The Project Gutenberg eBook ofCollection of Nebraska Pioneer Reminiscences

The Project Gutenberg eBook ofCollection of Nebraska Pioneer ReminiscencesThis ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.Title: Collection of Nebraska Pioneer ReminiscencesAuthor: Daughters of the American Revolution. NebraskaRelease date: January 4, 2011 [eBook #34844]Most recently updated: January 15, 2021Language: EnglishCredits: Brian Sogard, Sharon Verougstraete and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTION OF NEBRASKA PIONEER REMINISCENCES ***

This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: Collection of Nebraska Pioneer ReminiscencesAuthor: Daughters of the American Revolution. NebraskaRelease date: January 4, 2011 [eBook #34844]Most recently updated: January 15, 2021Language: EnglishCredits: Brian Sogard, Sharon Verougstraete and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team

Title: Collection of Nebraska Pioneer Reminiscences

Author: Daughters of the American Revolution. Nebraska

Author: Daughters of the American Revolution. Nebraska

Release date: January 4, 2011 [eBook #34844]Most recently updated: January 15, 2021

Language: English

Credits: Brian Sogard, Sharon Verougstraete and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTION OF NEBRASKA PIONEER REMINISCENCES ***

Mrs. Laura B. Pound Second and Sixth State Regent, Nebraska Society, Daughters of the American Revolution. 1896-1897, 1901-1902Mrs. Laura B. Pound Second and Sixth State Regent, Nebraska Society, Daughters of the American Revolution. 1896-1897, 1901-1902

ISSUED BY THE

NINETEEN SIXTEENTHE TORCH PRESSCEDAR RAPIDSIOWA

This Book of Nebraska Pioneer Reminiscences is issued by the Daughters of the American Revolution of Nebraska, and dedicated to the daring, courageous, and intrepid men and women—the advance guard of our progress—who, carrying the torch of civilization, had a vision of the possibilities which now have become realities.

To those who answered the call of the unknown we owe the duty of preserving the record of their adventures upon the vast prairies of "Nebraska the Mother of States."

"In her horizons, limitless and vastHer plains that storm the senses like the sea."

"In her horizons, limitless and vastHer plains that storm the senses like the sea."

Reminiscence, recollection, personal experience—simple, true stories—this is the foundation of History.

Rapidly the pioneer story-tellers are passing beyond recall, and the real story of the beginning of our great commonwealth must be told now.

The memories of those pioneers, of their deeds of self-sacrifice and devotion, of their ideals which are our inheritance, will inculcate patriotism in the children of the future; for they should realize the courage that subdued the wilderness. And "lest we forget," the heritage of this past is a sacred trust to the Daughters of the American Revolution of Nebraska.

The invaluable assistance of the Nebraska State Historical Society, and the members of this Book Committee, Mrs. C. S. Paine and Mrs. D. S. Dalby, is most gratefully acknowledged.

Lula Correll Perry(Mrs. Warren Perry)

