ANNALS OF IOWA
VOL. X IOWA CITY, JANUARY, 1872 NO. 1.
RECOLLECTIONS OF THE EARLY SETTLEMENT OF
NORTH-WESTERN IOWA
BY N. LEVERING, GREENWOOD, MO.
(continued )
The "little unpleasantness" with the
"Lo family," at Correctionville, spread as if on the wings of the
wind. The whole country for miles around was in a blaze of excitement. The
guards especially, were burning to emulate the deeds of fallen heroes.
"They smelt the battle afar off." The news spread rapidly—like a
snowball rolling down the mountain's side, the farther it rolls the more it
accumulates. The most exaggerated reports of the affair were soon after read in
the New York journals. The risibles of the guards were uncontrollable when they
read these reports, to see how easy it was to become a hero.
When the report reached Col. Baldwin, of Council
Bluffs, he immediately dispatched to our relief a company of "mounted
minute men," from Mills county, under commend of Capt. Tubs, who made a
forced march, and were soon on the ground, ready to co-operate with the guards
in affording protection to the settlers. The guards and citizens of Sioux City
gave Capt. Tubs and company a hearty welcome Capt. Tubs was a fine looking
officer, and an excellent disciplinarian. His company was made up of Mills
county's best citizens, among whom was D. Solomon, a prominent lawyer of
Glenwood, several doctors and ministers of the gospel, whose names I now have
forgotten. They responded to the order to relieve us of our supposed danger like
true patriots and brave men, sacrificing their personal interests and comfort of
their families. On their arrival (July 5th) they were agreeably surprised to
find the smoke of battle cleared away and the brave guards tranquilly reposing
on their arms, with an inordinate appetite for lager which was a slight
proclivity of our braves. Our minute friends remained with us two or three days,
to recuperate themselves and jaded horses, during which time the hospitalities
of the town were extended them. On the 8th, a luxurious dinner was given them at
Cassady's Hall, by the citizens of Sioux City, under the directions of the
ladies where our Mills county friends were feasted and toasted in a very happy
manner. I am sorry that I cannot here give the toasts and eloquent and
well-timed responses on that occasion. The next morning they took up their line
of march for home, escorted out of town by the "guards" and followed
by the good wishes of our grateful citizens, for the manifestation of their
magnanimity and patriotism. On the day of their departure, two members of the
guards, Thomas Roberts (brother of William, who was wounded at Correctionville)
and Henry Corduway, among our oldest and most worthy citizens, obtained a permit
from Capt. Trip to cross over to the east side of the Floyd river, to what was
known as Hartshorn's Ravine, for the purpose of plowing potatoes that they were
cultivating there, taking with them their horses and wagon. The field was in
full view of the town. They were ordered to report themselves at roll call in
the evening. Roll call came, but not the two soldiers. Nothing strange was
thought of this as it was supposed that they wished to complete their work
before returning. No alarm was felt by their families, as Roberts was something
of a hunter, and it was thought that they had, in all probability, gone in
pursuit of elk or other game. But when they did pot come at a late hour in the
night, Mrs. Corduway, who lived on the east side of Floyd river, in what was
known as " Cole's Addition," became much alarmed as to the whereabouts
and safety of her husband, and about 11 o'clock that night the determined to
institute some search or inquiry for him. Accordingly, she started for the house
of J. M. White, a member of the guards, who lived about three fourths of a mile
up the river. Arriving there, she awoke White, who, on hearing her statement,
immediately reported their absence to Capt. Trip, who was then camped with a
portion of his company in Sioux City, on the bluff just north of G. W.
Chamberlain's house. Grave suspicions were now entertained as to their safety.
G. W. Chamberlain (Orderly Sergeant) was ordered out with a small detachment of
men to make search for the missing ones. They arrived at the field about two
o'clock in the morning, where they found the wagon in a twist, with the hind
wheels turned upon the side and the harness near by, having been cut off of the
horses. The premises gave unmistakable evidence of hostility. The horses
evidently had been tied to the hind wheels of the wagon, and having been
frightened, turned them up as they were found. The darkness rendered further
discovery impossible. They remained on the ground until daylight when evidences
of Indians were clearly discernible, but the I missing men were nowhere to be
found, and as no traces of I blood were discovered, it was presumed that they
had been made prisoners or carried off to some more secret place, and murdered.
They had evidently taken the horses. Their trail was soon struck, when the
command started in pursuit, leaving J. M.White to report to headquarters, which
he promptly did. As I was seating myself at the breakfast table, J. C. C.
