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"Past
2 Present"

Buchanan County, Iowa
Books
-
History of Buchanan County, Iowa : with
illustrations and biographical sketches. / Cleveland, Ohio: Williams
Bros., 1881, 544 pgs. (Surname
list and Table of Contents)
-
Chappell, Harry Church,. History of Buchanan
County, Iowa, and its people / Chicago: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co.,
1914, 1293 pgs. (Surname
list and Table of Contents)
Most counties are included in
the Iowa statewide books
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
- January 1977
- Bible - OZIAS / BRIGHT
- Deaths, 1887-1895
- Early Residents
- Early Settlers
- History of Buchanan County
- Marriages, 1848-1858
- Marriages, 1858-1862
- Pine Creek Cemetery
- April 1977
- Abandoned Cemetery
- Bible - BRIGHT
- Bible - Park WALKER
- Bible - PURDY
- Bible - W. B. SMALL
- Buchanan Co. Families settle Millerboro, Nebraska
- Deaths, 1896-1904
- Kint Cemetery
- Marriages, 1863-1869
- Some Early Buchanan Co. Doctors
- The Cemeteries in Buchanan County
Palimpsest:
- The Lexington of the North (October 1965)
- End of Innocence (May/June 1979)
BUCHANAN COUNTY
is in the third tier west of the Mississippi River and in the third
south of the Minnesota line; embraces an area of five hundred and
seventy-six square miles and is divided into twenty congressional
townships. It was established in December, 1837, and at that time
contained all of that portion of the original county of Dubuque lying
directly west from Delaware to the Missouri River. The county was named
for James Buchanan, afterwards President of the United States. The name
was suggested by S. P. Stoughton a prominent Democrat of the new county.
In 1843 the territory was reduced to its present limits.
The first white
man known to have settled in the county was William Bennett who with his
family came from Delaware County in February, 1842, took a claim and
built a log cabin on the east bank of the Wapsipinicon River where
Quasqueton was afterwards laid out. Soon after S. G. and S. H. Sanford
and Ezra Allen took claims in the same vicinity. Early in the spring Dr.
Edward Brewer, R. B. Clark and Frederick Kessler joined the first
settlers. In 1845 a post-office was established named Quasqueton with
William Richards as postmaster. The town was laid out by D. S. Davis in
1847, the name being of Indian origin and signifying "rapid
water." In 1847 the commissioners selected to locate a county-seat,
chose the site where Independence stands. Rufus B. Clark was the first
to call attention to this spot as a beautiful location for a town and ,
associating himself with N. A. McClure and S. P. Stoughton, entered a
quarter section of land embracing the water power and a portion of the
ground upon which Independence was built. In March, 1847, Mr. Clark
built a log cabin on the land thus entered which was the first house in
Independence. A dam was built across the river, a sawmill erected, a
store opened and a post-office secured by the proprietors of the new
town during the year 1848. Mr. Clark kept a hotel in his two-room log
cabin while Mr. Stoughton opened a store and kept the post-office in his
cabin. Edward Brewster practiced medicine and kept a school in his
house.
The county was
organized in 1848 by the election of the following officers: Elijah
Beardsley, judge; E. D. Phelps, sheriff; S. P. Stoughton, clerk; and
Elijah Beardsley, prosecuting attorney. The first term of the District
Court was held in April, 1849, by James Grant, judge of the Third
District. In May, 1855, B. F. Parker and James Hillery issued the first
number of a newspaper named the Independence Civilian. In
December, 1856, Jacob Rich and Mr. Jordon began the publication of the Quasqueton
Guardian in the rival town. The first railroad built into the county
was the Dubuque and Sioux City, which reached Independence in December,
1859.
During the session
of the Legislature of 1868, Senator William G. Donnan secured the
passage of an act providing for the location and building of an
additional Hospital for the Insane at Independence.
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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Aurora |
populated place |
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Brandon |
populated place |
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Bryantsburg |
populated place |
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Doris |
populated place |
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Fairbank |
populated place |
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Gatesville |
populated place |
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Hamerville |
populated place |
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Hazleton |
populated place |
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Independence |
populated place |
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Jesup |
populated place |
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Lamont |
populated place |
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Littleton |
populated place |
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Monti |
populated place |
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Otterville |
populated place |
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Quasqueton |
populated place |
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Rowley |
populated place |
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Shady Grove |
populated place |
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Stanley |
populated place |
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Vista |
populated place |
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Winthrop |
populated place |
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Wise |
populated place |
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Amish Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Byron Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Campton Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Cedar Crest Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Circle Grove Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Fairview Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Floral Hills Memorial Gardens Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Fontana Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Fremont Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Hazleton Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Jefferson Township Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Kint Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Madison Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Mount Hope Cemetery |
cemetery |
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North Amish Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Oakwood Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Otterville Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Payne Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Saint Athanasius Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Saint Johns Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Saint Marys Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Saint Michaels Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Saint Patricks Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Saint Patricks Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Spangler Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Stanley Cemetery |
cemetery |
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State Hospital Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Union Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Upper Spring Grove Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Wilson Cemetery |
cemetery |
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Bible Church |
church |
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Hoover Church |
church |
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Kingdom Hall |
church |
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Pine Creek Mission Church |
church |
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Castleville (historical) |
locale |
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Middlefield (historical) |
locale |
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Buffalo Grove Post Office (historical) |
post office |
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Castleville Post Office (historical) |
post office |
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Wards Corners Post Office (historical) |
post office |
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Buffalo, Township of |
township |
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Byron, Township of |
township |
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Cono, Township of |
township |
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Fairbank, Township of |
township |
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Fremont, Township of |
township |
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Hazleton, Township of |
township |
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Homer, Township of |
township |
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Jefferson, Township of |
township |
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Liberty, Township of |
township |
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Madison, Township of |
township |
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Middlefield, Township of |
township |
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Newton, Township of |
township |
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Perry, Township of |
township |
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Sumner, Township of |
township |
|
Washington, Township of |
township |
|
Westburg, 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" |