The first settlement about Devizes was in September
1872, when Henry Zimmerman and Herbert
Shaw, coming from the east, settled on claims one mile west of
Devizes, on the land now owned by P. A. Anderson. P.
T. Sovern and John O'Brien also
settled about the same time on land two miles east of Devizes, which is
now owned by B. S. Miller, of Norton. In
December of the same year John Demott came
in and located on the land where the mill and store was built later. Mr.
Demott was also the first settler to break sod on the
Sappa in that part of the county. Other early settlers that season
were John E. Page and Victor
Clark, who in December settled on land now owned by
Miller Bros. These few families had things their own way the first
winter, except, of course, when the Indians came in and had their way
with them.
In the spring of 1873 Ira and Peter
Applegate, the Bisbee's, Nelson's, Wm. Watts, Billy Page, Geo. Waters,
Geo Hannum, Seth Coats, John Brainard, Henry Lebeau, John P. Dopps and
families, came into that part of the county about Devizes and found
homes. John Dopps was the second
probate judge the county had, and he made a good record. Reuben
Bisbee, Sr. was the first postmaster Devizes had, the office being
located on what is now the Magers farm.
The first merchant was L. M. Sherburne, who kept a
small stock of merchandise in the Bisbee home, where was situated the
post office. E. C. Fortney was second
in the mercantile business, located in the log shanty near the old
mill. Colby Bates, and Lindsey built
the flour mill, the first on the Sappa in the county, in 1877. The
first frame store building was built a little later, the building being
torn down and moved across from Lexington, Nebraska, in the Platte
valley. This store housed stocks of merchandise for various owners
up until the evening of September 30, 1916, when it was destroyed by
fire.
We can not recall the first white child born in the
vicinity of Devizes, but Mrs. John O'Brien was
the first person buried in the cemetery there.
The natural site for a mill, there being already a
nature-made mill race, made it possible for the erection of one for the
settlers there, though it was with difficulty that the lumber was hauled
from the Union Pacific, near Kearney, Nebraska. For years and
years this mill was patronized by farmers living in distant parts of
northwest Kansas, as well as in southern Nebraska, and the reputation
for good flour was country-wide. It was one of the pulling powers
that for years helped Devizes to be a splendid trading point, but was
finally destroyed fire while owned by the Smiths.
Those who owned and operated the store are recalled
as follows: Rube Marvin, Wyatt Brothers, Hill, E. J.
Phipps, Ed I. Jones as receiver for Phipps, Jones
& Ballew, Jones & Jenkins and the last owner was Ira
Jenkins, who lost a stock by fire. The burned buildings are
being rebuilt and a new stock will be placed therein as soon as
finished.
Devizes has been a good trading point for every body
in the northwest part, and in the nineties was one of the liveliest
little inland points in the county. Sports of all kinds, special
occasions being frequent, attracted the settlers, and all had good times
together, the natural site for picnics, swimming and boating, being
excellent.
In the middle eighties a railroad ran a survey up the
Sappa, and for years, and years settlers expected, hoped and sought in
vain for a sight of actual construction work on the railway. To
this day there are settlers who have not given up hopes that the valley
will sound with the echo of the iron horse as it passes up and down its
rich acres, some day.
The valley is rich in alfalfa lands, and the soil is
the best to be found in the county, and, as one stands on the high land
to the south and views the miles of pretty country, dotted with groves
of timber, and pleasant prosperous homes, he is prone to wonder whether
or not in all the wide world there is another landscape picture nearly
so beautiful as that before him, wrought out by the Hand of God and that
of the hardy pioneer.
transcribed from Norton County News Historical
Edition, 1870-1916 by Ardie Grimes
Ruben Bisbee furnished the land for the Devizes
Cemetery and recorded the plat in 1880 though the cemetery had been
established the previous year in 1879. The cemetery was resurveyed
by J. C. Newell in 1906 at which time
an additional 40 lots were added to the original 80 bringing the total
to 120 lots.
The first settlement in the Devizes community arrived in September 1872
when Henry Zimmerman and Herbert
Shaw settled a mile west of Devizes. P.
T. Soverns and John O'Brion settled
about the same time on land 2 miles east. Mrs. John
O'Brion was the first person to be buried in Devizes
cemetery. In December of that year John DeMott settled
on land now owned by V. L. Ballinger and was the first settler to bread
sod on the Sappa Creek, which in the Cheyenne tongue means "Black
Water".
