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Settlements & Settlers Topic

 
Adair County, Missouri Courthouses Marker back image, Touch for more information
By Michael E Sanchez, Jr., March 24, 2017
Adair County, Missouri Courthouses Marker back
1 Missouri, Adair County, Kirksville — Adair County, Missouri Courthouses / Early Days of Adair County, Missouri
The first courthouse of Adair County, completed on July 15, 1843, was constructed on the northwest corner at the intersection of Harrison and Elson Streets. Described as "a low brick affair," the building was said to cost $1,000, a large amount of . . . Map (db m144751) HM
2 Missouri, Adair County, Kirksville — Early Days of Adair County, Missouri
The first attempt at a settlement by Whites in this county was in 1828, twenty-five years after the Louisiana Purchase and three years after extinction of the Indian title. Settlers from Howard County decided to locate on the east side of the . . . Map (db m144764) HM
3 Missouri, Andrew County, Savannah — Andrew County
Andrew County, organized 1841, is one of 6 counties in the Indian Platte Purchase Territory annexed to Missouri, 1837. Named for Andrew Jackson Davis, St. Louis editor, the county was first settled in the middle 1830’s. Pioneers were from Ohio, . . . Map (db m39756) HM
4 Missouri, Andrew County, Savannah, Nodaway Township — First Christian ChurchSavannah, MO.
This local church, a part of the American religious movement known as The Disciples of Christ, was organized in 1847 and since its beginning has been a fellowship of over 5000 members. This present location, Fifth and Market Streets, has been the . . . Map (db m216796) HM
5 Missouri, Atchison County, Rock Port — Rock Port
Side A: Here on Rock Creek in Missouri's fertile Glacial Plains, Rock Port was laid out, 1851, by Nathan Meek and succeeded Linden as seat of Atchison County, 1856. A leader in corn production, the county, organized 1845, is named for U.S. . . . Map (db m48107) HM
6 Missouri, Audrain County, Mexico — John Bingle Morris
Born in Ky, Dec. 3, 1806 Married Julia Ann Shumate June 5, 1827 Settled in Mexico, Mo. 1836 Built the first residence and business house Post Master 15, County Clerk 18 and County Judge 16 years Had 18 children Honest, strong . . . Map (db m70465) HM
7 Missouri, Audrain County, Mexico — Mexico
[Side A] Internationally known for its firebrick industry and famed for its saddle horses, this county seat was laid out by Robert C. Mansfield and James H. Smith not long before Audrain County was organized, 1836. Named for legislator . . . Map (db m70508) HM
8 Missouri, Audrain County, Mexico — Old Stones
Acquired 1973 Indian Mortar (Grist) Stone c.1700-1800 1960 Granite Millstones used in first Audrain County mill 1850Map (db m70507) HM
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9 Missouri, Barton County, Lamar — Lamar
Side A Lamar is distinguished as the birthplace of Harry S. Truman, the 33rd President of the United States. The son of John Anderson Truman and Martha Ellen (Young) Truman, he was born May 8, 1884. The family moved to Harrisonville in Cass . . . Map (db m42286) HM
10 Missouri, Bates County, Butler — Bates County, Missouri in 1862
Bates County was formed in 1841. Many early settlers came from Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee. The 1860 census listed a population of 6,765 with a slave population of 442. In 1862, the slave population had dropped greatly. Most Bates . . . Map (db m60614) HM
11 Missouri, Bates County, Butler — Butler History Murals
1806 15 Ms. South of Butler Explorer Zebulon Pike Parley With Osage Chief 1863 Burning of Butler by Order No. 11 During the Civil War Where the Civil War Began Brother Against Brother Post Civil War Reconstruction [Mural . . . Map (db m39898) HM
12 Missouri, Bates County, Butler — The Toothman FarmHome to a Notorious Rebel Family
After the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed, pro-slavery Missourians and free-state Kansans fought over whether Kansas should enter the Union as a slave or free state. The fighting was so intense that the conflict was called "Bleeding . . . Map (db m60584) HM
13 Missouri, Bates County, Rich Hill — 33 — Harmony MissionAmerican Presbyterian and Reformed Historical Site No. 33
[Front] Historic Harmony Mission, a school for the Indians of Missouri, once stood east of Rich Hill, on the north bank of the Osage River, near the centuries-old camping sites of the Great and Little Osage tribes. The mission was founded . . . Map (db m121349) HM
14 Missouri, Bates County, Rich Hill — The Town That Coal BuiltRich Hill, Missouri — "Big Mouth" —
