two years later sold to A. W. Dripps who changed the name to the
Journal. Dripps was Captain of Company A, in the ninth Iowa
Infantry in the Civil War and was killed at the Battle of Pea Ridge.
McGregor, the largest town in the county, was
laid out in 1847 by Alexander McGregor. In 1836 he established a ferry
across the Mississippi River at this place opposite the old French town of
Prairie du Chien. Soon after he made a claim where the town of McGregor
stands and built a log cabin at the foot of Main street. In 1847 he moved
his family into it and a store and public house were soon opened. For
many years the village which grew up was called McGregor's Landing. The
ravine where the town was located was named by the early French traders
"Coolie de Sioux." The bluffs here rise to the height of nearly
four hundred feet and overlook the mouth of the Wisconsin River and the
adjacent country for a great distance.
The first newspaper in McGregor was established
by Colonel A. P. Richardson in October, 1856. The first railroad
constructed in the county was the McGregor Western which was built west in
1857. This company secured a large land grant but failing to comply with
the requirements the lands were given to the Milwaukee and St. Paul Company
which completed the road west to Sheldon in 1878.
CLINTON COUNTY was created in December, 1837, from territory embraced
in the original county of Dubuque. It was named for De Witt Clinton the
illustrious Governor of New York, contains an area of seven hundred twenty
square miles and lies on the Mississippi River in the fifth tier south of the Minnesota
line extending farther eastward than any other county in the State. The
city of Clinton lies farther east by more than sixty miles than Keokuk, both on
the Mississippi River. Clinton and Jackson are the most easterly counties
in the great bend of the Mississippi River forming the east boundary of Iowa.
The Wapsipinicon River enters the county from the northwest and forms a
large portion of the boundary line separating Clinton from Scott County.
In July, 1835, Elisha Buel crossed the
Mississippi and made a claim where Lyons was laid out. In 1836 James D.
Bourne who was an agent of the American Fur Company established a post and made
a claim on the Wapsipinicon, becoming a permanent citizen. He was the
first postmaster in the county and kept the office named Monroe which was on
the mail route from Davenport to Dubuque. He also kept a ferry across the
Wapsipinicon at that place. During the year 1836 Dr. George Peck made a
claim on the banks of the Mississippi and laid out the town of Camanche, named
for an Indian tribe. Joseph M. Bartlett made a claim two miles below
Buel's the same year and built a log cabin. He opened a store and laid
out a town where Clinton stands, which he named New York. In 1837 Mr.
Buel, G. W. Harlan and Suel Foster laid out the town of Lyons. Eli
Goddard, D. C. Bourne, W. D. Follett and others settled in various parts of the
county during the following year.
In February, 1838, the county-seat was
established by a vote of the people at Camanche. The county was fully organized
in 1840 and the first election was held April 6th in the house of Lyman Evans
at Camanche. In 1841 three commissioners were chosen by the Legislature
to relocate the county-seat. They selected a place twenty miles west of
the Mississippi and gave it the name of Vandenburg. A log court-house and
hotel were built and the court-house was used for school and church purposes.
J. Wood was the first school teacher in the county. The name of the
town was soon changed to De Witt and the county-seat remained there about
thirty-five years, when it was removed to Clinton.
Clinton was laid out on the old site of New York
in 1855 by the Iowa Land Company. The Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska Railroad
Company was organized in 1856 to build a railroad from Clinton to the Missouri
River. The road was pushed with energy and was the first to cross the
State, reaching Council Bluffs in the fall of 1867.
The first newspaper in the county was
established at Camanche in 1854 by Bates and Kanapp and named the Camanche
Chief. In June, 1860, Camanche was destroyed by the great tornado
which swept through central Iowa that year. A railroad bridge was built
across the Mississippi at Clinton and in the course of years Lyons and Clinton
grew together and became one city.
COOK COUNTY was established from territory originally embraced in Demoine County,
on the 7th of December, 1836. It included a portion of Scott County and
other territory not clearly defined. The county was never organized and
the following year the territory was divided among other counties created by
act of the Legislature of December 21, 1837. The origin of the name given
it is not known.
