History of Hamilton and Clay counties, Nebraska, Vol. I, Part 13

Author: Burr, George L., 1859-; Buck, O. O., 1871-; Stough, Dale P., 1888-
Publication date: 1921
Publisher: Chicago : The S.J. Clarke Publishing Company
Number of Pages: 886


USA > Nebraska > Hamilton County > History of Hamilton and Clay counties, Nebraska, Vol. I > Part 13
USA > Nebraska > Clay County > History of Hamilton and Clay counties, Nebraska, Vol. I > Part 13


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).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93


9,106


9.866


9,061


4,072


58


472


Keith


5,294


3,692


1.951


2,556


194


Keya Paha


3.594


3.452


3,076


3,920


Kimball


4,498


1,942


758


959


8,582


3,606


261


152


Lancaster


85,902


73,703


64,835


76,395


28,090


7,074


153


125


Lincoln


23,420


15,684


11.416


10,441


3,632


17*


1171


Logan


1,596


1,521


960


1.378


Loup


1.946


2,188


1,305


1.662


McPherson


1,692


2.470


517


401


5,589


1.133


with Platte 109


9,151


4,584


8,926


8.222


5,773


1,212


44


12.547


13,095


14.952


12,930


10.451


7,593


3,139


1,281


Nuckolls


13.236


13,019


12,414


11,417


4,235


8


29


Otoe


19,494


19,324


22.288


25,403


15.727


12,345


4,211


1,862


Perkins


3,967


2,570


1,702


4.364


9,900


10.451


10.772


9,869


2,447


152


782


35


Polk


10,714


10,521


10,542


10,817


6.846


136


19


Richardson


18,968


17.488


19,614


17,574


15,031


9,780


2,835


532


Rock


3,703


3.627


3.083


Saline


16,514


17,866


18,252


20,097


14,491


3.106


39


Sarpy


9,370


9,274


9,080


6,875


4.481


2,913


1,201


Saunders


20,589


21,145


22.085


21.577


· 15,810


4,547


Scott's Bluff


20,710


8,355


2,552


1,888


16.140


11.147


2,953


9,625


7.328


6,033


8,687


Sherman


8,877


8.275


6,550


6.399


2.061


Stanton


7.756


7.542


6.959


4,619


1,813


636


Thayer


13.976


14.775


14.325


12.738


6,113


Thurston


9.589


8,704


6,517


3.176


109


31


Valley


9,823


9,480


7,339


7.092


2,324


Washington


12.180


12,738


13.086 .


11,869


8,631


4.452


1,249


751


Wayne


9,725


10,397


9.862


6.169


813


182


Webster


10.922


12,008


11.619


11.210


7.104


16


Wheeler


2,531


2.292


1.362


1,683


644


York


17.146


18,721


18.205


17.279


11.170


604


· Boundaries of Lincoln County changed about 1867.


t As Shorter County.


ADAMS COUNTY


Adams County lies about one hundred and twenty miles west of the Missouri River, and twenty-four miles from the south line of the state. It is bounded by the counties of Hall on the north, Clay on the east, Webster on the south, and Kearney on the west.


Mortimer N. Kress and Joe Fouts came into the county in 1869. On March 5, 1820, they located claims at a point near where the Little Blne enters Clay County. In 1871 it was declared a county by executive proclamation and the first elections held in that year. In April of 1871, a colony of Englishmen came in and settled near where Hastings is located, and upon Micklen's land Hastings was projected and the townsite laid out, in 1872. In 1871 the county had a voting population of twenty-nine. The line of the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad built across the county east and west in 1871-2. The St. Joseph & Denver built into the county also in 1872. The area of the county is 565 square miles. The growth of the county as evidenced by its population, has been : Census of 1870, 19; 1880, 10,235; 1885, 18,004; 1890, 24,303; 1900, 18,840; 1910, 20,900, and 1920, 22,621.


