From
February 12, 1853, Crescent Township formed a part of Rockford. At the
latter date, a petition signed by A. J. WILLIAMS and thirty-seven other
citizens of the territory comprising Crescent Township, asking that the
territory be set off as a new township and it was granted. This
territory consisted of congressional township 76, range 42, and
township 76, range 43, also a fractional part of township 76, range 44.
This included its present territory as well as that of Hazel Dell and
part of Norwalk. It was also ordered that an election for township
officers be held at Crescent City in April 1857.
The first settlers were Mormons that
came
with the great exodus that halted at Council Bluffs and overflowed into
the adjacent territory. Some of these renounced allegiance to Brigham
Young, though still adhering to the faith as expounded by Joseph Smith.
These remained here and have proved to be some of our best citizens.
Among the number were David WILDING, an Englishman, William STRONG,
Robert KIRKWOOD, Scotch. H. A. TERRY, S. M. HOUGH, and Joseph McCOID
were natives of New York.
No citizen is better known than H. A.
TERRY.
For years he has devoted his time to demonstrating that fruit of all
kinds adapted to this parallel of latitude could be profitably grown
here, and he has succeeded in proving it, and in his old age is reaping
the benefits of his earlier labors. He was among the first to organize
the first agricultural society of which L. M. KLINE was president; D.
S. JACKSON, vice president; J. E. JOHNSON, treasurer; and H. A. TERRY,
secretary. This was in 1856. For many years, his seed business extended
from St. Joseph, Mo., to Fort Pierre, Dakota.
Mr. Robert KIRKWOOD was a plain farmer
and
desired no office, but the people insisted on his representing them on
the county board of supervisors, to which they elected him a number of
terms, and, further, his party wished to send him to the legislature,
but he declined the honor.
The first highway opened was the road
from
Crescent City to Council Bluffs, through the valley of the Little
Pigeon, and in the crossing of that stream the first bridge was built.
The first schools were probably kept by the Mormons and taught at some
of the residences. In September 1855, Reuben BARTON, David DUNKLE, Wm.
McMULLEN, Henry McMULLEN, and Solomon McMULLEN met and organized the
school township of Little Pigeon, District No. 7. L. J. GODDARD was
elected president of the board, David DUNKLE, secretary, and Reuben
BARTON, treasurer. L. J. GODDARD was employed by the other members to
teach at $30 per month until a schoolhouse could be built. A log
schoolhouse was soon built and fitted up near the line between Crescent
and Hazel Dell townships. The floor was of puncheons, smoothed by an
adz, with earth roof. The seats were slabs with flat side up, with
holes bored and pins put in for legs. These are the germs from which
the great universities, with their bequests of millions, have grown and
the foundation upon which the greatest nation of earth was laid. The
next summer Miss Sophronia E. WHITCOMB, now the venerable wife of Rev.
Henry DeLONG, was the teacher, and the house was crowded. For several
years, this was the only school within a radius of seven miles. The
second building was erected on Pigeon Creek, near the site of the
Parish mill. From this time on, the interest increased with that of the
population until before the division by detaching Hazel Dell, Crescent
contained eleven subdistricts, all with comfortable houses. In the
division, Crescent retained five of the houses, to which two had been
added previous to 1880. At this date, ten teachers were employed, four
male and six female.
The first postoffice was at Ellisdale
Farm,
two miles south of what was destined to be Crescent City. This was in
April 1856, and the first postmaster was L. J. GODDARD. On Crescent
City coming into being, it was moved to that place. It will be
remembered that Crescent City is older than the township, it having
been organized in the spring of 1856. The original proprietors were
Joseph E. JOHNSON, H. A. TERRY, S. M. HOUGH, Samuel EGGLESTON, L. O.
LITTLEFIELD, L. J. GODDARD, O. H. DUTROW, D. S. JACKSON and R. W.
STEELE. Joseph E. JOHNSON erected the first business house in 1856, and
Mr. JOHNSON opened a general store the same year in that building.
Samuel EGGLESTON soon followed with another. The third was built by a
Mr. PIPER, who built a large one but a short distance from the other
two. Business not requiring so large a building, it was converted into
a town hall.
