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"Past 2 Present"
"Past
2 Present"

Union County, Iowa
I have no books which are
specifically for this County, but most counties are included in the Iowa
statewide books
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
- Blue Grass Palace (October 1922) (Text Only)
- The Blue Grass Palace (December 1963)
UNION COUNTY lies in the second tier north of
Missouri, in the fourth east of the Missouri River and contains four
hundred thirty-two square miles. It was created in 1851 and in the
original bill providing for its establishment the county was named
Mason, for judge Charles Mason. Just before the passage of the bill in
the Senate, upon motion of Mr. Morton, the name Mason was stricken out
and "Union" inserted. At that time, after years of better
conflict over the institution of slavery which threatened a dissolution
of the Union, a compromise had been effected which was believed by many
would permanently settle the dangerous controversy and insure the
perpetuity of the Union. Hence the name given to this new county. Grand
River, Twelve Mile and the Platte are the principal streams traversing
the county and their banks are covered with timber.
The county was entirely unsettled in 1846 when
the Mormon emigration began from Nauvoo westward through Iowa. At this
time many of the Musquaka Indians, under their chief, "Johnny
Green," occupied hunting grounds along Grand River. A large body of
Mormon refugees moving westward were overtaken by severe winter storms
in Decatur and Union counties. Several hundred men, women and children,
unable to endure the hardships of winter travel through an unsettled
country, stopped in a grove on the Grand River bluff in Union County and
dug caves for shelter form the storms. Here they also built log cabins
and cared for the sick and feeble until spring. They built a mill run by
horse power and many remained several years cultivating land and raising
crops. This furnished a refuge for others who could here recruit from
the hardships of the journey and replenish their exhausted provisions.
The place was named Mount Pisgah by the Mormons.
In 1850 many settlers came into the county and
purchased the improvements made by the Mormons. Among them were William
L. Lock, J. H. Stark, Joseph and Norman Nun and Benjamin Lamb. Henry
Peters bought the Mormon mill and laid out a town which he named
Petersville. A store, hotel and several small houses were built and for
a few years it was the business center for the people of the county. In
1851 Amos C. Cooper and Isaac P. Lamb settled in the southern part of
the county in Pleasant township and the following year William Grosbeck
and Lewis Bragg located in the northeast corner.
The county was organized in 1853 by the
election of Norman Nun, judge; John Edgecomb, sheriff, and I. P. Lamb,
school fund commissioner. The first term of court was held at
Petersville in the fall of 1853 at which Judge A. A. Bradford presided.
The commissioners located the county-seat near a beautiful grove on
Twelve Mile Creek, in February, 1855, and gave it the name of Afton at
the suggestion of Mrs. James Baker. The town of Highland, laid out near
the center of the county was a competitor for the county-seat and losing
it also lost its buildings which were moved to Afton.
In 1869 the town of Creston was laid out on the
line of the Burlington Railroad. The principal division of this road in
Iowa and the machine shops were established at Creston and it eventually
became the county-seat. The first newspaper in the county was
established in the summer of 1859 by Morris and Ryan, named the Afton
Eagle. It was Democratic in politics but after the election of
Lincoln in 1860 it was purchased by L. Raguet and became neutral.
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
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"Past 2 Present" |