In June, 1868, the safe in the county
treasurer's office was blown open and about $500 in money
and county warrants stolen. Suspicion rested on Arthur
Linn, who was arrested and tried, but there being no
direct evidence to prove him guilty, he was discharged.
The person or persons who committed the deed were never
discovered.
On the 2d day of December, 1856, set in one of the most
severe snow storms that ever visited this country. The
winter of 1856-57 is remembered by all the old settlers
as the winter of "blizzards," during which,
quite a number were frozen to death. In what is now
Newton township, three men were frozen to death in the
month above referred to. Two of the parties names are
remembered - Porter and Snyder, the other, a stranger and
traveler, is not remembered. A German and his wife were
frozen in the same month, in the timber a short distance
north of Forest City. They were all attempting to reach
places of safety, where they could get food, got lost in
the storm, and their bodies were found the following
spring. This severe winter found nearly all the settlers
in straightened circumstances, crowded in small log
cabins, and with but little to subsist upon. Many went
days without food or fire, and the suffering as described
by early settlers, is, in many instances, almost without
comparison in the history of the northwest. Such a winter
has never since been experienced.
John Tinger, a young man about twenty-one years of age,
committed suicide at Lake Mills on the 6th of May, 1872.
It seems he had been afflicted for some time with a fever
sore on his left leg, and for some months he had
entertained fears that he would lose the use of the limb.
A letter was found in his pocket, that he had written to
a girl in Sweden, in which he accused her of being false
and unfaithful to the promises she had made him, and told
her that she would live to regret it. He was, at the
time, out of money, and, comparatively, among strangers,
and getting down-hearted and despondent seemed rashly to
decide that death was preferable to life. He was found
lying on his back, with a fearful hole in his left
breast, and a large pool of blood near him on the ground.
A shot gun was lying close by with the muzzle towards
him, and near his side, an open jack knife and a piece of
hazel bush about two feet long. Appearances indicated
that he had seated himself on the ground, placed the
muzzle of the gun against his breast, and discharged it
by pushing the trigger with the hazel stick. He came to
the county from Sweden, in September, 1871.
Oct. 21, 1876, Hans Evenson, a resident of Norway
township, was buried alive by the caving in of a well
thirty feet deep. Help was immediately sent for, but they
were unable to get him out until the following day. He
left a large family to mourn his untimely death.
Aug. 30, 1877, Iver Groves was overcome by damp in a well
which he was digging, and before help could reach him
life had become extinct. The well was forty feet deep. He
left a wife and four children to mourn his death.
Jan. 4, 1878, a sad accident occurred by which Lewis
Helgeson, a resident of Center township, lost his life.
He had gone to Kensett to market some grain, and on his
return was thrown from the wagon, sustaining injuries
that resulted in his death the same evening.
The following account of a frightful runaway is taken
from the Winnebago Summit of July 29, 1880:
"The worst accident that ever
occurred in Winnebago county happened on last Sunday
afternoon. A wagon containing eleven persons started
to go out on the prairie, west of town. As the team
started down the hill by the gravel pit, which is
quite steep, the horses started to run. Uncle William
Lackore and George Dunaway sat on the front seat, the
latter driving his own team. Mr. Lackore attempted to
assist in stopping the team, and in some way they
were turned to one side, which overturned the wagon,
throwing all the occupants violently to the ground.
"Mrs. George Dunaway was killed outright; Mrs.
L.C. Green, daughter of Mrs. Dunaway, had her right
elbow dislocated, and was badly bruised about head,
face and limbs; her little daughter had her left arm
jammed, and was badly shaken up. Mrs. William Lackore
had both arms broken and is also cut about the head.
Uncle William Lackore is bruised up considerabley;
George Dunaway is badly injured about the back; Mrs.
Gambell was slightly hurt on the right hand, and Mrs.
Clark and her daughter were slightly injured. Jesse
Lackore was the only one of the entire load who was
not hurt; as the wagon upset he jumped, and
fortunately escaped uninjured.
"Drs. Jones and Hewett were called at once, and
did all that lay in their power to alleviate the
wounds of the sufferers, and the injured are doing as
well as could be expected.
"It was a sad accident, and one which has no
parallel in this section."
The following account of a suicide is
taken from the Independent Herald, dated Nov.
21, 1881:
"This morning we were startled
by the news that Ena Sawyer had committed suicide by
taking morphine. She has always been subject to fits
of melancholy, and has often made the assertion that
she would kill herself. On one occasion before, from
the same cause, she barely escaped eternity.
Yesterday she appeared downhearted, but no one took
special notice of it from the fact that she had
appeared the same so often before. She told several
persons yesterday that she had taken morphine, and
told Dr. Hull that he would probably be called, but
did not want him to come. By talking with her for
about an hour he satisfied himself that if she had
taken any at all it was no unusual dose, as it should
have operated within twenty minutes. After this she
went to the literary society, walked home after it
was out and soon became unconscious. The doctors were
immediately summoned and stayed with her till life
vanished at about 3 o'clock this morning. Thus an
unhappy life is ended. Perhaps the last sentence she
wrote was: "Where will my soul rest?"
The first marriage of persons who were
residents of the county occurred in the fall of 1856. The
contracting parties were James Redmile and Jane Adams,
residents of what is now Newton township. The ceremony
was performed at Mason City, and the couple returned to
this county and commenced matrimonial life on section 36.
This match was not a substantial one, however, for within
two months they separated.
The next marriage of residents of the county was between
William Sutton and Tempa Decker, in the spring of 1857.
They were married at Mason City, as there was no officer
in the county, at the time, who had authority to officate
at marriage ceremonies.
1History of Kossuth, Hancock and Winnebago Counties, Iowa. Springfield, Illinois: Union Publishing Company, 1884. 852-54. |