In 1856, few towns away from railroads
presented greater activity than Crescent city. A little newspaper was
started called the Rock Bottom, but was short lived. Its principal
business was to urge the bridging of the Missouri River between this
place and Florence on the west side, five miles above Omaha. The dream
that haunted the people of both these towns was that there being rock
bottom here, it would be the only practical place to locate a bridge;
that the first railroad would come down the Pigeon Valley, and that
Crescent would supersede Council Bluffs and Florence should do likewise
to Omaha. Crescent was laid out, platted, the streets named, a
newspaper started called the Crescent City Oracle. It was quite ably
edited by Joseph E. JOHNSON. Florence also made great strides. A
newspaper was started there and also a bank, and for quite a while it
looked as if there was something in it, but in the fall of 1857, when
the great crash came, only the strongest of the young cities (there
were no towns or villages) survived. Many houses in Florence were moved
to Omaha and out onto farms, and from Crescent, both business houses
and dwellings were moved to the Bluffs as well as sold to farmers.
Among these was that of G. F. SMITH, the father of Hon. Walter I.
SMITH, present member of Congress. He had a neat dwelling in Crescent
which he brought down to Council Bluffs, and after living in it some
years, sold it to the late Colonel W. F. SAPP, who finally died in it.
So that little house had the honor of housing two members of Congress,
and still - at this writing - is standing on Oakland Avenue, but it was
while yet in Crescent City that the Hon. Walter I. SMITH was born in
it.
It is a long reach from 1856 to 1907,
during
which time great cities have risen and some of the embryo cities
disappeared. In the meantime, however, the little hamlet backed by the
township has maintained its individuality and, in fact, grown with the
township of which it is a part. At this writing (1907) it has a graded
school of four rooms, a neat two-story frame, with Miss Mary SCHROT as
principal, with Margaret JOHNSON and Nettie HUTCHISON, assistants. The
members of the board of education are J. R. LAPWORTH, president; J. A.
PRATT, secretary; and Warren HOUGH, treasurer. The Latter Day Saints
have a neat church building; also the Methodists. Rev. Mr. Baldwin is a
pastor of the latter. The Odd Fellows have a lodge of over seventy
members, of which Dr. A. A. ROBERTSON is noble grand. The Modern
Woodmen also have a lodge with G. B. HAMPTON as head consul. Crescent
City has two stores of general merchandise, two hotels, a lumber yard,
livery stable, and besides the nursery of H. A. TERRY, previously
mentioned, is an extensive one known as the Crescent city Nursery,
owned and operated by a joint stock company of which T. G. TURNER is
president; E. D. MENARY, vice president; R. D. M. TURNER, secretary;
and F. W. MENARY, treasurer. It has extensive salesrooms in Council
Bluffs, with office at 3101 Avenue A.
It is interesting to a person who saw
this
beautiful country a half century ago and revisits it to note the
difference. In place of the rude cabin and its equally rude
outbuildings, we see the comfortable house of the prosperous farmer,
with the box for reception of his daily mail at his front gate and, on
entering, find the piano or organ while the telephone is waiting your
bidding. Occasionally, we meet those whose life has spanned the long
interval that reaches from the little log schoolhouse nearly hid in the
grove down to the present time with all our modern conveniences and
comforts. An interesting case of this kind is to meet the following
named persons, now past middle age, viz.: J. A. BOREN, Mrs. H. A.
TERRY, Warren HOUGH, and C. L. BARRET, and hear them tell of the time
when, as little kids, they were pupils of Miss WHITCOMB, now Mrs.
DeLONG, in the little log schoolhouse a half century ago and we wonder
if the next will show as much progress. The little boys and girls must
answer this, as we shall not be here.
The township officers at this writing
1907
are: Trustees, James R. LAPWORTH, Fred MILLER and P. J. MORAN; Walter
HOUGH, CLERK; justices of the peace, J. A. PRATT, and L. S. JONES;
constable, James KINNEY; assessor, H. W. MILLER; school board president
J. R. LAPWORTH; secretary J. A. PRATT; treasurer Warren HOUGH.
According to the state census, there are three hundred and eighteen
children between five and twenty one, being one hundred and fifty nine
of each sex.
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