Haskins appeared at my door, with gun in hand, and narrated in substance the
statement above, and that our company was ordered out immediately to search for
the missing men. Saddling my horse as quickly as possible, I mounted and was
soon on the way with what remained of our company. Arriving at the field, we
found J. M. White who had discovered the body of Roberts. Further search being
made, the lifeless body of Corduway was found a short distance from Roberts, in
the grass near where they had been at work—both lying on their backs, as if
they had laid down to sleep. Roberts had his left hand on his left breast, with
his thumb under his vest; in his right hand he held a small tin pail, about half
full of water. He had seemingly died without a struggle. But Corduway had
struggled considerably. On turning them over it was found that they had been
shot in the back—Roberts through the lungs, the ball lodging in the palm of
his left hand, and Corduway through the bowels. They evidently had been
preparing their dinners when they received the fatal shot; so close were the
enemy upon them when they fired that the powder burned their clothes. The
harness was hastily and temporarily repaired and thrown upon the horses, which
were hitched to the wagon in which were laid the bodies of our murdered
comrades, which were conveyed to Cassady's Hall, to await the necessary
arrangements for burial. Both left families to mourn their sad fate.
A courier was at once dispatched to Council Bluffs with
the startling intelligence to Col. Baldwin. John Hubble, a youth, was selected
to carry the dispatch. He mounted a horse and set out on the trip, stopping at
Onawa and several other points to procure fresh horses. He reached his place of
destination about twelve hours, a distance of 110 miles. Captain Trip, after
detailing men sufficient to convey the dead to town, took the remainder of his
company and started in pursuit of the enemy. Taking the trail, we went south,
across Hartshorn's Ravine, thence southeast for a mile or more, when the trail
turned north. Judging, from indications, there could not have been more than two
Indians. We soon came upon Sergeant Chamberlain with whom we continued the
pursuit, when about noon I was ordered to carry a dispatch to Correctionville,
where a small detachment of the guards were stationed, ordering Joseph Buchanan
(brother-in-law of the murdered Roberts) to Sioux City. Frederick Borsh
accompanied me. Having ridden our horses quite rapidly during the day, my horse
gave out before we had gone many miles, whereupon I urged Borsh, as his horse
was seemingly good, to leave me and hurry on with the dispatch, which he
reluctantly did. I urged my disabled and wearied horse along as fast as it was
practicable, and arrived safely at Correctionville late in the evening. There
was no house then from Sioux City, or after leaving the Floyd river, until
arriving at Correctionville, a distance of over thirty miles. Captain Trip
continued pursuit until next day, when he was relieved by Captain Morton, who
commanded a small company composed mostly of the settlers of Plymouth county.
Morton continued the chase until about four o'clock that afternoon, when for
some cause best known to himself; he abandoned pursuit and returned home.
The alarm had now spread until it had reached every
cabin and hamlet on the frontier, and a general stampede seemed inevitable. Many
abandoned their homes and fled to Sioux City for safety. Others returned east
among their friends until there should be some guaranty of safety to our
frontier. In order to check further hostilities and restore tranquility, his
excellency Gov. Kirkwood, who had been notified by Col. Baldwin of the state of
affairs, ordered Capt. John Mitchell, of Des Moines, to garrison the most
exposed points, and afford protection to the settlements. A portion of this
company was left to garrison Cherokee. Two brothers (whose names I now have
forgotten), citizens of Cherokee county, joined Capt. Mitchell's command, or
acted in conjunction with it as scouts. It was during the month of August that
these scouts, returning from a scout, late one sultry evening, their horses
fatigued from the day's ride, themselves equally so, they sought rest for the
remainder of the night in a stock-yard, in or close to the town of Cherokee.
Turning their horses loose in the yard, they climbed upon the top of a shed
covered with hay, which stood in the enclosure, so that they might be able to
keep an eye on their horses. They were armed with minnie rifles loaded with
conical balls. They slept alternately, in order to keep a close watch for any
approaching enemy. The moon shone brightly, and objects were discernible for
some distance around. About two o'clock in the morning, not seeing anything to
awaken suspicions of danger to themselves or horses, the watch was gently
yielding to the demands of balmy sleep, when he was suddenly aroused by some
unusual noise, and on looking in the direction from whence it proceeded, he was
startled to see two stalwart Indians in possession of their horses, and leading
them toward the bars of the yard. Quietly awakening his brother, each selected
his victim, who were now endeavoring to lay down the bars, one of whom was in a
stooped position, with his unmentionable in range with the unerring rifle of the
scout which at once sent a leaden compliment crashing through him, raking him
fore and aft, coming out at the top of his head. The other scout missed his aim;
the savage made his escape with the horse. The scouts leaped from the shed and
approached the fallen foe, who had not yet taken his departure for the new
hunting ground. As they came near him, he struck at them with his gun, when they
sent another ball through his heart which safely landed him in the hunting
grounds of the great spirit. The victors, no doubt wishing to preserve some
memento of their copper-colored prize, not only scalped, but skinned his entire
head, which scalp they sent to Capt. Trip's headquarters, at Sioux City, where
it hung for several days out on the Captain's tent, which gave it the appearance
of the home of a notable brave, when it was afterward forwarded to Gov.