The first county seat was Juniata, but after some efforts Hastings secured this


301


Pawnee


9,578


10,582


11.770


10,340


Pierce


10,681


10,122


8,445


4,864


1,202


19,464


19,006


17.747


15.437


9,511


1,899


Red Willow


11.434


11,056


9,604


8,837


3,044


Merrick


10,763


10,379


9,255


8,758


5,341


557


Nance


8,712


Nemaha


22,511


19,101


16,976


13,669


.....


Knox


18.894


18.358


14,343


Madison


Morrill


Phelps


Seward


15.867


15,895


15.690


Sioux


4,528


5,599


2.055


2.452


699


Thomas


1,773


1,191


628


517


Platte


2,809


Sheridan


96


HISTORY OF NEBRASKA


prize in 1877. Besides its metropolis, Hastings, the fourth city in the state, the other towns of the county are, Juniata, which was started in 1871 and is a town of about five hundred inhabitants now; Ayr, which was laid out in 1828; Kenesaw, which was located in 1872, and is now a town of over seven hundred ; Hansen, which was laid out in 1829: Pauline, Leroy, Briekton, Roseland, Holstein, and Prosser. As in every county, there were some forty years ago a number of postoffices, at inland points, which by the establishment of rural mail routes and concentration of trade into other towns, have been practically, if not entirely. wiped out or discontinued. Among these in Adams County were Millington, about three miles northeast of Ayr ; Indlow, about eleven miles northeast of Hastings; Hazel Dell, about eight miles south of Juniata : Mayflower, about seven miles south of Kenesaw ; Kingston, about five miles east of Ayr; Morseville and Rosedale, in southwest corner of the county. With the prestige of Hastings, the queen city of the state, Adams County has always been a county to be reckoned with in Nebraska.


ANTELOPE COUNTY


This eounty is in the northeastern part of the state, in the fifth tier from the east and second from the northern edge. Its area is 872 square miles. It was settled on April 25, 1868, by "Ponca George" St. Clair, in the St. Clair Valley. The county was established in 1871, and received its name from an incident remembered by Hon. Leander Gerrard, when the year before a party he was with had killed and refreshed themselves upon the meat of some young antelope. The county seat then chosen was the present site of Oakdale. The county seat Neligh was chosen in the late '70s, after the first court house had burned. The county had Indian raids in 1820, but no serious depredations were suffered in this eounty. The principal early towns of the county were Oakdale, founded in 1872, Neligh, in 1873. The towns now flourishing in this eounty in 1920, are: Clearwater, started in 1872 as Antelope and name changed in 1880 to Clearwater; Orchard, established 1880; Elgin, a town of about seven hundred in southern part of county : Royal, established in 1880, Brunswiek, and inland points, St. Clair, established as a postoffice in 1826 and named for the first settler in the county; Vim; Willowdale, where a postoffice was established in 1874; Jessup, named in honor of ex-Governor Jessup of lowa, and Glenalpine, settled up in 1879. This county is traversed by the main line of the Northwestern system from Omaha to the Black Hills, and by the Sioux City- ()'Neill branch of the Chicago. Burlington & Quincy.


ARTHUR COUNTY


This is the youngest county in Nebraska, formally organized in 1913. Prior to the land drawings at North Platte and Broken Bow in 1912, when the major portion of the land in this eounty was thrown open to homestead settlement, this vicinity was a sparsely settled west end of MePherson County. Big ranches were built up in those days, and a considerable portion of the county is yet devoted to ranching. The county seat town, Arthur, is a small inland village. Other post- offices or trading points in the county are Zella, Melrose, Hillsdale, Cullman, Read and Rice, in the southern portion of the county; Edward, Flora, Collins, Willett, Lena. Carman and Calora, in the northern part. The county is reached by automo-


97


HISTORY OF NEBRASKA


bile stage or private conveyances from Lewellen, Lemoyne or Keystone in Keith County, or Hyannis or Whitman in Grant County, and to Arthur town is about forty miles drive through sandhills either way.


