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"Past
2 Present"

Lyon County, Iowa
Books
-
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)
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
- The Grasshopper Wars (September/October 1981)
LYON COUNTY lies in the extreme northwest
corner of the State and when first created in 1851 was named Buncombe.
By act of the legislature of September 11, 1862, the name was changed to
Lyon in honor of General Nathaniel Lyon who was killed at the Battle of
Wilson's Creek while in command of the Union army in 1861. The county is
about thirty-five miles in length east and west and about seventeen
miles wide, containing five hundred eighty-seven square miles.
The first white man who built a cabin within
its limits was Daniel McLaren a hunter and trapper who lived several
years near the Big Sioux River at the mouth of a creek which bears his
name. In the summer of 1862 Roy McGregor, George Clark and Thomas
Lockhart, three adventurous young men from Massachusetts settled on the
Iowa side of the Big Sioux River and built a cabin. McGregor was killed
by the Sioux Indians, Clark was drowned in March, 1863, and Lockhart,
after many narrow escapes from the hostile Indians, returned to the
settlements. In July, 1866, Lewis P. Hyde of Minnesota took a homestead
on the Big Sioux River two miles below where Beloit stands. In 1868 Ole
Nelson and his brother Halver of Clayton County, with a colony, settled
near the Big Sioux River where they built a mill. During the same year
Dr. H. D. Rice and wife, Emerick Irwin and H. W. Reeves settled on the
Rock River near the present town of Doon. D. C. Whitehead and several
others settled at Rock Rapids in 1869 and at the close of that year the
population of the county was about one hundred.
The first school was taught at Rock Rapids
during the winter of 1870-71 by Mrs. D. C. Whitehead and the first
minister in the county was Rev. Ellef Oleson of Beloit. On the 25th of
July, 1871, a weekly newspaper was established at Rock Rapids by C. E.
Bristol which was named the Rock Rapids Journal. The county was
organized in October of the same year by the election of the following
officers: Charles E. Goetz, auditor; James H. Wagner, treasurer; D. C.
Whitehead, clerk; T. W. Johnson, sheriff, and Thomas Thorson, recorder.
Rock Rapids on the Rock River was made the county-seat. The Big Sioux
River forms the western boundary of the county and State in this
section. The Milwaukee and other railroads furnish transportation
facilities.
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" |