Ringgold County's Centennial
By Luke E. Hart, 1955
I know something of the pride with which the people
of this county approach this occasion, the celebration
of the Centennial of its founding, and "home my footsteps
I have turned" in order that I might participate
in this historic event.
It is indeed a great privilege for me to be here and
to have the opportunity of joining in this celebration,
which for me is full of sentiment. It was more than
one hundred years ago that my grandfather, Luke Shay,
with his wife and three small children settled about
three miles west of what is now the town of Tingley, in
the northwest quarter of the county, then known as
Platte township. It was just one hundred years ago
that he joined with other residents in driving "west of
Clarinda" some Pottawattamie Indians who were disturbing
the tranquility of the settlers. It was just one
hundred years ago that the first formal religious services
were held in this county of which there is any
record or knowledge a Methodist service in Mount
Ayr and the celebration of Mass in my grandfather's
home by a Catholic priest who had arrived there on
mule back while he and his wife and their children were
accompanying other residents of the county on the trip
to drive the Indians "west of Clarinda."
It was just one hundred years ago this coming December
that his son Thomas S. Shay was born, the first
white child born in Platte township, embracing the entire
northwest quarter of the county. It lacks just two
of being one hundred years since the district court of
Ringgold county, as its first act following its establishment,
granted his petition for citizenship.
My grandfather, whose name I bear, exerted a great
influence over my life. He was a deeply patriotic
American. He belonged to that group of men who
pushed the frontiers of this nation beyond the Mississippi
river and into a new and wholly undeveloped territory.
He had pride of ancestry and he deeply revered
his forebears, his father, his grandfather and his great
grandfather, whose graves I have visited and over the
latter of which may be found today, a monument stating
that "Here lyeth the body of Luke Shea, born 1705,
died 1762."
To me his life symbolizes the spirit of our nation.
As a young Irish immigrant of twenty-four, he arrived
with his wife at Castle Garden in New York harbor in
the year 1848. After five years of work on the railroads,
from New York to Baltimore, to Louisville, to Terre
Haute, he, with his wife and two small children, and
$360 which he had saved, arrived in this vicinity in the
spring of 1852. After a year in Union county, he purchased
the land west of Tingley in Ringgold county
which afterward became his home.
But circumstances in the form of a prairie fire which
destroyed his home in Union county and compelled his
removal to Clark and then to Decatur counties, delayed
his taking up his residence on the farm near Tingley
until the early spring of 1855. But from that day until
his death, forty-one years later, Ringgold county was
his home and the scene of all of his activities. ' He
gained his livelihood by farming and stock raising. His
activities were confined largely to the western part of
the county. One of the early historians of Ringgold
county, comparing another of the early pioneers, Andrew
O. Ingram, with him, said, "He was to the eastern
part of the county what Luke Shay was to the western
part of the county."
He was a devout Christian. He practiced his religion
faithfully and without ostentation. In the very early
days, when facilities for the performance of his religious
duties were not close at hand, he took three of his children,
in their turn my mother in 1853, my Uncle
Thomas S. Shay in 1855 and my Uncle Douglas Shay in
1857 by moving wagon to St. Joseph, Missouri, one
hundred miles away, without roads, without bridges
and a week's journey, in order that they might be baptized
in accordance with the tenets of his religion.
That spirit of enterprise, that vision, that industry
and that rugged determination were characteristic of
the men and women who founded this county and established
it as one of the units that make this one of
the greatest states in the Union.
I relate these facts with regard to my own pioneer
ancestors for the purpose of bringing home to those in
the audience the circumstances under which this new
county was populated and developed. However, I realize
that they are merely typical because there are few
Americans who cannot find in their family history
similar stories of those who risked much and endured
much to bring a dream into reality. It is those qualities
which within the short span of one hundred years
have developed this great community and have made
this into the greatest nation on earth.
I know the question arises in the minds of many as
to why Iowa, and in particular, Ringgold county, was
so late in its development. The fact is that until the
Black Hawk war of 1832, which was fought on the east
bank of the Mississippi river, all of Iowa belonged to
the Indians. But as a part of the settlement that grew
out of that war, a strip about ninety miles wide along
the west side of the Mississippi river, and containing
about six million acres, became the property of the
United States and was opened for settlement on June
1, 1833. Thereafter the state was opened by sections
and it was not until May, 1843, that Ringgold county
was opened for settlement.