BANNER COUNTY


This county is just north of Kimball, the southwestern county in the Nebraska Panhandle, and borders onto the State of Wyoming, to the west. It has an area of 742 square miles and a population of approximately 1,500 to 2,000. It is an inland county, reached from Union Pacific stations in Kimball County or towns in Scotts Bluff County. Its county seat, Harrisburg, is a small inland town. The early settlements were made in the county in the late '80s. The first invasion of the county by white men was for ranching purposes when it was used by a couple of large ranches before the farming population arrived. It was organized, upon its division from Cheyenne, in 1888. Postoffices or trading centers other than Harrisburg, are Gary, Flowerfield and Epworth, in the southwest part ; Heath and Kirk, in southeastern part; Hull, in the northwestern, and Big Horn, in eastern part of county. The highway from Scotts Bluff to Kimball traverses the county north and south and is the main thoroughfare of travel. Banner County is a great wheat producing area.


BLAINE COUNTY


This county is located north of Custer County, and south of Brown County. It has an area of 711 square miles. This county has a population of between 1,700 and 2,000. The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad line to the Black Hills, and Billings runs through this county with stations at Linscott, Dunning and at Halsey, which is on the Blaine-Thomas County line. Both the Middle Loup and North Loup rivers flow through this county. Brewster and Purdum are both inland towns. Brewster, the county seat, is situated in a most beautiful valley. Dunning, the largest town in the county is a very progressive business town, and has in 1920 the best hotel between Grand Island and Alliance, and numerous other modern, up-to-date brick business buildings. Blaine County, in early days, was the scene of much interesting cowboy history and many very profitable "hunting and fishing" episodes. A great deal of traffic is carried on between Brewster and Dunning by auto trucks in recent years.


BOONE COUNTY


This county is in the fifth tier west in the state and the third north of the Platte River. It has an area of 692 square miles. The first settlements made in the county were in 1871 by people chiefly from Massachusetts, Wisconsin and Minnesota, among the first party being S. D. Avery, Albert Dresser, N. G. Myers, W. H. Stout, W. H. Prescott, and other early settlers being S. P. Bollman, Harvey Manicle, L. H. Baldwin, Richard Evans, T. T. Wilkinson, Elias Atwood, Sr., and John Hammond. Albion, the county seat, was platted in October, 1872, by Loran Clark. The county was organized by act of Legislature, approved March 28, 1871. Towus on the Union Pacific branch to Albion are Boone, St. Edward and Boon- ville. On the Spalding branch of the Union Pacific, the towns are Cedar Rapids and Primrose. On the Chicago & Northwestern branch into Albion from the north,


98


HISTORY OF NEBRASKA


are Petersburg and Loretta. St. Edward was laid out in 1821; and Cedar Rapids in 1879. Inland points in the county are. Arden in the very Northwestern corner; Closter and Olnes in the eastern part ; and Bradish is on the Northwestern branch into Albion from the east. With three branch lines running into the county, and two of them making junction at Albion, this little city has become an important trading center for a very extensive territory, and hardly any county fair in the state excels the annual exposition held at Albion, each September. Early towns in the county's history that have disappeared, or play no very important part any longer, were Waterville, Dayton, Dublin, Myra, Raville, Oxford, Roselma, Boone and Coon Prairie, some of which never had much more than a general store and school house.


BOX BUTTE COUNTY


Box Butte is in the northwestern part of the state, just east of Sioux County, the extreme corner northwestern county. It has an area of 1,076 square miles. It owes its existence to the gold discoveries in the Black Hills in 1876. Prior to then, it was a part of the Brule and Ogallala Sioux Indian reservation territory. But the "Old Sidney" trail to the Black Hills traversed this county, and the mighty rush of gold seekers and freighters verily drove the Indians back. On this noted trail, through Box Butte there were three important stopping places, Hart's ranch at the crossing of Snake Creek, Mayfield's and later the Hughes ranch, at the crossing of the Niobrara, and Ilalfway Hollow, on the high tableland between. After the Northwestern Railroad was extended to Deadwood, the trail dropped into disuse. Then came the great range herds of the Ogallala Cattle Company, Swan Brothers, Bosler Brothers, the Bay State, and other cow outfits. A unique elevation in the eastern part of the county, the cowboys named "Box Butte," and from that, the county received its name. Later, as the Burlington line built up through the sandhills, the rush of homesteaders came in. This county has a great reputation as a potato raising region and Hemingford is a great potato shipping point. Alliance, the county seat, has built up to a thriving city of approximately 5,000 inhabitants. Letan is on the Burlington branch to Sidney ; and stations other than Alliance on the Burlington main line through the county are, Yale, Berea, Heming- ford, Girard and Nye. Marple is an inland point.


