USA > Indiana > Cass County > Plat book of Cass County, Indiana, 1950 > Part 2
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
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2At this time, "Kentucky District" still was a western portion of Virginia; but the following year, it became the STATE of Kentucky.
Very soon, however, he sold out to U. S. Indian Agent, JOHN TIPTON, who used both buildings as a nucleus for the government's INDIAN AGENCY, serving both the Miami and Potawatomi tribes. Meanwhile, the government, in 1826, had purchased the much desired lands also on the north side of the Wabash River, from the Miamis as owners and from the Pota- watomis as co-owners. The purchase was accomplished only after John Tipton had played one tribe against the other, and certain Potawatomi chiefs against eachother, and by granting to certain influential chiefs (and their friends), as personal "re- serves", several particularly valuable tracts .*
At first, the Potawatomis stubbornly insisted on retaining also what is today Cass County's extreme northern edge (the area lying north of the historic Potawatomi Indian Boundary- line), but made the fatal mistake of letting the Americans have a one-mile-wide corridor through it. This corridor consisted of the "MICHIGAN ROAD SECTIONS" at and north of present Metea .? This corridor served the delighted Americans not only as a typical "entering-wedge", but also as a "funnel" through which land-hungry prospectors could entirely lawfully penetrate far up into the "Indian Country". In treaties of 1832, the in- creasingly bewildered Potawatomis, in return for good and valu- able considerations, transferred to the United States their last remaining tribal rights to Cass County lands, and very reluct- antly began preparing to move to the trans-Mississippi West.
Meanwhile, almost overnight, the town of Logansport had sprung up at the mouth of Eel River, across the Wabash from
3These first structures were on what is today Logansport's Cliff Drive, just west of Anthony Street. But soon, Chamberlain moved half a mile down the Wabash to the mouth of (Shultztown's) Goose Creek, where he erected almost an exact duplicate of his former hotel, and had a large patronage.
4The Miamis insisted, for example, that SEVEN SECTIONS of land containing the site of Olde Towne be allocated to Chief Charley's son, Little Charley, and to Chief Little Turtle's young relative MET-CHIN-E-QUE-AH, two important members of their tribe. The Potawatomis insisted on a large tract near the Agen- cy's being reserved for the children of their French-Canadian- born friend JOSEPH BARRON, who had served as interpreter dur - ing their negotiations with the government; and that similarly choice lands -- at the mouth of Eel River and also at the mouth of Crooked Creek in present Jefferson township, be reserved for their esteemed chief GEORGE CICOTT, in whose honor Lake Ci- cott has been named, and whose father had been a French- Canadian from Detroit and Vincennes.
5. The L'Anguille Valley Historical Association has placed a road-
the Indian Agency. For, by disbursing vast sums of money to both tribes (in payment for land purchases), the Agency had be- come the Mecca for nearly all of northern Indiana's thousands of Indians, and also for an astonishingly large number of enter- prising "Indian-traders" from even other states. The lively competition of these well-stocked merchants soon caused LO- GANSPORT to become known far and wide as NORTHCENTRAL INDIANA'S OUTSTANDING SHOPPING CENTER, -- an enviable reputation it still richly merits.
Long before the unhappy Potawatomis had carried out their agreement to vacate northern Cass County, U.S. Commissioners already were busily trying to persuade the Miamis to sell out, and vacate, also :southeastern Cass County! By 1840, after a series of treaties in which valuable reserves had to be granted to insistent chiefs, the Miamis had sold what are today JACKSON, TIPTON, and DEER CREEK TOWNSHIPS, and also all their tribe still owned of present WASHINGTON and EEL TOWNSHIPS.
By 1850, except for one fairly large colony of Miamis on one reserve along the Wabash, and a few Miami stragglers else- where south of the Wabash, and a few Potawatomi "hide-outs" north of that stream, the Indians were entirely gone from the area covered by this Plat Book. Soon after the close of the Civil War, "INDIAN CHARLEY", a Miami who lived in a little shack in the woods south of where WSAL Broadcasting Station's radio tower now stands, was almost the only Indian still remain- ing in Cass County.
