Jasper Co. IAGenWeb

Jasper County, Iowa

Towns of Yesteryear

Contributed by Colette Miles

One of my greataunts was one of the authors, she gave a copy to my grandmother and my mother when it came out. This is just one of the ways that I can help others, like other people have helped me. So I hope that I have helped some people out there.

The Jasper County Yestertowns was Compiled - Edited - Published by The Jasper County Writers Inc. and copywrited in 1963. Colette Miles at Seosaimhin8@aol.com

Towns with Surnames


AMBOY

by author Opal M. Snyder

About three and one-half miles northeast of Newton, located in Kellogg Township, lies the little neighborhood of Amboy, first named Hammer's Grove in honor of its first settlers, Elisha Hammer and his sons, one daughter and a grandson.

Surnames:
HAMMER - Seth, Henry, Ira, Jesse, Aaron, Elisha, Polly Ann, Mahlon, Elisha-minister, Hannah
WHITE - Matilda
BALLAD - Jacob
GOTSHALL - David
MOORE - Ralph
HILL - Frank


CLYDE

by author Jean Gleaves Poage

Clyde, eighteen miles northwest of Newton, was the oldest trading center in that section of Jasper County, for twenty-five years or more, it grew and thrived, and hoped for a railroad to come and unite it with Green Castle, Newton, and the eastern markets, but like many other villages, the railroads bypassed the little hamlet.

Surnames:
BALDWIN
BERRY - Albert
BROWER - Jim
DODD - Blanche, Lee, Maude
EDDY - Phil
HALEY - Edd
HALL - Clara
HAMMOCK - a Preacher
HAYLEY - Edd
HELLER - V. M.
HIGBY - Frank
HOY - Billy, Maggie
KINTZ - Altie, Mary
LONG - Clarence, Jimmie, Lily, Pearl
MAUS - Edna, Pearl Cynthia
MAXWELL - Warren
MCGRAND -Danny
MILLER - doc
MILT - Anna
MITCHELL - Gertrude, Laura
MORRISON - Perry
MOWRY - Ross
NEAL - Jefferson, Lemuel
PERSHALL - doc, Vern
PRESTON - Elijah
STIER - Bill, John
SUMPTER - Benny
THOMPSON - David, Sadie
TRIPP - Robert
WEST - Joseph


DRAPER

by author Irene Allison Morton

Why go west to see a ghost town surrounded by abandoned mines? Jasper County has several of them. They may not hold the glamour of gold and silver, one could hardly call coal glamorous, but the net result is the same. The coal mines, like gold and silver, have collapsed and filled up with water. Nothing is left but wreckage.

Surnames:
BLOUNT - Sam
ERICKSON
GILL - Phil
JOHNSON
MORTON - Archie
SCHUYLER
SELYNDER - Gus


FAIRMOUNT

by author Irene Allison Morton

Here I lie still, a passing memory of a small, once flourishing town, close enough to the capitol sight which was once laid out for the state of Iowa, to almost a part of it. That was a dream which was soon abandoned however, because of the water shortage. I am alone and neglected, almost forgotten now. People pass on to more promising places.

Surnames:
BYERS - Colonel
CHURCHILL - Carl
HUMMEL - John
MCRUNNELLS - Sam
MEAD - John
MONTGOMERY - Osten, William
PORTER - Andrew Jackson
RHOADES - Chet
VOLK - George, Wayne


GALESBURG

by author Della Wade Peery

Many changes have taken place in Iowa since the first white settlers arrived. Most of these changes are the outcome of progress, a progress which could perhaps be described as a giant machine building towns, cities, highways, railroads and industries as it crouched the life out of the old frontier. Driving over Iowa's roads today, one can see rural schoolhouses with windows boarded up, abandoned railroads and coalmines and now and then a distant church spire towering above an obscure little village which has once been a booming frontier town.