BOYD COUNTY


Boyd is a narrow, long county of some five hundred thirty-five square miles in area ent off from the north end of Holt County. Lying between the Niobrara River and the South Dakota state line, it is entirely eut off from the mother county, Holt. With the Niobrara on the south, Ponea Creek running through the county, and the Missouri River along the northeast edge of the county, it is pretty well watered. The Northwestern branch to Winner, South Dakota, runs diagonally southeast and northwest, and stations along this line, within Boyd County are Monowl, Lynch, Bristow, Spencer, the largest town in the county, Anoka and Baker. Other than Butte, the county seat, which the railroad barely missed, inland points are Naper, Gross and Rosedale. The settlements in this county really began much later than those of Ilolt, and most of the towns built up after the railroad came through.


99


HISTORY OF NEBRASKA


The county was separated from Holt in 1891, and is the ninetieth county in the state. It, therefore, has a rather short separate history.


BROWN COUNTY


This county borders to the east of Cherry County, and the 100th meridian runs through it. The Niobrara River is its north border, and Blaine County is to the south, and Rock County to the east. It has an area of 1,235 square miles. The Northwestern Railroad runs through the county practically east and west. The stations on this line are the three main towns of the county. Long Pine, Ainsworth and Johnstown, the latter a village of slightly over a hundred and a quarter. Ainsworth, the county seat, is the largest town in the county, having a popu- lation of over one thousand. Long Pine is the oldest settled town. II. M. Uttley went from Wisner to Long Pine with a steam saw mill on May 13, 1878, and was the first settler there. Dennis Sullivan and A. N. Bassett settled in that vicinity. A postoffice was established at Bone Creek in August or September, 1828, but in 1881 diseontinned and located at Long Pine. The present town of Long Pine, first ealled Long Pine Station, is probably ten miles below the first Long Pine, located on Long Pine Creek. In 1880 the only points in this vicinity were Long Pine Station, Long Pine, Bone Creek, Evergreen and Burrows. All of the other points in this county are now sonth of the railroad, and south of Ainsworth and Long Pine. Among these little inland points are, Almi. Sunnyside, Raven, Midvale, Pike, Beardwell, Mary, Giles, Enderslake, Lakeland, and Burgan.


The county was established in 1883, and in the following year, Keya Paha County was taken off the north. Prior to 1883, it was a part of the unorganized territory, and for a while, of the big Sioux County, when that was in an unorganized state.


BURT COUNTY


Burt County lies in the eastern tier, flanking on the Missouri River, and is the second county north of Douglas County, containing 415 square miles. It was named in honor of Nebraska Territory's first governor, Francis Burt, being one of the original eight counties. Its county seat, Tekamah was founded in 1855 by B. R. Folsom, W. N. Byers, J. W. Patterson, 1I. C. Purple, John Young, Jerry Folsom, Mr. Maynard, William T. Raymond, and a Mr. White, in the name of the Nebraska Stock Company, organized in October, 1854. Decatur, in the northeast corner of the county, was located in the fall of 1855, by the Decatur Town and Ferry Company, the principal members of which were Stephen Decatur, Peter 1. Sarpy, B. R. Folsom, and W. B. Beck, and platted in the summer of 1856. Settle- ments were made at Lyons in 1867 and 1868, but the first store opened in 1821. Oakland was started in 1870, upon a site which John Oak, who settled there in 1862, had purchased from the original owner, Mr. Aaron Arlington, who settled in that vicinity in 1859. Baneroft started upon the arrival of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railroad in 1880, but this town is now in Cuming County. Other stations on the railroad just named are Eureka, Zion, Craig, Peak, and in addition to Decatur being an inland point now, so is Argo. Newton, Arizona, Riverside, Alder Grove postoffice and Golden Spring were former settlements in this county.


