RINGGOLD COUNTY IOWA HISTORY
CHAPTER SIX ~ VILLAGE AND COUNTRYSIDE PIONEER TOGETHER
NOTE: Transcribed as written at the time, some terms not considered to be politically correct at the present time.
Many of the post offices and villages known to the
citizens of Ringgold County in the 1870's disappeared entirely
or were absorbed by newer towns that sprang up along the
railroad when it entered the county. Some of these names --
Bozzaris, Clipper,
Ingart Grove,
Marena, Union Hill, Bloomington
Marshall, Riley, and Polen -- were entirely unknown
to many residents.
Read more about Ringgold County's Ghost Towns
When the Western Stagecoach Company stopped its service in 1870 the county was almost as isolated
as it had been during the days of early settlement. The
railroad which the people of the county had expected to
continue across Ringgold County soon after it reached Leon in
1871 was not built any farther until 1879. During this
period the county gained 700 in population, but life moved slowly.
When Mount Ayr was incorporated in 1875 it was the
largest village in the county, with a population of 422. In
the summer of 1872 many townspeople followed the village's
first band to Afton, where the members received $100 for
playing at the Fourth of July celebration. Later that year,
the Pete BROTHERS' Leader Band was organized with ten pieces.
Another evidence of growth was the establishement of a second
newspaper, the Mount Ayr Journal, in 1873, C. C. BARTRUFF
of Creston started the paper and ran it for ten years
before he sold out. In the same year
George R. STEPHENS bought
a half interest in the Ringgold Record.
There was growth in other sections of the county at
this time. Clipper was made a post office, with
Harvey WAUGH
the postmaster, at a salary of $6.80 for his first year.
The hamlet did not grow, however, and the post office was
abandoned in the 1880's. The Cross post office at Merritt
Station, one of the former stagecoach stops, was moved two
miles east to a neighborhood known as
New Chicago, so named
for a family from Chicago, Illinois, who lived there.
During the middle 1870's several businesses were opened
at Mount Ayr.
Lewis B. IMUS started the first barber shop,
which the men of the village quickly welcomed. They no
longer had to prop the kerosene lamp beside the mirror on an
early winter morning and try to scrap off the stubble of
the previous day's growth with doubtfully warm water. T. E.
CORKHILL started the first town dairy. The cows were milked
in the lot and the milk skimmed into a 20-gallon can. At
Mount Ayr the can was placed on a two-wheeled cart drawn by
a horse with a bell on his hames. The jangling of the bell
warned the residents that the milkman was coming, and they
ran out with their cans or pails to meet him.
Although the county had needed a jail for many years,
the first one was not erected until 1876. This building, 18
by 20 feet, had two cells made of half-inch boiler plate
with a flat tin roof. Previously prisoners had been housed
in the jury room at the courthouse, or at the Creston jail
in Union County.
Circumstantial evidence almost cost Herman POTTER his
life in 1876. Dave ALDRICH, who lived north of what later
was the site of Redding, left home on horseback without
telling anyone where he was going. When he had not returned
a week later, a posse went out for him. They found some of
his clothing near Herman POTTER'S home and a pool of blood
in the adjoining timber, and suspected that POTTER had
murdered him. POTTER explained that his hogs were so wild he
had to butcher them in the timber, and the result of
butchering them was all they had found. But the posse would have
hanged POTTER then and there, had not
John D. CARTER pursuaded the men to let the law take its course, since the
evidence against POTTER was only circumstantial. A few days
later, when ALDRICH returned, everyone was glad that CARTER
had prevented them from a rash deed.
People were disappointed when the railroad was not
extended at once beyond Leon. The delay -- eight years -- may
have been partly due to the Granger law enacted by the Iowa
State Legislature in 1873, giving the Legislature the right
to regulate freight and passenger rates in Iowa. The law
divided railroad transportation into three classes,
establishing rated for each class, both in passenger and freight service.