For decades, however, groups of Indians occasionally re- turned here to visit not only American friends (and Indian Charley), but also the sites of their ancestral homes, the graves of loved ones, and the rivers and nooks they once had known so well and loved so much. Despite their habitually being "poker- faced" and very reticent, aged squaws and even braves often manifested real emotion about the changes American settlers were making. When, after many years of absence, Logansport's famous pioneer artist, the English-born GEORGE WINTER, likewise returned here for a visit to friends, he too was aghast at the changes that already had taken place in the appearance of the country at and near Logansport. Not being an Indian, this gentle-souled artist unashamedly WEPT.
side marker near the point at Metea where the Indian Boundary- Line crossed the historic "Michigan Road". The town of Metea was named for a highly intelligent and very eloquent Potawatomi chief who lived north of Ft. Wayne, and whom many members of both tribes angrily regarded as being too pro-American. His grave is unmarked; but its approximate location is, thanks to L'Anguille research, now known.
Perhaps he felt that we Americans are far more enter- prising, energetic, and result-getting, than aesthetic, far-seeing, or wise! It may be that he broodingly pondered the fact that in 1825, shortly before we Americans arrived, this area doubtless looked muchas it had looked in 1700, or perhaps even 1492. In 1825, it all still had been one vast FOREST -- except for a few "barrens" (in, for example, Adams Township) made, perhaps, by forgotten forest fires of long ago; some ocean-like marshes in particularly Boone Township; and a few "fingers" of grassy prairie that daringly stabbed into sandy Jefferson Township from the west. This vast forest had been no mere grove of parklike trees of the sort we know so well today. Instead, it had been our region's majestic ORIGINAL FORESTATION, of which Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (as in his "Evangeline") could truly have thundered," THIS -- yes, THIS TOO -- is the FOREST PRIMEVAL!" Certainly when American settlers first arrived, many of the trees were far broader-trunked, somewhat taller, and consid- erably more VENERABLE than any of those we see in Cass County today.
No material change of any sort was made to the appearance of the country by the Miamis during their entire century and a half of active occupancy. Nor were any changes made by the French, the British, or even the fun-loving and harumscarum Potawatomis. But THESE AMERICANS! JUST LOOK what these amazing AMERICANS had done to it, in even a single generation ! The first stroke of Alexander Chamberlain's lustily swung ax had, in 1826, sounded the DEATH-KNELL of this area's status as a junglelike wilderness, and simultaneously had doomed also all the great herds of bounding deer and the other wildlife. It was as if the resounding clang of that first momentous impact had been some impatiently-awaited SIGNAL of great portent! For there at once came swarming into Cass County a great crowd of --- in the main, AMATEUR, though rather expert! -- SAW - YERS AND WOODCHOPPERS, who seemed never satisfied until they had triumphantly denuded every section in every township of practically every tree ! This was so vast an undertaking that the final three quarters of the Nineteenth Century may have passed before they had entirely sheared Cass County of its original for- estation. And even before they had completed this task, they already were "backtracking", and were eagerly "harvesting" also every succeeding RE-GROWTH of timber, and often at least as fast as these could become at all "ripe". During the first half of the Twentieth Century, we tree-cutters undeniably were slowing down, though largely only because we were "run- ning out of trees" and running INTO trouble !
Yes ! The elimination of our region's dense forestation and so much of its other native vegetation; our laborious ex- cavation and diligent maintenance of so many urgently needed drainage-ditches; our installing of so many ingeniously devised
and far reaching networks of underground-drains and sewers; and even our sometimes overzealous cultivation of the soil it- self -- all these and other such purposeful acts of ours are usually excused, on the ground that they were part and parcel of our unprecedentedly PRODUCTIVE ERA. But in addition to very radically changing the entire APPEARANCE of the country (as the returning artist so groaningly noted), that purposeful and tireless toil of ours has created NEW problems just as serious as were the old ones it victoriously solved !