100


HISTORY OF NEBRASKA


BUFFALO COUNTY


Buffalo County is nearly in the central part of the state: being just south of C'uster County. in which the geographical center of the state is located. A famous ranel has been established at the point which is 1.433 miles from New York, and the same distance from San Francisco, this being the midway mark of the continent, east and west, and is very close to the City of Kearney. Buffalo County was first settled by the Mormons in 1858, when they located at Wood River Center, now Shelton, in the very eastern edge of the county. This county suffered some material damage in the Indian raids of 1864, and the exodus of settlers that took place then was a deterrent for a time to its settlement. But by 1820 it had sufficiently recovered to form its own organization. For some ten years it had virtually been a part of Hall County. The Burlington & Missouri River Railroad eame through in 1872, some six years after the Union Pacific had built across the county. Kearney Junction, later City of Kearney, was settled in 1820, at the point where the Burlington joined the Union Pacifie main line, upon a townsite selected by D. N. Smith, representing Burlington interests. This location was made under the guidance of Moses 11. Sydenham, who had resided in that vicinity since 1856, and to whom great credit is due for a guiding influence he exercised in the earliest days of central Nebraska. The Huntsman's Echo, a paper started in 1858 at Wood River Center, by Joseph Johnston. while a Mormon sheet, was probably the first notable venture of the Nebraska Territorial Press in the central part of the state, and is one of the most quoted from of all territorial papers for historical data of that period. Buda, located as Kearney Station, when the Union Pacific reached that point in 1866, for some time was the county seat, but lost this distinction and waned down to a small village. For a few years its name was Shelby and then changed to Buda. Gibbon was laid out in 1871 and has been a most enterprising small town in all of the years. Perhaps no citizen of Gibbon had done more to make its name well known and revered in the State of Nebraska than Hon. Samuel C. Bassett. Mr. Bassett has served the agricultural interests of the state in many ways. and been one of the foremost students of Nebraska history and writer of a most interesting and instructive column in recent years published weekly in the Nebraska State Journal. Some years ago he prepared an excellent history of Buffalo County, and has served as president of the State Historical Society for the past few years. Elm Creek was started along about 1820, and Stevenson and Odessa became stopping points on the railroad very early. Butler's Raneh and Optie are also merely flagging stations. When the Burlington line to the Black llills and Wyoming was built. St. Michael, Ravenna, the second largest town in the county and a Burlington division point, and Sweetwater sprang up. There are several stations on a Union Pacific branch from Kearney toward Stapleton ; being Glenwood Peak, Riverdale, Amherst, Watertown and Miller. Natasket, South Ravenna, Pleasanton and Poole, are in the very northern edge of the county on another Union Pacific branch, and inland points are Sartoris and Peake.


BITLER COUNTY


This county is located in the eastern part of the state, fifty-one miles directly west of the Missouri River and even with Omaha as to north and south position,


101


HISTORY OF NEBRASKA


containing an area of 583 square miles. The county was visited by Fremont in his expedition of 1842. but the first permanent settlement was made in 1852. The county was organized in 1868. and Savannah, the first county seat held that distinction for only four years, when it lost to David City, the present county seat. The first railroad built in was the Burlington & Missouri River Company in 1880. Since then the county has become pretty well honeycombed with railroads, David City being an important junction point for diverging branch lines. Ulysses, at the very southern edge of the county was started in 1868, and is several years the senior of David City. During the four years, Savannah, which was laid out as early as 1859, had the court house; it was a thriving village. When the Omaha & Republican Valley branch, now Union Pacific, built through this county in 1878 several enterprising stations were located, among which were Rising City and Brainard. Other towns in the county along this line are Loma and Poley. Brainard was on the old Mormon trail through this vicinity. Other towns in the county now are Surprise, Millerton, Dwight, in the southern part, and Octavia, Brono, Able, Nimburg, Linwood, and Edholm, in the northern part. The Platte River forms the northern boundary of the county.


