?> CHAPTER
XIV. Source: The Trail of the
Loup By: H.W.
Fought and W.W. Haskell Copyright
1906 Thy spreading fields are yielding recompense
for honest toll. Nebraska,
dear Nebraska. Once the dainty
golden-rod peeped above the virgin sod. Where today we
see the beet leaves green and curled. Grain and cattle from thy fields
natures richest bounty yields. And Nebraska,
our Nebraska, feeds the world.
LOUP COUNTY was settled in
1874. The first settlers to trail the Loup beyond the Garfield county
settlement and squat within the confines of Loup county were Rodney P.
Alger, John R. Goff, D. L. Bowen, B. J. Harvey, A. M. Gurnsey and Wm.
Burns with their families. A few months later, when work on Fort Hartsuff
was begun, a number of additional families became temporary dwellers
within the limits of the territory.
In the spring of 1875 an Indian scare seized the outlying
farmsteads; the growing crops were abandoned and the whole community
assembled in the little, well-known park on R. P. Alger's farm, and there
erected temporary abodes. For greater security a stockade was erected and
dubbed "Fort Rodney," in honor of Rodney P. Alger. The Indians, however,
did not appear and shortly all the staunch-hearted among the settlers
returned to their abandoned homes: a few timid ones only left the country
for good. Fort Hartsuff was soon
afterwards completed and the colony freed from any further Indian
experiences. In the summer of
1876 and the following spring the colony was further increased by the
arrival of the Rushos. T. W. Williams, D. A. Gard and G. C. Snyder, all
with their families. These arrivals settled near where Kent and Taylor are
now located. During the winter of 1876-77
A. M. Gurnsey succeeded in getting a special postoffice established. Mr.
Gurnsey was appointed postmaster and the office named Kent. For a time the
mail was carried by volunteers who took turn about making the trip down to
The Forks and back. Grand Island, one hundred
miles to the south, was in those days the nearest railroad connection.
Thither did the settlers have to go for most of their necessaries of life.
During the first few years of scant crops it was a common thing for the
settlers to cart ox-loads of cedar posts all the way to York and Butler
counties a round trip of fully 300 miles to exchange the same for flour,
groceries and other necessaries of life. Ten days to three weeks were
counted necessary to make the trip; and during all this time the hardy
freighter was subject to the discomforts and hardships occasioned by the
uncertainty of weather conditions- swollen and unfordable streams, sudden
storms, and the like. "During
the summer of '77 says David Gard, "we were all so busy breaking prairie
and putting in crops, that no one had time to make, a trip to the nearest
grist mill, which was then fifty miles down the valley. For a while we
accordingly ground our corn and wheat on hand coffee-mills." The first
school district was organized in 1876 under the jurisdiction of Valley
County, where Rev. Oscar Babcock was at that time county
superintendent. The
district, which was designated as No. 9, was very large, containing more
than thirty square miles. A sod house with dirt roof and stamped clay
floor was erected on section 36, T. 21, R. 18. Rose Harvey was the first
teacher employed to teach here, and her first term was only three months
long. The first general store in the
county was opened by A. Kitzmiller at Kent in 1880. He was obliged to haul
all of his merchandise from St. Paul, which point the Union Pacific
Railroad had now reached. Time passed and other
families were added to the list already mentioned. There were A S. Moon,
David McCord, Thomas Croughwell, William A. Clark, Jacob and Wesley
Strohl, William Forbes, Henry Copp, John Burlingham, William Thomas, B. S.
Sawyer, George Spangler, John Abbott, George Craven, Charles Copper, John
Wheeler, George Abbott, Calvin L. Copp, Stephen Roblyer, Wesley Rains, H.
Dunbar. Mrs. Phoebe Glover, and many others. Loup County was at this time
a part of the unorganized territory. As the population continued to
increase it became expedient to organize the county. This was accomplished
in the spring of 1883. The temporary county seat was placed at Kent with
David Gard as temporary clerk. The first election was held May 3rd of that
year and resulted as follows: Clerk, F. H. Sawyer: Treasurer, Joseph
Rusho; Judge, B. J. Harvev; Sheriff, Arthur C Alger; Surveyor, A. J.
Roblyer: Superintendent, A. S. Moon; Commissioners. G. W. Strohl. N. E.
