History of Osceola County

by D. A. W. Perkins 1892

Chapter VII

The western part of the County was settled first, owing to the prospective incoming railroad. Goewey Township and Gilman were as early settled as any, and, indeed, the very first settler took his claim in Gilman.

In 1871 there was living in O'Brien County, where Primghar now is, Mr. Charles F. Allbright. His home was a small one, we should judge 14x20, one story, with small addition. This house was the general stopping place, not only for people from the north part of O'Brien County, but also Southern Osceola. It will be understood that at this time there was no railroad, and freight was hauled mostly from Cherokee, and the Allbright house was about the only one on the road in O'Brien County in making trips to and from Cherokee.

Mr. A.H. Lyman made the first track across the County from Allbright's to Goewey Township, and Mr. Lyman came into Osceola County in March 1871. He came from Grant County, Wisconsin, and first settled upon and done his filing on the northeast quarter of Section 26, Township 98, Range 41, now Goewey Township. He put up a residence with a shingled roof, but the walls of which were built of sod. He broke about thirty acres that season; put in beans, potatoes, turnips and melons, and of these had quite a crop. His family came in October 1871. Mr. Lyman's house then became the stopping place for that part of the country, and it was often crowded with people, sometimes the whole floor covered with lodgers, and, if not cold, some outside.

On this same section, in 1871, Douglas E. Ball and B.F. Mundorf took claims, and Adam Batie took his claim on the same section in the spring of 1872. Mr. Lyman still lives in Goewey Township. His reputation is that of an honest and hard working man, but Lyman is considered quite a talker. He is a man of ideas and likes to express them. Several were at Lymans' one day and a fellow by the name of Patch bet $1 with Lyman that he couldn't keep from speaking for one hour. The money was deposited with the stakeholder, and the hour of silence commenced. In the course of half an hour some fellow came to the house to make some inquiries, and the rest of them kept in the house to see Lyman wrestle with the stranger. His motions were the most awkward, for he couldn't answer the questions as his dollar was at stake, and finally the stranger left with the idea that Lyman had gone crazy.

The fore part of the summer of 1871 was a very dry one. There was not a drop of rain from the middle of March until the 16th day of June, and during that time of dryness several got out of the County, as they have got out of Dakota, for the reason, as they said, the County was too dry ever to raise crops.

In April 1872 Walter Fisher and Reed Patch started west from Spencer to Lyman's place. They knew the quarter that Lyman was on, so took the bearings and navigated as the sailors do, by compass. They made it all right and reached the Lyman place safely. These three then went to Sibley with a sleigh. The ground was soft, however, and the creeks had some water in. While crossing the Otter the horses suddenly went down in the soft, watery snow, and went so suddenly it pitched Lyman out, who went in up to his neck. Lyman was got out and over the river, and Fisher, by careful work, got himself across, and the horses were unhitched and they safely landed. Patch determined to stick to the sleigh and not get wet, the other fellows he thought could look out for themselves. After the horses were got over, the boys hitched a rope to the end of the tongue of the sleigh to pull that out, and Patch was sort of crowing over his safe and dry-shod transportation. The horses started and the first jerk of the sleigh landed Patch into the creek and up to his neck. The boys got him out, but he was not only a sorry looking object, but had the appearance of a man disgustingly disappointed. Lyman thought honors were easy, and they soon got where their condition was made dry and comfortable.

In June 1871 J. B. Lent, who was Treasurer of Osceola County, preceding Mr. Townsend, arrived at the Lyman place. Mr. Lent also came from Grant County, Wisconsin and had started with some others for Nebraska. The others who started with him with teams kept on to Cherokee, while Lent diverted his course to go to Lyman's for the purpose of leaving some stock there for Lyman, they having lived in the same neighborhood in their Wisconsin home. The reason that the 16th of June arrival is so well remembered is that on that day the dry spell was broken, and Lyman and Lent gazed upon the falling water with supreme satisfaction and delight. Lent, after leaving the stock at Lyman's, went to Cherokee and told the rest of his party he was so delighted with Osceola County that he would settle there and go no further; they went on, except Louis Folsom and Lent, and these returned to Lyman's place. The first night they slept out under the wagon cover set on the ground and during the night the wind blew that over, when they went into the house. Lent and Folsom soon did their settlement and filing, Lent on southwest quarter of Section 24, Township 98, Range 41, and Folsom on south half of southeast quarter of Section 24, Township 98, Range 41.