Freight rates were worked out according to a compliance
divisional scale that did not allow the railroad to
pay its own operating costs. A carload of lumber brought
$33.00 for a two-hundred-mile trip. Merchandise traveled
the same distance third class at thirty-six cents per
hundred pounds. Even the New York Herald Tribune remarked that
it was little wonder that immigrants passed Iowa by when it
had a bill like the Granger law on its statute books. Railroad
boxcars lay idle on the tracks, and some of the rail
road equipment rusted from disues until the law was repealed
in 1878, and the Railroad Commission set up to adjust grievances
between the farmer and the railroad.
Shortly after the Granger law was repealed, a group in
the county organized a stock company to build a narrow gauge
railroad from Leon to Mount Ayr. In 1877 this company published
a newspaper, The Headlight, to arouse intrest in the
proposed railroad. It was succeeded by Onward, which was
published until 1884.
There had been no Fourth of July celebration in Mount
Ayr for a number of years and the citizens decided to stage
a Grand Rally of the Veterans of the Civil War on the Fourth
of July 1878. Soldiers in most of the townships met on
June 15 and organized their veterans. Fifers and drummers
from all over the county met with D. B. MARSHALL at Mount
Ayr on July 3, and assisted the Mount Ayr band, which then
was rated as one of the best in the State. The Taylor
County Argus commented, "If any town in southwestern Iowa
will have a grand time on the Fourth, Mount Ayr will have
it." No one wanted to miss the celebration, and many attended
from surrounding counties.
The soldiers started the day with reveille at sunrise
and carried it through to sick call at 8 o'clock, grand
mount at 9 company drill at 9:30, battalion drill at 11:30,
skirmish drill at 2 p.m., and dress parade at 3 p.m.
All through the forenoon, crowds arrived on foot, on
horseback, in wagons, and in buggies from Taylor, Decatur,
and Worth Counties even though the skies were clouded and
rain threatened. More that 5,000 people joined in the
festivities and listened to the speaker, Edward B. HEATON, well
known to this community where he had been farmer, preacher,
school teacher, writer, singing master, and soldier. A week
later the veterans met again and formed a permanent organization.
A big year was 1879, when the Leon, Mount Ayr and
Southwestern Railroad was built through the county from
Bethany Junction to Mount Ayr, slightly more than 23 miles.
In 1880 the line was continued from Mount Ayr to Grant City,
Missouri. The townships voted a tax of two to five per cent
to help build the line, which, like other contemporary roads,
wandered through as many townships as it could for the sake
of the levey. In return for the money and the right-of-way,
the county and townships received railroad stock which was
actually worthless. In September 1879 the road was opened
for business and at once the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
Railroad too it over, operating it as lessee until 1901,
and from then on as owner.
Before the new road began operation, a cyclone dipped
down into Ringgold County, the night of May 29, 1879, and
wrecked the DULANY homestead. The DULANYS had arrived in
the county in March and built their house, but it had not
yet been plastered. The cyclone lifted it up and set it
down a few feet away. The DULANYS then grabbed what few
clothes they could and got outside. For a few minutes they
were separated, then they managed to crawl together through
a ditch to the home of John ERSKINE, a neighbor. When they
returned to their house in the morning, they found it fit
only for kindling. Dishes were broken, the furniture smashed,
and their clothing and bedding strewn all over the countryside.
Several new towns had been laid out along the route
while the Leon, Mount Ayr and Southwestern Railroad was
being completed. Railroad capitalists laid out Kellerton in
1879, naming it in honor of
Judge [Isaac W.] KELLER of Mount Ayr. Then
New Chicago, a trading post and post office a little more
than a mile to the east, moved bodily to Kellerton. The new
site, purchased from Samuel and John TEDROW, lay on high
level ground from which both Mount Ayr and Leon could be
seen on clear days. Seventy of the 240 acres in the town
the site were soon laid off into lots, and Kellerton began its
history. Three and a half miles to the north was an old
buffalo wallow about two acres in area. This wallow, about
20 feet deep and then filled with water, was one of the old
swimming holes of pioneer days.
Lesanville was a platted town before the railroad came
through the county, but it never developed to more than a
station on the railroad. In 1887 it had a store, a post
office, and a Methodist Church, but this was the extent of
its growth. There is no sign of a town there in 1942, but
the place is still known as the "LESAN neighborhood."