By the end of 1873, John Page, Victor Clark, Ira and
Peter Applegate, Bisbee's, Nelson's, Watts, Billy Page, George Waters,
George Hannum, Seth Coates, John Brainard, Henry Lebeau, G. B. Wray, R.
F. Hudsonpillar, I. P. Burke, Archie Hewett, Joseph Collins, Fred Foote,
H. B. Hannum and John Dopps had
settled in the area. John Dopps later
became second probate judge of the county.
The first election in northwest Norton County was ordered by the county
commissioners to be held in the John O'Brion home
in 1873.
The first school at Devizes was established in 1878 and J.
C. Pettijohn taught school during the winter of
1878/1879 in a dugout along the Sappa Creek. Total enrollment was
between 40 and 50 pupils.
Rueben Bisbee who homesteaded what is now the Magers
Farm was born at Bellow Falls, New Hampshire in 1805,
coming here from Ontario, Canada. Rueben Bisbee established
the first Devizes post office in his home and became the first
postmaster. It was Rueben who named the post office Devizes after
the post office he lived near in Ontario. J. W. Bisbee,
Reuben Bisbee's [brother?] settled in Devizes in 1879 and died in 1883
and is buried in the Devizes Cemetery.
Ed. I. Jones was born in Greenfield, Pennsylvania in
1837 and came to Norton County in 1879. He served two terms as
county treasurer, later ran the Devizes store and was first to receive
Masonic rites in the Norton Masonic Lodge.
Longtime surveyor J. C. Newell was
succeeded by Fred Foote, the first elected county
surveyor in 1910.
L. M. Sherburne became the first storekeeper in the
area when he began selling items from a small stock of goods which he
kept in the Bisbee home. E.
C. Fortney opened a store in a log shanty near the mill
built on the Sappa north of Bisbee's by Bates and Lindsay in
1877. The post office was moved from the Bisbee home to the
Devizes store near the mill in 1889.
Both Sioux and Cheyenne in small bands frequented the area hunting
buffalo and deer until after the Indian Massacre in 1876 in which 19
Indians were killed and which indirectly caused the Indian scare and
deaths of several settlers in 1878 on the Sappa farther west.
Grasshoppers, drought and blizzards plagued the lives of these early
settlers. Travel was by horseback and doctor and medicine were
many hours of hard riding away, yet the simple pleasures of neighbor
visiting neighbor and helping neighbors with the more difficult jobs of
building and putting up wood. And it is still possible to hear
some of the old timers tell of the tricks and horseplay, the accidents
and the intentional dunkings which accompanied putting up ice from the
creek.
Compiled by Wayne L. Plucheck, Sr. from notes of unknown authors
This Devizes Cemetery presentation was compiled from documents obtained
from the Norton County Clerk and Recorder's Office, Norton Library,
Devizes Cemetery Records Keeper, Mr. Donald Goss [now deceased] and the
Beaver City, Nebraska Library.
The data and burials contained in this presentation may be incomplete
and somewhat inaccurate by nature as only the lot purchaser names were
recorded on the Devizes Cemetery Plat Map for many years. Many of
the names that are listed as being buried in the Devizes Cemetery are
taken from walkthroughs and gravestone recordings.
Location: Rock Branch Township, Norton County, Kansas.
Section 7, Township 1 South, Range 24 West. The cemetery is
located just south of the Kansas/Nebraska state line, 8 miles west of
Norton off Highway 36 (at the Maple Grove Church - north side of
Highway) and 11 miles north of Highway 36 on the west side of the dirt
road.
William H. Shaw
Photos contributed by Gordon Shaw ©1997
Remains of Devizes Post Office - just a fallen roof
The Devizes Post Office was established 04 March 1874. Reuben
Bisbee, Sr. was the first postmaster. It was discontinued 15
April 1926.
Photo taken 1997 and contributed by Gordon Shaw
The Sappa Metropolis: Devizes
The Store at Devizes
This store burned in September,
1916, but is being rebuilt at this time.
(my
apologies for the quality - old newspaper photos do not scan well)
History compiled by Wayne L. Plucheck, Sr.
Devizes
Cemetery listings, plot map and some photos
This
presentation was completed in memory of
Samuel and Margaret (Huffman)
Fisher
by
their great great great grandson, Wayne L. Plucheck, Sr.
Shaw Family at Devizes Cemetery
Family Plot at Devizes Cemetery
Military marker in Devizes Cemetery
William H. Shaw
Devizes Post Office
Copyright © 1996 - The USGenWeb® Project, KSGenWeb, Norton County
Design by Templates in Time
This page was last updated
07/10/2024