Marion 8200-5 Walking Dragline "Midway Princess" Total Working Weight • 6,800,000 Pounds Boom Length • 275 Feet Boom Angle • 35 [degrees] Maximum Digging Depth • 125 Feet Operation Radius • 251 Feet Bucket Capacity • 73 . . . Map (db m72041) HM
15 Missouri, Bollinger County, Marble Hill — Marble Hill
[side 1] Here on a scenic hill at the junction of crystal clear Crooked and Hurricane Creeks, Thomas Hamilton laid out Marble Hill after Bollinger County was organized, March, 1851. First called New California, the town was . . . Map (db m179953) HM
16 Missouri, Boone County, Columbia — African-American HeritageFlat Branch Park
The Flat Branch has witnessed the accomplishments of Columbia's African-American community for generations. A free African-American, John Lange (later shortened to Lang), Sr., operated Columbia's first butcher shop in the public market from . . . Map (db m169422) HM
17 Missouri, Boone County, Columbia — African-American Heritage Trailhead
The African-American Heritage Trail commemorates Columbia's blacks, their enterprises and churches from the city's first 200 years. The Trail honors people who overcame enormous odds to achieve outstanding legacies, some receiving national and . . . Map (db m169420) HM
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18 Missouri, Boone County, Columbia — Columbia
Columbia, "Educational Center of Missouri", originated in the town of Smithton, laid out by the Smithton land Company, 1819. By 1821, when the name was changed, the town was the seat of Boone Co., organized 1820, and named for Daniel Boone who died . . . Map (db m106358) HM
19 Missouri, Boone County, Columbia — Early SettlementFlat Branch Park
The first settlers of present-day Boone County, Missouri were American Indians who arrived more than 11,000 years ago. Their descendants slowly evolved culturally, settling in communities where they engaged in agriculture and developed pottery. . . . Map (db m169425) HM
20 Missouri, Boone County, Columbia — George Clinton SwallowA.M., M.D., L.L.D. — 1817 - 1899 —
First Professor of Geology, Chemistry, Agriculture, and First Dean of The College of Agriculture University of Missouri. First State Geologist of Missouri.Map (db m59459) HM
21 Missouri, Boone County, Columbia — James Shannon L.L.D.
In memory of James Shannon L.L.D. Born in Monaghan Co. Ireland April 23, 1799 Died Feb. 23, 1859 Second President, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 1850-1856 Co-Founder of Christian College 1851 (Now Columbia College), . . . Map (db m59462) HM
22 Missouri, Boone County, Columbia — Jewell Cemetery
Jewell Cemetery is located on what was originally the farm of George Jewell. George, his wife, and their children first moved from Virginia to Kentucky, then Franklin, Missouri, and finally Columbia in 1822. George, his son William, and . . . Map (db m59646) HM
23 Missouri, Boone County, Rocheport — History of Rocheport
1804... Land Before the Town Prior to its settlement, American Indians used the area we now call Rocheport. The closeness to the river, fertile soils, both salt and freshwater springs, and the protection given by the huge bluffs, rock . . . Map (db m46345) HM
24 Missouri, Boone County, Rocheport — Steamboating on the Missouri
First Steamboats Early steamboat trips on the Missouri River tested boats, crews and passengers. Between 1820 and 1900, several hundred steamboats on the Missouri were destroyed by fire or boiler explosions, crushed by ice, or sunk by snags. . . . Map (db m46353) HM
25 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — "Queen of the River Towns • King of the Trails"St. Joseph, Missouri — Great America VI —
[Mural depicting St. Joe's history]Map (db m79252) HM
26 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — David Johnson Heaton
Born in Phil. Pa. Dec. 6, 1808, Died in St. Joseph Mo. Apr. 28, 1898 Aged 89 years. United with the M. E. Church in 1834. A member of the I.O.O.F. from 1850 till death. In June 1827, became a professional undertaker and funeral . . . Map (db m66453) HM
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27 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Jesse James Home
Outlaw Jesse James was shot and killed in this house April 3, 1882. It was then at 1318 Lafayette on the hill above Patee House. It was moved here in 1977.Map (db m58835) HM
28 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Joseph RobidouxCity Founder — 1783 - 1868 —