Kirkwood, at Des Moines.
In the latter part of July (1861) a detachment of the
guards, under command of Lieut. Millard, were ordered to Correctionville, as a
relief garrison at that post. They were T. J. Stone, W. Haley, M. Bruckner, T.
McElhany, J. Hipkins, Mr. Lee, Mr. Chapman, N. Levering, and others whose names
are now not remembered. Each night a portion of the command was detailed to
guard the settlers' stables, for the protection of their horses. This kind of
duty the boys denominated "Watch-dog Duty," which we regarded as quite
appropriate. We were rendezvoused in a log cabin near the house of J. M.
Kellogg, a very excellent man, in whose family resided two young ladies, whose
acquaintance Bruckner and Lee soon made, and generally acted as their escort.
They were observed one day by T. McElhany, accompanying the young ladies to a
grove of timber on the bank of a small stream, about one mile distant, for the
purpose of gathering berries. The boys being unarmed, Mac. thought there was a
good opportunity for fun, which he lost no time in improving. Hastening to the
house of a Mr. Everett, near whose house the parties had gone, he found Mr.
Everett ripe for a joke, as he always was. They quickly agreed upon a plan to
frighten the unsuspecting by personating the Indian. Accordingly, Everett
painted his face and donned a blanket, and Mac., with his gun loaded with a
blank cartridge, they hurried off. Arriving at the timber they cautiously crept,
unobserved, through the brush on the opposite side of the stream until they were
sufficiently near the party, who were busily at work and not anticipating the
least danger, when suddenly the report of a gun was heard. The young ladies, on
looking sharply in the direction of the sound, discovered Everett, and shrieked
(as only affrighted women can), "Indians! Indians!!" and away they
bounded for home, through the brush and over the logs, like young fawns, while
Lee stood coolly watching the movements of the blanket as if to fully satisfy
himself as to whether attacked by Indians or not. Calling Bruckner to his side
he said, "Morris, there are Indians over there; don't you see them ? Don't
you see that blanket? " Bruckner was a German, but spoke English tolerably
well, and was pluck to the heel. Bruckner, after hastily surveying the supposed
enemy, grasped the limb of a tree-top lying near him, which he endeavored to
break off for a war club, at the same time shouting at the top of his voice,
" Vot for you shoots over here ? Shust you stops cat, or I shust comes over
there und beats h—1 out you." Getting no response to his interrogatory or
threats, he said, " Lee, I shust believes dem are Inshuns, und ve had
better leave," and suiting actions to words, they beat a retreat—not,
however, without first making a hasty search for the girls. They hurried to the
house of Everett, thinking that the girls had fled thither. Arriving there they
found the would-be Indians—Everett in the act of washing the paint off of his
face, and convulsed with laughter T. J. Stone was standing near Kellogg's house,
looking down the road in the direction of the timber, when he saw girl No. 1,
bounding up the road at the top of her speed, with bonnet in hand, as if life
was at stake. Calling to me he said, " See that girl coming, something
wrong. Let's go and see! " Off we ran to our quarters, and grasping our
guns, we soon inquired of the young lady the cause of her alarm, and were told
that the Indians had attacked the party. "I saw," said she, "one
great big Indian with a blanket on. He shot at us, and the ball whizzed close by
my head." "Where are the boys? " said we. " I don't know; I
left them there." We hurried on, thinking that a bloody fight with Mr. Lo
was inevitable. Meeting girl No. 2, her statement was a corroboration of No. 1.
Leaving her we hurried forward, when we soon met Bruckner and Everett, who were
now looking for the girls whom they feared had been seriously frightened. On
being informed of their safety, Everett related the joke, which was followed by
roars of side-splitting laughter, all enjoying the joke a hugely.