Some First Things in the History of Adams County11By George F. WorkEarly Experiences in Adams County18By General Albert V. ColeFrontier Towns22By Francis M. BroomeHistorical Sketch of Box Butte County25By Ira E. TashA Broken Axle27By Samuel C. BassettA Pioneer Nebraska Teacher30By Mrs. Isabel RoscoeExperiences of a Pioneer Woman32By Mrs. Elise G. EverettRecollections of Weeping Water36By I. N. HunterIncidents at Plattsmouth41By Ella Pollock MinorFirst Things in Clay County43By Mrs. Charles M. BrownReminiscences of Custer County46By Mrs. J. J. DouglasAn Experience50By Mrs. Harmon BrossLegend of Crow Butte51By Dr. Anna Robinson CrossLife on the Frontier54By James AyresPlum Creek (Lexington)57By William M. Bancroft, M. D.Early Recollections62By C. ChabotRecollections of the First Settler of Dawson County64By Mrs. Daniel FreemanEarly Days in Dawson County67By Lucy E. HewittPioneer Justice72By B. F. KrierA Good Indian74By Mrs. Clifford WhitakerFrom Missouri To Dawson County75By A. J. PorterThe Erickson Family76By Mrs. W. M. StebbinsThe Beginnings of Fremont78By Sadie Irene MooreA Grasshopper Story82By Margaret F. KellyEarly Days in Fremont84By Mrs. Theron NyePioneer Women of Omaha90By Mrs. Charles H. FisetteA Pioneer Family93By Edith Erma PurvianceThe Badger Family97The First White Settler in Fillmore County102Pioneering in Fillmore County107By John R. McCashlandFillmore County in the Seventies109By William SpadeEarly Days in Nebraska111By J. A. CarpenterReminiscences of Gage County112By Albert L. GreenRanching in Gage and Jefferson Counties123By Peter JansenEarly Recollections of Gage County127By Mrs. E. JohnsonBiography of Ford Lewis129By Mrs. (D. S.) H. Virginia Lewis DalbeyA Buffalo Hunt131By W. H. AveryA Grasshopper Raid133By Edna M. Boyle AllenEarly Days in Pawnee County135By Daniel B. CropseyEarly Events in Jefferson County137By George CrossEarly Days of Fairbury and Jefferson County139By George W. HansenThe Earliest Romance of Jefferson County147By George W. HansenExperiences on the Frontier152By Frank HelveyLooking Backward155By George E. JenkinsThe Easter Storm of 1873158By Charles B. LettonBeginnings of Fairbury161By Joseph B. McDowellEarly Experiences in Nebraska163By Elizabeth Porter SeymourPersonal Recollections166By Mrs. C. F. SteeleHow the Sons of George Winslow Found Their Father's Grave168Statement by Mrs. C. F. Steele168Statement by George W. Hansen169Early Days in Jefferson County175By Mrs. M. H. WeeksLocation of the Capital at Lincoln176By John H. AmesAn Incident in the History of Lincoln182By Ortha C. BellLincoln In the Early Seventies184By Ortha C. BellA Pioneer Baby Show186By Mrs. Frank I. RingerMarking the Site of the Lewis and Clark Council at Fort Calhoun187By Mrs. Laura B. PoundEarly History of Lincoln County190By Major Lester WalkerGrey Eagle, Pawnee Chief194By Millard S. BinneyLovers' Leap (Poem)196By Mrs. A. P. JarvisEarly Indian History198By Mrs. Sarah ClappThe Blizzard of 1888203By Minnie Freeman PennyAn Acrostic204By Mrs. EllisEarly Days in Nance County206By Mrs. Ellen Saunders WaltonThe Pawnee Chief's Farewell (Poem)208By Chauncey Livingston WiltseMy Trip West in 1861211By Sarah Schooley RandallStirring Events Along the Little Blue214By Clarendon E. AdamsMy Last Buffalo Hunt219By J. Sterling MortonHow the Founder of Arbor Day Created the Most Famous Western Estate235By Paul MortonEarly Reminiscences of Nebraska City—Social Aspects240By Ellen Kinney WareSome Personal Incidents242By W. A. McAllisterA Buffalo Hunt244By Minnie Freeman PennyPioneer Life246By Mrs. James G. ReederEarly Days in Polk County248By Calmar McCunePersonal Reminiscences252By Mrs. Thyrza Reavis RoyTwo Seward County Celebrations254By Mrs. S. C. LangworthySeward County Reminiscences255Compiled by Margaret Holmes Chapter D. A. R.Pioneering263By Grant Lee ShumwayEarly Days in Stanton County266By Andrew J. Bottorff and Sven JohansonFred E. Roper, Pioneer268By Ernest E. CorrellThe Lure of the Prairies272By Lucy L. CorrellSuffrage in Nebraska275Statement by Mrs. Gertrude M. McDowell275Statement by Lucy L. Correll277An Indian Raid279By Ernest E. CorrellReminiscences281By Mrs. E. A. RussellReminiscences of Fort Calhoun284By W. H. AllenReminiscences of Washington County286By Mrs. Emily Bottorff AllenReminiscences of Pioneer Life at Fort Calhoun288By Mrs. N. J. Frazier BrooksReminiscences of De Soto289By Oliver BouvierReminiscences290By Thomas M. CarterFort Calhoun in the Late Fifties293By Mrs. E. H. ClarkSome Items From Washington County295By Mrs. May Allen LazureCounty-seat of Washington County298By Frank McNeelyThe Story of the Town of Fontenelle299By Mrs. Eda MeadThomas Wilkinson and Family305Nikumi307By Mrs. Harriett S. MacMurphyThe Heroine of the Jules Slade Tragedy322By Mrs. Harriett S. MacMurphyThe Last Romantic Buffalo Hunt on the Plains Of Nebraska326By John Lee WebsterOutline History of the Nebraska Society, D. A. R.333By Mrs. Charles H. Aull

