History of Northwestern Iowa
Osceola County Newspapers
Osceola County was organized in the fall of 1871,
the Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad was built in the following
year and the town of Sibley was platted on its line. There the
county seat was also located in 1872, and in the summer of that
year L. A. Baker established the first newspaper called the Sibley
Gazette. Furthermore, the first courthouse was erected in
1872; so that the press and the county government were
established in substantial form about the same time. The second
newspaper at the seat of justice was founded in 1881, by Charles
E. Crossly, as the Sibley Tribune, the name afterward
being changed to the Osceola County Tribune.
The town of Ashton was laid out by the land department of the
Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad Company in 1872. It was first
named St. Gilman, but in 1882 the name was changed to Ashton. The
village is in the southwestern part of the county, and its
surviving newspaper, the Leader, was established by
Claude Charles in 1890.
The Burlington, Cedar Rapids & Northern Railroad crossed
Osceola County in 1894, Ocheyedan being platted as one of its
stations in the fall of that year. Its first building were soon
erected, but it did not blossom forth as a newspaper town until
August, 1891, when the Press came into existence under
the shadow of a great personal affliction. The paper was started
by D. A. W. Perkins, who intended it for his son, George W.
Perkins, but while the material was still in the boxes at the
freight depot, the boy was drowned in Silver Lake, near Lake
Park. Under the burden of this terrible misfortune, however, Mr.
Perkins issued the first number of the Press on August
7, 1891, and was for many years its editor and publisher.
- Source: History of Northwestern Iowa, Its History and
Traditions 1804--1926; by Arthur F. Allen; Volume I; Chapter 13; Page 420
-Transcribed by Kevin Tadd