Near this site the French fur trader Joseph Robidoux established a trading post in 1826 while it was still Indian territory. Robidoux and his family oversaw a far-ranging fur trading empire. The Platte Purchase of 1837 added the six county . . . Map (db m47468) HM
29 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Joseph Robidoux at Roy's Branch
Joseph Robidoux, founder of St. Joseph, was the leader of a French-Canadian fur trading family which sent men out to trade with the Indians along the Missouri River and as far west as today's Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico. From his first trip . . . Map (db m91000) HM
30 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — No Turning Back
Too young and naïve to think they could fail Too full of visions for the end of the trail They stored their silk dresses and donned calico To join in the cry of Westward Ho Their diaries tell of the endless hours The . . . Map (db m55832) HM
31 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Patee HouseCompany & Division Headquarters, Original Home Station — Apr. 3 1860 - Sep. 13, 1861 —
The Patee House was the Pony Express Company's Eastern Headquarters from April 3, 1860 to September 13, 1861. The company's official name was "The Central Overland California and Pike's Peak Express Company." John Patee built the hotel from . . . Map (db m47398) HM
32 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Patee Town
John Patee came to St. Joseph in 1845 and opened the city's first drugstore at the corner of of Main and Francis Streets. He purchased 320 acres, platted what was known as "Patee Town" and began selling building lots in 1849. He later built the . . . Map (db m22072) HM
33 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Platte Purchase1837-1937
Sixteen years after the admission of Missouri to the Union. This territory now comprising six counties was purchased from the Sax, Fox and Ioway Indians. Negotiations for the United States were conducted by William Clark, Governor of Indian . . . Map (db m156350) HM
34 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Pony Express1860 - 1861
On this site, April 3, 1860, a ferry carrying a horse and rider crossed the Missouri River to start a 10 day journey of 1,966 miles to deliver mail to Sacramento, California. The race against time, elements and a hostile land captured the spirit . . . Map (db m47470) HM
35 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Pony Express"Saddle and Mochila"
On April 3, 1860 the eastern Pony Express mail arrived by train and it was late. To save time the Pony Express Company which was located in the Patee House at 12th and Penn Streets had the mail taken directly to the post office. The post office . . . Map (db m47480) HM
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36 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — Saint Joseph
Renowned city of the Pony Express, St. Joseph was first settled as a trading post for the American Fur Company by Joseph Robidoux, 1826. Later he acquired the site and laid out a town in 1843. St. Joseph became an outfitting point for settlers in . . . Map (db m4989) HM
37 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — St. JosephThe Union's Linchpin to the West
In 1860, the United States stood on the brink of Civil War. Following the election of Abraham Lincoln as America's 16th President, states began seceding from the United States to form a new nation, the Confederate States of America. In April . . . Map (db m79274) HM
38 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — St. Michael's Prairie / The Lewis and Clark Expedition
St. Michael's Prairie St. Michael’s Prairie, the site where St. Joseph would be established, was identified on maps at least as early as 1792. French explorers and trappers had been traveling up and down the Missouri River since the early . . . Map (db m47472) HM
39 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — The California - Oregon Trail1840s & 1850s
Each spring thousands of emigrants camped in these hills and meadows waiting for new grass to support their teams along the trail. Wagons lined St. Joseph streets to the east waiting for two to three days to be ferried from this point. The settlers . . . Map (db m47467) HM
40 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — The Journey West
After the 1848 discovery of gold in California, more than 100,000 sturdy Americans passed through St. Joseph on their way west in quest of wealth, opportunity and better lives. The "Gold Rush" began and those who followed the "Star of Empire" . . . Map (db m47479) HM
41 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — The One-Room Schoolhouse
