|
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"
"Past
2 Present"

Warren County, Iowa
I have no books which are
specifically for this County, but most counties are included in the Iowa
statewide books
Periodicals
Hawkeye Heritage:
Palimpsest:
- Don L. Berry - A Forthright Editor (November 1963)
- Vanishing Iowa: An Artist's Crusade (January/February 1979)
Iowa Journal of History and Politics:
- Starting Life in Warren County (April 1941) TEXT Only
WARREN COUNTY lies in the third tier north
of Missouri, in the fifth east of the Missouri River and contains five
hundred sixty-nine square miles. It was created in January, 1846, and
named for General Joseph Warren who was killed at the Battle of Bunker
Hill. In 1848 the northern tier of townships was attached to Polk
County. In 1853 these townships, with the exception of a fraction lying
north of the Des Moines River were restored to Warren. Three rivers,
North, Middle and South River flow in an easterly direction through the
county and are bordered by fine timber.
The first settler in the county was John D.
Parmelee who built a log cabin and erected a sawmill on Middle River in
1853, where lumber was manufactured for building the fort at Raccoon
Forks. William Mason took a claim near Palmyra in the spring of 1845
before the Indians removed from the region. Among the earliest pioneers
were Henry James, Robert Rees, P. P. Henderson, Samuel Hayworth, D.
Booker, Alexander Grindler and Alfred D. Jones. Early in 1849 P. P.
Henderson was appointed sheriff to organize the county and the first
commissioners were Samuel Hayworth, Alexander Grindler and D. Booker.
During this year the commissioners chosen to select a site for the
county-seat met at the house of Alexander Grindler and decided upon a
place near the geographical center of the county a mile north of South
River where a town was laid out and named Indianola. Among the first to
build houses and settle at the new county-seat was Zebulon Hackett, P.
P. Henderson and Amos Booker.
The first election was held on the 1st of
January, 1849, at which the following officers were chosen: judge of
probate, Thomas Feagans; sheriff, P. P. Henderson; clerk, Jonathan
Dillon; recorder, William Ginder; surveyor, Henry Hays; commissioners,
Samuel Haworth, Alexander Grindler and Daniel Barker. In September of
the same year the first court was held in a log school-house by Judge
McKay at which Barlow Granger was district attorney. A log court-house
was built at Indianola in 1851 which for several years was used also for
church services, public meetings, political conventions and schools. A
newspaper was established at Indianola by John W. Murphy who issued the
first number of the Republican on the 24th of August, 1855. It
survived less than a year and was succeeded by the Indianola Visitor,
published by J. H. Knox. The Methodists organized the first church in
Indianola in 1850. At the annual conference of the Methodist Episcopal
Church held at Indianola, in August, 1860, steps were taken to establish
a seminary under the auspices of that denomination, which in 1867 became
"Simpson Centenary College."
Carlisle was laid out in the northern part of
the county by Jerry Church and Daniel Moore in 1851. Norwalk was laid
out by George M. Swan the same year near the northwest corner of the
county. The first railroad built was a branch of the Rock Island running
from Des Moines to Indianola which was completed to that place in
October, 1871. The first movement of the citizens of Warren County to
secure a railroad was made as early as 1853. Efforts continued for
nearly eighteen years before the county-seat became connected with the
railroad lines of the country.
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" |