The history of Buchanan County, Missouri, Part 62

Author: Union historical company, St. Joseph, Mo., pub. [from old catalog]
Publication date: 1881
Publisher: St. Joseph, Mo., Union historical company
Number of Pages: 1104


USA > Missouri > Buchanan County > The history of Buchanan County, Missouri > Part 62


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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January 15, 1872, the second Board of Directors were designated, and consisted of W. P. Hall, W. Z. Ransom, J. D. McNeely, Peter G. Conlisk, G. H. Koch, Dr. Robert Gunn, Jeff, Chandler, John Pinger, J. L. Bittinger, Fred. W. Smith, T. B. Weakly, R. H. Jordan and S. P. Hyde.


Hon. W. P. Hall was elected President ; Jeff Chandler, Vice Presi- dent ; Col. G. H. Koch, Treasurer ; Dr. Robert Gunn, Secretary ; John L. Bittinger, Auditor ; Ed. E. Mason, Superintendent and Engineer.


The caisson for pier four was accidentally launched January 21, 1872. While the workmen were busily engaged in "blocking down" the immense caisson, weighing four or five hundred tons, and just as they had got from under it, for the purpose of getting more materials, the blocking gave way, and, with a lurch, the heavy mass of timber went down through the ice upon the sandy bed of the river, a distance of about eight feet, and there rested, as luck would have it, exactly in the position it was designed to occupy. During the sinking of this pier (4) the ice broke up in the river, but resulted in no material damage to the work.


Pier four was landed on bed rock March 8, 1872. While the work was thus steadily progressing, a proposition to transfer the bridge to the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad Company, according to the proposition of Mr. B. F. Carver, was presented at a meeting of the Manufacturers' Aid Association, held March 20, 1872. The proposition, as may be sup- posed, caused a great deal of excitement among the people.


Mr. Carver's proposition was to furnish the money to complete the bridge under the present direction, as fast as Chief Engineer Mason would estimate for the required funds; that he would take and extend the St. Joseph & Topeka Railroad to Atchison, Kansas, and connect it with the various roads at that town; that he would remove the machine shops, car works and general offices of the Hannibal & St. Joseph Rail- road, now located at Hannibal, to St. Joseph ; that he would fix the tariff of highway travel on the bridge at rates one-half lower than those of any similar structure on the Missouri or Mississippi Rivers, desiring, for example, that it may bring him from this source not more than $12,500 per annum, whereas the business of the ferry, for similar work, pays over


40


650


HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH.


$50,000 ; and that he would make the tariffs to railroads equal as between his and all others, and that rates guarded and liberal be assured to all.


In consideration of his doing these things, he asked that the city transfer to him its entire stock of $500,000, and that the machine and car shops should be exempted from taxation, as they were in Hannibal, for twenty years.


There was much debate and a great variety of opinions delivered. Some wanted the bridge made absolutely free for highway travel, while others thought it was better to allow the owners of it to collect a low rate of tariff and return to the city a portion of the bonds voted to the work. All appeared to favor the proposition in one form or other, and adopted a resolution, unanimously, that it was the sense of the meeting that the city's stock ought to be sold whenever judicious terms could be made. The council submitted the transfer to the vote of the people, but before the election day had arrived the ordinance was withdrawn.


The caisson for the upper draw rest was placed in position April 27, 1872, and landed on bed rock May 30, 1872.


Pier two, commonly known as pivot pier, was got in place Septem- tember 1, 1872.


The caisson of pier three was landed on bed rock, November 4, 1872.


The next and last pier sunk was pier one. After launching her into the water from the east bank, she was put in position and the air pumps started February 5, 1873. This pier landed in bed rock March 5th, and was completed March 25th. These piers, constituting the sub-structure of the bridge, contain 1,457,000 feet of timber, board measure ; 16,038 cubic feet of concrete, and 172,071 cubic feet of masonry. The base of the largest pier is 45x45 feet the top 35 feet diameter.


Work on the superstructure immediately began. The first span was swung January 18, 1873. The last span was swung May 4, 1873, all the superstructure suspending its own weight.


The superstructure consists of three fixed spans of the quadrangular Pratt truss, each 300 feet long, one fixed span at east approach, 80 feet, and a draw span 365 feet, making the entire length of the bridge 1,345 feet. The weight of the iron in the superstructure is 2,850,000 pounds ; of the road-bed and track, 382,000 pounds. The draw span alone weighs 900,000 pounds, and is so perfectly adjusted as to be easily opened and shut by one man. The capacity of the bridge as estimated, is six times as great as the largest and heaviest train of cars that can be placed upon it. The approaches over bottom lands contain 2,025,000 cubic feet of earth and broken rock.


