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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Shelby County, Iowa
Books
-
Biographical History of Shelby and Audubon
Counties, Iowa. / Chicago: W.S. Dunbar & Co., 1889, 833 pgs.
(Surname list and Table of
Contents)
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
- What's in a Name? (May/June 1976)
Iowa Journal of History and Politics:
- Shelby County - A Sociological Study (January and April 1904)
TEXT Only
SHELBY COUNTY was embraced in the original
county of Keokuk when it extended west to the Missouri River. In 1850
the county was organized with present boundaries and named for General
Isaac Shelby, an officer of the Revolutionary War. It lies in the second
tier east of the Missouri River and in the fourth north of the Missouri
State line, is twenty-four miles square, embracing in its area five
hundred ninety square miles. The entire surface is rolling and was
originally largely prairie with numerous small groves of native woods
scattered over it. The West Nishnabotna and numerous branches of the
Missouri and Boyer rivers furnish a water supply.
The first white men known to have made homes in
the county were two hunters and trappers, Nicholas Beery and Mr. Bowman,
who built a cabin near the Nishnabotna in the fall of 1847 and spent
several years at their occupation along the numerous water courses. In
1851 Mr. Beery was attacked by a wandering band of Indians, robbed and
beaten so brutally that he died of his injuries. The next settlers were
largely Mormons who separated from the main body who, in 1848-9, made
settlements in several of the Missouri River counties. Abraham Galland
and his son-in-law, William Jordan, made claims at a large grove in the
northwest portion of the county in the fall of 1848, built a log cabin
and became the first permanent residents of the county. Galland's Grove
contained about a thousand acres of timber land and attracted about it
many families. Among the earliest settlers were William Felshaw, Solomon
and Joseph Hancock, Joseph Roberts, James M. Butler, Andrew Foutz,
Franklin Rudd, Mansel Wicks and John A. McIntosh. The latter was a noted
Mormon pioneer preacher.
The county was organized in 1853 by the
election of the following officers: William Vanausdall, judge; Andrew
Foutz, sheriff; Vinsan G. Perkins, clerk; Alexander McCord, recorder and
treasurer, and James Ward, prosecuting attorney. There were but thirteen
votes polled at this election. The first court was held in 1853 by Judge
Samuel H. Riddle in a building used for a grocery and saloon at
Galland's Grove. A location was chosen for the county-seat in what is
now Grove township, where a town was laid out and named Shelbyville.
Several buildings were erected and for five years the new town grew into
a thriving village. But, on losing the county-seat, the town soon became
deserted and finally disappeared by the removal of the buildings to
other places. In 1857 the town of Simoda was platted near the center of
the county with the expectation that it would become the county-seat. A
newspaper was established by Samuel Dewell named the New Idea;
the first number was issued early in 1858. This town attained a size of
twenty buildings and made a vigorous fight to secure the county-seat but
failing, fell into decay, the buildings were for the most part removed
to Harlan and the town entirely disappeared. In 1858 the town of Harlan
was laid out near the geographical center of the county and named for
the first Republican United States Senator in Iowa. The first building
was erected by Isaac Plum and in the fall of 1858 William W. Newton
built a hotel. In January, 1859, the Shelby County Courier was
established at Harlan by J. B. Besack and a determined campaign opened
to secure the county-seat which was successful before the end of the
year. In 1878 a railroad was built from Avoca, on the line of the Rock
Island, to Harlan; in 1881 a branch of the northwestern was built
through the northeastern part of the county; and the next year the
Milwaukee road was built through the northwestern portion of the county.
Shelby is a flourishing town in the south side of the county on the Rock
Island road.
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
Home -- Periodicals
-- Books -- Research
service -- Email
"Past 2 Present" |