|
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"
"Past
2 Present"

Jackson County, Iowa
Books
- Portrait and Biographical Album of Jackson County, Iowa. /
Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1889, 621 pgs. (Surname
List)
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
- October 1974
- Bible - Alexander ORGAN
- Bible - CLARK-BOWEN
- Bible - FAIRBROTHER-ESTABROOK
- Bible - SMITH
- Cemeteries in Jackson County
- Early Marriages, 1848-1855
- Jackson County History
- Original Lot Owners in Bellevue, Iowa
- Pioneers of Jackson County
- Probate Book I, 1838-1851
- The Pioneer Women of Jackson County
- January 1975
- Reel Cemetery
- Early Marriages, 1856-1860
- Will Records, 1838-1876
- 1982 issues
- 1850 Census (Winter-Spring 1982)
- 1850 Census (Spring-Summer 1982)
- 1850 Census Addition (Spring-Summer 1982)
- 1850 Census (Summer-Fall 1982)
- Fall 1984
Palimpsest:
- Iowa Lime Burning (March/April 1979)
Annals of Iowa History:
- History of Jackson Co. (January 1869) TEXT Only
- History of Jackson Co. (April 1869) TEXT Only
- Journal of a Missionary in Jackson County, 1843-46 (January
1907) TEXT Only
- Jackson County's Temporary Mississippi River (Spring 1966)
JACKSON COUNTY lies immediately south of
Dubuque on the west shore of the Mississippi River. It was created in
1837 from the territory originally embraced in Dubuque County named for
General Andrew Jackson. The county contains an area of six hundred
thirty-eight square miles and large tracts of native woodland lie well
distributed over the county. The Maquoketa River runs from west to east
with several large tributaries. The first settlers came in as soon as
the Indian title was extinguished and took claims along the Maquoketa
River.
Among the earliest pioneers were William Jones, James Armstrong,
Alexander Reed, Thomas Nicholson, David Dias and his sons. They built
cabins in the forests and cleared the timber for farms near the
Mississippi in the vicinity of Bellevue. James McCabe, Nicholas Carroll,
Arthur Mullen and Anson Newbury made claims near Sabula. At the time the
county was created it had a population of two hundred forty fur. J. E.
Goddenow, in the spring of 1838, took a claim, built a cabin and the
next year laid out a town which he named Springfield and a few houses
were built. But in the winter of 1856 Mr. Goddenow in company with A.
Spaulding and Z. Livermore platted a large tract of land owned by them
embracing that upon which Springfield had been laid out and gave the new
town the name Maquoketa. John Shaw purchased a claim now in the limits
of Maquoketa, in 1837, and removed to it in 1841. The first store was
opened by S. M. Marr in 1844. In 1837 John Kindly took a claim and built
a cabin at Andrew. The county was organized April 2d, 1838, by the
election of the following officer's: commissioners, William Jones, J.
Leonard and William Morden; treasurer, John Sublett; probate judge, J.
K. Moses; clerk, J. H. Rose; recorder, John Howe.
A movement was made to secure the county-seat
to the new town of Andrew laid out on Hindley's farm. Commissioners were
appointed to relocate the county-seat and they selected Andrew in 1841.
In 1845 a weekly newspaper was started there by m. H. Clark and Andrew
Keesecker, with Ansel Briggs editor. In the county seat was again
removed to Bellevue, and in 1861 it was again transferred to Andrew. In
1873 it was moved to Maquoketa where it has since remained. In the fall
of 1835 John D. Bell made a claim, built a cabin, laid out a town and
gave it the name of Bullevue. It was a beautiful site on the bank of the
Mississippi River and protected on the north and west by a semi-circle
of wooded bluffs. A hotel was built the following year by Peter Dutell.
In 1837 Bellevue was made the county-seat.
In early days desperadoes settled in the Big
Woods along the Maquoketa. They had confederates in Illinois and
Missouri at points along the Mississippi River and for a time Bullevue
appeared to be their headquarters. Horse stealing and passing
counterfeit money were their chief crimes though they did not hesitate
to commit murder when attempts to arrest them were made. In the spring
of 1840, after a series of desperate conflicts between the criminals and
the sheriff's posse under the direction of Captain W. Warren, known as
the "Bullevue war," the gang was broken up and twelve of the
number captured.
The county was organized April 2d, 1838, by the
election of the following officers: county commissioners, William Jones,
J. Leonard and William Morden; John Howe, recorder; J. K. Morse, probate
judge; John Sublett, treasurer; and J. H. Rose, clerk.
Sabula is a thriving town on the Mississippi
River in the southeast corner of the county. The Milwaukee Railroad
follows the valley of the Mississippi through the eastern part of the
county.
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" |