According to Frank Kroh, son of Henry Kroh, many of these first settlers were buried in a n old cemetery about two miles southeast of Galesburg on the Galesburg-Pella road. Jacob Dearinger donated the land for this necessary spot. Just north of this cemetery the settlers built their first schoolhouse, a log cabin. A man named L. D. Earp settled on a farm east of this school. His nephew named Wyatt Earp, who was destined to become a famous marshall of the old West, stayed with him for a time during the Civil War and attended school in the log school house along with the children of early settlers. page 12

Why Galesburg was the fightingest town! Take them Earps, for example. They would fight at the drop of a hat. But boys had to be able and willing to take their own part. A farm boy always got into town to do his trading but he had to fight his way out. There was no gun slingin' though. Just fist fightin'. The old man smiled as he remembered bygone days when boys and young men had to prove themselves, not only by ability to withstand hardship, but also by the strength of sinewes muscles. Truly Galesburg was an old time frontier town, crushed by the mighty wheels of progress.

Surnames:
BRADLEY
BRAKE
BURTON - William
BUTIN
CORNELIUS - doctor
DEARINGER - Jacob
EARP - L.D., Wyatt
HART - doctor
JUDSON - Al
KROH - Frank, Henry
MCDUFF - Jake
MCNIGHT
MINOR - John
MORTON
MOSER
MUDGETT - John J.
PARISH - doctor
PAUL
PEERY
RAMER
RENFRO
SELLMAN - MR. BEAL
SELLMAN MRS.
SMITH
SNODGRASS
TOOL - James A.
WEAVER - James B.


GODDARD

by author Pearl Haley Patrick

All that remains of Goddard, Iowa, is the lower half of the Goddard store, a brick building now remodeled in stucco. Even Watt Lake is no more. Once the end of it was spanned by the "biggest bridge in Jasper County, with abutments of 110 feet." Once gay skaters made much use of it.

Surnames:
BEALS - Art
BROWNE - Hamilton
CAMPBELL
CORDRAYS - Harry
COUCH - Carl
GODDARD
HADSELL MRS.
HAMMERLY - Lawrence
HERBOLD - Lu, O.A., William Sr.,
HOLTZ - Beryl, W.E.
LENARTZ MRS.
LEONARD - James
PIERCE - Charlie
PINK - P.R.
PITTCOCKS
POAGE - R.A.
ROBERTSON - MRS. ROB
SELBHER - Harry
SLAUGHTER
WATT - Arthur, CHARLES
WHEELER - Mary
WHEELERS - O.A.
WRAY - Ona


GREENCASTLE

by Catherine Poage

One of the most ghostly of all the ghost towns in Jasper County is the obsolete town of Greencastle. Perhaps this is because it was one of the very first villages to be established in that part of the county which lies north of the Skunk River.

Surnames:
ANDERSON - MISS
BAKER - George
CARR - REV.
COZAD - W.F.
CROSS - MR.
DEVORE - MISS.
DURFEE - MRS.
DURFEE - REV.
FISCHER - Ben
FLEMING - E.M.H.
GARDNER - Archibald, DR., JOHN
HAWK - DR. W.W.
KING - REV.
KNOX - DR. J.H.
LAMPMAN - REV.
MARSH
MCLAREN - Robt.
MOSES - Joseph
MURRAY - REV.
PEASE - Hugh
PFEIFFER
POAGE - James R.
RUMBAUGH - Tess
SHAFFER - REV.
SHIPP - Albert
SLAUGHTER - Joseph
WINSLOW - H.S.
WITHMER - MRS. O.H.
WITMER - F. R.
WOOTEN - PASTOR


HORN

by author Jean Gleaves Poage

Malaka Township, almost exclusively prairie land, has had to rely on Newton and neighboring towns for railroad and other market accommodations. Malaka can not boas to a town -- not even a ghost town.

Surname:
BEATTY - Hon. John
BOHNE - William
BUTLER - Adam
CARY - John
EICHNER - MR.
EILERT - William
GOODHUE - David, Edward Payson
HARLAND - Henry
HARPER - J.W., W.J.
HARRIS
KEY - D.M.
KINYON - M.S.
KORF - Henry
KORTE
LOGAN - A.J.
MANSFIELD - Theophilus
PARSON - Hezekiah
PAYSON - Edward
PRESTON - C.
RANDALL - A.W.
SANFORD - MRS. N.
SKIFF - Harvey
TOEDT - August
WING - Jesse
WORMAN - Henry


MONROE CITY

by author Clarice McGriff Hoagland

Though it never materialized to become, in turn, a ghost town, the proposed Iowa capital at Monroe City seemed a very real and promising dream for a time.