The great thing to be feared then on an open prairie was a blizzard. The early settlers encountered several of them. In December 1871, Dr. Hall, then living in Goewey Township, and his son, Arthur, a boy, started to the creek for some willows for fuel. While they were gone a terrible blizzard came up and they were caught in it. They made their way toward home the best they could, but the blinding snow and extreme cold made it slow progress, and the oxen, too, were hard to get along. Soon the boy discovered that the father was missing and could not be found anywhere. Of course no search could be made, for the boy was struggling to take care of himself, but all at once Mr. Hall himself had disappeared, either strayed away from the boy or fallen in sheer exhaustion unable to go further. The boy went west for awhile, then turned and went east again, and after traveling a few miles the oxen gave out; the boy then hollered as loud as he could, and as luck would have it he was near enough to the house of F. O. Messenger so that Messenger heard him and went in the direction from where the sound came until he reached the boy. The boy's hands and feet were frozen, but Messenger got him to the house and after a while the boy got around all right again. The oxen were also rescued. Dr. Hall himself perished in that December blizzard, and was not found until the spring of 1872, and was then found by Mr. Messenger's dog bringing to the house the bone from a human body, which was noticed, and Mrs. Messenger then directed the dog back and followed him to Dr. Hall's remains, which were but his bones. The boy, Arthur Hall, grown to manhood, now lives in Washington State. The blizzard in February 1872, the same in which Nagg perished, was also a fearful one. The first day of that blizzard, Lyman, with others, went to Sibley to buy goods at Rogers' store. The blizzard commenced while they were in town, and they hurried up their purchases in order to return, and were soon on their way back again. It was a foolish start, but still they got through and no lives were lost. There were Lyman, B.F. Mundorf, Lon Sanfrisco, Eve Adler and A. Carpenter. When they got to the house of A. Romey, Mundorf and Lyman had about eight miles further to go, and Mundorf insisted on going and was bound to go. All the others objected to any such thing, and Mr. Romey declared that not one of them should leave his house. Mundorf, however, had made up his mind to go and go he would, and as there was no other alternative, Lyman, knowing that Mundorf would surely get lost, started with him. Nothing saved them but the team of horses Mr. Lyman was driving. They who are accustomed to the road know the great difference between horses in knowing the direction to go, and Mr. Lyman's team was of that kind which could find their way home in the darkest night or in any storm in which they could travel. This was the reason Lyman went with Mundorf, and Lyman made no attempt to guide his team, but let them take their own way, and they landed these storm-driven settlers safely home.

At this time there was considerable of an attempt, and some of it successful, to hold claims in fictitious names and cover them up, so called. It was done by filing applications in the land office at Sioux City, and the filer signing some name which would make it appear of record that the claim was taken. It took an incoming stranger a little time, using a western expression, "to catch on to the racket," but he soon did, and there was no much after all made in that kind of speculation. Soon after Lent and Folsom got here, and they, with Lyman and some others, were taking it easy sitting on the prairie grass at Lent's claim, a stranger, who gave his name as Freman, drove up and informed these gentlemen that they were trespassers on other people's claims; that he had done the filing for them, and they were now on the road to settle. Lent cross-questioned the fellow a little, Lyman gathered himself together for a controversy, and when the stranger had told all he knew about it and the boys had sized the thing up so that a conclusion was reached, Mr. Freman was told in a most emphatic manner, and in language that was not doubtful of construction, that if he was seen in that part of the country in just sixty minutes after that interview, they would hang him; and Lyman went to hunting a rope and to get the well ready to drop him in, when he started, to use Lyman's expression, as though the devil was after him, and was never seen afterwards.

Mr. A. Romey, who is now a merchant in Sibley, came to Osceola County in April 1871. He drove through from Fayette County, Iowa, and William Barkhuff started and drove through with him; also, Mr. A. Carpenter. On the road, Mr. J. F. Jones, Joshua Stevens and Waldo joined them; also W. H. Lean. Mr. Stephens and Mr. Waldo have since died. Mr. Jones and Mr. Carpenter are still residents of the county. Mr. Romey filed on the northwest quarter of Section 4, Goewey Township. He put up a sod house, with shingled roof, and hauled his lumber from Sioux City. He broke about fifteen acres in 1871, but put in no crop.



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