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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Lucas 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:
LUCAS COUNTY was created in January, 1846,
and at that time embraced a portion of Clarke County but in 1849 was
reduced to its present limits. It lies in the second tier north of
Missouri and midway between the Mississippi and Missouri rivers and
contains twelve townships embracing an area of four hundred thirty-two
square miles. The county was named for Robert Lucas the first Governor
of the Territory of Iowa. In 1846-7, the year of the Mormon exodus
through Iowa, several families stopped at Chariton Point near the river
of that name in Lucas County, where they built cabins and remained
several years. They were the first white settlers in the county. In
September, 1847, William McDermott and family made a claim ten miles
east of the Chariton River. In March, 1848, Elijah Baldwin and family
settled west of McDermott's and in June, James Rolland located south of
them. Before the close of the year there were eight families in the
neighborhood. During the following year many families made homes in
various parts of the county.
In August, 1849, an election was held and the
following officers chosen: William T. May, Jacob Phillips and J. G.
Robinson, county commissioners, who proceeded to organize the county. In
September, 1849, the commissioners chosen to locate the county-seat
reported a site on the Chariton River which they named Polk. The
citizens of the county at a public meeting held in November changed the
name to Chariton and a town was platted and a public sale of lots
ordered in December. In April, 1850, a contract was let for the building
of a log courthouse in which the first term of court was held in May,
1851, over which Judge McKay presided. A mill was built by Isaac C. Cain
and Pleasant Williams on Whitebreast creek. In the winter of 1852-3
Crawford Sellers taught the first school in the court-house.
The first newspaper in the county was the Little
Giant; established in 1856 by George M. Binckley. The Chariton
Patriot was a weekly journal started by John Edwards in 1857. The
Burlington Railroad runs through the county from east to west passing
through the towns of Russell, Chariton and Lucas.
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
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"Past 2 Present" |