After a heavy rain, water no longer indolently loiters about infinitely, as if patiently waiting for evaporation, or for absorption by the soil or plant life; nor does it slowly trickle into some convenient stream, as originally arranged by good old Mother Nature. Instead, it now MADLY RUSHES, -- carrying along with it alarmingly large amounts of precious top soil! Many beautifully forested isles George Winter knew and loved are now vanished, or reduced to mere unsightly sandbars. Even if escaping the woodsman's ax, their majestic trees were ruth- lessly undermined, eventually laid low, and ultimately even swept entirely away, by the recurrent and rushing violence of high water! Also, we now are confronted with increasingly fre- quent and devastating "FLASH FLOODS". These do appalling . damage to particularly our more densely populated areas, in- cluding some formerly thought to be safely above the rivers' reach! But when the rains cease, the rivers, to our dismay, sometimes drop to so uncomfortably LOW levels that they, as "Nature's Sewage Disposal Plants", are unable efficiently to purify themselves, and become a menace to public health, as a result of the countless tons of waste our growing population DAILY dumps into them.
As we advance into the final half of this awesome Twentieth Century, we would perhaps do well to pause for a while, to look long and lingeringly back over our shoulders, and rather carefully all about us, and even questioningly FORWARD, before we cau- tiously proceed! We will continue to hear much about good roads, rural electrification, bridges, crop rotation, efficient arti- ficial drainage, and other such needed things. But also we doubt - less shall hear more and more about such less familiar topics as flood control, soil erosion, stream pollution, sewage disposal, soil fertility methods, reforestation, and CONSERVATION.
As we face the future, we increasingly look with anxious eyes, and hopeful hearts, to particularly THE SCHOOLS, THE HOMES (including even the very humblest), and THE CHURCHES, both rural and urban. For our primary need is an ever-growing number of intelligent and well-informed GOOD CITIZENS. In the years that lie ahead, we are going to need also all the insti- tutions, and all the organized groups of citizens, that tend to lead our city and county forward and also up, - - the forces which impel us to work both intelligently AND TOGETHER, for the building of a greater and better Cass County.
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NEW Anti- Rust FUEL OIL
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CALL- 4666 Automatic Delivery + Metered Service
J.H. HAMBRIGHT Supplier of Sinclair Products
Office - 2125 Broadway Bulk Plant - 1427 Woodlawn Logansport, Indiana
FOR
FEEDS
DEFINITE
MASTER MIX FEEDS
NEEDS
REILY HATCHERY & FEEDS
Big English Leghorns
All Pedigreed Males
Large Eggs- Chalk White - Large Birds
GLIDDEN FEEDS FOR ALL YOUR
NEEDS
MR. AND MRS. TOM PRICE, OWNERS
PHONE 26 M
TWELVE MILE, INDIANA
CHRYSLER & PLYMOUTH AUTOS.
Factory Trained Mechanics
Factory Engineered Parts
HENDRICKSON MOTOR
SALES
The house that service built
411-423 S. Third Street
Logansport, Indiana
THE LOGAN LOCKER
CASS COUNTY'S COMPLETE FROZEN FOOD SERVICE
Frozen Food Processing
Food Locker Rentals
Phone 4770
Wholesale Meats 315 Hanna Street
Snow Crop Frozen Foods
Logansport, Indiana
Packaging Supplies
FREEZER COMBINATIONS
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TWELVE MILE HARDWARE
Byron W. Moss OWNERS Donald D. Moss
General Hardware
Electric Wiring Supplies & Installation
Maytag Appliances
Bishop Food Freezers
Farm Machinery Repairs
Burdsal's Paints
Armstrong Furnaces
Ask us for a free estimate.
Phone 13 Twelve Mile, Indiana
GRABLE GARAGE & IMPLEMENT CO.