CRAWFORD COUNTY lies in the second tier east of the Missouri River and
in the fifth south of the Minnesota line. It has twenty-four townships
containing an area of seven hundred twenty square miles and was named for
William H. Crawford who was Secretary of the Treasury from 1817 to 1825 and a
candidate for President in 1824. The county was created in 1851 from
territory originally embraced in Benton but at that time did not include the
four western townships. In 1853 it was attached to Shelby County and in
1855 was organized at the April election by choice of the following officers:
E. W. Fowler, judge; Thomas Dobson, clerk; A. R. Hunt, treasurer; D. J.
Fowler, sheriff; and Cyrus Whitmore, prosecuting attorney. The present
boundaries were established in 1865.
The first settlers were Franklin Prentiss,
Cornelius Dunham and their families, who with Reuben Blake took claims on the
East Boyer River in a grove about six miles east of where Denison stands, in
the year 1849. The place was long known as Dunham Grove. Jesse
Mason, George J. and Noah V. Johnson settled the next year at Mason's Grove on
the West Boyer. J. W. Denison came to the county in 1855 and
entered a large tract of land for the Providence Western Land Company. In
1856 he laid out the town of Denison, and with others began the erection of
houses.
The first school-house was built at Mason's
Grove in 1856 in which Morris McHenry taught the first school in the county.
The Methodists organized the first church at Mason's Grove in October,
1856, through the efforts of Rev. William Black who was a pioneer preacher in
that part of the State. S. J. Comfort was the first lawyer in the county
in 1867, following down the Boyer valley to Council Bluffs.
CROCKER COUNTY was created by act of the Legislature of 1870, embracing
the northern part of Kossuth County which had at one time made the county of
Bancroft. It was named for General M. M. Crocker of Iowa, a distinguished
officer of the Civil War. The county-seat was located at Greenwood and
the organization was completed in October, 1870, by the election of the
following officers: George V. Davis, auditor; Cyrus Hawks, clerk; William
Gibbon, treasurer; A. J. Garfield, recorder; J. H. Coffin, sheriff; Sarah A.
Littlefield, superintendent of schools.
In December, 1871, the Supreme Court of Iowa
declared the act creating this county a violation of the Constitution, which in
article eleven declares that no new county shall be created which contains less
than four hundred thirty-two square miles. Crocker County thus ceased to
exist from and after the rendition of that decision and its territory reverted
to Kossuth.
DALLAS COUNTY lies in the fourth tier north of the Missouri State
line, in the fifth east of the Missouri River and was formerly included in the
county of Keokuk. On the 17th of January, 1846, the county was created
and named for George M. Dallas, then Vice-President of the United States.
It contains sixteen congressional townships with an area of five hundred
eighty-eight square miles. The Indians continued to occupy the county
until the beginning of the year 1846 and soon after it was opened to settlement
by whites.
On the 12th of March, 1846, Samuel Miller took a
claim in the central part of the county near the Raccoon River and built a
cabin. Soon after Wilson Miller, John Wright, Levi A. Davis and others
made claims in the fine groves in that vicinity. During the year many
settlers came to different parts of the county and opened farms. Samuel
Miller built the first mill in that region which was run by horse power.
The county was organized in February, 1847, and
commissioners chosen to locate the county-seat. They selected a site in
May, a town was laid out and named Panouoch, a word of Indian origin. The
claim upon which the town was platted had been taken in 1846 by Elijah T.
Miller of which he conveyed a part to the county. S. K. Scovell, the
clerk of the county, built the first house for an office and Benjamin Green
opened the first store. The first term of court was held by Judge Carlton
in September, 1847. In 1849 the name of the town was changed to Adel.
The first newspaper was established in 1856 by Rippey and Reed and named
the Ship of State. The Des Moines Valley Railroad was constructed
through the county from the southeast during 1869-70 and several towns were
laid out on its line. Among them were Dallas Center and Perry, the latter
the largest town in the county. Redfield, laid out on the Raccoon River,
was established by Colonel James Redfield who was killed in the Civil War.
Upon the organization of Dallas County the
following offices were chosen: Samuel Miller, clerk; L. A. Davis,
recorder and treasurer; J. K. Miller, sheriff, and W. W. Miller, surveyor.
DAVIS COUNTY is in the third tier west of the Mississippi River on
the south line of the State and embraces an area of five hundred three square
miles, as the southern tier of townships is divided by the State line. It
was formerly included in the original county of Demoine and afterwards in Van
Buren but was created with its present boundaries in 1844 and named for Garret
Davis a Kentucky statesman.