For nearly 250 years the country school was the backbone of American education. These simple buildings often served as school, chapel, town hall and community center. One-room schoolhouses were the most common type of schools in the Midwest . . . Map (db m122675) HM
42 Missouri, Buchanan County, St. Joseph — The Patee House In The Civil WarA State Divided: The Civil War in Missouri
The Hotel Patee House opened in 1858 as St. Joseph’s finest hotel. It later served as the national Pony Express headquarters, the local Union Army headquarters, a women’s college and a factory. The building is now a National Historic Landmark. . . . Map (db m47441) HM
43 Missouri, Butler County, Poplar Bluff — Original Town Poplar Bluff
This site marks northwest corner of original town platted in 1849. Poplar Bluff, named for beautiful tulip poplars on bluffs overlooking Black River, became county seat of Butler County in 1849 and was incorporated on February 9, 1870.Map (db m36126) HM
44 Missouri, Butler County, Poplar Bluff — Poplar Bluff
(Front): In the Ozark perimeter, above Missouri's Southeast Lowland Region, Poplar Bluff was laid out in 1849 as seat of newly organized Butler County. The town was named for its location in a forest of yellow poplars on the bluffs above . . . Map (db m36128) HM
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45 Missouri, Butler County, Poplar Bluff — Poplar Bluff Historic DepotGrand Staircase Renovation
This beautiful staircase is a reconstruction of the original depot stairs built in 1910. Thousands have used the steps as a gateway to and from downtown Popular Bluff. After a century of deterioration, the depot steps could not be salvaged and were . . . Map (db m180373) HM
46 Missouri, Caldwell County, Braymer — Haun’s Mill Reported missing
In December 1835, Church member Jacob Haun acquired this tract of land and hired the construction of a gristmill. By 1838 an 18-foot square blacksmith shop had also been built and 10 to 15 families lived in the community. Cultural differences . . . Map (db m153436) HM
47 Missouri, Caldwell County, Braymer — Haun's Mill Massacre
. . . Map (db m22502) HM
48 Missouri, Caldwell County, Hamilton — "Richey" Mill Stones
"Richey" Mill Stones Salem, Caldwell County 1838Map (db m66984) HM
49 Missouri, Caldwell County, Hamilton — Boyhood Home of J. C. Penney
[Title is text]Map (db m66989) HM
50 Missouri, Caldwell County, Hamilton — Hamilton
Founded in 1855 and named for Alexander Hamilton and Joseph Hamilton. First incorporated in 1868. Ten miles southwest the Mormons in 1836 established the town of Far West, the county seat from 1836 to 1843.Map (db m66996) HM
51 Missouri, Caldwell County, Hamilton — Hamilton Train Depot
Hamilton was built around the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, which was completed on Valentine's Day, 1859. In the fall of the same year, the Hamilton Depot was built. In 1885 a spur line to the Hamilton Coal Mine was added and later extended to . . . Map (db m156949) HM
52 Missouri, Caldwell County, Hamilton — Harden Stone Millstones
Harden Stone Millstones, Monroe Township, Daviess CountyMap (db m162683) HM
53 Missouri, Caldwell County, Hamilton — Welcome to Hamilton
J.C. Penney 1875-1971 • 500th J.C. Penney Store opened in 1924 • Frank Clark's Mill 1867 • Sam McBrayer's Livery Stable 1898 • Caldwell County Courthouse in Kingston Built 1898 • J.C. Penney Farms • Far West Memorial • Hamilton Holiday Street . . . Map (db m66988) HM
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54 Missouri, Caldwell County, Hamilton — Welcome to HamiltonQuilt Town, USA — Find Your Happy Place —
J. C. Penney's Boyhood Home Zach Wheat · Baseball Hall of Fame Home of Northwest Mo. Steam & Gas Engine Show Missouri Star [symbol of the quilt company] Penney [High School] HornetsMap (db m156954) HM
55 Missouri, Caldwell County, Kingston — Kingston
The fertile Shoal Creek Valley, Kingston was laid out in 1843 to replace Far West as seat of Caldwell County. Organized in 1836, the county was to be for Latter Day Saints (Mormons), ejected from Jackson County in 1833 and asked to leave Clay . . . Map (db m144715) HM
56 Missouri, Callaway County, Calwood — Old Auxvasse CemeteryMissouri's Civil War
Old Auxvasse Presbyterian is one of the oldest congregations west of the Mississippi. But this hill on which the congregation first met in 1828 in a log church earlier hosted travelers along the Trial, some of whom likely were buried here before the . . . Map (db m216974) HM
57 Missouri, Callaway County, Fulton — Boone's Rock
