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Items of Interest from Rock County
W. E. Buckendorf
(54)Delving into the original records of Rock county for
information, one finds that the first entry in Record book
A is a copy
of the proceedings of the county
board of Brown county on August 1, 1888. At this meeting M.
E. Freeman and others filed with the county commissioners a
petition asking for a division of Brown county and the formation of a new
county, to be called Rock. In this petition is quoted the
boundary lines of the proposed new county. The next day
the board passed a resolution submitting the proposed
question to the voters of the county and set the date of the
regular election, November 6, 1888 as, the day on which
the voters might make their decision. The election notice
was signed by C. F. Boyd, county clerk of Brown county. The
election gave a vote of 1029 for the division and 689 votes
as being opposed to a division.
Governor Thayer then issued a proclamation
ordering a special election to be held December 24, 1888, for naming officers and locating the county seat.
This election resulted in naming the
following: clerk, W. T. Phillips; treasurer, J. D.
Likens; judge, F. N. Morgan; sheriff, Henry Harris;
coroner, A. J. Taylor; superintendent, W. H. Rugg; attorney,
A. H. Tingle; commissioners, S. Corder, A. H. Gale and E.
Opp. The question of location of the county seat gave
Bassett 315 votes; Newport, 179; Thurman, 156; Tracy, 93;
Rock Center, 24.
The first meeting of the new county board
was held January 8, 1889; and by a resolution adopted,
Bassett was made temporary county seat. As none of the
contesting points had received a majority of (55)
votes; a special election
was held
January 29, 1889 and as a result thereof, Bassett was made
permanent county seat.
Later at a joint meeting of Brown and Rock
county boards for the purpose of arriving at assessed
valuations of the two counties, it was found that Rock
county's assessed valuation was placed at $439,042.00; that
Brown county's valuation was placed at $994,341.00.
A. M. Brinkerhoff was one of the county
commissioners of Brown, when Rock became a separate
commonwealth. The family came to the county in 1878 and
settled near the Niobrara river. Other members of the
Brinkerhoff family were John H. Putnam and these families
selected land in the extreme northwest corner of what is now
Rock county. Later coming to that section, was the A. C.
Kendall family, locating nearby in 1884. Mr. Kendall in 1904
established in his place, Cuba post office of which he was
postmaster for a number of years.
When the Putnam family located on Pine creek there was not
another family along the creek. Mr. Putnam built the first
school in that locality and a little later established the
first Sunday school west of O'Neill. Later the F. E. Stockwell
family located upstream on Pine creek, some three miles from
Long Pine in 1879. Other early day residents of the Niobrara
river family were the Turpins, who settled near what is now
the Mariaville and Kirkwood neighborhoods in 1878. The
following year there came to this neighborhood the families of
Edward G. Green and the Thomas Peacocks. Mr. Peacock
established Mariaville post office at his farm in 1882 and was
postmaster for many years.
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