As early as 1837 hunters and trappers built
cabins in the southern part of the county long before the Sac and Fox Indians
had been removed. In 1837 James H. Jordon established a trading post
among these Indians on the banks of the Des Moines River in the northeast corner
of the county, Van Caldwell and others located near him in 1839-40.
In 1842 a post-office was established in the county on the extreme
western limits of the Black Hawk Purchase, at a point called Fox, with S. A.
Evans as postmaster.
The county was organized in 1844 by the election
of the following officers: S. W. McAtee, W. D. Evans and Abraham Weaver,
commissioners; Calvin Taylor, treasurer; Israel Kister, recorder; F. C. Humble,
sheriff, and Franklin Street, clerk. The county-seat was located at Bloomfield
and the first term of court was held in September, 1844, with Judge Charles
Mason presiding. James H. Cowles had, in 1846, entered the land upon
which Bloom field was located and conveyed it to the commissioners who had
there established the county-seat. The town was platted the same summer
and a post-office secured. The first merchant in the new town was John
Lucas who had taken a claim adjoining it in 1844, upon which he had built a log
cabin occupied by his family and used also for his store. Hosea B. Horn
built the first frame house in Bloomfield in 1849. In 1854 the first
newspaper was started by George Johnson named the Western Gazette.
DECATUR COUNTY lies on the south line of the State and in the fifth
tier east of the Missouri River. It embraces an area of five hundred
thirty-four square miles, was taken from the original county of Demoine and in
January, 1846, established with present boundaries. The county was named
for Commodore Stephen Decatur a distinguished naval officer in the War of 1812.
The first settlers were William Hamilton, Reuben
and James Hatfield, Alfred Stanley, John McDaniel, John E. Logan and Allen
Scott who came from 1838 to 1840, supposing they were settling in Missouri.
A number of them brought slaves which were held by them until it was
decided that they could not hold them as such in Iowa.
The county was organized on the 1st of April,
1850, by the election of the following officers: Josiah Morgan, William
Hamilton and Asa Burrill, commissioners; Henry B. Norton, clerk; J. J. Stanley,
sheriff. On the 21st of July, 1851, the county-seat was located by
commissioners chosen for that purpose at a place which was named Decatur.
W. Westcoat was employed to survey and plat the town and a sale of lots
was held in August, 1851. A log court-house was built in October.
The first session of court was held in the log cabin of Daniel Moat in
May, 1851, at which Judge McKay presided. In 1853 the county-seat was
ordered by vote of the people to a more central location, where a town was laid
out and named Independence. A new court-house was built of brick; and, by
act of the Legislature in 1854, the name of the new county-seat was changed to
Leon. A claim had been made by Thomas East and a log cabin built on the
ground where Leon stands before it was chosen for the county-seat. The
next house was built by Judge S. C. Thompson soon after the town was platted.
I. N. Clark opened the first store in September, 1853. The first
newspaper in the county was the Leon Pioneer, established in 1855 by P.
H. and George Binkley.
DELAWARE COUNTY is the second west of the Mississippi River in the third
tier south of the Minnesota line and contains sixteen townships embracing an
area of five hundred seventy-six squares miles. It was named for the
State of Delaware and was created on the 21st of December, 1837, and at that
time attached to Dubuque.