February 11, 1873, the stockholders met and elected the following Directors for the ensuing third year : Willard P. Hall, W. B. Johnson, I G. Kappner, James McCord, G. H. Koch, W. M. Wyeth, Milton Tootle,


651


HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH.


Edward D. Mason, Robert Gunn, J. D. McNeely, Louis Hax, Jeff. Chand- ler, and R. L. McDonald.


This board met on the 14th, and elected the following officers : W. P. Hall President ; Jeff. Chandler, Vice President ; Robert Gunn, Secre- tary ; G. H. Koch, Treasurer ; Edward D. Mason, Chief Engineer and Superintendent, and John L. Bittinger, Auditor.


Rather an amusing incident occurred during the election. R. L. McDonald acted as teller, and announced Governor Hall elected unani- mously. "I know better," said the Governor quickly," I didn't vote for myself!" Mr. McDonald again looked over the ballots, and as he vainly endeavored to decipher the hieroglyphics on one, the Governor said, nervously, "That's mine ; I voted for Mr. McCord."


"I will leave it to any member of the board to decide whether that does not look as much like Willard P. Hall as James McCord," said Mr. McDonald, good-naturedly exhibiting the ballot. The joke was on the Governor, and no one appreciated it more than he.


On the 20th of May, 1873, the first locomotive crossed the bridge. This was engine No. 6, of the St. Joseph and Denver City Railroad. It was in charge of E. Sleppy, Master Mechanic of the shops of that road, and the man who ran the first passenger train out of St. Joseph on the opening of the Hannibal and St. Joseph Road more than fourteen years before. Charles Stine performed the duties of firemen on this engine. There were on board besides, several bridge and railroad officials, together with several prominent citizens of St. Joseph and Kansas, among whom were the following : Colonel Edward E. Mason, Superin- tendent and Engineer ; Governor Williard P. Hall, President, and Dr. Robert Gunn, Secretary of the St. Joseph Bridge Building Company ; J. F. Barnard, of the K. C., St. J. & C. B. R. R .; R. J. Wells, General Agent of the H. & St. J. R. R. Co., Hon. Isaac C. Parker, Jeff. Chandler, General G. H. Hall, P. Arnholt, Captain C. Mast, Harry Carter, J. G. Wood, G. H. Koch, Judge J. P. Grubb and J. A. Piner, managed to secure positions on the pilot of the engine, while H. W. Musson, General Agent of the St. L., K. C. & N. R. R .; E. H. Saville, Secretary of the St. Joseph & Denver City R. R .; "Uncle Joseph Beaumont," and about thirty others secured sitting room on the tender.


As soon as the engine arrived on Missouri's soil, three cheers were given for the St. Joseph Bridge. In a few minutes after, the engine again appeared ready for its return trip for a second crossing.


Conspicuous among those perched upon the pilot, on the return trip, was Miss Hettie Mason, daughter of Col. E. D. Mason, Chief Engi- neer, who thus enjoyed the distinction of being the first lady to cross the bridge on wheels. On the same day, crossed the first regular train, ten car loads of freight.


.


652


HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH.


On Saturday, May 31, 1873, occurred the grand celebration of the completion of the bridge. This was, beyond doubt, the most magnifi- cent pageant ever displayed in the city. Not only was every civic asso- ciation and benevolent society represented in the vast procession, but the German citizens of the Northwest had selected St. Joseph as the place for holding their annual Saengerfest, and May 31 was selected as the time. The procession which traversed the streets of St. Joseph on that day was never equaled west of the Mississippi. Every trade was represented. The cooper was hooping barrels in his improvised shop on wheels, the shoemaker was pegging at his last, the axhandle manufac- turers were using their drawing-knives and turning out handles with the same celerity that marked their labors at home ; lathes, looms, steam engines, collar factories, trunk establishments, and an endless variety of other trades and appliances of merchanical labor were in full blast in the vast stream of human industry that moved along the streets to the enlivening music of six or eight brass bands. The procession on this occasion was fully six miles in length, and both in the novelty of its character and immensity of its magnitude, astonished even the people of the city in whose midst existed the industries represented.


The morning papers stated that there were, on that day, 25,000 strangers in the city, and 50,000 people on the streets. As the proces- sion passed the bridge, the splendid structure presented, with its gay array of bunting, such a picture as few in the vast throng had ever before gazed upon.


At night hundreds of Chinese lanters illuminated the structure.