Soon after this, and while we were at Correctionville,
some of the company concluded to test the fighting qualities of one of its
members—Wm. Haley—an Irishman from Monona county, who was regarded by his
fellow soldiers as a great coward. The following plan was agreed upon: Tom
Flowers, an intimate friend of Bill's, proposed to him one day, that he (Bill)
should accompany him on a scout for Indians, which Bill readily agreed to. One
of the men was selected to play Indian. Taking his gun and red I blanket under
his arm, he quietly slipped out of camp and down to the timber, unobserved by
Bill. Flowers, in order that nothing serious might occur by a shot from Bill's
gun, proposed that he should load it for him, to which Bill readily assented.
Tom took the gun, and stepping aside, loaded it with a blank cartridge. Having
done this, they mounted their horses, when their brothers in arms crowded around
to give words of cheer, while some shook Bill by the hand and expressed their
fears that ere the sun went down, some redskin would possess his scalp. Pat
assured them that he would give a good account of himself should they encounter
an Indian. They rode down to the timber, when Flowers proposed that they should
ride into the river to let their horses drink. While in the river, the crack of
a gun was heard. On looking around, a red blanket was seen behind a tree near
by. "Indians!" said Flowers. "Run for life! " and spurring
his horse, dashed off, saying, "Bill, save yourself:" Bill was not to
be bluffed. He dismounted, tied his horse to a tree, and was disposed to take
matters coolly. Unslinging his gun he said, " Be dad, an' I'm not afther
lavin' until I make a howl in yer darty hide." Looking about for his
comrade and not seeing him, he shouted, " Tom! Tom! " Receiving no
response, he concluded he wanted to see Tom worse than the Indian, and took to
his heels, leaving his horse behind. Coming out on the prairie in full view of
our quarters, he stopped, looked for a moment at Tom—who was charging about on
his horse as if his horse was uncontrollable, then in the direction of the
timber, as if determined not to give up the contest—when he shouted,
"Come on, Tom, for by the howly saints I'll have a shot at him yet.
"Retracing his steps to the edge of the timber, he tip-toed, and stretched
his neck to its full capacity, while he peered around for the enemy. His eye
soon caught a glimpse of the red blanket through the brush, when Pat whaled away
and immediately took to his scrapers, like a quarter horse, until he was some
distance on the prairie. Looking toward our quarters and seeing a number of us
standing in a group, looking toward him, he pulled off his hat, and waving it
over his head, shouted in an indignant voice, "Come down here, you cowardly
devils—come down! The woods is full of Ingins." Each one grasped his gun
and started on a double-quick. We were soon circled round him, listening to his
wonderful adventure. Said he, "Boys, the woods are alive with Ingins. I saw
four great big fellers, with red blankets." "See here," he
continued, holding up his right hand that had received a scratch in the brush,
and pulling open his bosom, which also had received a scratch, "see here
where two balls grazed me. Be dad, boys, I'll have a shot at them again."
We complimented him for his bravery, and told him that it would be an act of
rashness to venture into the timber again as the enemy had the advantage of us.
Tom rode into the timber and brought out Bill's horse, when all withdrew from
the bloodless field to our quarters, in good order, well convinced that Pat was
game, and to fool with him was unsafe. Bill remained in blissful ignorance of
the joke for several days, when he incidentally heard of it one day in a saloon,
after we had been ordered back to Sioux City. His wrath knew no bounds. He
immediately conquered a pint of "red-eye," and then started for camp
to conquer the company. It was a bright, moonlight night, when Bill came
staggering into camp, roaring like one of the bulls of Bashan. He stamped, he
raved, he foamed and frothed, he swore he would whip the Captain, and every
"domed" officer and private in the company. He was ordered under
guard, but to no effect. It was not until a late hour that, from exhaustion, he
succumbed to Morpheus and slumbered away his wrath. These were some of the
notable and brilliant feats and strategic movements of the guards, for which
they were so justly renowned.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
MEMORIAL SPEECH BY JUDGE GRANT
The Scott County Pioneer Settlers' Association, of
Scott county, held their fifteenth annual festival at Davenport, on the evening
of January 9th, 1872, on which occasion the Hon. James Grant pronounced the
following eloquent eulogy on some of the pioneer dead of Scott county:—
There is always a
sadness attendant on our annual meetings. This association was created to
preserve from oblivion the memory of the early settlers of this county, and to
make some permanent record of past events, which otherwise would be forgotten
when our day and generation had departed.
