|
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"

Jones County, Iowa
Books
-
Portrait and Biographical Record of Dubuque,
Jones and Clayton Counties, Iowa. / Chicago: Chapman Pub. Co.,
1894, 543 pgs. (Surname
list and Table of Contents)
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
- Jones County -Gleanings of an Editor in 1858 (Jesse Clement)
(September 1968)
- A Grant Wood Sampler (January 1972)
- The White Palace of the West (May/June 1978)
Iowa Journal of History and Politics:
- Pioneer Life in Jones County (April 1931) TEXT Only
- Life on a Jones County Farm, 1873-1912 (October 1951) TEXT Only
JONES COUNTY was established in December,
1837, from territory belonging to the original county of Dubuque. It
lies in the second tier west of the Mississippi River and the fourth
south of the Minnesota line. It is twenty-four miles square and contains
an area of five hundred seventy-six square miles. The county was named
for General George W. Jones who, as delegate in congress, secured the
creation of the Territory of Iowa, and who was one of the first United
States Senator when it became a state. The Wapsipinicon and Maquoketa
rivers flow through the county in a southeasterly direction and their
stores are lined with woodland.
In 1836 Hugh Brown, Moses Collons, John Flynn
and Alfred Weatherford made a settlement at Brown's Prairie in the
northeast part of the county. During the same year Daniel Varvel and
William Clarke made claims and built cabins near Montecello. In 1837 a
colony from the Red River of the north emigrated southward and made a
settlement at Scotch Grove. Among them were Alexander Sutherland, James
Brimmer, David McCoy and their families numbering in all about thirty
persons. In 1839 thirty-three of their neighbors joined the settlement.
In 1837-8 a settlement consisting of about thirty persons was made along
Farm Creek. Among them were Abraham Hostatter, John Rafferty, Charles P.
and James Middleton. The first settlers at Buffalo Forks of the
Wapsipinicon River were George Russ and Sherebrick Dakin who came from
Maine in 1838. Gideon H. Ford came in the fall and bought their claims
which included the site of Anamosa. He sold a portion of the tract to
Timothy Davis and George H. Walworth which who laid out a town which was
named Walworth. Three years later a town was laid out west of Walworth
which was named Lexington. In 1842 David Wood and Edmund Booth built a
frame house where Anamosa stands.
The county was organized in August, 1838. In
1840 a commission was chosen by the Legislature located the county-seat
near the geographical center of the county and laid out a town which was
named Edenburgh. The first term of court was held there the following
year by Judge Thomas S. Wilson. In 1845, by a vote of the people, the
county-seat was removed from Edenburgh to Newport where the only house
was a small log cabin. In 1847 the people voted to move the county-seat
and it was located at Lexington. The name of this town was soon after
changed to Anamosa in honor of a beautiful Indian girl who once lived
there and whose father was a chief named Nas-i-nus. The name of the
daughter signifies "White Fawn." The first newspaper in the
county was the Anamosa News, published by William Haddock and first
issued in February, 1852.
Montecello was laid out in September, 1853, by
G. H Walworth and D. Varvel. Branches of the Milwaukee Railroad run
through the county. One of the large penitentiary of the State was
located at Anamosa where there are extensive stone quarries.
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" |