Surname:
ENDERSHOT - Doctor


MURPHY

by author Opal M. Snyder

General James B. Weaver's history of Jasper County lists "Murphy" as a village. But this small section of land two miles southeast of the County Home, is more fondly remembered as the "Murphy Neighborhood" named after the owner of its only business enterprise, "Uncle John Murphy."

Surnames:
FLECK - Senator D.S.
FLECK
HIXON
MURPHY - Loren
MURPHY - Uncle John "Wildman"
RUSSELL - John William
SQUIRES - Bert
STARRETS
STARRETT - Charles
VERWERS - Edith MRS. HEDGES
WEAVER - GEN. JAMES B.
WILSON - Lola, MRS. MURPHY


OLD BAXTER

by author Jean Gleaves Poage

In the center of Independence Township one mile west of the Baxter Cemetery is a ghost town - Old Baxter. No one knows when the once thriving village began, but a few old timers remember the business houses, the school, and the dwellings. The countryside is rich in homespun lore.

Surnames:
ALLAN - Janet GALLOWAY
ALLAN
BOOTH - Jud
CAULFIELD
COOL - MRS. P. J.
CROSS - Samuel
DAVEY - Alf
DAVIDSON
DAWSON - Squire
DONALDSON
ELLIKER - Rev
ENGLES
GALLOWAY - Agnes
GALLOWAY - Arch
GLEAVES - Efffie WILLIAMSON
GULLETT - Margaret
HALL - Lucy
HIGGINS - Sid
HIGGINS - Sidney Baxter
HIGGINS
JEFFRIES - Salem esq.
JOHNSTON - Isobel
JOHNSTON - Robert
KLEIN - Henry
KLISE - J.F.
KRAMPE - Mary DEPPE
LAMPHIER - Colonel
MCKENZIE
MECKLEY - Lynn
MEIKELJOHN - Elizabeth
MEIKELJOHN - George
MEIKELJOHN - Janet
POAGE - Mrs. R. A.
ROSE - Seth
TERNEY - Jessie KLISE
VANDIKE - William
WILLIAMSON - Jimmie
WILLIAMSON - Margaret, Mrs.
WILLIAMSON
WILSON - Elisha
WILSON - Ola
WISEHAUER - Maude MCINTIRE
WRIGHT - Ed


OLD WITTEMBERG TOWN

by author John E. Soderblom

Wittemberg was first settled in 1853. It was located in Newton Township in the east half of section 3, township 80, range 19.

Surnames:
BEATTY - JOHN P.
CARY - MARY
CRAWFORD
FAILOR - ANDREW
HAMMER - JESSE
KING
LEWIS - JOEL
MCLAUGHLIN - JAMES
MCLEAN - ANNA
MCLEAN - ELIZABETH
MCLEAN - S. A.
MERRILL - ELIZABETH
MERRILL - REV. THOMAS
MERRILL - SARAH
POAGE - JAMES R.
POAGE - REV. GEORGE G.
SHERER - RICHARD
THORN - S.A.
VANATTA - THOMAS
WORK - JOHN A.

[Additional Note: It was platted in 1856 and the Wittemburg Manual Labor College was established there. ¹ ]

OSWALT

by author Olin C. Bissell

Oswalt, Iowa was named after Mr. Barney Oswalt, and was platted in 1889. It was located pproximately three miles north and west of Colfax, with portions in sections 32 and 33 in Powshiek Township, and sections 2 and 3 in Washington Township.

Surnames:
COUCH - D.S.
FRIEBERG - ELIAS
IRWIN - E.E.
JAMES - CHARLES
MELL - SAMUEL
OSWALT - BARNY


PALMYRA

by author Jean Gleaves Poage

During the '50s and '60s town sites sprang up like mushrooms. Ambitious landowners hoping to attract settlers would have a likely location plotted. Frequently the site never advanced beyond a paper town.

Surnames:
KEYS - E.H.
SOUTHERN - WILLIAM


PRAIRIE BELLE

by author Della Wade Peery

Prairie Belle, located in section 32 of Washington Township had a post office as late as 1903. It consisted of a few houses, one of which, presumably, was a stage coach stop.

