The order to constitute Boomer
was made June 8, 1858. It formerly was a part of Rockford. It is a full
congressional township, being bounded on the north by Harrison County,
east by Neola, south by Hazel Dell, and west by Rockford Townships.
The first election under the new
organization was held on the 12th of October 1869, at the house of
Samuel BATEMAN and township officers were chosen. There were nineteen
votes cast, of which eighteen were democratic and one republican. This
one was that of Z. REMMINGTON, referred to in part of the history of
Neola. The first township officers chosen were Samuel DIGGLE, Wm.
FOUTS, and Joseph MOHAT, as trustees; Henry GITTINGS, clerk; and Samuel
BATEMAN SR. and Joseph BARDSLEY, justices of the peace. There is no
record of constables having been elected.
The first settler was Lee BYBEE, a
Mormon,
who, with a number of families, established a camp and built cabins as
was their custom during their temporary sojourn while enroute from
Nauvoo to Salt Lake. In two or three years, these moved on and their
camping ground was later included in the farms of L.S. AXTELL and
George DRAKE. The names of the first births and deaths are not known,
but the first wedding was a double one, the parties in one being
William McKEOWN and Miss Eliza Jane HALL, and in the other Ezekiel
CHEENY and Miss Lucy HARDY. This was in 1848. The latter couple
subsequently went on to Utah and were lost sight of.
The first school opened was in Bybee's
camp
in the winter of 1847-8. J. L. DEFOREST was the teacher, who afterward
died in Harrison County. The persons most active in securing the
organization were Judge HALL and I. M. SIGLER. The latter being the
strongest kind of Democrat, and something of a wag, proposed the name
of Bloomer as a joke on D. C. BLOOMER, who was equally as strong a
Republican. But Judge SHERMAN spoiled the fun by leaving out the "l"
making it Boomer, which was adopted. The first highway laid out was
what is known as the Harris Grove and Council Bluffs road, laid out by
Edward LATHAM, as commissioner, in 1853, and the first bridge a wooden
one across the North Pigeon near William McKEOWN's.
Nearly all the first settlers were
English
and accustomed to reaping with the sickle. Ike SIGLER had the only
grain cradle, which was as much a wonder to them as the McCormick
reaper to us a half century ago. The first fanning mill was owned by
Robert KENT and he charged his neighbors toll for using it. I. M.
SIGLER was, for many years, a prominent citizen. He died about 1888 in
Nebraska from the effects of a fall, and his remains were brought home
for interment. He was a soldier of the Mexican War and a native of
Indiana.
Mr. L. S. AXTELL has always been a
highly
useful citizen, was a school teacher in Council Bluffs in the early
days, where he married a Miss WADE; has represented Pottawattamie
County in the Legislature and was, for several years, county
superintendent of schools.
Boomer has been at a disadvantage
compared
with her neighbors in having neither a railroad nor town. It has as
good soil, however, as the sun shines upon, well adapted to grain or
stock raising. It also has groves of native timber that have been a
wonderful help to the settlers. The township officers at this writing
(1907) are C. M. AXTELL, J. H. PAGE, and G. H. DARRINGTON, trustees;
and Nels CHRISTIANSON, clerk; J. M. AXTELL and Geo. H. DARRINGTON,
justices of the peace; C. L. THOMAS, assessor; and G. F. PAGE and Wm.
WRIGHT, constables. The school board consisted of Joseph MACKLAND,
president; secretary, Geo. H. DARRINGTON; treasurer, Lewis PETERS. Pay
of teachers, first grade $40; second, $35 per month, respectively.
According to state census of 1905, there were four hundred of school
age in the township, of which two hundred and twenty were males and one
hundred and eighty were females.
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