Originally located on a bluff on Stinson Creek in northwest Fulton, about 200 yards north of the Boone's Lick Trail, this rock bears the name D. Boone with the date 1801 and an arrow pointing due west.Map (db m69693) HM
58 Missouri, Callaway County, Fulton — Callaway County Men at WarMissouri's Civil War
The Civil War divided Missouri, but in Callaway County more soldiers served with the pro-Southern Missouri State Guard (MSG), the Confederate Army or irregular partisans. The MSG was a state-sanctioned force, organized in May 1861 to defend . . . Map (db m70386) HM
59 Missouri, Callaway County, Fulton — Captain James Callaway
Sacred to the memory of Captain James Callaway, who sacrificed his life in the defense of his country, and who fell in the same battle in which McMullin, McDermid and Houchins were killed. Captain James Callaway, raised and . . . Map (db m70383) HM WM
60 Missouri, Callaway County, Fulton — Fulton
This is a two sided marker Side A: Fulton was founded here in the Little Dixie Region of Missouri, 1825, to replace the poorly located Elizabeth as seat of Callaway County. Named for a grandson of Daniel Boone and War of 1812 . . . Map (db m78757) HM
61 Missouri, Callaway County, Fulton — War Comes to Westminster CollegeMissouri's Civil War
"The Columns" atop this hill are the venerated remains of Westminster College's original academic building, Westminster Hall, destroyed by fire in 1909. Founded in 1851, Westminster was one of the few Missouri colleges to function in some fashion . . . Map (db m70437) HM
62 Missouri, Callaway County, Jefferson City — Bicentennial Monument
Cole County, Missouri Established November 16, 1820 Dedicated in this bicentennial year to those who have given life to Cole County, from the generations of Ancient Ones before the settlers of European and African lineage who formed our . . . Map (db m169397) HM
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63 Missouri, Callaway County, Jefferson City — History of Jefferson City Area
1826 Cedar City's Prosperity The town Hibernia exists in post office records from 1825. A wilder and wider Missouri River was a half mile closer then, and many people arrived by steamboat. While laying out a new town in 1872, David Kenney . . . Map (db m169401) HM
64 Missouri, Callaway County, Jefferson City — N. Jefferson to TebbettsPoints of Interest Reported damaged
The distance from North Jefferson to Tebbetts is 12 miles. The trail passes through Wainwright (milepost 137.6), which was named after a St. Louis financier who helped establish the Missouri, Kansas & Eastern Railroad, later part of the Katy. . . . Map (db m169400) HM
65 Missouri, Camden County, Lake Ozark — Bagnell Dam
The historic Osage River, impounded here by Bagnell Dam, flows east and north some 82 miles to join the Missouri. At the river's mouth, the 1804 Lewis and Clark Expedition camped several days and in 1806 Zebulon M. Pike's Southwest Expedition . . . Map (db m78759) HM
66 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Burfordville — Bollinger Mill/Burfordville Covered Bridge
(Front): Bollinger Mill Maj. George Frederick Bollinger built the first mill here in 1800, on a 640-acre grant from Louis Lorimier, Spanish Commandant of Cape Girardeau district of Upper Louisiana. A German Swiss from North Carolina, . . . Map (db m35367) HM
67 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Cape Girardeau — 1735Girardot Post
Sieur Jean Baptiste Girardot established a trading post in the vicinity of Cape Rock in the middle of the 18th century. This remote outpost became a gathering place for river travelers. By 1765, maps of the Mississippi River identified the bend in . . . Map (db m107727) HM
68 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Cape Girardeau — 1793Planning a City
In 1793 Spanish officials in St. Louis named Louis Lorimier the Commandant of the District of Cape Girardeau. Shortly thereafter, he received Spanish land grants totaling several thousand arpents (1 arpent= .85 acres).In 1806 Lorimier and his . . . Map (db m107725) HM
69 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Cape Girardeau — Cape Girardeau
[side 1] Founded as an Indian trading post, 1793, by French Canadian Louis Lorimier. Probably named for Girardot, a trader at Cape Rock. In 1795 Lorimier became commandant of Cape Girardeau District, most American of the 5 . . . Map (db m179995) HM
70 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Cape Girardeau — Don Louis Lorimier / El Camino Real
. . . Map (db m241959) HM
71 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Cape Girardeau — Justice for the Common ManDid You Know?