Mrs. Laura B. PoundFrontispieceOregon Trail Monument near Leroy, Nebraska18Oregon Trail Monument on the Nebraska-Wyoming State Line18Mrs. Angie F. Newman22Dedication of Monument Commemorating the Oregon Trail at Kearney, Nebraska27Mrs. Andrew K. Gault50Monument Marking the Old Trails, Fremont, Nebraska78Mrs. Charlotte F. Palmer90Mrs. Frances Avery Haggard127Oregon Trail Monument near Fairbury, Nebraska139Mrs. Elizabeth C. Langworthy155Mrs. Charles B. Letton168Boulder at Fort Calhoun, commemorating the council Of Lewis and Clark with the Otoe and Missouri Indians187Mrs. Oreal S. Ward203Oregon Trail Monument on Kansas-Nebraska State Line240Mrs. Charles Oliver Norton252Oregon Trail Monument near Hebron, Nebraska268Mrs. Warren Perry305Memorial Fountain, Antelope Park, Lincoln326Mrs. Charles H. Aull333Monument marking the initial point of the California Trail, Riverside Park, Omaha337California Trail Monument, Bemis Park, Omaha337

Adams county is named for the first time, in an act of the territorial legislature approved February 16, 1867, when the south bank of the Platte river was made its northern boundary. There were no settlers here at that time although several persons who are mentioned later herein had established trapping camps within what are now its boundaries. In 1871 it was declared a county by executive proclamation and its present limits defined as, in short, consisting of government ranges, 9, 10, 11, and 12 west of the sixth principal meridian, and townships 5, 6, 7, and 8, north of the base line, which corresponds with the south line of the state.

Mortimer N. Kress, familiarly known to the early settlers as "Wild Bill," Marion Jerome Fouts, also known as "California Joe," and James Bainter had made hunting and trapping camps all the way along the Little Blue river, prior to this time. This stream flows through the south part of the county and has its source just west of its western boundary in Kearney county. James Bainter filed on a tract just across its eastern line in Clay county as his homestead, and so disappears in the history of Adams county. Mortimer N. Kress is still living and now has his home in Hastings, a hale, hearty man of seventy-five years and respected by all. Marion J. Fouts, about seventy years of age, still lives on the homestead he selected in that early day and is a respected, prominent man in that locality.

