THE ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION IN 1872 Measured by some standards a quarter of a century is a long period of time, but in the building of a civilized community in a virgin country, where farms and homes had literally to be hewn from the forests, twenty-five years is but a very brief span. And yet, be it said to the glory of our pioneers, that although they planted their colony in a strange land, 120 miles from the nearest railroad, and although they were strangers to the customs and even to the language of the new country, yet such was their determination, industry and thrift, that in the brief space of time between 1847 and 1872, they had developed a settlement here that would compare favorably with many that were much older in Iowa. We believe the facts justify us in stating that in every department of community life, Pella was the peer of any similar settlement in the Mississippi Valley. This was not only true in regard to commerce and in the industries, but it was even more marked in the departments of religion and education. What is true today was true then: that few if any towns of equal population were so well equipped with churches and schools. We would not be doing justice to our forefathers if we failed in this history, to emphasize at every opportunity, that the men and women who planted this colony, were of exceptional type and peculiarly fitted by character and ability, to lay a broad and enduring foundation for the future development of a cultured and Christian community. If there is one fact established by a study of the early history of Pella, it is that we have a just cause to remember the sturdy men and women of that time with pride and gratitude. Occasionally we observe an attitude, on the part of the more frivolous of the present generation, indicating that they consider our fathers and grandfathers to have been crude nad [sic, and] uncultured, and fitted only for the rough life of the frontier. Nothing is farther from the truth; and if this book will do no more than to dispell [sic] this inexcusable ignorance, and to record for all time to come, the fact that the most advanced and prosperous citizens of present day Pella, have no greater cause for proper pride, than is to be found in the character and worth of those who laid the foundation on which later generations are building. Not only is there just cause for pride in the history of the men and times of which we write, but there is a direct and unescapable challenge to this and future generations to perpetuate the virtues and to emulate the sturdy qualities that more than any material prosperity is the brightest star in Pella's crown. Much has been said and written of the manifest Providence that marks the history of the discovery, colonization and development of this great country. And we believe that in no other community is the guiding hand of God more clearly-visible than in the events that led up to the planting of a colony here under the inspired leadership of the Rev. Henry P. Scholte and the other Godly men who shared the leadership with him. On the 27th day of July, 1872, a meeting of the citizens was held for the purpose of arranging for the proper observance and celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the planting of the colony. A general committee was appointed consisting of the following men: Isaac Overkamp, Sr. Jan F. LeCocq Koenraad van Zee Ads. Van Stigt Dirk Synhorst Hendrik Kars Phillippus J. Koelman August Wigny Pierre H. Bousquet Antonie J. Betten, Sr. Brouwer 't Lam Wiggert Rietveld Jan Akkerman Jacob van de Roovaart Levi Beintema Auke H. Viersen Ads. Veenman Jan Hospers Gerrit H. Overkamp Stfanus van Zee Jacobus Muntingh Ernest F. Grafe Pieter O. Viersen Jacobus Verhey