The LESAN neighborhood, located approximately
5 miles east of Mount Ayr along Highway 2 has been built up as the
Ramsey Farm and is quite a nice attraction.
During the 1880's two other railroads crossed the
county: the Humeston and Shenandoah in the northern tier of
townships, and the Great Western diagonally through the
western part of the county. Other new towns were established
along these routes and rivalry between them, when
some were only a few miles apart, was the keynote of the
decade. Older communities and settlements were absorbed by
the newer towns.
In 1880, when the Leon and Mount Ayr was extended to
Grant City [Missouri], railroad owners laid out Delphos (formerly Borneo)
and Redding. There had been some settlement near the
site of Delphos, and it was not long before the town had a
reputation for being one of the cleanest and most circumspect
villages in the county. Redding, laid out in the same
year, was incorporated in 1882 with a population of 300.
There had been a post office in this vicinity for some time,
but it had moved at least five times before it finally arived
in Redding. The Methodist erected the first church
in the village in 1884. The town had great promise in its
earliest years, but suffered several disastrous fires which
almost wiped it out. Its buiness houses moved elsewhere and
Redding never recovered.
When the Humeston and Shenandoah crossed the northern
part of the county in 1881, Beaconsfield and
Tingley were
laid out by town companies which purchased the sites from
farmers.
Tingley was probably indirectly named for a school
teacher, Tingley CORNWALL. He had taught in a rural district
of Union Township at the same time Union was
subdivided into two parts, and the new township had been named
for him. Some time later, Eugene, about five miles north of
Tingley, was absorbed by it. Then Beaconsfield was platted,
and had a doctor,
R. G. [Major Robert G.] RIDER, before it was a year old.
This little village, because of its nearness to other villages,
grew slowly.
Two men, COCHRAN and LeFEVER, had a store on the site
of Wirt a year before it was platted. Lots were not surveyed
for several years after the railroad passed the site,
but the post office was moved from Union Hill, three miles
northeast, and a railroad station was established. Twelve
or 15 years later, the name was changed to Ellston. In a
few years there were stockyards and scales there, to meet
the needs of the stock raisers in the surrounding territory.
A Methodist church was erected during this period by J. E.
EVANS, the town's first minister.
In 1880, when new towns springing up in the county
absorbed old villages, Mount Ayr boasted a population of 1,275.
There was an increase in civic activities. A four-room
schoolhouse was built and classes were transferred there
from their old location in the courthouse. New businesses
and lodges were organized. Eighteen veterans of the Civil
War started the Ellis G. MILLER Post, Grand Army of the
Republic, on November 3, 1880. It was named for Lieutenant
MILLER who had enlisted in Company G, Fourth Iowa Infantry,
and was killed at the battle of Chickasaw Bayou at Vicksburg,
Mississippi, December 29, 1862. MILLER had been the first
commissioned officer from Mount Ayr to die in service. By
July 1926 the post membership had reached 246.
Mount Ayr began its rather long struggle to provide
adequate fire protection in 1880. In that year the town
council authorized Z. T. KINSELL to buy fire fighting tools
for the newly organized hook and ladder company as the first
step in providing better fire protection. The memory of a
disastrous fire in 1879, which had burned most of the buildings
on the southeast quarter of the block on the north side
of the square, was fresh in the minds of the citizens, but
popular sentiment was against the hook and ladder company.
Five years dragged by before any attempt was made to get the
equipment the company needed. Fires still had to be fought
by bucket brigades.
In 1881 Walter MARRIAGE moved a three-story roller mill
to Mount Ayr. Before the installation of this mill, with
its one set of burrs for grinding corn, rye, and buckwheat,
and another set for chopping, farmers had to take their
grain as far as Afton and Davis City grinding. MARRIAGE
operated the mill until 1885, and then D. JODON ran it until
1887, when D. D. BALLOU bought and managed it until 1908.
About 1910, while it was in the hands of Poe JOHNSON, the
mill burned to the ground. Later an elevator was built on
the site.