Gordon H. Edgerton, now a resident and prominent business man of Hastings, when a young man, in 1866, was engaged in freighting across the plains, over the Oregon trail that entered the county where the Little Blue crosses its eastern boundary and continued in a northwesterly direction, leaving its western line a few miles west and a little north of where Kenesaw now stands, and so is familiar with its early history. There has already been some who have questioned the authenticity of thestory of an Indian massacre having taken place where this trail crosses Thirty-two Mile creek, so named because it was at this point about thirty-two miles east of Fort Kearny. This massacre took place about the year 1867, and Mr. Edgerton says that it was universally believed at the time he was passing back and forth along this trail. He distinctly remembers an old threshing machine that stood at that place for a long time and that was left there by some of the members of the party that were killed. The writer of this sketch who came to the county in 1874, was shown a mound at this place, near the bank of the creek, which he was told was the heaped up mound of the grave where the victims were buried, and the story was not questioned so far as he ever heard until recent years. Certainly those who lived near the locality at that early day did not question it. This massacre took place very near the locality where Captain Fremont encamped, the night of June 25, 1842, as related in the history of his expedition and was about five or six miles south and a little west of Hastings. I well remember the appearance of this trail. It consisted of a number of deeply cut wagon tracks, nearly parallel with each other, but which would converge to one track where the surface was difficult or where there was a crossing to be made over a rough place or stream. The constant tramping of the teams would pulverize the soil and the high winds would blow out the dust, or if on sloping ground, the water from heavy rains would wash it out until the track became so deep that a new one would be followed because the axles of the wagons would drag on the ground. It was on this trail a few miles west of what is now the site of Kenesaw, that a lone grave was discovered by the first settlers in the country, and a story is told of how it came to be there. About midway from where the trail leaves the Little Blue to the military post at Fort Kearny on the Platte river a man with a vision of many dollars to be made from the people going west to the gold-fields over this trail, dug a well about one hundred feet deep for the purpose of selling water to the travelers and freighters. Some time later he was killed by the Indians and the well was poisoned by them. A man by the name of Haile camped here a few days later and he and his wife used the water for cooking and drinking. Both were taken sick and the wife died, but he recovered. He took the boards of his wagon box and made hera coffin and buried her near the trail. Some time afterwards he returned and erected a headstone over her grave which was a few years since still standing and perhaps is to this day, the monument of a true man to his love for his wife and to her memory.

The first homestead was taken in the county by Francis M. Luey, March 5, 1870, though there were others taken the same day. The facts as I get them direct from Mr. Kress are that he took his team and wagon, and he and three other men went to Beatrice, where the government land office was located, to make their entries. When they arrived at the office, with his characteristic generosity he said: "Boys, step up and take your choice; any of it is good enough for me." Luey was the first to make his entry, and he was followed by the other three. Francis M. Luey took the southwest quarter of section twelve; Mortimer N. Kress selected the northeast quarter of section thirteen; Marion Jerome Fouts, the southeast quarter of eleven; and the fourth person, John Smith, filed on the southwest quarter of eleven, all in township five north and range eleven west of the sixth principal meridian. Smith relinquished his claim later and never made final proof, so his name does not appear on the records of the county as having made this entry. The others settled and made improvements on their lands. Mortimer N. Kress built a sod house that spring, and later in the summer, a hewed log house, and these were the first buildings in the county. So Kress and Fouts, two old comrades and trappers, settled down together, and are still citizens of the county. Other settlers rapidly began to make entry in the neighborhood, and soon there were enough to be called together in the first religious service. The first sermon was preached in Mr. Kress' hewed log house by Rev. J. W. Warwick in the fall of 1871.

The first marriage in the county was solemnized in 1872 betweenRoderick Lomasor Loomis and "Lila" or Eliza Warwick, the ceremony being performed by the bride's father, Rev. J. W. Warwick. Prior to this, however, on October 18, 1871, Eben Wright and Susan Gates, a young couple who had settled in the county, were taken by Mr. Kress in his two-horse farm wagon to Grand Island, where they were married by the probate judge.

The first deaths that occurred in the county were of two young men who came into the new settlement to make homes for themselves in 1870, selected their claims and went to work, anda few days later were killed in their camp at night. It was believed that a disreputable character who came along with a small herd of horses committed the murder, but no one knew what the motive was. He was arrested and his name given as Jake Haynes, but as no positive proof could be obtained he was cleared at the preliminary examination, and left the country. A story became current a short time afterward that he was hanged in Kansas for stealing a mule.

The first murder that occurred in the county that was proven was that of Henry Stutzman, who was killed by William John McElroy, February 8, 1879, about four miles south of Hastings. He was arrested a few hours afterward, and on his trial was convicted and sent to the penitentiary.

The first child born in the county was born to Francis M. Luey and wife in the spring of 1871. These parents were the first married couple to settle in this county. The child lived only a short time and was buried near the home, there being no graveyard yet established. A few years ago the K. C. & O. R. R. in grading its roadbed through that farm disturbed the grave and uncovered its bones.

In the spring and summer of 1870 Mr. Kress broke about fifty acres of prairie on his claim and this constituted the first improvement of that nature in the county.