CASS COUNTY


Cass is one of the original counties of the state, immediately south of Sarpy County. Its first settlement by Samuel Martin in 1853 has been elsewhere narrated. In 1856 it had a population of 1,251. Plattsmouth, its county seat, very early became an important railroad town and one of the important towns of the state. The first company of Nebraska volunteers in the war of the Rebellion was organ- ized at Plattsmouth on the same day that the news of the breaking ont of the war was received. Soon after the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad built into Plattsmouth in 1869, it located its principal shops there. The Missouri Pacific Railroad came into the county in 1882. Speculators, as well as settlers, came into this county in the late '50s, and by the speculating element, three townsites were laid out on Weeping Water Creek; that of Weeping Water, which has survived and made a splendid town; of Grand Rapids and Caledonia, the later town of Grand Rapids taking another site. Louisville was incorporated by the Legislature in 1857, but no substantial building took place until the Burlington Railroad arrived in 1870. Greenwood, in the very northwest corner of the county, wa- located in 1869 by S. C. Bethel : Rock Bluff City, later Rock Bluff, was laid out in 1856, and another town North Rock Bluff, laid out about the same time, was consolidated with it in 1858. South Bend was laid out by speculators in 1852, but not much done in way of building until 1870 when the railroad arrived. Factoryville was the site of three mills and an attempt to build a town around the early milling industry. Avoca was platted in 1882, at the crossing of the Missouri Pacific and Wabash tracks; Union grew from a settlement made as early as 1869: Elmwood grew from a very early settlement ; and many newer towns have sprung up and flourished. Among the more prominent of these are perhaps Nehawka, which though small has furnished the state with statesmen; in recent years Gov. Geo. L. Sheldon and Congressman E. M. Pollard living in that vicinity. Avoca platted in 1857; Englo, on the Lancaster County line in southwestern corner; Wabash; Murray, Mynard; Oreapolis, a railroad point of some importance: La Platta,


102


HISTORY OF NEBRASKA


Cullom. Cedarcreek. Munley, Murdock. Alvo, and Prairie Home. Among numerous towns projected in this county, which further evidence the spirit of speculation that strikes every new country and of which Cass County was a good example of its effect on our territorial days, were Cedarcreek City, filed plat in 1870; Elgin, 1857: Clay City, November, 1856: Troy, 1857; Saline, 185%: Cladonia, 1851: Capital City, 1857: Carlisle, 1856: Bluffdale, 1857: Centerville, 1852; Kanosha, 1858, and Eldorado, 1857.


CEDAR COUNTY


This county is located in the very northeastern corner of the state, and has an area of 135 square miles. It was organized in 1857. In the years 1858, 1862 and 1863, the Indians committed many depredations in Cedar County, burning homes, stealing stock and murdering a few settlers. St. Helena, was the early county seat, succeeding the very first county seat, St. James, in 1859. These two places are now inland points in the very northern part of the county. The first settlers in the county were a group from Harrison County, Iowa. Wancapona as well as St. Helena was settled in 1858. Then Saby Strahm and a few others started Strahmberg, in northwest corner of county opposite the present town of Yankton, South Dakota. This county had a number of other towns, that no longer extensively flourish, being Smithland, Logan Valley, St. Peters, Center Bow, Bow Valley, and Menominee, most of which had a postoffice, store and school, and did not survive railroad extensions. Hartington is now the county seat and principal town of the county. A group of very splendid towns grew up in the south part of the county after the arrival of the railroads, being Randolph, a junction point of two lines : Belden, Laurel, likewise a junction point of two lines of railroad ; Magnet, Coleridge. In the northern part, are a new station called St. James; Wynot, Fordyce, with Aten as an inland point, practically at the old Strahmberg location.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.