Surnames:
GERTZS - JOHN
ROBERTS - WILEY


RUSHVILLE

by author Clarice McGriff Hoagland

Rushville, which was located in Kellogg Township, had its beginning as a stage coach stop. The platted town was laid out by Jesse and Jane Young on March 24, 1857 on the Northeast Quarter in Section 9, Township 80, Range 18.

Surnames:
ADAMS
CALLISON - MRS. LAURA
CALLISON
CARTER - G.W.
COLE - WILLIE P.
LEE
MORRISON
OWINGS
WHITCOMB
WHITCOMB
WILSON
YOUNG - JANE
YOUNG - JESSE


SEVERS

by authors Della Wade Peery and Irene Allison Morton

The story of Severs could easliy begin "Once upon a time." Just off highway number six, two miles east of Colfax, is the old Blanford school. Here a gravel road leads straight south.

Surnames:
ANSPACH, R. G.
ANSPACH, W. E.
CRAWFORD, CATHRINE
CRAWFORD, ELIZABETH
DAVIS, MATT
DECAMP, GUS
GUNN, HUGH
JAMES, ABRAM
JAMES, DAVID D.D.S.
JONES, JIM
MACY, ELVIN
MARTIN, DOCTOR
MAYTAG, FRED L.
PEARN, FRED
PRATT, JOHN Sr.
RYAN, J. B.
WEISSE, DOCTOR


ST. THOMAS

by author Della Wade Peery

The mining camp of St. Thomas was located northwest of Colfax in Powesheik Township. Although it was not a platted town, it can not be ignored, as it had a direct influence on the history, population and culture of the present town of Colfax.

Surnames:
BOOTH, D. C.
GREGG
HAGEDORN, WILLIAM
RYAN, JUDGE


TURNER

by author Jean Gleaves Poage

Turner, first called "Dixie" was platted April 19, 1899 in NE quarter, NW quarter of Section 34 in Rock Creek Township. Located along the Rock Island Railroad fourteen miles east of Newton, it came to be a busy trading post with a general merchandise store run by Lena Diehl, a creamery owned by E.B. Elliot, and Turner Coal and Lumber Company. There was also a tavern.

Surnames:
DIEHL, LENA
ELLIOT , E. B.
TURNER , O. J.


VALERIA

by author Olin C. Bissell

Valeria, Iowa, with its present population of seventy-six inhabitants, lies among the rolling hills, extending north and east of the South Skunk River, approximately one mile east of Poweshiek Township in Jasper County.

Surnames:
FIDDLER, J. Y.
GANNON
HENNIGHER, MRS.
HENNIGHER, MRS. MARY
JOHNSON, HESTER
JOHNSON, MRS. WILLIAM HENDERSON
JOHNSON, N. W.
JOHNSON, VALERIA
KEEVER, W. M.
LAWRENCE, MRS. MARIA
PATTERSON, REV.
POLING
RADLEY, J. A.
RYAN, C. J.
RYAN, DR. J. R.
STANLEY, J. C.
STIERS, H.
STOKE, H. E.
TURNER, DR. LOUIS
TURNER, DR. ALICE BELL
VERNOCOM, ELLA
WARRICK, CHARLES


VANDALIA

by Della Wade Peery

Come along with me to Vandalia in the southwest corner of Jasper County. We must take the trip by automobile since there are no longer hack lines between this town and Prairie City. Almost a hundred years ago we might have gone in the hack at a very reasonable fare.

Surnames:
ANDERSON F. J.
ANSON
BOSWELLS
BUFFINGTON JOSEPH W.
CASTLEMAN A.
CAVITTS
DEAKIN H. C.
DEAKIN JOHN Q.
DRAPER IRA E.
GOURHAME HENRY
HAYES L. T.
HAYES
MORRIS A. M.
MORRIS CHARLES
POTTER H. C.
PULVER D. F.
REESE GEORGE
ROSE JOSHUA
ROSE
SHEARER HENRY
SIMS BERT
STAFFORD T. J.
WILSON JOSIE E.
ZACHARY

¹ Abandoned Towns, Villages and Post Offices, by David C. Mott from the Annals of Iowa, Vol. XVIII, Nos. 6,7,8 and Vol. XVIII, Nos. 1,2,3, 1930-1932, pp. 541-543