J. R. Carter and wife settled in this neighborhood about 1870, and the two young men, mentioned above as having been murdered, stopped at their house over night, their first visitors. It was a disputed point for a long time whether Mrs. Carter, Mrs. W. S. Moote, or Mrs. Francis M. Luey was the first white woman to settle permanently in the county; but Mr. Kress is positive that the last named was the first and is entitled to that distinction. Mrs. Moote, with her husband, came next and camped on their claim, then both left and made their entries of the land. In the meantime, before the return of the Mootes, Mr. and Mrs. Carter made permanent settlement on their land, so the honors were pretty evenly divided.

The first white settler in the county to die a natural death and receive Christian burial was William H. Akers, who had taken a homestead in section 10-5-9. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. J. W. Warwick.

In the summer of 1871 a colony of settlers from Michigansettled on land on which the townsite of Juniata was afterward located, and October 1, 1871, the first deed that was placed on record in the county was executed by John and Margaret Stark to Col. Charles P. Morse before P. F. Barr, a notary public at Crete, Nebraska, and was filed for record March 9, 1872, and recorded on page 1, volume 1, of deed records of Adams county. The grantee was general superintendent of the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad Company which was then approaching the eastern edge of the county, and opened its first office at Hastings in April, 1873, with agent Horace S. Wiggins in charge. Mr. Wiggins is now a well-known public accountant and insurance actuary residing in Lincoln. The land conveyed by this deed and some other tracts for which deeds were soon after executed was in section 12, township 7, range 11, and on which the town of Juniata was platted. The Stark patent was dated June 5, 1872, and signed by U. S. Grant as president. The town plat was filed for record March 9, 1872.

The first church organized in the county was by Rev. John F. Clarkson, chaplain of a colony of English Congregationalists who settled near the present location of Hastings in 1871. He preached the first sermon while they were still camped in their covered wagons at a point near the present intersection of Second street and Burlington avenue, the first Sunday after their arrival. A short time afterward, in a sod house on the claim of John G. Moore, at or near the present site of the Lepin hotel, the church was organized with nine members uniting by letter, and a few Sundays later four more by confession of their faith. This data I have from Peter Fowlie and S. B. Binfield, two of the persons composing the first organization.

The first Sunday school organized in the county was organized in a small residence then under construction on lot 3 in block 4 of Moore's addition to Hastings. The frame was up, the roof on, siding and floor in place, but that was all. Nail kegs and plank formed the seats, and a store box the desk. The building still stands and constitutes the main part of the present residence of my family at 219 North Burlington avenue. It was a union school and was the nucleus of the present Presbyterian and Congregational Sunday schools. I am not able to give the date of its organization but it was probably in the winter of 1872-73. I got this information from Mr. A. L. Wigton, whowas influential in bringing about the organization and was its first superintendent.

The first school in the county was opened about a mile south of Juniata early in 1872, by Miss Emma Leonard, and that fall Miss Lizzie Scott was employed to teach one in Juniata. So rapidly did the county settle that by October 1, 1873, thirty-eight school districts were reported organized.

The acting governor, W. H. James, on November 7, 1871, ordered the organization of the county for political and judicial purposes, and fixed the day of the first election to be held, on December 12 following. Twenty-nine votes were cast and the following persons were elected as county officers:

Clerk, Russell D. Babcock.Treasurer, John S. Chandler.Sheriff, Isaac W. Stark.Probate Judge, Titus Babcock.Surveyor, George Henderson.Superintendent of Schools, Adna H. Bowen.Coroner, Isaiah Sluyter.Assessor, William M. Camp.County Commissioners: Samuel L. Brass, Edwin M. Allen, andWellington W. Selleck.

Clerk, Russell D. Babcock.Treasurer, John S. Chandler.Sheriff, Isaac W. Stark.Probate Judge, Titus Babcock.Surveyor, George Henderson.Superintendent of Schools, Adna H. Bowen.Coroner, Isaiah Sluyter.Assessor, William M. Camp.County Commissioners: Samuel L. Brass, Edwin M. Allen, andWellington W. Selleck.