When Cape Girardeau was originally platted in 1806, a square was dedicated to public, common use. Court was held in a simple, wooden structure on Themis St. several blocks west of the riverfront. Under English law, violations against government . . . Map (db m236285) HM
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72 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Cape Girardeau — Opera House1806-1868
Site of the first hostelry in Cape Girardeau, built in 1806 by Capt. Wm. Ogle, one of the earliest west of the Mississippi River. In 1868 the Turner Society erected the present building as a turnverein or a community center. Masonic Order owned . . . Map (db m236098) HM
73 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Cape Girardeau — The Mississippi River
"The Father of Water" has provided means of travel and commerce since early days. Indians, explorers, priests, traders, and settlers plied its current in canoes, dugouts, flatboats, keelboats, packets, and towboats. Until the Civil War, Cape . . . Map (db m52040) HM
74 Missouri, Cape Girardeau County, Hartle Ford — "Historical Marker"
The Niswonger family came to this area from Lincoln Co. N.C. in a caravan of 20 families, they crossed the river on ice near Ste. Genevieve Jan. 1, 1800, then came south to the Whitewater creeks along which they settled. The family consisted of 3 . . . Map (db m33791) HM
75 Missouri, Carroll County, De Witt — Fort Orleans1723
First settlement in Missouri made by the French Marked by the Carrollton Chapter Daughters American Revolution 1924Map (db m131999) HM
76 Missouri, Carroll County, De Witt — Fort Orleans
(side 1) Fort Orleans, first European post in the Missouri Valley, was built by the French explorer Etienne Véniard De Bourgmond on the Missouri River close by, a few miles above the mouth of the Grand, 1723-24. The exact location of the . . . Map (db m132000) HM
77 Missouri, Cass County, Harrisonville — Cass County
Midway on Missouri's western border, Cass County was organized in 1835 and named Van Buren. The Free-Soil Party affiliation of Martin Van Buren led to name change, in 1849 for Democrat Lewis Cass. In territory ceded by Osage tribes 1825, the county . . . Map (db m20267) HM
78 Missouri, Cass County, Harrisonville — The Burnt District Monument
(Left Side Plaque) The Burnt District / Jennison's Tombstones When the Civil War began, Cass County was home to over 1,700 families. The population of 8,900 free whites and 1,000 slaves reflected widely diverse origins. Many had . . . Map (db m22089) HM
79 Missouri, Cass County, Harrisonville — Wayside RestThe Robert Allison Brown House — Circa 1850 —
has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior Not open to the publicMap (db m99463) HM
80 Missouri, Cass County, Pleasant Hill — 105 First StreetHistoric Building 1881
In 1858 John Armstrong purchased this and surrounding land from the U.S. knowing the Pacific Railroad would site its station here. Armstrong sold some land to the railroad for $1.00. By 1865, when the railroad began construction, business men from . . . Map (db m88421) HM
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81 Missouri, Cass County, Pleasant Hill — Col. Hiram BledsoeApr. 25. 1825 - Feb. 5. 1899 — Bledsoe's Battery —
One of the finest artillery units of the Civil War was Bledsoe's Battery, commanded by Col. Hiriam Bledsoe, a resident of Pleasant Hill. Born in Kentucky, he moved at age 14 to Lexington, Mo. In 1846 he joined the U. S. Army, Missouri . . . Map (db m88348) HM WM
82 Missouri, Cass County, Pleasant Hill — Pleasant Hill, Missouri
[Side A] Pleasant Hill dates back to Missouri's early pioneer days. As early as 1823, there was a trading post located two miles east of the present town that was operated by a French Canadian by the name of Blois. In 1828, David Creek . . . Map (db m88330) HM
83 Missouri, Cass County, Pleasant Hill — The Civil War in Pleasant Hill
The American Civil War had a profound and long-lasting impact on the Pleasant Hill area. Its location in the border state of Missouri ensured that residents would align themselves on both sides of the conflict. Numerous skirmishes were fought . . . Map (db m88350) HM
84 Missouri, Cedar County, El Dorado Springs — City Park Dedication
This land was dedicated to the City of Eldorado Springs for a park by N. H. and W. P. Cruce July 20, 1881Map (db m57378) HM
85 Missouri, Cedar County, El Dorado Springs — El Dorado Spring
El Dorado Springs was founded around this spring in 1881 due to the waters medicinal value. The stone above marked its first site 75 ft. to the SE until 1890 when routed to this basin. During repairs in Sept. 1992, this sandstone slab was found . . . Map (db m57372) HM
86 Missouri, Cedar County, El Dorado Springs — Former School Districts in El Dorado Springs R-2