With the cession of the six million acre tract on the
west bank of the Mississippi river, the area was divided
into two counties, Dubuque county on the north and
De Moines county on the south. Development proceeded
rapidly and in August, 1836, Dubuque county had a
population of 4,274 and Des Moines county a population
of 10,531. Two years later the population had almost
doubled, with 22,859 people in the sixteen counties that
were organized from the area comprising the two
original counties. This rate of growth continued and
census taken in 1840 found the population to be 43,112.
In his message to the legislature upon its convening
at Burlington, November 9, 1839, Governor Lucas said
that with a genial climate, soil unsurpassed for fertility,
abounding with pure water, navigable rivers and
inexhaustible mineral resources, it had advanced, since
its organization, in improvement, population and wealth
beyond a parallel in all previous experience and he
recommended that the legislature formally request the
congress to authorize the admission of Iowa as a state
at an early date. By mid-summer of 1844, it was estimated
that the population numbered over 75,000. That
was the year Ringgold county acquired its first settler,
when Charles H. Schooler settled in the southeastern
part of the county.
When Iowa was admitted as a state in 1846, the first
free state carved out of the Louisiana territory, its population
was slightly more than 100,000. It had 44 counties,
mostly in the southeastern corner of the state,
where most of its population then resided. Fewer than
10,000 resided in northern Iowa and there were but two
families in Ringgold county, the family of James Tithrow
having settled near that of Charles H. Schooler in
the summer of 1846. The first white child born in the
county was Manoah B. Schooler, who was born in 1847.
There was no further settlement for several years
and in 1854 there were only nine families in the county.
However, in 1855 there was quite a brisk migration four
or five neighborhoods being formed in different
parts of the county. It seems strange, indeed, that Iowa
should have waited so long 340 years after Columbus
discovered America and 212 years after the Pilgrims
landed at Plymouth Rock.
When the settlers did come to Iowa, they beheld the
most attractive and the most inviting country ever
fashioned by the Creator. It was a broad undulating
prairie, rising gradually from the southeast corner,
where its lowest point is 444 feet above sea level, toward
the northwest, where in the northwest part of the
state the highest point is 1,694 feet above sea level, a
land bounded on the east by the broad Mississippi and
on the west by the mighty Missouri.
And what brought these people to Iowa and to Ringgold
county? All of the great events of history, the
struggles and tumults, the victories and defeats of which
there is a record, are merely incidents of an irresistible
tendency to movement among human beings. That
movement of races no system of political organization
and no form of government, however powerful or extensive,
has been able to arrest or even to check. And
that movement of races has always been the result of
land hunger, of an impelling demand for new lands to
provide sustenance for those mouths which could no
longer find it on the lands they occupied.
It was this hunger for land that moved Barbarian
tribes to invade the Roman province, overturn the empire
and wreck the monuments of ancient civilization.
It was that same hunger that plunged the nations of
the earth into two world holocausts and keeps them
now teetering on the brink of still another. While this
soil has been the theater of a race movement greater
than any the world has ever seen, it has involved no violence
and entailed no injury to anyone, but has brought
enormous benefits to millions.
The pioneer settlers of Ringgold county found here
a country that was nearly all prairie, excepting the
valleys of the Platte river, along its western boundary,
and the several forks of the Grand river and their affluents.
The soil was covered with native grasses and in
the valleys there was sufficient timber for the erection
of temporary buildings, for fuel and for rails for fences
and the protection of their crops. The streams abounded
with fish and there was an abundance of game, including
buffalo, deer, wolves, squirrels, prairie chickens and
quail, passenger pigeons, ducks and geese.
This was the country into which came the pioneer
settlers whose deeds and accomplishments we have
gathered here to commemorate. They did not come
here to seek a life of ease. Their coming was a determined
and carefully considered choice. They wanted
a place where they could have peace, where they could
rear their families in the love and fear of God, where
their children could be educated and where by industry
and thrift they might earn a competence to sustain
them in their declining years.
LAND SOUGHT FOB HOMES
From the very beginning, the home has been the
fundamental unit of the social order in this country
and our government has encouraged the homemaking
spirit among its citizens. First, it allotted public lands
to those who would settle on them, live there a number
of years and improve them as homesteads. The
laws preserve free from sale for debt, certain homesteads
of our citizens. The laws of various states
exempt from taxation owner-occupied homes, household
goods and tools of trade of the head of a home. The
federal and state governments allow deductions for income
tax purposes for wives and children. Generally,
the farmers in the field, the miners in the bowels of
the earth, the business and professional men in their
shops and offices, the workers in the factories are working
to earn money with which to establish and maintain
homes homes to house their families and in which
to rear and educate their children. Without homes
there would be no social order, no schools, no churches
and no American way of life as we know it in this
country.
