History of Osceola County

by D. A. W. Perkins 1892

Chapter XXIII

To start on there were only three townships. The congressional township running east and west across the county, numbered 100, was called Horton Township; the same running east and west across the county, numbered 98, was called Holman Township, and the same numbered 98 called Goewey Township. These remained in that way until October 7, 1872, when the board divided Horton Township into three townships, making section 100, range 42, Fenton, section 100, range 41, Wilson and section 100, range 40 and section 100, range 39, Horton. Afterwards, by a demand of the people in that township, Fenton was changed to Viola. Fairview was set off September 7, 1874. Holman Township remained as established until at the September 27, 1873, meeting the board made two townships out of the four, making the east, being section 99, range 39, and section 99, range 40, one township, and giving the name Ocheyedan. These townships, remaining the same as Holman, comprise two congressional townships, and Ocheyedan two, which for convenience sake are called East and West Ocheyedan. At the January 1, 1884 meeting, Gilman Township was set off by itself. June 7, 1875,the board passed a resolution that township 98, range 40, be set off and called Baker, except sections 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, and sections 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 28, 19, and 30, in township 98, range 39. Harrison was set off September 3, 1888, and that fall had its first election.

EDUCATIONAL

If there is any one thing that is distinctly American, it is our educational system, which offers to each rising generation the grandest facilities for scholarship that can be found in the world.

The American boy knows no barrier to distinction in the line of education save in himself. Iowa is not behind any other state in the Union in its legislative provisions concerning schools, and Osceola County, as a part of the great state, is ever active in the organization of its school districts and their effective management.

If any boy or girl lives in Osceola County during their school days, and grows to manhood or womanhood here without a good common school education, the fault must be charged to the parent or the child and not to lack of opportunity.

Immediately upon the formation of the civil townships, as made by the Woodbury County Board, the same townships by operation of law became school districts, and the school townships now are the same in size and name as the civil townships.

F.W. Hahn is the present County Superintendent of Schools, and his official management in that department is efficient and highly satisfactory.

There are at present in the county eighty-one school houses, as follows:

3

Fairview

6

Horton

6

Wilson

6

Viola

12

Ocheyedan

7

Harrison

7

Baker

7

Goewey

8

Gilman

15

Holman

2

Sibley, town

1

Ocheyedan, town

1

Ashton, town

The value of Osceola County school houses is estimated at $44,000; the value of school house apparatus at $2,000.

The present school officers are as follows:

FAIRVIEW

J.C.Ward

President

M.B.Smith

Secretary

Wm.Mowthorpe

Treasurer

Geo.Hamilton, B.F.Webster

Directors

HORTON

Dick Wassmann

President

John Robertson

Secretary

N.W. Emery

Treasurer

I.B. Titus, August Bremer

Directors

WILSON

W.A.Cloud

President

A.B.Evarts

Secretary

Will Thomas

Treasurer

W.C.Connor, Mons.Soren, C.E.Yates, F.A.Klampe, Joseph Zweck

Directors

VIOLA

Joseph Raine

President

George Downend

Secretary

J.P.Wallran

Treasurer

S. Newman, Pat Piesley

Directors

HOLMAN

W.L. Taylor

President

M. Harvey

Secretary

P.A.Cajacob

Treasurer

T. Ling, John Gallagher, Thomas Reycraft,D.W.Whitney,John Karpen, James Hunter, O.C.Staplin, John Schroeder, Will Morse, J.B. Jenny, John Wagner, John Melcher

Directors

OCHEYEDAN

W.E. Ely

President

E.N. Moore

Secretary

L.B. Boyd

Treasurer

G.W.Thomas, Joseph Smith

Directors

HARRISON

J.W.Wardrip

President

T.Hemming

Secretary

F.H.Newkirk

Treasurer

George Krukenberg, Daniel Tzards

Directors

BAKER

Hans Graves

President

C.W. Bryan

Secretary

W.H. Lean

Treasurer

J.L. McAnnich, Fred Kuester

Directors

GOEWEY

H.C. Allen

President

Henry Huffman

Secretary

Alex Gilkinson

Treasurer

O.B.Harding, A. Brunson, Charles Bangert, Jacob Brandt, George Spaulding, Eugene Girton

Directors

GILMAN

B.T. Pettingell

President

J.C. Wilmarth

Secretary

W.C. Craig

Treasurer

A.Schent, R. Lensen, H.H.Nolte, R.J. Stemm, E.Beckwith, Nels Porter

Directors

INDEPENDENT DISTRICT OF ASHTON

H. Neill

President

W.P.Webster

Secretary

Levi Shell

Treasurer

A. Romey, M.J. Campbell, J.B. Lent, Geo. Learned, W.H. Chambers

Directors

INDEPENDENT DISTRICT OF ASHTON

I.B. Lucas

President

J.W.Reagan

Secretary

W.L.Benjamin

Treasurer

N. Boor, H.S.Grant

Directors

 

The school sections, so-called, are numbered sixteen in each township, which were donated by the general government, to the State, for the benefit of the schools. These sections are sold, and the proceeds constitute a fund which remains and not disposed of, but it is loaned out upon good real estate security, and the income from it byway of interest, is distributed over the State to each township according to its number of scholars. Osceola County has now of this fund, and as proceeds from the sale of land in this county, about $100,000. The first sale made of school lands in Osceola, was in July, 1881, and the first quarter sold was bought by Close Bros. In Gilman Township. These school lands have all been disposed of except one quarter, and this will go to sale soon.

There are in Osceola County at the present time, about twenty-one hundred persons of school age, and the best of teachers are secured, so that our schools are of a high order and the means of much advancement. Several school buildings have been erected this present season. Prof. Trainer, mentioned elsewhere, did much for Osceola County in the line of education. He constantly contributed to the public press articles intended to stimulate the young in the line of their studies. The following is one of his contributions:

"A PLEA FOR THE CHILDREN"

"Children hunger perpetually for new ideas. They will learn with pleasure from the lips of others what they deem drudgery to study in books; and even if they have the misfortune to be deprived of many educational advantages, they grow up intelligent people.

"We sometimes see people who are the life of every company which they enter, dull, silent and uninteresting among children; such cannot teach. The teacher must be the life of the school. How can we expect life and energy to come from dry, cold, silent books! The use of books is a detriment rather than an aid to the younger pupils. When the pupil enters school at the age of five years he already has learned more than any teacher on earth can teach him in a long life time. Teachers, did you ever think that the child at that age has learned two of the most difficult things mortals have to learn-walking and talking? How many works in philosophy has he heard to be able to make known his thoughts by talking. We know that these and a thousand other attainments have been reached by doing for himself. Yet without a knowledge of these things, from the first hour the child enters school many teachers attempt to change the whole course of nature by forcing upon him that which is as foreign to his nature as day is from night. What we need is the teacher who will give the children a chance to observe, experiment and to think for themselves, and let us remember that language is the instrument of thought, and that without language there can be no thought."



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