The first assessment of personal property produced a tax of $5,500, on an assessed valuation of $20,003, and the total valuation of personal and real property amounted to $957,183, mostly on railroad lands of which the Burlington road was found to own 105,423 acres and the Union Pacific, 72,207. Very few of the settlers had at that time made final proof. This assessment was made in the spring of 1872.

The first building for county uses was ordered constructed on January 17, 1872, and was 16x20 feet on the ground with an eight-foot story, shingle roof, four windows and one door, matched floor, and ceiled overhead with building paper. The county commissioners were to furnish all material except the door and windows and the contract for the work was let to Joseph Stuhl for $30.00. S. L. Brass was to superintend the construction, and the building was to be ready for occupancy in ten days.

The salary of the county clerk was fixed by the board at $300, that of the probate judge at $75 for the year.

It is claimed that the law making every section line a county road, in the state of Nebraska, originated with this board in a resolution passed by it, requesting their representatives in the senate and house of the legislature then in session to introduce a bill to that effect and work for its passage. Their work must have been effective for we find that in July following, the Burlington railroad company asked damages by reason of loss sustained through the act of the legislature taking about eight acres of each section of their land, for these public roads.

The first poorhouse was built in the fall of 1872. It was 16x24 feet, one and one-half stories high, and was constructed by Ira G. Dillon for $1,400, and Peter Fowlie was appointed poormaster at a salary of $25 per month. And on November 1 of that year he reported six poor persons as charges on the county, but his administration must have been effective for on December 5, following, he reported none then in his charge.

The first agricultural society was organized at Kingston and the first agricultural fair of which there is any record was held October 11 and 12, 1873. The fair grounds were on the southeast corner of the northwest quarter of section 32-5-9 on land owned by G. H. Edgerton, and quite a creditable list of premiums were awarded.

The first Grand Army post was organized at Hastings under a charter issued May 13, 1878, and T. D. Scofield was elected commander.

The first newspaper published in the county was theAdams County Gazette, issued at Juniata by R. D. and C. C. Babcock in January, 1872. This was soon followed by theHastings Journalpublished by M. K. Lewis and A. L. Wigton. These were in time consolidated and in January, 1880, the first daily was issued by A. L. and J. W. Wigton and called theDaily Gazette-Journal.

I was a young business man in Michigan in 1871, about which time many civil war veterans were moving from Michigan and other states to Kansas and Nebraska, where they could secure free homesteads. I received circulars advertising Juniata. They called it a village but at that time there were only four houses, all occupied by agents of the Burlington railroad who had been employed to preëmpt a section of land for the purpose of locating a townsite. In October, 1871, I started for Juniata, passing through Chicago at the time of the great fire. With a comrade I crossed the Missouri river at Plattsmouth on a flatboat. The Burlington was running mixed trains as far west as School Creek, now Sutton. We rode to that point, then started to walk to Juniata, arriving at Harvard in the evening. Harvard also had four houses placed for the same purpose as those in Juniata. Frank M. Davis, who was elected commissioner of public lands and buildings in 1876, lived in one house with his family; the other three were supposed to be occupied by bachelors.

We arranged with Mr. Davis for a bed in an upper room of one of the vacant houses. We were tenderfeet from the East and therefore rather suspicious of the surroundings, there being no lock on the lower door. To avoid being surprised we piled everything we could find against the door. About midnight we were awakened by a terrible noise; our fortifications had fallen and we heard the tramp of feet below. Some of the preëmptors had been out on section 37 for wood and the lower room was where they kept the horse feed.

The next morning we paid our lodging and resumed the journey west. Twelve miles from Harvard we found four more houses placed by the Burlington. The village was called Inland and was on the east line of Adams county but has since been moved east into Clay county. Just before reaching Inland we met a man coming from the west with a load of buffalo meat and at Inland we found C. S. Jaynes, one of the preëmptors, sittingoutside his shanty cutting up some of the meat. It was twelve miles farther to Juniata, the railroad grade being our guide. The section where Hastings now stands was on the line but there was no town, not a tree or living thing in sight, just burnt prairie. I did not think when we passed over that black and desolate section that a city like Hastings would be builded there. The buffalo and the antelope had gone in search of greener pastures; even the wolf and the coyote were unable to live there at that time.


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