Chevrolet Sales & Service
Case Implements, Sales, Service
and Parts
PHILGAS STOVES
PHILCO APPLIANCES
PHONE 35F20
TWELVE MILE
INDIANA
THE TWELVE MILE STATE BANK
A MODERN BANK WITH MODERN IDEAS IN THIS NEW ERA.
We are a member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. We solicit your business, new accounts being opened up daily at this progressive bank. Farm and city property loans a specialty. Also insurance of all kinds written here.
STRENGTH SECURITY SERVICE
SLIFER
MOTORS
RESOURCES
$2,400,000.00
FORD SALES & SERVICE
GENERAL GARAGE REPAIRING SPECIALIZED LUBRICATION phone 59 Twelve Mile
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V. BOOKIES GARAGE
TRACTOR, AUTO, & BLACKSMITH
REPAIR SHOP
DAY & NIGHT SERVICE
phone 17 Twelve Mile
INDIANA
HOOVER SKELGAS SERVICE
Gas Ranges
Gas Water Heaters
Gas Room Heaters
Servel Gas Refrigerators
Gas Stoves Installed
Twelve Mile
Indiana
-
RALPH O. YANTIS
FARM MACHINERY
New Idea - PAPEC- DUNHAM-BURCH
HELIX SELF UNLOADING
WAGON BEDS
Phone 40498 7 Miles North of Logansport & 1/2 Mile West
ULERICK'S TURKEY FARM
Growers
Producers
Distributors of
BROAD BREASTED BRONZE TURKEY
WHOLESALE
RETAIL
Dressed
or
Alive
phone 69F20
Twelve Mile, Ind.
R2E
H. +A. SHAW
J.A.
24.44
MARSH 19.35
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MIKESELL
SUTTON
16.78
40.47
89.65
CARL
C.H. * G.
W.F.
LEMMON
SUTTON
135.86
45.32
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137.4
69.73
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66
78.52
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40.46
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80
DIYEN
W.S. MINNIX S 80 ₩ 40
40
106.67
F
«.D.E.
J .* A.
CAIMMONE BRINLEY
J+L
D'AKE
C.+M. COFFMAN
80
MOSSA 40
40.
45.25
89.96
20
5 7.71
160
S. H.
J.M.
C. M.
H. R.
H.+F.
6
A.+H.
H.+L. MOORE
60
***** R.E.
S. + E.
MARONEY GRAUEL
MARONEY MUMMERT
D .* A.
F.
ULERICK
WILLIAMCE
160
20
7
80
74
J.+M.
55
140
B. M. O'NEAL
7.
D.E. MOSS
79.5 .
T. JUICE
80
80
8
86.05
47
2$
175
8 015
11
E. +M.
DONLEY
J.+E. TRACY
RICHEY
80
40
SOLVESTIL
M+E.
BARRETT
W+M.
J.+L.
124.55
160
80
ET. AL.
80
80
40
160
80
180
80
80
131.89
1.4.2
7
L. +M.
F.+E. CONRAD
C. RHO DES
71.87
47.90
F. J. DORSEY
CD
40
RUSSELL FELKER
PICKENS
W.M. HUBENTHAL
160
B.+E.
YOUNG
P. NEFF
DITEH
40
40
40
80
80
YOUNG
117.24
14
/ P.+V.
W.
J .* L. CRIST
C.J .* B. DAVIDSON
BRENNER
HALL
EMERY JOHNSON MALLIN
8 0
41
172.5
78
206.91
175
84
R .* A.
M.I.
80
80
80
79
ZEIDER HILEMAN
60.77
50
O. HUBENTHAL
.. "C. P. LEFFEL
40
39.4
10
W. CLARY
1
700 7
105.7
1
24.67
R. CONRAD
D.W.
STUBER
STAO4
STRONG
M. Mª DOWELL
80
PICKENS
E.Y. TRACY
E .* H.
R.+R.
F.+ L.
H. + J.
4/0
40
60
-1
R.+0
124.02
TRACY
0
A .* W.