Ex-Governor W. P. Hall, President of the St. Joseph Bridge Build- ing Company, made the opening speech. He was followed by Rev. and Hon. I. S. Kalloch, of Leavenworth, in an oration of powerful eloquence, which was listened to by the vast audience with the most absorbing interest. Hon. Joseph Brown, Mayor of St. Louis, was then introduced and addressed the audience. General James Craig, Hon. I. C. Parker, Captain James B. Eads, and Hon. Jeff. Chandler, all spoke in turn.


At 3 P. M., a sumptuous banquet was served in Tootle & McLaugh- lin's Hall, to which about five hundred invited guests sat down. Dur- ing the feast, the Fifth Infantry Band, from Fort Leavenworth, under command of Lieutenant Lewis, took seats in the balcony and discoursed appropriate music during the entertainment.


Numerous toasts were given and eloquent responses made. The last of these was "Joseph Robidoux, the founder of St. Joseph," which was drunk in silence by all standing. Thus closed the festivities of the grandest public demonstration ever witnessed in St. Joseph.


On the 4th of July, 1873, at 6:30 P. M., the steamer Mountaineer broke from her moorings, and, floating down, struck the bridge, occasioning damage to the amount of $16,000, which occupied twelve days in repairing.


653


HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH.


Dr. Robert Gunn, who served as Secretary of the Company from the beginning of the second year of its organization, and is now (1881) super- intendent of the bridge, has filled the latter position uninterruptedly, ever since the completion of the work.


June 16, 1879, the control of the bridge was transferred to Jay Gould and associates.


RAILROAD TRAFFIC OVER THE BRIDGE.


Total number engines crossing both ways . .


2,500


Total number passenger and baggage cars crossing both ways


8,500


Total number empty freight cars


5,000


Total number loaded freight cars


25,000


FOOT AND WAGON TRAFFIC FOR YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1880 --- CROSSING WEST.


MONTHS.


Hogs


Sheet and


and Mules.


Cattle, Horses


Vehicles .


Four Horse


Vehicles.


Two Horse


Vehicle.


One Horse


Horsemen


Footmen.


January . .


...


185


1


582


97


195


1 492


February .


200


452


10


803


129


200


1,630


March


. . .


344


12


819


149


197


1,842


April .


40


609


16


782


135


173


I 743


June .


200


233


2


647


217


132


1,958


July ..


430


165


4


874


276


153


2,273


August .


...


II2


3


1,123


236


201


2 330


September


...


178


3


2,096


294


138


1,994


October .


200


321


5


2,849


306


189


2,147


November


. . .


90


I


1.486


180


III


I 665


December


12


108


I


1.437


143


130


1,485


Total


882


3.146


61


14.156|


2.320


1 973


22,413


CROSSING EAST.


MONTHS.


Hcgs.


Sheep and


and Mulcs.


Cattle, Horses


Vehicles.


Four Horse


Vehicles


Two Horse


Vehicles


One Horse


Horsemen.


Footmen


January .


121


98


I


553


90


181


1,424


February


51


135


2


701


95


163


1,442


April


. . .


141


:


565


121


142


1,603


May


17


198


I


721


149


162


1.791


June .


8


224


I


679


193


142


1.732


July .


13


227


4


922


262


165


2.219


August


537


205


..


1,032


210


192


2 242


September .


...


363


3


1,160


188


166


I,8So


October .


15


555


7


1,849


176


174


2 118


November.


184


185


1


1,198


113


106


1.520


December. .


9


97


I


730


79


I26


I 392


Total .


955


2.704


21


10,882


1,818


1.891


20,105


May


600


349


3


658


158


154


1,854


March .


276


722


142


175


1,742


654


HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH.


THE UNION DEPOT.


Since the printing of the article on the Union Depot, under head of " Railroads," page 595, other and important data have come to our knowledge, which we offer, by way of explanation, for the appearance of this second article on the same subject.


The officers of the St. Joseph Union Depot Company are as follows : L. D. Tuthill, of the St. Joseph and Western Railroad, President.


J. F. Barnard, of the Kansas City, St. Joseph and Council Bluffs Railroad, Secretary and Treasurer.


Judson & Motter, Attorneys.


A. A. Talmage, General Manager of the Missouri Pacific ; John B. Carson, General Manager of the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad ; J. F. Barnard, General Superintendent of the Kansas City, St. Joseph & Council Bluffs Railroad ; Thomas McKissock, General Superintendent of the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railroad ; L. D. Tuthill, General Superintendent of the St. Joseph and Western Railroad, are the Directors. All these gentlemen have done their utmost to forward the great enterprise in every possible manner.


The architects are Messrs. Eckel & Mann, two young men of this city, who have already taken a position among the first architects of the country. The plan furnished by these gentlemen shows the handsomest railway building in the West, and, when it is completed, St. Joseph will indeed have good cause to feel proud of the grand edifice. It will cer- tainly be a superb building and will stand as a monument to the genius, taste and wonderful skill of its accomplished architects.