Until 1883 the indigent people in the county were supported
in their own homes or cared for in the home of
others by county funds. In that year, the county officials
moved the poor into a new $5,000 county home which had been
completed in the spring. The officials had purchased 240
acres from John UNDERHILL for a county home site during the
fall of 1882. Here the indigent were cared for until 1922.
The towns in the country were having various growing
experiences in 1882 and 1883. Mount Ayr still struggled with
county fairs that had little success. When train service
into Tingley was begun in 1992, that town had a population
of 200. A Christian Church had been erected, George SWAIN
was running the first store, and J. GETTINGER had started
the Tingley News. The paper, however, was soon moved to
Wirt (Ellston). Kellerton was incorporated in 1882 and the
next year the Kellerton Independent was established to
supersede the Kellerton Mentor, a two-year-old newspaper.
Redding also became incorporated, with a population of 300.
In 1883 the Baptists at Delphos erected that village's
first church, and the Catholics at Kellerton built a Church.
The county had by this time outgrown its second courthouse.
Construction of the third courthouse started in 1883,
but the two-story brick and stone building, with its tower
102 feet tall, was not completed until 1884. The courtroom,
the sheriff's office, and the grand jury room were on the
second floor. The old courthouse was used for a variety of
purposes for a number of years. On Thanksgiving night about
1889 the old courthouse, which had been left standing,
caught fire and burned to the ground.
While the county was setting up housekeeping in the new
building, C. B. MORRIS, H. A. WHITE,
and J. C. ASKREN sank
a shaft 326 feet deep, about two and a half miles east of the
depot at Mount Ayr, in the attempt to find coal. They found
it, but not in a quantity that would make mining profitable,
so the shaft was abandoned.
Several young men in the county experimented with bicycles
in the spring of 1884, after a young man named Franklin
had ridden a high bike through the streets of Mount Ayr. Jack
SCOTT and Ben BRILEY, young blacksmiths, then tried their
skill at making bicycles and demonstrated them at the county
fair. Some of the spectators declared the high-wheeled
things were a passing fad, but ten years later they were numerous
in Mount Ayr. They sold for $100 and $150.
In 1875 the Chicago Great Western ran its road diagonally
across the western part of the county and three ne
towns -- Knowlton, Benton, and Maloy -- were established
along the route. The Chicago Great Western was known as the
Maple Leaf Route in the early days because its track between
Kansas City, Minneapolis, and Chicago, roughly outlined a
maple leaf, with these three cities as the points of the
leaf.
Benton and Maloy did not have such auspicious beginings
as Knowlton, but they were more fortunate in their
locations, since neither town faced a competitive struggle
with nearby villages. Benton was orginally located in two
townships. Its main street followed the dividing line
between Benton and Rice Townships. When the town was a little
more than 30 years old, the county supervisors made a new
township out of the large independent district which the
school board had organized, and named it Waubonsie. Because
one of the early storekeepers had a large red fox painted on
his store front, Maloy, first called Delphi, was known to
most settlers as Foxtown. This was long before the C.G.W. [Chicago Great Western]
was built or Maloy platted. The town occupied a dense
natural grove on the east side of the Platte River.
Knowlton was named for the president of the Chicago
Great Western. Sponsored by the railroad company, the town
at first had an unusual growth. It was promoted to freeze
out the village of Goshen on the C.B.& Q. [Chicago, Burlington & Quincy], about two miles
southwest, and to give the Great Western a monoploy on shipping.
But the Great Western withdrew its support; Goshen in
1890 moved bodily to the intersection and became Diagonal,
and within a few years had obliterated Knowlton. The Knowlton
school, once among the foremost in the county, was by
1942 little more than a country school. Pupils there
recall that Dr. LeRoy PARKINS of the Harvard Medical School,
was graduated from Knowlton High School in 1905.
Newspapers mushroomed into existence about this time.
