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Earliest
Settlers In Richardson County
B. F. Leachman, the first native white child of Richardson
County, was
born August 18, 1855.
The first death in the county was that of Mrs. Purgett
in February, 1855.
The first recorded marriage was between Wilson M. Maddox
and Miss Margaret Miller, which occurred in October, 1855. Mrs. Maddox
resides in Falls City.
The first minister of the gospel, Rev. Hart (Methodist), came in
the summer of 1855.
Mrs. Samuels, a one-armed lady, taught the first school,
in 1855, in a small log hut near Muddy Creek. The boys chopped the wood and
built the fires, and the girls swept the cabin and carried water from a
spring nearby. The school children's dinners consisted principally of corn
bread and bacon. Wheat flour in those days was a luxury, and some biscuits,
made from a sack of it, donated by a family in our neighborhood, was
long remembered by us children as a great treat.
The first physician in
the county was Mrs. Sallie Dodge, as she was familiarly called.
Uncle Jesse
Crook came in August, 1854, and squatted on a claim. His wife and three
small children, with a small colony from Tennessee, arrived at Muddy
Creek on the 17th day of April, 1855, crossing the Missouri River at
sundown, at a place known as St. Stephens. The Crook household goods were in
a wagon drawn by oxen, and in driving off the ferryboat the wagon upset,
throwing most of the goods into the river. We stopped over night at St. Stephens, and next day, April 17, 1855, journeyed to our new home, a
mile and a half northeast from the place now occupied by Falls City. Our
cabin had one door, a stick and clay chimney, completed only about half way
up one end, and was without windows or other improvements.
The men had to
sleep in the wagons, and the cooking was done on the outside by a campfire.
There was nothing to be seen but wolves, Indians and the vast prairies, and
our only music was the howling of wolves. The Indians were very fond of
coming to our cabin and watching us at our work.
Where we crossed the Muddy to our new home the banks were so steep that
it was necessary to fasten ropes to the end of the wagons so that by holding
onto them the men kept the wagons from tipping forward on the oxen.
The
first Fourth of July celebration in Richardson County was held at Salem on
the 3d, 1856, as the fourth came on Sunday, and the second was at Rulo on
the 5th of the same month.
The first Fourth of July celebration at Falls
City was in 1857, General Jim Lane was the orator of the day, Major
Burbank had the only confectionery stand, and the music of the occasion was
made solely by a fife and a drum.
The exercises, including dinner, took
place under a brush arbor. Mrs. Jesse Crook and other pioneer women, most
of whom have long since passed to the great beyond, prepared the dinner.
The great feature of the celebration was a war dance by the Indians for
which we gave them dinner. The Indians were very friendly. Their reservation
was about three miles south of Falls City and was a very interesting
place for the whites to visit.
For years we had no church
houses, and
our religious services were held in the groves on the banks of the streams
and in the cabins of the settlers. The people had a high regard for these
services. I saw men, women and children attend them in their bare feet.
The first church building (Methodist) used exclusively for church purposes
in the county was erected in Falls City in 1867 and dedicated the same year.
Most of our provisions, such as sugar, coffee, flour, etc., was hauled
in wagons from St. Joseph, Mo., so that we were often short of some kind
of food. I knew one family that lived for weeks in the winter of 1855-56 on nothing but corn bread and coffee
made of corn meal; and another family had nothing to eat for weeks but
parched corn. The father of this family went to Missouri, over twenty miles,
through sleet and snow two or more feet deep, and returned home with
only a ham.
The town of Archer was laid out from public land in the summer
of 1855. It was situated on the east side of Muddy Creek about three miles
northeast of Falls City, near the claim of Judge Miller, who had moved
thereon the same summer.
Judge Miller's daughter, Margaret, was married
to Wilson M. Maddox (now deceased) at her father's house in October, 1855.
The town of Archer consisted of one hotel, owned by Judge Miller,
two general stores, kept by Abel D. Kirk and John F. Welty, one blacksmith
shop, four or five dwelling houses, and two lawyers, William Loan and Abel
D. Kirk.
The first county officers were:
Frank L. Goldsberry, county
clerk
Louis Mesplais, county treasurer
McMullen, sheriff
Judge
Miller, probate judge
Jesse Crook, surveyor
The town site of Archer was
abandoned in the year 1857, because the government survey in the
allotment of land to the Indians included it inside the half- breed
line. (See Note 1) Isaac Crook, brother of Jesse Crook, settled here with his family on or about April 15, 1856, and here his children
grew to maturity.
Fighting prairie fires was one of the worst pioneer hardships. Very
often the settlers would have to turn out for this purpose day and night;
and often homes, crops and live stock were consumed.
David Dorrington, wife and children settled at Falls City in
September, 1857, where they built their dwelling house and made other
valuable improvements. They lived here until death, and their children who
still live here are:
William E. Dorrington
Mrs. Annie (Dorrington)
Reavis, wife of Judge Isham Reavis
Kittie L. (Dorrington) Towle,
wife of Edwin S. Towle
William E. Dorrington is the oldest resident in
point of time now living in Falls City.
David Dorrington and Mother
Dorrington, his wife, died long ago.
Squire Dorrington, as he was familiarly
called, was mayor, justice of the peace and member of the city council
and of the school board.
Note: 1
The initials of McMullen's Christian
name are E. G., and Miller's Christian name was John C.
Archer derived its name from its founder.
The change of the western
boundary of the half-breed tract was the result of a resurvey made in 1857
which left Archer about three- quarters of a mile within the reservation,
but the original line was reestablished by act of Congress June 12, 1858.
See Watkins, History of Nebraska, I, 378, and articles on Archer and the
half-breed tract by Isham Reavis, republished in the Sunday State Journal,
February 7 and February 28, 1909.
Mrs. Wilhite, author of this paper,
and her husband, Judge J. R. Willhite, live at Falls City.
According to
Records of Nebraska Territory, in December, 1854, Governor Cuming appointed
Christian Bobst judge of probate of Richardson County, Robert T. Archer, for
whom the town of Archer was named, sheriff, and Nell J. Sharp county clerk.
In 1855 Governor Izard appointed county officers as follows:
March 16
Nell Johnson Sharp register of deeds
May 31
J. C. Lincoln treasurer
August 3
A. D. Kirk surveyor
In November
J. C. Lincoln
register of deeds
E. G. McMullen sheriff
John C. Miller Judge of probate
December 27
Ambrose Shelley treasurer
On November 6, 1855, the first
election in the territory of county officers — five in number -- was held.
According to the record above named, those chosen in
Richardson County are as follows:
John C. Miller Judge of probate Ambrose
Shelley treasurer
J. C. Lincoln register of deeds
E. C. McMullen sheriff,
Jesse Crook surveyor
Frank L. Goldsberry, county clerk, is omitted.
According to local historians, Christian Bobst was the first actual Judge of
probate, 1854;
E. G. McMullen first sheriff,
1857
Frank L. Goldsberry first
clerk
1855
Isaac Crook first treasurer
1857
J. J. Leabo first surveyor,
1857. But pioneer records as well as memories are often infirm. — ED.
By:
Sarah E. (Crook) Wilhite
Source:
"Publications of the Nebraska
State Historical Society"
Published by Nebraska State Historical
Society, 1919
Item notes: v.19
Transcribed
and Contributed by: Kim
Torp
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