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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Cherokee County, Iowa
Books
-
Cherokee County, Iowa / Des Moines, Iowa?:
unknown, 1940, 62 pgs.
-
Northwestern Iowa : its history and traditions,
1804-1926 : comprising the counties of Woodbury, Monona,
Plymouth, Cherokee, O'Brien, Sioux, Lyon, Osceola, Sac, Buena Vista,
Clay, Dickinson, Emmet, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Calhoun, Ida,
Crawford, Carroll and Greene / Chicago: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1927,
1563 pgs. (Surname list
and Table of Contents)
Most counties are included in
the Iowa statewide books
Click here for a brief
history of Cherokee County
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
- April 1973
- 1860 Census
- 1870 Census
- Albert PHIPPS Family Record
- Ansell BRIGGS Family Record
- BANISTER Family Records
- Bible - CORBETT
- Birth Records Before 1880
- Cemetery Records from Five Locations
- Early Probate Records
- History of Cherokee County
- Map
- Marriage Licenses, Papers of Rev. Stanford
- Marriage Returns, Papers of Rev. Stanford
- Marriages 1856-1880
- STANFORD Family Records
- Towns
- Ex-Service Burial Record (Spring
1986)
Palimpsest
- Senator Guy Gillette Foils the Execution Committee
(November/December 1981)
Annals of Iowa History:
- Settlement of Cherokee County ( 1963) TEXT Only
Iowa Journal of History and Politics:
- Cherokee County Pioneer (July 1929) TEXT Only
CHEROKEE COUNTY is in the second tier east
of the west boundary of the State and in the third south of the
Minnesota line, is twenty-four miles square and contains five hundred
seventy-six square miles. Its territory was at one time divided between
Fayette and Dubuque counties but in 1851 it was established with the
present boundaries as Cherokee County, being named for a southern tribe
of Indians. It was first attached to Wahkaw County in 1853.
In 1856 a colony from Milford, Massachusetts,
selected lands near the center of Cherokee County for a settlement.
There were about fifty members of the association most of whom were
mechanics. The following named members with their families moved onto
their lands the same year: Dr. Dwight Russell, Dr. Slocum, G. W.
Lebourvean, B. W. Sawtell, Lysander Sawtell, Albert Simon, Daniel
Wheeler, Lemuel Parkhurst, Albert Phipps, Carlton Corbett, J. A. Brown,
A. J. Slayton, Robert Hammond and Benjamin Holbrook. Each member took
about a hundred acres of the lands which had been entered. A large body
of timber was taken along the Little Sioux River which was divided among
the members of the colony. Dr. Dwight Russell built the first house, a
log cabin in which nine families were sheltered until additional houses
could be erected.
During the year 1856 twelve families formed
another settlement in the southern part of the county near the Little
Sioux River, in the vicinity of Pilot Rock. This immense rock was in
early days a well-known landmark which could be seen at a great distance
over the unsettled prairies. It was a red granite boulder about sixty
feet long by forty wide rising above the surface about twenty feet, near
the river on the east side of a high point of land. Many mounds are
found in this county north of the town of Cherokee which are believed to
be the work of the ancient "mound builders."
The first colony laid out the town of Cherokee
on the west side of the Little Sioux River in 1856 and it became the
county-seat. In the spring of 1857 Inkpaduta's band of Sioux Indians on
their way to perpetrate the massacre at Okoboji, robbed many of the
settlers in Cherokee County and killed many of their cattle. Later in
the season a stockade was erected at Cherokee for protection and a
company of soldiers stationed to protect the settlements in that part of
the State.
The county was organized in August, 1857, and
at the election the following persons were chosen for the first county
officials: A. P. Thayer, judge; B. W. Sawtell, clerk; G. W. Labourvean,
treasurer and recorder; S. W. Hayward, sheriff; and Carlton Corbett,
prosecuting attorney. The Iowa Falls and Sioux City Railroad was built
through the county in 1870 and in January of that year J. P. Ford issued
the first number of the Cherokee Chief. The railroad was located
some distance from the old town and gradually a new town grew up near
the station. One of the Hospitals for the Insane has been recently
located at Cherokee.
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" |