History of Lincoln Township, 1907
In traveling over Pottawattamie county
one naturally wonders why the great railroad lines
crossing the state from east to west have avoided
the best tier of counties in the whole state. This
applies more particularly to the western part, where
in going from Madison, Adair, Cass or eastern Pottawattamie
county to Council Bluffs or Omaha, a person must pass
through Shelby or Mills. However, Pottawattamie has
managed to survive and grow in wealth and population
and a person now passing where the roads were mere
trails, following the divides over miles of treeless
prairies and now finds excellent roads running on
section lines and each farm with an artificial grove,
he feels impressed with the amount of progress that
one generation has made, and although Lincoln, like
several of her sister townships, has no railroad or
town of her own, it is but a short drive to one in
any direction. In fact a person can't get ten miles
from a railroad in Pottawattamie county. Farming,
including stock raising and fruit growing, must always
be the business of the people and as such, prosperity
is certain to follow the active and prudent worker.
The present township officers are as follows: Trustees,
Jacob Carbuhn, Carl Rothwisch and Geo. Hardenburg;
clerk, M.E. Reimer; justices of the peace, Thos. Peterson
and John Goetsch; assessor, H.P. Jacobson. No one
qualified as constable. George Eichhorn, A.E. Young,
B. Geiss and Fred Swengle are among its prominent
citizens. According to state census of 1904, there
were two hundred and thirty eight persons of school
age of which one hundred and twenty were males and
one hundred and eighteen were females. The first election
in Lincoln was on the same day of the general election
in November, 1876. W.A. Clapp was chosen township
clerk, H.B. Jack, Samuel I. Pope and Andrew McCormick,
trustees and Joseph Battersley, justice of the peace.
This is a full congressional township of most excellent
land, but destitute of native timber except along
the streams. Among the first settlers were: Wm. H.
Painter, Patrick Howard, H.B. Jack, W.A. Clapp, Samuel
E. Pope, John A. Frank, Elias Yeoman, Christ Dramyer,
John A. Chipman, Wm. Linkletter, Geo. Woods, Charles
Mamfer, Geo. Roberts, and R.M. Allen. By the year
1882 great progress had been made. In the year 1872
when Mr. Painter came there were neither church, schoolhouse
or store, nor bridge but so active were the people
that by 1882 there were nine schoolhouses of uniform
dimensions and costing $800 each. There were also
six bridges, built at cost of the county and costing
from $1,600 to $1,700 each. Three of these were over
Big Walnut creek, two over Little Walnut and over
Graybill creeks.
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