Overton/Pilot Grove
located in Marion Twp. Sec. 22 was the former name of
the railroad station and post office of Pilot Grove.
Old Pilot Grove was located in Marion Twp. Sec.
10-Highway 16 go North on W74 (Pilot Grove Road) 3/4
of a mile on the West side of the road at 110 Street
is past the cemetery.
Madisonia - date unknown
When it was officially platted in Marion township in
1858, Pilot Grove had 166 lots and a large public
square, and during the 1870 and 1880s it became quite
a town with a high school as well as a grade school,
blacksmith shop, two dry goods stores, a general
store, two churches, a hotel, two doctors, post office
cemetery and a population of about 300.
One of the physicians was Dr. Pitman who at first
drove from Salem where he lived, then removed to Pilot
Grove riding in his buckboard, wearing his beard,
everyday clothing, friendly manner and Quaker
religion.
Quaker families in Pilot Grove, and there were quite a
few, liked him because he came from Salem, the most
important Quaker community hereabouts. They had one of
two churches in Pilot Grove, sharing religious
importance with the Methodists who had the other
church in town.
The Quaker meeting house followed the strict Quaker
custom of having the men sit on one side of the room,
and the women on the other side and with both having
separate entrances. Newlyweds could come to the church
together, but had to separate as they entered.
There was no music during the meeting, at first
anyway; later a pump organ made its appearances and
there was singing and there were long periods of
meditation during which the children were hard put to
stay awake. Woe to the boy who dozed off for his
britches were dusted plenty when the family got home.
That was the way of life was in Pilot Grove,
religious, busy and every one confident that the town
faced a great future. It came to an end after the
Peavine Railroad, which struggled heroically through
the 1870's to reach from Fort Madison to West Point,
gave up and the company was sold to a contractor who
changed the road from narrow gauge to standard gauge
and pushed it on westward across Lee Co. in the early
1880's.
Everybody took it for granted that the Peavine
Railroad would come through town but the survey missed
Pilot Grove by a mile or more south and a railroad
station was built at the point nearest town.
This was a mortal thrust for Pilot Grove and almost at
once you could hear it gasping for breath as it
prepared to expire, but its citizens refused to give
up. Instead they moved down to the railroad around the
new station, tearing down buildings and taking the
lumber with them to erect the buildings there.
Businesses went with them and so did the name of the
town, Pilot Grove.
This caused a wild furry of confusion for the folks
who didn't move to the new town insisted they lived in
Pilot Grove and the people who did move were just as
insistent that they did as well.
Out of this came the names of Old Pilot Grove and New
Pilot Grove. This lasted for a time and finally
everybody moved to new Pilot Grove, and the other
became a ghost town. But it still had signs of life
for some time the dances were held in the hall of the
school building until at last all the buildings were
gone or were razed for lumber.
The only thing that remains is the cemetery that is
wedged between several of the Holtkamp family farms
north of New Pilot Grove.
Surnames from the
area circa 1838 - 1850:
ADDINGTON, ASHMEAD, BAILEY, BEARD, BEESON, BELL,
BENEDICT, BERRY, BINFORD, BOND, BREACH, BROWN,
BURNETT, CLARK, CLAWSON, COFFIN, COOK, DAY, DENNY,
DILTS, DOWELL, EMMERSON, ENOS, FERGUSON, FISHER,
GARDNER, GOODELL, GREGG, GRIFFIN, GRIFFIN, HAMPTON,
HARVEY, HASKINS, HIATT, HICKS, HOBSON, HOLTKAMP,
JACKMAN, JESSUP, JOHNSON, JONES, KELLUM, KEMPKER,
LEWELLING, MAYO, MCMILLAN, MOON, NEWBY, NICHOLSON,
OVERMAN, OVERTON, PARKINS, PHELPS, PICKARD, PITMAN,
POSTLEWAITE, PRESNALL, PRICE, RATCLIFF, RATLIFF,
ROBERTS, SEAMAN, STEWART,
THORNBURG, TRUEBLOOD, TURNER, WHEELER . . . and many
more.
Originally transcribed by Julia Holtkamp for the
West Point Public Library.
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