The men and women who came to Ringgold county
had no illusions as to what frontier life on a western
prairie would require of them. They were under the
stern pressure of making a livelihood. They came with
a knowledge that the privileges they hoped to acquire
involved the assumption of burdens. There was nothing
about them to awaken friendly interest among those
with whom they came in contact excepting their moral
character, their ability and their willingness to contribute
by their efforts to the establishment of a new
community. They brought with them the most valuable
possession that any man could offer a pair of
human hands and an eagerness to employ themselves
in the cultivation of the soil. They believed in the admonition
of the Creator that man must earn his bread
by the sweat of his brow. They were able to work and
willing to work, and so they went to work. In season
and out of season they labored, the women with the
men.
They were without money to spend, but that made
little difference because there was nothing to buy. The
nearest trading points were St. Joseph, Missouri, Keokuk
and Burlington, each 100 miles away a week's
journey in a moving wagon. There were no roads, but
that did not matter because there was no place to go.
The only vehicle was the wagon which brought them,
their families and their possessions. There were no
electric lights, not even coal oil lamps; only home-made
tallow candles. There were no stoves; only open grate
fires. There were no washing machines; only wash boards,
and not many of these.
They raised and sheared their own sheep, carded and
spun the wool, wove the cloth, knitted the yarn and
otherwise fashioned their clothing. Their houses were
not merely places in which to live. They were work
shops and factories in which the things needed for
their livelihood and comfort were planned and made.
ENFORCEMENT OF CITIZENS' RIGHTS
There were no courts but they were scarcely needed,
because each one respected the other's rights. The only
serious transgression of another's rights occurred when
a man just over the line in Decatur. county became
angry because a neighbor's cow had damaged his corn
and he shot and killed the owner of the cows. These
sturdy pioneer ancestors of ours formed a posse, took
the guilty party in hand, organized themselves into a
court, heard the testimony of witnesses, found him
guilty, sentenced him to be shot and, on the four corners
at the intersection of Ringgold, Decatur, Clarke
and Union counties, proceeded to carry out the sentence.
There were no tractors and only a few horses. Nearly
all heavy work was done with oxen. Almost the
only implements now in use on the farm that were
then known to these early pioneers were the pitchfork
and the plow, and the plow of the early 5O's was a crude
implement, indeed. The soil was sod-bound and tough
and it was a considerable undertaking to break the
ground on 40 acres or 80 acres with one of these early;
plows and a yoke, or several yoke, of oxen.
I remember hearing Thomas Canny, one of the very
early pioneers and a man who became one of the county's
most prosperous and respected citizens, relate an
incident that may be worth repeating here. During
the winter of 1855-56, he and two other men were engaged
in hauling logs for my grandfather on three
sleds, with several yoke of oxen. It was bitter cold and
Mr. Canny and one of the other men thought it necessary
to walk in order to keep their blood circulating
and thus avoid freezing. But the third man insisted
upon riding on his load of logs. Mr. Canny and the
other man used their ox whips on the fellow who
wanted to ride, which made him so angry that he would
run after them, but in this way they kept him moving
and thus prevented his freezing to death.
I have often heard my grandmother tell of the founding
of their first home in the Tingley vicinity. The
simplest structure that could be built was the stable
for the horses and it was built first. But the members
of the family were in greater need of shelter than the
horses and, therefore, when the stable was finished, it
was occupied by the family until the house was erected,
and not until the house was finished and the family had
moved in was the stable made available for the horses.
In the meantime, cooking and other household work
that required the use of a fire was done outdoors over
an open fire. IOWA'S SETTLEMENT AND GROWTH
It is an historical fact that the greatest movement for
the settlement of a new country that ever occurred in
the history of the world took place here in Iowa between
1840 and 1860, and although the movement began
in Ringgold county later than it did in the counties
farther east and north, by the middle of 1855 it was in
full swing here.
At first, what is now Ringgold county was attached
to Taylor county. In the spring of 1851, commissioners
appointed by act of the legislature to locate the seat
of justice for Ringgold county reported that they had
selected a place for the county seat, which they had
designated by setting a stake about four miles south of
the center of the county and that they had named the
said county seat Urbana. They gave as a reason for
their inability to give a more particular description of
the place the fact that the land had not been surveyed
into sections. I suspect that, at this time nobody knows
the exact location of Urbana. This first attempt to organize
the county was not a success, probably due to
the fact that there was not sufficient population to form
an organization.