We have all lived so many years in this community that
we are now old men and old women. Long before our organization was created, a
large majority of the settlers of this county—prior to December 1, 1840—had
passed out of existence, without a record of even their names, much less their
history.
Every year since our organization we have been called
upon to mourn the death of some members of this body whose lives had been passed
in usefulness among us, and whose memory was endeared to us by fond
recollections. Antoine Le Claire, Ebenezer Cook, Willard Barrows, and Charles
Metteer, who had held high positions in society, end been presidents of this
body, have all died and been buried by this society, with the honor and respect
due to well-spent lives. Never, in the last fourteen years, have we met, in this
hallowed congregation, without performing the melancholy duty of funeral honors
to some brave men or women, who had periled their lives in the wilderness, and
had been coworkers with us in all these honest and honorable labors which made
this the garden of the valley, and filled it with intelligence, luxury, and
refinement.
But in the past year, our associates greater in number
and personal character and influence than ever before have died; and the year
1871, from its beginning to its close, has gathered from our midst a harvest of
death without a parallel in our history. During that period, eighteen men and
women—whose lives had been long, useful, and honorable among us—have been
taken from earth to a life immortal. They are numbered as follows:—
Thomas Jones, Leroy
Dodge, Jabez A. Birchard, Ebenezer Cook, James Davenport, Rodolphus Bennett,
Alanson Noble, Michael Cooper, William Wilson, Isadore Dapron, Jas. Jack, Mrs.
Isabella Maclot Wallace, Mrs. Charles H. Eldridge, Mrs. Ephraim Lane, Mrs. Wm.
H. Gabbert, Mrs. J. M. Dunn, and Miss Lucy Campbell—daughter of Andrew W.
Campbell—and Mrs. Milo Pollock.
You do not expect me to give a short history of the
life of each or any of our deceased friends, but in this large array of names,
the mention of every one of which will carry our memories to days long vanished,
and recall characters and events which had years been forgotten, there are some
who occupied the very front ranks in the march of civilization and order which
created this county.
Thomas Jones died early in the year. Leroy Dodge, James
Davenport, Ebenezer Cook, Jabez A. Burchard, and Rodolphus Bennett, all died
between the harvest and the fall of the leaves of 1871. They were among the
greatest of the great men of Scott county, in days of yore; they continued tall
trees in the forest of talent, industry and energy which has honored Scott
county since its habitation by the whites. They trod on and literally rubbed out
the receding footprints of the red man, when the Caucasian wave rolled its white
crest west of the Father of Waters in Iowa.
Leroy Dodge was, for a long period of his early life, a
steamboat pilot and owner, on the river which runs from us to the gulf. He
settled in this county and became a leading and prominent farmer, in 1839. He
was elected to the legislature in 1852. No man in his township was more
intelligent or useful. In private life he was a good husband, a kind father, and
an exemplary neighbor.
Ebenezer Cook has occupied as large a place in the
confidence of the inhabitants of this county as any other man. He was first
clerk of the district court after its organization in this county. He held
various places of trust and honor—was in the constitutional convention of 1845—was
alderman and mayor of your city, and was connected with the Rock Island railroad
from its organization. He was a banker, and at one time the leading one in the
state. As clerk of the court, he signed my license to practice law in Iowa. One
of the first citizens of the county that I ever saw—my calling and his own
brought us in constant intercourse for over a quarter of a century. He
deservedly held a high place in your esteem, and his loss to you, as a people,
will be long and deeply deplored. This is not a place or occasion for
indiscriminate praise or general adulation, much less for censure.
We knew Ebenezer Cook as well as any man outside of his
own family, and few men have lived a more useful life—few have done more to
give this county and this city' the exalted position which they hold in the
state of Iowa. In private life, who was his superior? James Davenport was a man
who possessed many elements of character in common with Ebenezer Cook and Leroy
Dodge. He was a well informed man—perhaps like those early settlers, not well
educated; a man of generous impulses, greet prudence end circumspection in
affairs. He, with John Sullivan and a few others like them—among them, Dr.
Barrows—undertook to build the town of Rockingham, as the county seat of this
county, and no greater compliment can be paid to their ability than to say, that
for four years they kept it an open question. They contested the palm of place
and pride against the most beautiful town site on the river, with a little neck
of sand surrounded by a swamp—against all the odds of wealth and talent
scarcely inferior to their own, until the whole territory was convulsed with the
contest.