29.6 101.13
35
BRENNER
79.96
35
S.E. COVER 4 0
HINKLE
80
RODGERS
20
ANTIS
15
98
80
80
69.8
100.31
127.1
T. COVER 40.
53
63.46
YANTIS
21)
22)
23
M.
40
21.56 -
MURPHY
40 FRANK 7 20.2
46
100.M. RHODES
D.M. RHODES
F.+L. YANTIS
-. 40 CHAMP
42.26
SKINNER 40
M. + S.
84
160
53
80.
RODGERS
OCCOFFMAN
84.3
140.5
9 15 : 1
1
T.
CLYDE+S. CLEAR
40
RUMMELL
DANIEL
M.
32.34
40
ELLIS+F. MOSS
11.45
70.5
FREO LEONARD+MARY RUPE
120
/201
40
40
10,
20
-Z.
28
DWIGHT SMITH
80
STURDYAMT HARMON T.+L. PRICE
WELLS
MAUDLIN
R. A. GILSINGER
40
40
2.0
"W.'E.
20
HARMON
92
£27.66
545
1
1
ORLANDO
7
DONALD D.
202
ORLA*G. MADDEN
NEIL
FOWLER
DE WITT 40
40
ECHAMP
124.5
75
A
MORROW 36
80
80
80
80
9
70
HARRY
20 1
35
IM
JANE GARDNER
FRED+ T. PIERCE
MORROW 20.45
BRYAN+F. HORTON
GEO. SHAFFER
281.23
HAZEL +M. HINEY 75
110
45
80
80
SAMUEL+B. WARNER
160
BETTY MUEHLHAUSEN
40
40
40
95
199.87
75.75
C.
20
40
140
SISSON
MILLER
100.16
1
13.33
.S PINDER 62
IM'CARTER
ALBER
26
RENTSCHLER 48.78;
M.K. GEIER
5.
80
20
1
1
CF
44
E.+B.
D.L.
CLEMENTS
WILLIAMSON
POWELL
J.V. POWELL
W.E. CRAIN
50
CALZALL
101.86
C.RULERICK
RICHEY
OD HUBENTHAL
80 - 38
28
80
G +J. HUBENTHAL
J.+M. WOOD
37.02
41,73
40.017
67.29
80
/24.16
80
RTH.
# F.L.
GRAUEL
80
W. CRAIN 22.67
80
1
13
18
w.M.
A
E.+A.
M+8. NICKELS
HUBENTHAL
60 R.+0.PICKENS
88.23
19.74
CHUBEN THAL
60
W.C. HUDENTHAL
LOWRAD
W.+E.REED
194.2
80
D. F. SMHTH 69.65
MET
T28N
N.FLACK
F.+B.
C+B
E. YAIVTIS
33.51
KEITH
18
DAVIDSON 108.81
E.Y.
CONRAD CONRAD
SHEETS
CRIMMINS
YANTIS
O. C.
80
A. YANTIST
41.75
5
$40
EJ.
SHOUP
DODONT
76
-
110
00
200
SKINNER
1
'&w.+T.
J.+E. SILANCE
JESSIE * G. CRIMMONS
39.5
ARMSTRONG ARMSTRONG 40,5
60
40
75
WILSON
160.
CIL. BECHDOL
W.ªN.
J.+ H.
SAMUEL CRIMMINS 50
PIT
54.8
R.S. WILLIAMSON E. RUDIEAL
27 FRANCES + E. ..... STRONG
w.+F. ..
R.
KIRK * C.
CLARENCE + B. SETTLEMYERS
50
40
80
= 60.75
80
80
160
ENOCH + R
\ET. AL.
50
40
80
20
20
40
34
JAMES D. HORNEY
HUGH HAROLD
ULERICH
10.
OLIVER
MOSS
40
43.25 15 40
OLIVER + E. MARSHALL
20
80
80
80
90
60
CHARLES, STRONG 65
34
36
31.5
THOMAS
EMMA
ROBERT E.
COOK
COOK
N .* B.