October 16, 1852, the county judge of Taylor county
entered an order declaring Ringgold county to be a
separate election precinct under the name of Schooler
township and designating the voting place for the presidential election to be the house of Lott Hobbs, in the
southern part of the county. The creek in that vicinity
known as Lott's creek derived its name from Mr. Hobbs
and the township derived its name from both.
MOUNT AYR LOCATED AS COUNTY SEAT
April 18, 1855, commissioners appointed by act of the
legislature to locate the county seat of Ringgold county
reported to the county judge of Decatur county, as the
act of the legislature provided, that they had selected
for the county seat the southwest quarter of Section 6,
Township 68, Range 29, with the name Mount Ayr,
and on June 9, 1855, Edward A. Temple deeded the land
to the county.
At the election that was held soon thereafter, James
C. Hagans was elected county judge, Matthew R.
Brown, clerk, Joseph W. Cofer, treasurer and recorder,
Hiram Imus, sheriff, and Charles H. Schooler, school
fund commissioner, and on June 29, 1855, Judge Hagans
made a settlement of financial matters with Judge
Lowe of Taylor county whereby he received $1.45 that
was due Ringgold county, and with this small capital
Ringgold county set up for itself.
The first formal meeting of the county officers was
held at the house of Ephraim Cofer, about six miles
south of Mount Ayr, July 2, 1855. At that time the
county judge divided the county into four townships,
or election precincts, respectively. Sand Creek, Platte,
West Fork and Lotts Creek, and it was ordered that an
election be held on the first Monday in August at the
homes of Stanberry Wright for the northeast precinct.
Garret Bird for the northwest precinct, John McGaughey
for the southwest precinct and Joseph Strickland for
the southeast precinct. The county judge, clerk and
recorder divided the fees they had received up to that
date and the share of each one amounted to $5.20.
The public business continued to be transacted at
the home of Ephraim Cofer until September, 1855, when
it was transferred to Mount Ayr. In the spring of 1856,
the county judge caused to be erected at Mount Ayr a
hewn log house for the use of the county officers. It
was 14 feet square, furnished with two tables, two desks,
four bookcases and a small rough-board box or safe for
the public revenue. This building was occupied by the
county judge, clerk, treasurer, surveyor and one physician.
This first courthouse was superseded in 1859 by a
frame one that was erected on the east side of, and
which fronted, the public square. It was two stories in
height, with four office rooms on the first fioor and court
and jury rooms on the second fioor. It cost $3,500,
which was paid from the proceeds of the sale of town
lots.
The first district court for Ringgold county convened
in Mount Ayr, May 25, 1857, with Judge John S. Townsend
presiding, Randolph Spry as clerk and John W.
Warren as prosecuting attorney, and the first business
transacted by the court was the granting of the application
of my grandfather, Luke Shay, for naturalization
as a citizen.
The most prominent man in the early history of the
county was Judge Hagans, who was born in Kentucky
and came here from McDonough county, Illinois. After
serving three terms as county judge, he was elected a
state senator and served with distinction in the Eighth
and Ninth general assemblies. He died September 7,
1863, at his home in Mount Ayr.
CHURCHES EARLY IN ESTABLISHMENT
The pioneers of Ringgold county were good Christian,
God-fearing people. Many of them brought a surprising
number and variety of books but almost without exception
they brought with them at least one book, the
Bible. Through it all they remained loyal to the religious
teachings and precepts of their forefathers.
Throughout the county, religious services were conducted
in the schoolhouses. Later, chapels devoted exclusively
to the worship of Almighty God were built in
different parts of the county. Among these was the Fry
Chapel several miles south of Mount Ayr, which, I believe, is still in use. Another was the Highland Chapel
about five miles west of Benton. But with the establishment
of the towns and the improvement of the roads
and travel conditions, churches were built in the towns
and many of the country chapels were discontinued.
Today, every town and village in the county has one
or more churches, with Mount Ayr having several fine
churches and each one having pious and devoted congregations.
There has never been any rivalry between
the different religious groups in this county and therefore
there is no bigotry, no intolerance and no discrimination.
Each group and each member in each group
serves the Master in accordance with the dictates of his
own conscience and each one accords to his neighbor
the full right to exercise that same privilege.
