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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Kossuth County, Iowa
I have no books which are
specifically for this County, but most counties are included in the Iowa
statewide books
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
- Letters from Algona, 1856-1865 (November/December 1980)
- Some Thoughts on Prisoners of War in Iowa, 1943 to 1946
(March/April 1984)
KOSSUTH COUNTY was established in 1851 and
named for the Hungarian patriot, Louis Kossuth. When first created it
was twenty-four miles square and its northern boundary was on the north
line of township ninety-seven, lying immediately south of Bancroft. In
January, 1855, by act of the General Assembly, Bancroft County ceased to
exist, its territory having been added to Kossuth as was also the north
half of Humboldt. In February, 1857, the townships taken from Humboldt
were restored to it and Kossuth was left with territory reaching from
Humboldt to the Minnesota line. It lies in the fifth tier east of the
Missouri River; is twenty-four miles wide and forty and one-third long,
containing nine hundred seventy-seven square miles, making it the
largest county in the State. The east fork of the Des Moines River flows
through the county to the south and the Blue Earth River flows to the
northwest.
The first settlers in the county were Ambrose
A. and Asa C. Call who, in July, 1854, took claims along the Des Moines
River near where Algona stands. The place was long know as "Call's
Grove." Later in the year Malachi Clark, Levi Maxwell, William Hill
and Soloman Hand, with their families, took claims on the west side of
the Des Moines River about four miles below Call's Grove. In January,
1855, W. H. Ingham and Andrew L. Seeley took claims near the river four
miles above Call's Grove. In the summer of the same year Jacob Wright,
Thomas and John Robinson, W. G. Clark and others settled near where
Irvington stands.
In August, 1855, the county was organized by
the election of the following officers: Asa C. Call, judge; Robert
Cogley, clerk; J. W. Moore, recorder and treasurer; H. F. Watson,
sheriff, and Lewis H. Smith, surveyor. The county-seat was located on
the claim of A. C. Call and named by his wife Algona. Mrs. Call was the
first woman to settle in the county. The town of Algona was platted by
A. C. Call, A. A. Call and J. W. Moore in April, 1856. The first
newspaper was issued in September, 1861, by Ambrose A. Call and was
named the Algona Pioneer Press. A flouring-mill was erected on
the Des Moines River in 1867 by J. E. Stacy. Lewis H. Smith was the
first lawyer in Algona. The first bank was established by W. H. Ingham
in 1867.
In the fall of 1870 the Milwaukee Railroad was
completed to Algona giving a direct line to the Mississippi River and
Chicago. Algona College was established in 1872 under the auspices of
the Methodist Episcopal denomination.
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" |