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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Sac County, Iowa
Books
-
Biographical History of Crawford, Ida and Sac
Counties, Iowa. / Chicago: Lewis Pub. Co., 1893, 715 pgs. (Surname
and Table of Contents)
-
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:
- Alumni of Sac City High School, 1886-1927 (Autumn
1989)
Palimpsest:
- The Name of Odebolt (December 1929) (Text Only)
- Farm Girl (Part 1) (Winter 1987)
- Farm Girl (Part 2) (Spring 1988)
SAC COUNTY was created in 1851 and named for
the Sac Indians. It lies in the fourth tier south of Minnesota and in
the third tier east of the Missouri River, is twenty-four miles square
and embraces five hundred seventy-six square miles. The county is
watered by branches of the Boyer and Raccoon rivers flowing in a
southerly direction through the county which is on the divide between
the Mississippi and Missouri rivers; the waters of the Raccoon flow into
the former and the Boyer into the Missouri.
The first settler in the county was Otho
Williams who, in 1854, located at Big Grove in the southeast corner on
the North Raccoon River, where he cleared a farm in the woods while
thousands of acres of fertile prairie ready for the breaking plow
surrounded the grove on all sides. Soon after F. M. Corey, Leonard
Austin, Joseph Austin, W. F. Lagourge and Seymour Wagoner settled in
various parts of the county. Mr. Wagoner became major of a cavalry
regiment during the War of the Rebellion and was killed while gallantly
leading his command in battle. On the 4th of July, 1855, a town was laid
out on the banks of the Raccoon River for the county-seat and named Sac
City. Previous to 1856 Sac had been attached to Greene County for
judicial, election and revenue purposes.
The first election was held April 7, 1856, at
the house of Eugene Criss, at which the following officials were chosen:
Samuel Watts, judge; Francis Ayers, clerk; F. M. Corey, recorder and
treasurer; W. F. Lagourge, sheriff, and H. C. Crawford, prosecuting
attorney. The first term of the District Court was held at Sac City by
Judge C. J. McFarland in June, 1857.
For many years the settlers were obliged to go
to Fort Dodge, a distance of fifty miles, for goods, groceries and mail.
The first house at Sac City was built by Eugene Criss for a hotel, which
was for many years the station for the semi-weekly stage line running
between Cedar Falls and Sioux City. In 1863 Grant City was laid out in
the southern part of the county on the Raccoon River. The first
newspaper was the Sac Sun, established in July, 1871, by J. N.
Miller of Sac City. Odebolt, in the western part of the county, was laid
out by the Blair Land Company in 1877 on a branch of the Northwestern
Railroad. The town of Wall Lake was platted by the Blair Company in
1877, three miles south of the famous lake of that name in the Maple
valley.
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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