Outside of the carriage drive will be an ornamental park, set in grass and shrubbery, and adorned with statues, urns and a fountain, all of which will not only greatly add to the appearance of the depot, but will show the æsthetic taste of the builder. We see no reason why a railroad depot should not be made as cheerful and inviting as a public park, or any other place of public resort. Here will congregate at all hours of the day and night, weary travelers and commercial men, fatigued women and tired children. The nice new depot, with its conveniences and accommodations, its small, handsome park, with its blooming flowers and sparkling fountain, will certainly do much to lighten the tedium of their waiting moments.


To fully appreciate this magnificent structure it must be seen. No description of ours would convey to the reader an adequate idea of its great beauty. It is both ornamental and durable, and St. Joseph will be justly proud of it, as one of her crowning architectural glories.


As a public improvement, it ranks next in importance to the great iron bridge that spans the Missouri River, a few blocks northwest of it. The stranger coming to St. Joseph from the east, gets his first glimpse of


655


HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH.


the depot building as he approaches the city from the south. He will see distinctly its huge proportions, and white-crested tower, glittering in the morning sunlight, but not until he halts within the shadow of its immense awnings, will he realize the fact, that he is gazing upon one of the finest, one of the largest, and one of the most symmetrically con- structed edifices of the kind to be found anywhere in the country.


The depot is the outgrowth of a necessity long since felt by not only those who are connected with the railroads, but by our business men generally.


The conveniences of a depot centrally located, where all the trains arrive and whence they all depart, are numerous. The passenger busi- ness, which has been scattered between the different depots, will now be confined to one point. Besides this, the railroad ticket offices will be here, and the express offices. These conveniences will save time and expense, and facilitate business, travel, and every interest connected with commerce and railroad transit.


St. Joseph has now a population of forty thousand, and being the converging point of several railroads, it is only in keeping with that spirit of enterprise ever manifested on the part of her citizens, and which has brought her present material prosperity, that she should have a first class Union depot-worthy of her growth and commercial import- ance.


To form something like a correct idea for the present emergency for a Union depot, we need only to mention the fact that forty-eight daily passenger trains arrive and depart from St. Joseph, saying nothing of the freight trains, which number many more.


At a congratulatory meeting held in Boston, in September, 1851, Mr. Winthrop was pleased to say that the number of passenger trains which daily arrived and departed from Boston was one hundred. Boston was then the fifth city in population in the Union, and it was with great pride that the distinguished orator dwelt upon the fact so creditable to the sagacity and energy of that people.


At that time St. Joseph was but a hamlet, struggling into existence. To-day, however, with about one-fifth the number of inhabitants that Boston then contained, St. Joseph has half the number of passenger and freight trains which Boston then boasted.


Western pluck and western energy have achieved, in a few short years, railroad facilities which older cities in the eastern states have not accomplished in half a century. The character of these improvements is not ephemeral, built merely to gratify the demand of the day, and to subserve a temporary purpose, but are substantial, and will be as durable, we hope, as the everlasting hills that surround our city. No other town in the wide Union, in proportion to population, presents a more thrifty or business like appearance than St. Joseph.


656


IIISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH ..


Stand at the foot of Felix, Francis, Edmond or any of her business streets, on any day of the week, and glance eastward and there can be seen thoroughfares crowded with teams, wagons, carriages, men, women and children from morning till night. All over the city are seen the unmistakable evidences of that resistless, pushing spirit of enterprise- which has made the town and given it an impetus which cannot be checked. The evidences of this spirit are seen in the immense packing houses, founderies, manufactories, planing and flour mills, street rail- roads, waterworks, Union depot, and all the other public improvements which have been inaugurated and pushed to completion, and lastly, in our rapid increase in population, which has more than doubled since 1870.


St. Joseph has struggled with a few difficulties in the past, yet with an unfaltering courage, and with an abiding faith in her own capa- bilities, like the stripling of Israel with his sling and stone, she has over- come them all, and now occupies a vantage ground from which she cannot recede.


Behind her, are the broad, rolling prairies, with a soil as prolific as was ever turned by the plowshare to the sunlight of heaven ; a soil upon which Ceres pours out the fullness of her horn in such plenteousness as will supply the granaries of half a continent. Toward the rising sun live the great bulk of the people of this country, who, in the course of time, will come in millions and pitch their tents upon our vast. plains and ver- dant valleys, and find in St. Joseph a ready market and an outlet for their surplus and their increase.


