A BRIEF HISTORY OF MAHASKA COUNTY
Courtesy of Mahaska County Historical
Society
Mrs. Stillman T. Clark, Historian
February 5, 1844 marks the beginning of Mahaska County's
history. On that date Iowa's Territorial Legislature
enacted the law authorizing the organization of a
county named Mahaska, after one of the most noted
chiefs of the Indian nation known as the Ioways. By
this law Mahaska County became two years older than
the State of Iowa. William Edmundson, receiving his
appointment from the Territorial Assembly, became
the first sheriff and justice of peace and was charged
with the organization of the twenty-four mile square
county. With the help of his clerk, Micajah T. Williams,
these two officers divided the county into nine precincts,
and by the first Monday in April 1844, an election
was held for county officers.
On May 11, 1844 a Commission of three men, appointed
from Iowa's Assembly, selected a site for the county
seat. The location was the narrowest point on the
divide between the Des Moines and Skunk rivers, known
as the "Narrows". They left the naming of
the new town to the local Board of County Commissioners,
who chose the name of Oskaloosa, meaning "last
of Beautiful" in honor of a Creek Indian princess.
The County Commissioners, by May 14, 1844, had chosen
the grand and petit jurors for the first term of the
District Court to be held July 1, 1844. The courtroom
was an unfinished log cabin built by William D. Canfield
and located within the present limits of Oskaloosa.
The first Court House owned by the county was a two-story
frame structure built at the northwest corner of the
square and occupied in January 1846. It was abandoned
in 1855 and thirty years passed before the first permanent
Court House, now located east of the square, was built
at a cost of $132,500 and dedicated on February 27,
1886.
The county's first school was opened in a crude,
doorless cabin in the timber two and one-half miles
east of Oskaloosa on September 16, 1844, with Miss
Semira Ann Hobbs as teacher. As early as 1844, Quaker
and Methodist as well as other religious groups, were
established in the county, and in 1846 the Cumberland
Presbyterian Church was built in Oskaloosa.
On July 2, 1850, the first issue of the Iowa Herald
(now the Oskaloosa Herald) was published by Needham
and McNelley. The New Sharon Star was founded in 1873.
Coal mining brought the county its first source of
wealth. Twenty-two communities have been surveyed
for town sites, but only Oskaloosa, New Sharon, Eddyville,
Fremont, University Park, Keomah Village, Leighton,
Barnes City, Beacon and Rose Hill, now enjoy the status
of being incorporated towns. Most of the rest have
become ghost towns and are now memories with the exception
of the town of Cedar with a Post Office established
in 1873. Other unincorporated towns are Evans, Wright,
Peoria, Lacey and Taintor.
Three schools of higher learning have been located
in the county. The Iowa State Friends Association
founded Iowa Union College in Oskaloosa in 1863, and
ten years later re-named it Penn College. Oskaloosa
College, supported by the Christian Church, was built
in 1864. After twenty years service, the equipment
was moved to Des Moines to help establish Drake University.
In 1906 on a 220-acre tract of land east of Oskaloosa,
the Central Holiness University was opened. After
several changes in administration, it was named Vennard
College (1959) and is located in University Park.
The first County Fair was held in the public square
on October 23, 1852, and in 1861 the traveling State
Fair was held in Oskaloosa.
During the County's first years vehicles were scarce.
Sheriff Edmundson owned the only buggy; traveling
was done horseback or by horse-drawn wagons. Oxen
were used extensively in breaking prairie and local
hauling. By 1860 the Western Stage Company was doing
a thriving passenger business into the county seat
from the "River" since traveling time was
one to two days according to conditions of the road.
The Des Moines Valley railroad reached the county
in 1864, connecting the community with Eddyville.
The Iowa Central railroad came in 1871.
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