Fay and H. L. Reniff. Next
came the inevitable strife for location of the permanent county seat. Kent
lay too far east to be considered in the race. But Taylor, Almeria, and
Clark's Point were all eager to land the plum. None of these places had
been platted, but that mattered but little in those days. Locate the county seat and the town
would spring up! Taylor lay very close to the center of population and was
a logical claimant. Almeria became a dangerous rival because Kent might be
expected to throw her support to a town as far away as possible from her
own zone of influence. For Taylor Taylor was staked off on a
farm belonging to and adjoining the homestead of Joseph Rusho. The
original site contained 32 blocks, of which No. 13 was set aside as a
public square. The first
store opened was that of Otto Witte, who carried a stock of groceries and
drugs. This was very early in 1884. In a short time two additional stores
opened. George Cleveland put in groceries and hardware and E. H. Snow, dry
goods, boots and shoes. But these ventures were not to be permanent
accessions to the town; they soon tired and left for more promising
fields. The first permanent business house to become established at Taylor
was that of Wheeler & Scott, which is still doing business under the
name of George F. Scott. Half
a decade later Taylor boasted five general stores, two banks, two hotels,
two livery stables, two newspapers and many other business places. Many of these were built on
the expectancy of getting an extension of the B. & M. which had
reached Burwell in 1887. But
alas! Taylor was doomed to bitter disappointment and is to this day an
inland town. The dry years were hard on
Loup county and her towns. Almeria, where G. W. Strohl and Fred Hoellworth
had opened a general store, managed to hold her own and live through the
crisis. Kent by degrees dwindled down till in 1905 there is nothing left
but the postoffice, and this too will no doubt soon be discontinued.
Taylor saw her banks close their doors for lack of business, and some of
her business houses removed, stock, buildings and all. But here, as
elsewhere, the tide turned in time, and today the town is slowly rallying
from the staggering blow. A new First, when the Burlington
built to Burwell in 1887, Taylor expected to get the line. Then when the
same system extended up through Custer County the town became hopeful
again. But this extension crossed the southwest corner of the county,
passing south of Taylor and missing Almeria just four miles. Even now the
situation is not hopeless. Two years ago a survey was made from Burwell up
through the valley and Taylor may yet get a connecting line between the
Garfield and Custer county branches. Loup County is in many
respects a remarkable county. It is chiefly a grazing district, well
adapted for the raising of cattle, horses and sheep. But at least forty per cent is
made up of good tillable lands. The value of the county live stock is
estimated at $500,000. This will increase rapidly hereafter. Alfalfa, bromegrass, and English
bluegrass are even now on the point of revolutionizing the cattle
industry. When such remarkable grasses shall have had time to clothe the
sand-hills with their mantle of green, these decried sections will become
a source of untold wealth to the county; indeed they will be the making of
a great and prosperous county. It is surprising how well fruit trees grow
in the county. Some of the
apple orchards in the valley and on the higher benches to the south can
scarcely be excelled by any in the state. It is an eye-opener to the
Easterner to see such orchards as are grown by L. F. Ruppel and
others STATISTICS. Population
(1903).......................... 1,700 Area.................................570 sq.
mi. Best tillable
land.................$25.00 to $55.00 Fair tillable
land.................$10.00 to $20.00 Rich hay
land....................$20.00 to $25.00 Pasture
land.......................$3.00 to $0.00 DESCRIPTION BY
TOWNSHIPS.* Range 17. T. 21. North Loup valley; rest
rolling; all fertile. T. 22. Calamus valley, fertile in
part; rest rough grazing land. T. 23. Rough, sandy grazing
land. T. 24. Rough, sandy grazing
land. Range 18. T. 21. North Loup valley,
three miles wide, fertile; rest rolling, fertile. T. 22. Rough; few farms in south,
rest grazing land. Range 19. T. 21. North Loup valley, three
miles wide; rest rolling; good soil. Range 20. T. 21. Rough, sandy soil, used for
farming and grazing land. T. 23. Loup valley in southwest,
tillable; rest rough grazing land. From the Bulletin of the
Bureau of Land, Lincoln, Nebr., 1902

HISTORY OF LOUP COUNTY
NEBRASKA
Loup County and Its
Possibilities.
TRANSCRIBED BY: MELODY BEERY
The smile of God is beaming ever on thy fertile soil.
Nebraska, dear Nebraska.
BY: Will M. Maupin.
once the county seat would mean death
to ambitious little Kent. So it came about that the election was very
close. Indeed Taylor won out by just two votes majority over
Almeria.
bank has just opened its doors to
business and the stores are all doing a thriving business. Geo. F. Scott
and Rusho Bros, are carrying large stocks of general merchandise, George
P. Emig has a first-class drugstore, Joseph Rusho a complete line of
hardware. J. G. Wirsig is proprietor of the Loup Couuty News and a
thriving implement business. Joseph Kriegel has built up an excellent
business in harness, saddles and trunks. The Taylor Clarion, the oldest
newspaper in the county, is edited by E. Andrews. Everything considered,
Taylor business men have cause to feel
encouraged. The territory from
which they draw their trade is rapidly developing, and with the increase
in population which is sure to come, the town is bound to grow. Taylor has
from the beginning been handicapped because it is an inland town. Several
times it has looked as though the B. & M. would extend to it, but it
has always ended in disappointment.
in this county. Since the passage of the Kinkaid homestead law,
every section of land in the county has been snapped up and land is
steadily increasing in value. To have land holdings in Loup County is now
to be fortunate.
T. 23.
Rough, sandy grazing land.
T. 24. Rough, sandy grazing
land.
T. 22. North Loup valley, over two
miles wide, fertile; rest rough.
T. 23. Rough, sandy grazing
land.
T. 24. Rough,
sandy grazing land.
T. 22. Rough, sandy soil, used for
farming and grazing land; Loup valley.
T. 24. Rough, sandy grazing
land.
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