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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Cedar County, Iowa
I have no books which are
specifically for this County, but most counties are included in the Iowa
statewide books
Click here for a brief
history of Cedar County
Periodicals
Annals of Iowa:
- John Brown Among the Pedee Quakers (April through October 1866)
(This series of articles is online)
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
- Quaker Boy (July 1962)
- The Scattergood Seminary (July 1962)
- Herbert Hoover (August 1962)
- A Place of End of Innocence (May/June 1979)
- f Peace in a World of War: The Scattergood Refugee Hostel,
1939-1943 (March/April 1984)
- A Simple Little Building (Summer 1987)
- Core Sample of Iowa History: The Mather-Bush Collection (Winter
1987)
- Iowa Pioneers Find a Lost Child: A Dan De Quille Memoir (Fall
1988)
- A Christmas Story: Under the Ice (Winter 1988)
- De Quille Sells a Christmas Story (Winter 1988)
- The Providers: The Iowa Environment (January/February 1982)
- The Providers: A Time for Preparation (January/February 1982)
- The Providers: The Depression and After (January/February 1982)
- The Providers: Four Men from Iowa (January/February 1982)
Annals of Iowa History:
- Chapter from the history of Cedar County (April 1869) TEXT Only
CEDAR COUNTY
was established from territory embraced in the original county of
Dubuque and lies in the second tier west of the Mississippi River and in
the fifth north of the Missouri boundary line. It contains sixteen
townships, making an area of five hundred and seventy-six square miles,
and was named for the Cedar River which flows through the county in a
southeasterly direction.
The first white man known to have traveled
through this county was Colonel George Davenport who, in 1831,
established a trading post on the west side of the Cedar River just
above the mouth of Rock Creek. Poweshiek, a chief of the Fox Indians,
had a village in that vicinity where he made his headquarters and here
Colonel Davenport, through his agents, carried on a profitable trade
with the Fox Indians. The first claims made in the county were taken by
Colonel Davenport, Antoine LeClaire, Major William Gordon and Alexander
McGregor. These men went about twenty-five miles west of Davenport to a
fine body of timber which was afterward named "Posten's Grove"
and staked out claims embracing all of the timber land. From there they
passed on to Onion Grove and took possession of that timber land by the
same process, all for purposes of speculation. Neglecting to comply with
the claim laws, however, by making actual settlement, they were unable
to hold these valuable lands. A few months later David W. Walton of
Indiana made a claim on Sugar Creek, a name he gave to the stream owing
to the sugar maples growing along its banks. He built a cabin and early
the following spring moved his family to the new home. They were
probably the first permanent settlers in the county. In May, 1836, Enos
Nye of Ohio took a claim on the bank of Cedar River four miles west of
Walton's. In June, 1836, Andrew Crawford and Robert G. Roberts made
claims in the central part of the county. In July of the same year James
Posten made a claim in the eastern part of the county in the grove which
bears his name. George McCoy and Stephen Toney settled on the east bank
of the Cedar River n 1836 where McCoy established a ferry. In August
McCoy and Toney laid out a town which they named Rochester, for the city
of that name in New York. Benjamin Nye opened the first store and built
a mill near the mouth of Rock Creek. Rev. Martin Baker, a Christian
minister, was the pioneer preacher in the county, beginning services in
1836. Moses B. Church taught the first school in 1837 at the house of
Colonel Henry Hardman.
In 1837 Rochester was made the county-seat and
there the first election was held in March, 1838, at which the following
officers were elected: Christian Holderman, treasurer; Robert G.
Roberts, register, and Richard Ransford, J. M. Oaks and Joseph Wilford,
commissioners. The first court was held in May, 1838, at Rochester,
Judge David Irwin presiding. In 1839 commissioners were chosen by the
Legislature to select a location for permanent county-seat. The site was
located near the geographical center of the county and named Tipton for
General John Tipton, United States Senator from Indiana. A town was
platted in 1840 by John G. Tolman, the county surveyor, on a claim made
in 1836 by William M. Knott, and the first sale of lots took place on
the 15th of June. A fierce contest was waged for several years between
Rochester and Tipton for the county-seat which was finally settled by a
vote of the people in 1852 in favor of Tipton.
On the 6th of April, 1850, the first newspaper
was established in Tipton named the Tipton Times and Cedar County
Conservative which was succeeded in 1853 by the Cedar County
Advertiser. In 1855 the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad was built
from Davenport through the southern part of the county. Previous to 1853
the county had voted aid to the Lyons and Iowa Central Railroad Company
which proposed to build from Lyons by way of Tipton to Iowa City. This
company caused grading to be done near Tipton and secured bonds of the
county for $20,000 to aid the work but never built the road.
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 #

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" |