The Redding Reporter, the Redding Independent, The Tingley
Times, the Battle Axe, the Independent, the Wirt Wasp, and
the Wirt News were all short-lived. The Ringgold County
Republican was established in 1885 at Mount Ayr by
Mr. F. M.[Francis Minor "Frank"] WISDOM and
Robert WILLIAMS. A year later, WISDOM sold out
his share to the
Reverend J. H. [James Harvey] TEDFORD. WILLIAMS and TEDFORD
then purchased the Ringgold Record in 1887, and
combined the papers under the Record's name. A few years later
TEDFORD bought out WILLIAMS and edited the paper himself
until 1907, when he sold half interest to Sam SPURRIER. Then
they bought the rival paper, the Twice-A-Week News
combined the two, and called them the Record News. In 1910
TEDFORD sold out to Sam SPURRIER, who in 1936 still ran the
only weekly newspaper in the county seat.
In 1885 Ringgold County checked up on itself and was
not displeased. The county fair, held from October 14 to 16,
was as good a fair as anyone could wish for. Balloon
ascensions and high tight-rope walking drove chills up and
dwon the spine, and the trotting, pacing, and running horse
races brought excited cheering. There were 20 post offices in
the county, 2,524 houses, 2550 familes, and a population of
12,530, including 523 who were foreign born. The average
farm was valued at $4,135 and there were more than 1,800
farms in operation, averaging 125 acres each. Small wonder
that the county, entirely agricultural, felt all was going
well on its thirtieth birthday.
A set back in 1885, however, was the destructive fire at
Mount Ayr on October 30. The bucket brigade could not
control the flames, which destroyed several business places.
After the fire, citizens and firemen again contributed to a
fund to secure fire fighting tools for the hook and ladder
company that had been organized, but not equipped, in 1879.
The majority of the citizens at last recognized the need for
the organization, and the city council allowed $50 to the
firemen for their previous work. The next year the council
paid them half a dollar each for their services at each fire,
From this time on there was little opposition to the hook
and ladder company. A group of citizens contributed $75
toward expenses incurred in sending representatives to the
Firemen's State Tournament at Council Bluffss in 1889, and
public sentiment in the firemen's favor continued.
The next year, a Mr. McCREARY established a new brick
and tile works in the town. His factory, with its capacity
for turning out 12,000 bricks daily, noticeably boosted business in the town.
Diagonal, platted about 1889 at the intersection of the
Chicago Great Western and the Humeston and Shenandoah railroads,
was the only town in the county through which both a
north-south and and east-west railroad ran. It soon was a
storm center of a struggle with Goshen and Knowlton. Two
years after Knowlton was platted and Goshen had been asbsorbed by
Diagonal, although a ghost of the old Knowton still clung
to existence in 1942. The first building in Diagonal was
moved from Goshen April 1, 1889.
A lively struggle ensued, however, between Knowlton and
Diagonal. On July 9 a fire almost wiped out the town of
Knowton, which then had one of the best business blocks in
the county. Items that appeared in Twice-A-Week News revealed
the bitter feeling. August 27, 1895, there appeared:
"The exodus from Egypt to Canaan has begun. That is, the
removal of the people from Knowlton to Diagonal is fairly
under way. . . " September 12 the Diagonal correspondent
wrote: "The commotion at Knowlton, always at fever heat,
was greatly increased last week by the presence of detectives
trying to ferret out the party who set fire to Knowlton
some time ago. We are informed they have the guilty
party spotted and, as was predicted, he is no citizen of Diagonal either."
The Knowlton correspondent remarked on September 27, 1895:
"The newspaper that was stolen and taken to Diagonal
has been brought back and in a few days will be running
again. So with all that goes to Diagonal. . . " Another item
boasted, "Men of Knowlton are highly pleased with the town's
prospects. Every day business men come through Diagonal
to our town to locate. There are five or six more
brick buildings talked of. Our printing press soon will be
sending out thousands of papers. . . The only thing we lack
is men enough to do the work which is now going on. If
anyone is contemplating finding a first-class locality he
should come to Knowlton. We have lots of room for honest,
upright business men." At this time Knowlton still had the
only coaling station on the railroad between Des Mones
and St. Joseph, and it was the only night station for a long
distance each way. In spite of Knowlton's tenacity, however,
the little town lost ground after 1910.
Back to Ringgold County History, 1942 Index
Ringgold County Iowa History The Iowa Writers' Program Of the Work Projects Administration.
Pp. 37-45. 1942.
Transcription by Sharon R. Becker, January of 2011
|