SMITH
80
25
STUARTTRY WILLIAMSON
45.5
80
40
74.5
HORNEY
TRIB
54
EDSON *ELIZABETH THOMAS
35
ROHRER
WILLIAMSON
O AVIO * B.
EVERETTTE.
OPAL ELLIOTT
EtL. SMITH
DONALDTE HAMON
32
EDSON+
33
31
GB. MAUOLIN 25
59.3
80
HERBERT
H. L. MOORE 20
58.25
HARRY+1. DONALD*M. FRUSHOUR | BAUMAN
MARY C. HORNEY
CHARLES
O."F.
GRACE
ELIAS * M.
CONRAD
CARL +M
MELVIN W+N. MORROW MORROW
0℃. BOOK WALTER UT
SANDS
60.75
HERMAN
FRUSHOUR
81.35
N .* H. SHERMAN
HALLABAUGH
W=+M. SHERMAN
WOD MARVIN
D.J. CRIST
L. KIRTLAND
80
REID
40
40
\70
JAMES M.|JOHN*8. MYERS
HARMONY
H.I. FRUSHDUR N
30
GEO .* IRA
₹.80
68
D.+H. TRENT 77.33
30
72.13
WAGNER 80
W.F BIENEKE 80
26.83
H.T. HINKLE 53.17
COLLINS
HARLEY + P. SIDERS 80.9
L.M. !!
D.+H. HORTON
F. L KRANZ
45
40
12
M. S. CHAMP
BROWN
20
24
10. 5
37.5
G.
T
E.+C.
17
80
J."A.
32.5
100
HOLSAZEN
H .* F.
DEEBS
40.27 /
40
CHAMP
A.B
40
84.44
59.47
1
7
PAULNA
JOHN +A. EROMAN
CHAS+G OLIVER
40
BALLARD
80
BLOE WITH
60
DOUD
R.+E. DEFORO
1
LEWIS
E. E. SHEETS
1
20
/03
YANTIS
E.
22.87
WULERICK
O.+C.
1
17)
16
45
15
JOHN
1 0 ~ REARICK
C. E
-
CHAS. RAN5
J. Mane
O.+ 5
W.M.
F. + H.
E.+L.
IL.
94.80
RENTCHEER
BLACK
GERRICÓ
DAGUE
WHITE MINTHOM
DITH
89.68
C.H . G.
RENTCHLER
RENYCHLER
4
68.54
65.89,4
20
5
4
3
43
25.62
PEARSON
41.45
M.M. MASON ETAL.
1. 40
40
40.48
163.57
R+G
84
C+K. OTTEN
R.J. COFFING
GRABLE
160
80
80
WILLIAMSON
PETERS
16
80
68.18
MINTER
GOHN
GRABLE
20.97 32.8 |
HOOVER
29.25
40
62.03
12
7
30
9
C .* G.
BINNEY
44
27
82./1 .9
H .* 8. PASCHEN
VAN METER
8.L. HORN 30
8.5 1
E. + H. ULERICK
CRIMMINS
R
50
SUTTON
13.3
MARONEY
GRAHAM
C.H .* G. LEMMON
10
80
60
20
BAVCE
111.96
6.6.
2
G.
W.R.1CJ. UNGER
GAYLEA
P/G.A.
LEMON
E+B. CLEMENTS
E.+M.
68.9/
S+F.
R. I. COFFING
A828
H.' NELLIE
PUTERBAUGH
41.75
70
MOSS 40
1
70
25.35
ROBERT"H. WILLIAMSON
84.28
.
H.+A
C. G. LI
M.
M.MARONEY
A.G.
81.65
38
26
IRA MAUDLIN
IL.PHILLIPS
60
111.09
W FRICK
2.6.67
GEORGE W. PEED
INTERNATIONAL MOTOR TRUCKS McCORMICK-DEERING FARM EQUIP. Genuine Parts- Sales & Service SKELGAS Sales & Service INTERNATIONAL DEEP FREEZERS
& REFRIGERATORS phone 116A Royal Center, Ind.
HARRISON FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE
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