In the summer of 1836, William Bennett, the
first settler, made a claim in a grove in the limits of the county and built a
log cabin. The place was afterwards known as Eagle Grove. The next summer
two brothers named Livingston, Hugh Rose and others, all Scotch, moved from the
Red River country and settled in Delaware County at a place which became known
as Scotch Grove. Early in 1838 Joel Bailey and John Keeler settled on the
banks of the Maquoketa River and opened farms. The place took the name of
Bailey's Ford. The county was organized in August, 1841, by the election
of the following officers: W. H. Whiteside, Daniel Brown and William Eads,
county commissioners, and Le Roy Jackson, sheriff. The county-seat was
located at this election and a town laid out by Joel Bailey on the ground
chosen on the 5th of April, 1842, which was named Delhi. The following
summer Charles H. Hobbs built a log cabin on the town site and for two years he
and his family were the only inhabitants of Delhi. A post-office was
established and Mrs. Hobbs was the postmistress, keeping the office at her
home. In the spring of 1845 John W. Clark, A. K. Eaton, William Phillips,
Thomas Norris and Joseph Mitchell came with their families to Delhi. In
1844 the citizens assembled from the various settlements, cut trees, hewed and
drew the logs to a high point overlooking Silver Lake and built a court-house
eighteen by twenty-four feet in size and two stories high. The first term
of court had been held before the court-house was built in September, 1844, at
which Judge T. S. Wilson presided. Miss Roxy Brown taught the first
school in the court-house in the summer of 1846. The first settlement in
the vicinity of Manchester was made in 1850 by a Norwegian who built a cabin
and opened a farm. In 1855 the claim was purchased by Allan Love who in
company with O. P. Reeves and L. Burrington projected a town. In 1856 it
was sold to the Iowa Land Company which resurveyed and platted the town of
Manchester. In 1850 the town of Hopkinton was laid out by William
Nicholson, on ground which he had taken in 1838. Lenox College was
established here in the same year by the Presbyterians. In 1853 the first
newspaper was established in the county by Datus E. Coon and named the Delhi
Argus. When the Dubuque and Sioux City Railroad was extended through
the county it ran three miles north of Delhi, which was a fatal blow, as
Manchester secured the railroad and eventually the county-seat.
DES MOINES COUNTY as first established in 1834 embraced nearly one-half of
the territory of the future State of Iowa. But in December, 1836, the
counties of Lee, Van Buren, Henry, Louisa, Muscatine and Cook were created from
territory within its limits. It was named for the Des Moines River and in
January, 1838, was reduced to nearly its present boundaries, lying on the
Mississippi River in the second tier north of the Missouri State line. It
has an area of but four hundred thirteen square miles. An account of the
early settlements of Burlington and this county will be found elsewhere.
DICKINSON COUNTY lies along the Minnesota line in the third tier east of
the western boundary of the State. It is one of the smallest of counties
containing but four hundred five square miles, was originally a part of Fayette
but in 1851 was created with its present boundaries and first attached to Polk.
The county was named for Daniel S. Dickinson, a distinguished New York
statesman and contains several of the most beautiful lakes in the west, among
which are East and West Okoboji, Spirit Lake, Silver Lake and Swan Lake.
It is estimated that the lakes in the county cover an area of about fifty
square miles. A history of the first settlements and their extermination
by the Sioux Indians is given in another place.
In the year 1857, after the massacre, other
settlers came to the county and made homes about the lakes. Among them
were R. A. Smith, Dr. J. S. Prescott, B. F. Parmenter, R. U. Wheelock, O. C.
Howe, Henry Barkman, Morris Markham and George E. Spencer. In 1857 a town
was laid out on the peninsula, formed by Spirit Lake and East Okoboji, by
George E. Spencer, O. C. Howe and B. F. Parmenter and named Spirit Lake; this
became the county-seat. The first officers of the county were elected in
1857, as follows: Judge, O. C. Howe; recorder and treasurer, M. A.
Blanchard; clerk of District Court, R. A. Smith; sheriff, C. F. Hill;
prosecuting attorney, B. F. Parmenter. In August, 1870, Orson Rice
established the Spirit Lake Beacon, the first newspaper in the county,
at the county-seat. The editor was A. W. Osborne and the paper was
printed the first year at the office of the Northern Vindicator, at Esterville
in Emmet County.
The beauty of the lakes and groves of Dickinson
County annually attracts thousands of tourists from a distance during the
summer. Hotels, cottages, scores of boats of all classes and other
accommodations have made Okoboji and Spirit Lake most delightful summer
resorts.
DUBUQUE COUNTY as originally established in 1834 embraced more than
half of the future State of Iowa but was reduced to its present limits in 1837.
It lies on the Mississippi River in the third tier south of the Minnesota
line and embraces an area of six hundred one square miles. The county was
named for Julien Dubuque, the first white man who made his home within the
limits of Iowa. The first election was held in October, 1836, in which
the citizens voted for delegate in Congress and members of the Territorial
Legislature of Michigan. John King was the first county judge after Iowa
Territory was created. Further particulars of the early settlements of
the county have been given elsewhere.
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