There is some question as to the exact date and location
of the first school within the confines of this county,
but it is certain that several schools were started between
the years 1854 and 1858 not less than three or
four. There are many supporters for the claim that
each of these was first, but I do not think we can undertake
to settle those claims here. However, it is certain
that at about that time schools were built in Jefferson
township, possibly as early as 1854, and in Mount Ayr
as early as the winter of 1855-56. Early teachers were
Miss Arsella Kirkham, John Cunningham, a Miss Brown,
Miss Bell and Miss Charlotte Swan, whose wages
varied from four dollars per month to ten dollars per
month.
Then came the system of establishing district schools
two miles apart. There were no school buses and as
I was among those who happened to live diagonally
across a section from the school, during my early childhood
I walked two miles to school. The advancement
in the Iowa school system has been one of the marvels
in the development of our nation's educational system.
The consolidated grade and high schools, the normal
schools, junior colleges and universities in Iowa outrank
those of any other state in the Union and the expenditure per capita of schools in Iowa is many times
as great as it is in some of the other states.
Throughout all of these now more than one hundred
years since the settlement of Ringgold county began,
the people of this county, together with other people
of this great state, have given of their manhood and
their womanhood to the upbuilding of communities of
which every lowan is proud. From out the homes they
established have gone boys and girls to give this nation
strength and to make it worthy of the great heritage
that is ours. No limitation of race or tongue or creed
has interfered with the free interchange of talents, the
merging of ideals and the development of that creative
spirit that has given America its place of leadership
among the nations of the earth. That Ringgold county
and Iowa have contributed more than their share toward
all of this is a matter of common knowledge and
it can easily be demonstrated. CONTRIBUTED TO DEFENSE OF NATION
The people of Ringgold county have always exhibited
a ρne spirit of patriotism and have contributed generously
to every national endeavor. When the Civil war
broke out and the safety of the Union was threatened,
the response of Iowa to the call of President Lincoln
for volunteers was overwhelming. Although the population
of the state was less than 700,000 including not
more than 150,000 men eligible for service Iowa gave
to the Union army 75,519 volunteers. Every cemetery
in Ringgold county enshrines the remains of men who
served their country in the defense of the Union. Also
in the Spanish-American war, in the flrst and second
World wars and in the Korean episode, Ringgold county
did its full share.
What Ringgold county did to vindicate the honor of
our nation in the second World war is very fresh in our
memories. Here is the record: Ringgold county contributed
to the armed service of our country 1,045 men
and 19 women. Theirs is a glorious record and proves
them to be worthy of the best traditions of our soldiers
in other wars. They have returned, all but 45 of the
dearest and best of them, who made the supreme sacrifice
and who will never return. Their sacrifices and
the record of their deeds will be held in grateful memory
as long as time shall last.
America has always upheld the principles asserted
in the Declaration of Independence and established
with the blood and the sacrifice of our founding fathers
in the war of the Revolution. It was to uphold those
principles that two world wars were fought and the
boys from Ringgold county who endured the hardships
and made the sacrifices that the war required of our
armed forces were valiant and loyal successors of the
hardy pioneers who one hundred years ago established
this great community in which you live and of which
every person having any relationship to Ringgold county
is proud.
Permit me again to extend my sincere thanks for the
honor and privilege of being here and having a part in
this program. In a busy life, crowded with activities
that absorb my time and energies, this manifestation
of your friendship and good will will be treasured by
me among my choicest memories.
TV Sets Outstrip Bathtubs
Farm homes in Iowa have fast become modern and
the new ones have the conventional conveniences. But
word now comes that in one county at least there are
now more television sets than bathtubs. It seems there
are 2,329 farm homes in Polk county in which
1,769 have bathtubs and running water. But there are
1,788 of the farm homes of the county having television
sets.
Other records show that in Polk county farm homes
there are 2,093 telephones. 2,274 farmers have electricity,
2,063 have automobiles, and on 1,360 of these
farms are neither horses nor mules.
The above was the text of an address given by Luke E. Hart at Mount Ayr, Iowa, July 4, 1955, on
occasion of the Centennial celebration of organization of Ringgold
county. Mr. Hart, a native of Maloy in that county, was long a practicing
attorney at St. Louis, Missouri, and is now Supreme Knight
of the fraternal order of Knights of Columbus with headquarters at
New Haven, Connecticut. From 1922 to 1953, he served as Supreme
Advocate of the order, in which capacity he acted as legal counsel
and its key policy-maker. Since his advancement to the high position
of Supreme Knight, he has been chief administrative officer in
the organization. For many years he has been the recognized strategist
behind its growth, official policies and manifold programs.
Transcription by Sharon R. Becker, April of 2015
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