Allamakee
County
Occupies the extreme northeast portion of the State,
being bounded on the north by Minnesota, and east by the
Mississippi River. The entire surface of the county is
more or less rolling, thus giving a pleasing variety to
the landscape and good surface drainage to the soil.
Though lying directly on the Mississippi River, the land
lies high, rising almost perpendicularly about 400 feet
from the shore, then gradually rising back, till at
Waukon, near the centre of the county, it is 655 feet
above the river level.
All the streams run in narrow valleys, hemmed in by
abrupt bluffs, in altitude equal to the general level of
the adjacent farming lands. They are very clear and pure,
being formed entirely of springs, and abound with
speckled trout. This prince of fish, which is not found
south of this county, affords another proof of the
sweetness and purity of Allamakee County waters. They are
all rapid streams. Upper Iowa and Yellow Rivers, Hickory,
Williams, Paint, Village, Coon, French, Silver,
Patterson, Bear and Waterloo Creeks, afford immense
numbers of very constant water powers, mostly unimproved.
The soil of the county is much varied. About one-third
its area is prairie, hazel thickets and river bottom,
consisting of a black loam from 20 to 40 inches in depth,
light in texture, easily tilled, never wet, and of
wonderful fertility. About one-sixth its area is burr oak
openings, scarcely inferior to the prairie in richness.
One-half its area is white oak and hickory openings, in
which the soil is less in depth, lighter in color,
heavier in texture, and producing somewhat less growth of
corn and straw, but a finer quality of wheat than the
prairie. Its chief deficiency seems to be in vegetable
mould, consequently it responds well to the use of
fertilizers, and under liberal treatment makes durable
and valuable farms.
The manufactures in this county are few and unimportant.
There are plenty of saw and grist mills, and a few small
plow and wagon shops; but the great want of this county
is extensive establishments for the manufacture of
agricultural implements, such as reapers, mowers,
threshers, plows, drags, fanning mills, drills, &c.,
&c., for which abundant water power and great tracts
of convenient and suitable timber afford wonderful
facilities. Choice water powers can be got for a song,
and heavy timber, suitable for manufacturing purposes,
convenient thereto, can be bought at 5 to 10 dollars per
acre, and a market at the manufactory for all
manufactures. The great increase of sheep husbandry will
soon demand that our crystal streams shall no longer
babble lazily over their pebbly beds in useless beauty,
but that they shall be harnessed to the spindle and loom,
and thus be made to yield a music no less pleasant than
the unfettered stream, and a music that shall tell of our
wives and daughters released from the drudgery of the
spinning wheel and shuttle, and ourselves from the
monopoly of railroads and steamboats, and speculators in
wool.
Allamakee county, lying as it does on the Mississippi
river, has a market there for all her surplus products,
without the laborious cartage of inland counties; and
more, she has direct access to the great pineries of
Minnesota and Wisconsin, for lumber for fencing and
building purposes.
This county has the usual school facilities of the State,
and in addition the Allamakee College and Academy, at
Waukon, the centre of the county, which gives such as
choose a fine opportunity for the acquirement of a more
thorough education than can be obtained in the common
schools.
The climate is particularly inviting to immigrants from
the north-eastern States and the British Provinces. The
great elevation and rolling surface of our prairies
render them free from those miasmatic vapors so prevalent
in some western localities, consequently fever and ague
is as much unknown on the high prairies here as it is in
New Hampshire or Massachusetts; and furthermore, the dry,
bracing air, peculiar to these localities, proves a
sovereign preventive and sometimes cure of consumption,
that scourge of New England. In fact, consumption is
almost as uncommon here as yellow fever in New England.
Our soil is such as would gladden the heart of an eastern
farmer. Corn grows on the same ground for a lifetime
without manure, and without any perceptible decrease of
crops. For wheat this is one of the best counties in the
West. Potatoes, melons, cabbages and other
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