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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Pocahontas 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:
- St. Patrick's Cemetery on Lizard Creek (Webster-Pocahontas
Counties) (Spring 1981)
Palimpsest:
- Rough Was the Road They Journeyed (May/June 1977)
POCAHONTAS COUNTY was created in 1851
and named for the Indian maiden who saved the life of Captain John Smith
in the early years of the settlement of the colony of Virginia. It lies
in the third tier south of the Minnesota line in the fourth east of the
Missouri River and contains an area of five hundred seventy-six squares
miles. The county was attached to Webster in 1855. The Lizzard and the
west fork of the Des Moines River flow through the eastern part of the
county among the small lakes within its limits are Swan Lake, Clear Lake
and Lizzard Lake.
In February, 1855, Michael Collins, Mr. Hickey
and families ascended the Lizzard from Fort Dodge, took claims and built
cabins. The following year John and Patrick Calligan, Dennis Connors,
Patrick McCabe, James Donahue and others joined the settlement and
opened farms near the Lizzard. In May, 1857, Robert Struthers, William
H. Haite, A. H. Malcome and Gurnsey Smith of Fort Dodge settled in the
northern part of the county in what is now Des Moines township. In 1858
David Slosson, O. F. Avery, Ora Harvey and others settled in the same
vicinity and a county government was established by the election of the
following officers: David Slosson, judge; W. H. Haite, treasurer and
recorder; A. H. Malcome, clerk; Oscar Slosson, sheriff. In August, 1859,
Judge A. W. Hubbard appointed C. C. Carpenter of Webster County, Miles
Mahon of Palo Alto, and Hiram Benjamin of Humboldt, commissioners to
locate the county-seat. They selected a site near the Des Moines River
and gave it the name of Rolfe. Here a town was laid out which became the
county-seat. The entire county was organized into one school district
and Miss Nellie Harvey taught the first school in the house of W. H.
Haite in 1860. In the fall of that year a brick courthouse was built in
which Judge Hubbard held the first term of court in November. On the
15th of July, 1869, W. D. McEwen and J. J. Bruce issued the first number
of a weekly newspaper named the Pocahontas Journal, which was the
first in the county.
Unlike the early officials of many of the
counties of northwestern Iowa, those of Pocahontas were honest and
competent men who protected the public interests and labored unselfishly
for the permanent prosperity of the county. The town of Pocahontas
Center was platted by Frederick Hess on land belonging to Warrick Price
in 1870. It was near the geographical center of the county and in 1875
was made the county-seat. In 1869 the Iowa Falls and Sioux City Railroad
was built through the southwest corner of the county and the town of
Fonda was laid out on its line. The town of Rolfe was laid out in
September, 1881, where the Rock Island Railroad crosses the line of the
Northwestern, several miles west of the old town of that name.
Gilmore is a town on the line of the Des Moines
and Fort Dodge Railroad which was platted by L. C. Thornton for a land
company in 1884.
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" |