This bell has been donated by the Rock School District of Cedar County Missouri in commemoration of the former Common School Districts which presently comprise the El Dorado Springs R-2 School District. Cedar County Barnes • Cedar Springs . . . Map (db m57417) HM
87 Missouri, Cedar County, El Dorado Springs — Grindstone Wash Basin
Before El Dorado Springs was founded, this stone wash basin sat before the Spring on rock supports. It was used by travelers along the trail. Some pioneer artisan cut it from a stone taken from Grindstone Quarry, located East of the Park Hotel. . . . Map (db m57377) HM
88 Missouri, Cedar County, El Dorado Springs — Nathaniel H. and Waldo P. Cruce1857 - 1925 and 1861 - 1904
Realizing it was believed by the general public that the spring water had some medicinal value and that people were coming great distances to drink the water for whatever ailments they had, Nathaniel H. and Waldo P. Cruce, brothers, had the . . . Map (db m57380) HM
89 Missouri, Cedar County, El Dorado Springs — PrairieA year-round palette of colors
A sea of grasses and wildflowers - the tallgrass prairie - once covered America's heartland. It is now one of the most endangered ecosystems in the world, and many of its inhabitants are struggling to survive. Thousands of acres of rolling . . . Map (db m57202) HM
90 Missouri, Cedar County, El Dorado Springs — Roy Bandy and Eddy Wilson
This monument is dedicated to Roy Bandy and Eddy Wilson for their efforts in providing career and work opportunities for young people in the field of cadastral (land) surveying with the General Land Office and its successor, the Bureau of Land . . . Map (db m57381) HM
91 Missouri, Cedar County, Stockton — Cedar County
(side 1) Here where the Ozark Highland borders on the Western Prairie region of Missouri, Cedar County was organized in 1845. The name is for the trees along Cedar Creek. Stockton, the county seat, was platted in 1846 on land given by . . . Map (db m72914) HM
92 Missouri, Chariton County, Keytesville — Keytesville
(side 1) Founded, 1832, by Englishman James Keyte, Keytesville is the judicial seat of Chariton County. First seat of the county, organized in 1820, was "Old" Chariton laid out, 1817, near the mouth of the Chariton River by Duff Green, . . . Map (db m131898) HM
93 Missouri, Christian County, Ozark — Christian County
Deep in the Missouri Ozarks, Christian County, organized 1859, was one of last 3 of the State’s 114 counties to be formed. At the request of pioneer “Mrs. Thomas Neaves” it was named for her native Ky. county honoring Rev. War Col. . . . Map (db m99716) HM
94 Missouri, Clark County, Athens — Athens Mills
Isaac Gray platted the town of Athens in 1844 and built the first grist and flour mill on the Des Moines River under the management of Charles Toms. Arthur Thome purchased the mill in 1846 and added a sawmill operation. In 1849, Thomes sold . . . Map (db m149836) HM
95 Missouri, Clark County, Kahoka — Clark County
(side 1) Missouri's first northern border county, organized in 1836, is named for explorer William Clark. In 1839, Iowa Territory and the State of Missouri mobilized troops on the nearby border in a boundary dispute called the Honey War for . . . Map (db m144553) HM
96 Missouri, Clay County, Kansas City, Antioch Acres — Antioch Church
"The Antioch Congregation was organized as a Christain Church (Disciples of Christ) in September 1853 by Moses Easterly Lard (1818-1880), Pastor of the Liberty Christain [sic] Church in Missouri. Its first 'Meeting House', a one room building, and . . . Map (db m86636) HM
97 Missouri, Clay County, Kansas City, Antioch Acres — Antioch ChurchClay County Historic Landmark
Congregation established in 1853 by Rev. Moses E. Lard as Christian Church. Building constructed 1859. Has served since as worship and social center. Reorganized as Community Church 1930. Building moved and [illegible] by Antioch Church Historical . . . Map (db m86639) HM
98 Missouri, Clay County, Kansas City, Antioch Acres — Antioch Church
Congregation formed in 1853 as Antioch Christian Church. This building erected in 1859. Restored by Antioch Community Church Historical Society, organized December 1964 with Hugh P. Loughrey founding president. [Additional plaque . . . Map (db m86640) HM
99 Missouri, Clay County, Kansas City, Woodneath — Woodneath — Clay County Historical Society Historic Landmark —
Homeplace settled by Elbridge Arnold in 1838, home built in 1856. Family home of William A. Crouch 1922 until it became the home of Edwin Yancey Crouch in 1940.Map (db m49819) HM
100 Missouri, Clay County, Kearney — James Farm
Home of Rev. Robert James, Baptist minister who came here in 1840. Son Jesse was born here and with his brother Frank, were involved with the Bushwhackers in criminal escapades until Jesse was killed in 1882. Frank surrendered and lived with his . . . Map (db m59638) HM

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Apr. 18, 2024