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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Mills County, Iowa
Books
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
- Winter 1983
- First Land Owners
- Death Records, 1880-1890
- Research in Fremont and Mills Counties of Southwestern Iowa (Spring
1986)
- Some Old Timers (Spring
1989)
- Autumn 1989
- Medical Attendants
- Muster and Descriptive Roll of Wahaghbonsey Rangers, 1862
Palimpsest:
- Agnes Samuelson (November 1962)
- The Big Mill Near the Big Muddy: The Allen-Hogan Fight of 1873
(January/February 1983)
- An Early Industry in Mills County: Ballast Burning
(September/October 1984)
Annals of Iowa History:
- Incidents in the Early Settlement of Mills County (July 1883)
TEXT Only
- Courts and Lawyers of Mills County (October 1952) TEXT Only
MILLS COUNTY was created in 1851 and named
for Major Frederick Mills, a gallant young Iowa officer who was killed
at the Battle of Cherubusco in the Mexican War. Its western boundary is
the Missouri River and it lies in the second tier north of the Missouri
State line. The county is twenty-four miles in length from east to west
and eighteen miles in width, containing four hundred forty-four square
miles. The western portion of the county consists of level bottom land
of the Missouri River valley, in places reaching a width of from three
to seven miles, east of which rise the high bluffs which in remote ages
formed the shore of the river.
The first white settler was Colonel Peter A.
Sarpy who as early as 1836 established a trading house and was an agent
of the American Fur Company. He laid out a town near the mouth of
Mosquito Creek and named it St. Mary. For many years it was a thriving
village but the Missouri River encroached upon it gradually undermining
the buildings until most of them disappeared beneath the floods and the
town was abandoned. Henry Alice, who came as a missionary to the Pawnee
Indians in 1834, made his home near St. Mary. In 1846 thirty Mormons,
who were among those driven out of Nauvook stopped in Mills County on
the east side of Key Creek near the Missouri and built cabins to shelter
them through the approaching winter. They formed a village to which they
gave the name of Rushville. Among them was William Brittain who became a
permanent resident of the county. In 1847-8 Silas Hillman, Libeons Coon,
Ira Hillman, G. N. Clark, J. Everett and others settled near the present
site of Glenwood. In 1849 Mr. Coon laid out a town on his farm which he
named Coonville.
In 1851 the county government was organized by
the election of the following officers: William Smith, judge; W. W.
Noyes, clerk and James Hardy, sheriff. The county-seat was located at
Coonville where the first term of court was held in 1851, at which Judge
James Sloan, a Mormon, presided. In 1849 the first flouring-mill in the
county was built by J. W. Collidge. Here D. H. Coloman, a young lawyer
taught the first school in a log cabin ten feet by twelve in size. Mr.
Soloman became a prominent lawyer and was one of the framers of the
Constitution of the State in 1857.
In 1853 the name of the county-seat was changed
from Coonville to Glenwood. Soon after the close of the War of the
Rebellion one of the Soldiers' Orphans' Homes was located at Glenwood
and later the Institution for the Feeble Minded was built there. The
first newspaper in the county was the Glenwood Times, established
in May, 1856, by J. M. Dews. The largest apple orchard in the State was
planted in Mills County by John Y. Stone. The soil of this region seems
to be peculiarly adapted to fruit growing. Malvern is a thriving town
near the center of the county. The Burlington Railroad was the first
built in the county.

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" |