Jabez A. Birchard
was of the most intelligent—perhaps I shall offend no one if I say he was the
most intelligent farmer that honored the early history of Scott county. In those
days it was my privilege to see him often—to know him well. His knowledge not
only of farming, but of those general affairs which interest the masses, was
very great and very exact. He only lacked the confidence which is needed to make
a public speaker, to have been as distinguished in public assemblies as he was
the acknowledged deader of his neighborhood.
Rodolphus Bennett was once connected with a great
publishing house in one of the eastern states. He was the first mayor of the
town of Davenport, and would have held many places of public trust, but
office-holding and office-seeking were not congenial to his nature. If time
permitted, I should speak largely on the excellent characters of the other old
settlers, men and women, who have died during the past year.
It has been to us a year of sadness, "days to be
remembered, for they shall see many." It comes home to our hearts' core—it
follows our waking hours, that death has demanded a hecatomb of offerings from
our once numerous but now little, band of pioneers. Our pale faces have erased
the land-marks of the red son of the prairies; we have cultivated where he
hunted; we have supplanted his wigwam with the dwelling, the church, the seat of
justice, and the school; we have banished his barter trade of skins, and made
depots for commerce and trade by river and rail; we have built up—with the
help of our dead—a little republic, where the plow has superseded the bow and
arrow, in earning a livelihood, and where intelligence and virtue have driven
away barbarism and vice. And, so far as is proper, we may congratulate ourselves
and our children, upon the heritage we have created. But death has stricken both
leaders and people of the ancient days. We who live, are being swallowed up and
absorbed by a later generation, and we are now on the utmost verge of time.
When we look over the long funeral array of 1871, we
involuntarily look each other in the face, and the anxious thought of who shall
go next, betrays itself without utterance. We are old men and women, fast
tottering to the grave; we must soon follow the large concourse of 1871. A few
years like the past and none of U8 will be left to condole or congratulate.
In the past history of this society, its members who
now survive have been afflicted with many sorrows. Scarcely one among us has not
lost a connection or relative—a father or mother, a husband or wife, a brother
or sister, a son or daughter. Each one has had the piercing iron of anguish
enter into his soul, and his life obscured by shadows, clouds, and darkness.
Other misfortunes—the loss of estate, the destruction of business, the waste
or loss of labor—have been endured at some time of our now long life, by
nearly every one now present and absent who belongs to this goodly company.
But the clouds do not always flit between us and the
sun. Calamity has been the exception, not the rule of our lives. We have been,
and those who survive now are, useful men and women. Our lives have been, in the
main, happily and profitably lived, and the future has no perils for us beyond
what are common to our nature.
There is a future in this world to the memory of the
dead of 1871, and we to-night record it. A life of energy, industry, and
truthfulness, has been rewarded in their case by honor and respect in old age
and death. Their labors have lived after them. Ours, in common with theirs, will
survive U8. We were all, like our county, new men. We began with frontier life,
with privations and hardships. Our greatest efforts of either mind or body were
little things. We planted a prairie, with a held here and another there; a log
cabin in this place, another miles away; we settled a village on the banks of
the river; we organized a society first, a neighborhood, then a county, then a
village, and then a state.
We can now behold a county with nearly all its land
under the plow. Every township has its village, the county seat the largest city
in the state, and the state one of the greatest in a great Union.
We have lived in the age of progress, and we have kept
in the fore-front of civilized advancement. We are not now frontiersmen, cut off
from civilization, fighting with savages and wild beasts for the land; but we
are in the center of a continent of civilized life. Whatever in the progress of
art and science contributes to the usefulness and happiness of man, we enjoy.
Railroads, telegraphs, steam engines, machinery, everything that lightens labor
and gives it value, is ours.
We have created the first city and county of the state.
We have the best cultivated fields, and the largest number of any county in
Iowa; and we have the most comprehensive and best organized system of public
education in the state, and one which will bear honorable mention in any state.
We organized society in the desert. We who survive
enjoy civilization in its highest form, and whatever is found to be most useful
in the arts. Whatever of happiness there is in morality, and in intelligence, in
the school and church, in education and refinement, in constant and easy
intercourse with our fellows, in confidence and cheap transit of trade, and sale
of products of labor, in the telegraph and printing press—is ours to-day, and
to the end of our lives. Most of the old settlers of this county survived the
privations, the wants, the perils, and poverty of frontier life. They endured
most suffering from 1833 to 1884, but they lived to greet the dawn of a better
day for themselves. They saw the bright sunshine of the rosy-fleeced morn of
prosperity, and lived to feel its meridian splendor on themselves and their
families. "Surely goodness end mercy attended them all their days, and they
shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever."