Germans from Hesse
Darmstadt and Bavaria (Southern Germany) Settle
Franklin
The little town of Franklin Centre, now known as
Franklin, is located near the geographical center of
Lee County. It was laid out in 1840 with the land
donated by three different men, one of whom was John
Brown out of Virginia. Most of the residents who own
their homes find his name on their abstract today. He
was the first postmaster and always kept the mail in
his stove pipe hat sitting on the dresser. It cost 12½
cents to send a letter at that time, postage collected
on delivery; many settlers could not pay it so the
postmaster generally gave them the letter anyway and
took it out of his own pocket.
Franklin was selected as the proposed county seat in
1840 but lost this honor to Ft. Madison in an 1841
election. When the railroad was being planned through
Lee County, Franklin was asked to donate $500 for the
building of a depot but officials refused and Franklin
Station and the line were laid out to miss the town by
two miles. Despite not having the railroad pass
through the town, Franklin still grew in size.
During 1837 and 1838, land sales for Lee County were
held at the courthouse in Burlington. Eighty acres of
land could be purchased for one hundred dollars. The
first house in Franklin Centre was built by Thomas
Douglas in 1859.
The settlers who came to this part of Lee County were
mostly Germans of the Mennonite, Evangelical, and
Catholic faiths. They came with the goal of owning
property and making a better life for themselves and
their children. They were hard workers and craftsmen.
In 1856 the first church was erected by the
Evangelical congregation, and in 1868 the Mennonites
built their fine structure. The Catholics that came to
Lee County did not settle right in Franklin but
located a few miles north in West Point.
If you were to go to Franklin in 1860, with the
population of about 2,500 people you would see a
thriving village with horses and buggies lined up
along the city square. Many of the houses were built
of limestone cut from the quarry just east of town.
A.C. Greener owned the quarry and he also cut
tombstones, but never when there were children
standing around asking questions, as he could not
concentrate on names and dates.
The town had two flour mills, the first sawmill, and a
woolen mill where fabric was made. There were a
brewery, a wagon shop, barrel or cooper shops, a drug
store, and a saddlery; Arthur Graham made Graham
chairs and rockers which are rarely found today and
very valuable if found. August Fye had an undertaker’s
parlor on the northeast corner of the square with a
barber shop beside it where he cut hair. He became
well to do and left money to the German Church and
other organizations.
The two-story, limestone school was erected in 1873
and seated as many as 160 students. It is still
standing over 130 years later, in excellent condition;
the upper floor is a replica of a school of that day
and the bottom floor is used for meetings of city
officials. The German churches also supported
denominational schools and according to the census of
1875, Franklin boasted that every child of the age of
14 in the village could read and write. According to
the 2000 census, there were 136 people living in
Franklin.
Information on Franklin is extracted from a genealogy
department scrapbook on Franklin, reminiscences of
Franklin residents, 1887 Portrait and Biographical
Album of Lee County, and the History of Lee County
1879.
Researched, transcribed and submitted by Erma DeRosear
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