Above us floats an atmosphere as clear and limpid, and a sky as blue and sunny as ever cheered and brightened an Italian landscape.


It will be seen, by glancing at a map, that Northwestern Missouri occupies about the central position of the American Union, and this being the fact, there must be, somewhere in the Valley of the Missouri, a grand pivotal point, about which may be eventually amassed the ele- ments of trade, power and influence, thence to be disseminated through- out the entire country. What town or city in this valley offers so many inducements for the location of this common center as St. Joseph ? All acknowledge the advantages of her geographical position, her salu- brious climate, and the unsurpassed fertility of her soil ; then, where would the stranger and the merchant, the mechanic, the tradesman, and sagacious business man, look, if not to St. Joseph, to find this ultimate common center ?


CHAPTER XV.


THE FIRE DEPARTMENT OF ST. JOSEPH.


ITS ORIGIN, GROWTH AND SUBSEQUENT IMPORTANCE.


To the active, personal exertions of General W. R. Penick, is due the credit of first inaugurating a fire department in St. Joseph. June 23, 1860, while a member of the City Council, he introduced an ordinance appropriating $25,000 for the purpose of procuring engines and equip- ping a fire company. This proposition was unanimously accepted by the Council, but, on being submitted to the people, was voted down. A subsequent attempt on the part of this enterprising citizen to raise the sum of $15,500 for the same purpose, met with a similar fate.


Though many approved the policy and admitted the urgent neces- sity of such an organization for the protection from fire, nothing was accomplished and scarcely anything attempted in the premises till April, 1864, at which period William R. Penick was elected Mayor of the city, and, in his message to the Council of that year, urgently recommended an appropriation of $5,000 for the purchase of a steam fire engine. In view of this recommendation, the City Council, at a meeting held July 5, 1864, passed an ordinance to that effect.


At the same meeting, the Mayor was requested to solicit subscrip- tions or donations of means for the purchase of hose and hook and lad- der truck. To the efforts of this gentleman, the citizens promptly re- sponded, and W. R. Penick having, as representing the firm of Penick & Loving, headed the list with a subscription of $100, was enabled to report, at the next meeting of the Council, the sum of $2,700 subscribed for the required purpose.


May 17, 1865, the steam fire engine, Blacksnake, arrived and was tested by a committee of the Council, who pronounced it acceptable.


August 7, 1865, a committee of the Council recommended the organization of Volunteer Fire Companies. The first to respond to this call was the Rescue Hook and Ladder Company, which was, for many years after, the pride of St. Joseph, including in its ranks some of the best young men in the city.


The following named gentleman comprised the thirty charter mem- bers :


John Lyon, Judson Lyon, H. Clay Carter, Joseph Andriano, Chas. C. Barrington, F. K. Maus, Ad. Andle, N. P. Schlupp, Wm. Borngesser,


658


.


HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH.


J. P. Lowell, J. M. Armstrong, C. H. Floyd, J. S. Thompson, John F. Lyon, Arthur Lowell, Theodore Textor, R. Saunders, John Smith, W. B. McNutt, S. J. Handley, R. M. Russell, C. E. Holman, E. C. Zimmerman, W. J. McCord, C. B. Wait, H. B. Floyd, W. K. Noyes, J. M. Hunter, Geo. W. McGibbons, F. A. Mitchell.


The company officers elected were, John L. Lyon, Foreman ; J. M. Armstrong, First Assistant; Judson Lyon, Second Assistant ; Wm. J. McCord, Secretary ; C. E. Holman, Treasurer.


October 13, 1865, Charles W. Davenport was appointed Chief Engi- neer of the fire department, but declined to act, for the reason that he was insurance agent, representing numerous companies. On the 31st of the same month, the Mayor appointed Dr. Robert Gunn to the position. He served as Chief Engineer till April, 1867, when Ed. R. Brandow was elected to succeed him. He served two years, to April, 1870, when he was succeeded by R. J. S. Wise. In 1871, Harry Carter was elected Chief, serving one year. He was succeeded in April, 1872, by E. Wag- ner. A. Saltzman, in turn, succeeded him, at the end of his annual term, serving till April, 1874, at which period, W. B. McNutt was elected. He served six years, to April, 1880, when he was succeeded by Henry Gibson, who served till April, 1880, when W. . B. McNutt was again elected to the responsible office of Chief Engineer of the fire department of the city of St. Joseph, a position for which he has proven himself eminently fitted.


In the years that have ensued since the organization of the first fire company in St. Joseph, there have been erected in the city, five engine houses, supplied with two steam fire engines, valued respectively, at $4,250 and $5,000 ; one hook and ladder truck, and two four-wheel hose carts and three two-wheel carts.




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