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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Boone County, Iowa
Books
-
A Biographical record of Boone County, Iowa / New
York: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1902, 655 pgs. (Surname
list and Table of Contents)
Most counties are included in
the Iowa statewide books
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
-
A Year of Struggle: Excerpts from a Farmer's
Diary, 1936 (January/February 1976)
-
Interior Life: An Iowa Farmhouse in the
Late-1800s (March/April 1979)
-
The Boonesboro Connection: Richard A. Ballinger
and Ray Lyman Wilbur (January/February 1985)
-
Iowa Innovations: The Army Helps the Farmer
(July/August 1981)
BOONE COUNTY is
near the geographical center of the State, lying in the fifth tier from
its north line, in the eighth west of the Mississippi River and
containing sixteen congressional townships with an area of five hundred
seventy-six square miles. It was created by act of the Legislature in
January, 1846, and named for Captain Nathan Boone who, in 1832,
commanded a company of Rangers in an expedition which explored the Des
Moines and Boone River valleys. Lysander W. Babbitt, a young man with
the expedition, was so fascinated with the beauty of this region, that
in the spring so 1842 he, with two companions, went into the Boone
valley where they spent several months hunting and exploring. They
traveled nearly to the headwaters of the Boone, then crossed to the Des
Moines and camped where Moingona stands. There they found the ruins of
an Indian village, near which they made claims. They were at one time
robbed of their furs by a band of Sioux Indians and finding it dangerous
to remain so far from white settlements, surrounded by roving bands of
Sioux, early in the winter of 1844 prudently abandoned their claims and
returned to a settled country. They were the first white men to select
homes in Boone County. In 1846 another member of Captain Boone's
company, Charles G. Gaston, with his family ascended the Des Moines
valley as far as Elk Rapids where he made a claim and built a log cabin.
Soon after John Pea, James Hull, J. M. Crooks and others built cabins in
that vicinity along a creek three miles north of Boonsboro. Benjamin
Williams the same year took a claim near where Madrid stands.
The county was
organized in 1849 and attached to Polk. In 1851 commissioners were
appointed to locate the county-seat and, as there was no town yet laid
out, they drove a stake in the ground near where the first courthouse
was afterward built and there established the county-seat. A town was
laid out and, upon the suggestion of S. B. McCall, named Boonsboro and a
public sale of lots was made in October, 1851. Samuel B. McCall was the
sheriff selected to organize the county, an at the first election John
M. Wayne was chosen clerk; John M. Crooks, treasurer; S. H. Bowers,
sheriff, and W. C. Hull, prosecuting attorney. The first term of court
was held in Boonsboro in October, 1851, at which Judge William McKay
presided. The first building in the town was a two story log house
erected by W. C. Hull on the east side of the public square.
In 1865 the Cedar
Rapids and Missouri River Railroad was extended in the county to the new
town of Montana which had been laid out by John I. Blair and other
builders of the railroad. This town was a mile east of Boonsboro and the
citizens of the county-seat were required to pay a large bonus to secure
the road. Feeling sure of the road, they declined to pay the amount
demanded and the construction company turned the road toward the
southwest following the valley of Honey Creek, leaving Boonsboro a mile
or more from the line. Then began a life and death struggle between the
proprietors of Montana and the citizens of Boonsboro for supremacy which
lasted for many years. Buildings were erected in each town but in the
end the citizens of Boonsboro began to move to Montana, its name was
changed to Boone and the old county-seat became a suburb of the new city
which had absorbed its business and much of its population. The first
newspaper was established by Capron and Sanders in July, 1856, at
Boonsboro and named the Boone County News. Its editor,
Luther C. Sanders, was one of the sharpest paragraphists in the State
among the pioneer editors.
The Des Moines
River flows through the county from north to south, with a heavy body of
excellent timber growing along its banks, under which are found
extensive deposits of coal. The soil of the entire county is of
unsurpassed fertility.
Source: History of Iowa: From the Earliest Times to
the Beginning of the Twentieth Century by Benjamin F. Gue. New York:
The Century History Co. 1903 #
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Angus |
populated place |
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Beaver |
populated place |
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Berkley |
populated place |
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Boone |
populated place |
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Boxholm |
populated place |
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Centerville |
populated place |
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Coal Valley |
populated place |
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Ericson |
populated place |
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Fraser |
populated place |
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Griffen |
populated place |
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Jordan |
populated place |
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Logansport |
populated place |
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Luther |
populated place |
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Mackey |
populated place |
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Madrid |
populated place |
|
Moingona |
populated place |
|
Napier |
populated place |
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Ogden |
populated place |
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Pilot Mound |
populated place |
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Ridgeport |
populated place |
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Wolf |
populated place |
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Bass Point Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Beaver Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Bethel Owen Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Biblical College Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Bluff Creek Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Boone Memorial Garden |
cemetery |
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Cassel Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Dalander Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Fairview Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Glenwood Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Grand Ridge Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Hickory Grove Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Hillsdale Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Hull Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Lawn Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Leatham Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Leininger Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Liberty Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Linwood Park Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Maas Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Maple Grove Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Mineral Ridge Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Mitchell Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Moore Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Mount Hope Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Oakwood Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Olive Branch Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Peoples Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Peoples Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Pleasant Hill Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Quincy Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Renner Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Rose Hill Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Sacred Heart Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Saints Peter And Paul Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Sparks Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Squire Boone Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Union Cemetery |
cemetery |
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White Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Battin Chapel |
church |
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Beaver Creek Church |
church |
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Bethel Church |
church |
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Fairview Church |
church |
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Garden Prairie Church |
church |
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Prairie Center Church |
church |
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Saint Johns Church |
church |
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Saint Johns Church |
church |
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Saint Marys Church |
church |
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Swede Valley Church |
church |
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Marcy (historical) |
locale |
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Hull Post Office (historical) |
post office |
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Amaqua, Township of |
township |
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Beaver, Township of |
township |
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Cass, Township of |
township |
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Colfax, Township of |
township |
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Des Moines, Township of |
township |
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Dodge, Township of |
township |
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Douglas, Township of |
township |
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Garden, Township of |
township |
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Grant, Township of |
township |
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Harrison, Township of |
township |
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Jackson, Township of |
township |
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Marcy, Township of |
township |
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Peoples, Township of |
township |
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Pilot Mound, Township of |
township |
|
Union, Township of |
township |
|
Worth, Township of |
township |
|
Yell, Township of |
township |

The items on this page are not for sale, but are
available to me to research your family tree
Home -- Periodicals
-- Books -- Research
service -- Email
"Past 2 Present" |