Osborne County, in the central part of the state east and west, is located in
the second tier from the Nebraska line. It is bounded on the north by Smith and
Jewell counties; on the east by Mitchell and Lincoln; on the south by Russell
and Ellis, and on the west by Rooks county. It was named in honor of Vincent
Osborne, a soldier of the Second Kansas cavalry, who was distinguished for his
courage in the Civil war, and who in 1867 settled at Ellsworth, Ellsworth
county.
The first permanent settlement was the Bullock ranch, established
on the south fork of the Solomon in March, 1870, by Charles and William Bullock.
Pennington Ray and James McCormick settled south of the site of Downs a little
later. Their stock was driven off by the Indians that summer. Word was sent to
the stockade at Waconda and the soldiers came out and drove the Indians away.
During the famous raids of 1868 there were no settlers in the county. A party
including Lieut. Higgins, John Owens and a third man were attacked while in camp
on Oak creek in the northeast corner of the county, and two of them were killed.
Owens escaped and reached the stockade at Glasco. Thirty-three people came
during 1870, among them being James Weston and family, J. J. Wiltrout, Crosby
brothers, Z. T. Walrond, W. T. Kelley and E. McCormick. The next year settlers
came in large numbers. The first store was near the center of the county and was
kept by Calvin Reasoner. In Nov., 1870, Gen. H. C. Bull founded a town, to which
he gave the name of Bull's City (now Alton), and erected a store building. The
first white child, Bertha Manning, was born on May 4, 1871.
Osborne City was founded in May, 1871, by a colony from Pennsylvania, and the county was organized the same year. On May 27 a mass meeting of citizens at Reasoner's store took the preliminary steps, C. M. Cunningham, W. W. Bullock and A. B. Fleming being appointed as a census committee.
On Sept. 12 Gov. J. M. Harvey declared the county organized and
appointed the following temporary officers: Clerk, Frank Thompson;
commissioners, Samuel Chatfield, C. M. Cunningham and Frank Stafford. An
election was held on Nov. 7, when Osborne was chosen as the county seat
and the following officers were elected: Sheriff, C. M. Cunningham;
treasurer, John Joy; county clerk, C. W. Crampton; attorney, H. H.
Napier; clerk of the court, C. J. Watson; register of deeds, A. B.
Flemming; surveyor, F. R. Gruger; probate judge, H. C. Bull;
superintendent of public instruction, J. T. Saxton; coroner, S. B.
Farwell; commissioners, P. W. Kenyon, F. Stafford and J. J. Hayes;
representative, W. L. Gear.
In 1880 the population of the county
was returned as 12,518, that of 1890 as 12,083, 1900 as 11,844, and 1910
as 12,827. The assessed valuation of property in 1882 was $1,137,906.
The valuation in 1910 was $24,743,947, which makes the wealth per capita
nearly $2,000.
The first railroad to enter the county was the
main line of the Missouri Pacific, which reached Downs in 1879. This
road runs through the county and terminates at Stockton, in Rooks
county. A branch diverges at Downs and crosses northwest into Smith
county. The Union Pacific runs through the southwest corner, passing
through Natoma.
The county is divided into twenty-three townships, viz: Bethany, Bloom,
Corinth, Covert, Delhi, Grant, Hancock, Hawkeye, Independence, Jackson,
Kill Creek, Lawrence, Liberty, Mt. Ayr, Natoma, Penn, Ross, Round Mound,
Sumner, Tilden, Valley, Victor and Winfield. The postoffices are,
Osborne, Alton, Bloomington, Covert, Downs, Natoma, Portis and Twin
Creek.
The area of the county is 900 square miles, with an
undulating surface, broken by high ridges which divide the numerous
water courses. Medicine Peak, in the eastern part and Round Mound in the
southwest, are the most important heights. Bottom lands average a mile
in width and comprise 20 per cent. of the total area. Native timber is
not abundant, but many acres of artificial forest have been planted. The
two branches of the Solomon river and their tributaries form the water
system. The north fork enters from Smith county and flows southeast
across the northeast corner. The south fork enters in the west from
Rooks county and flows east through the second tier of townships from
the north. It has numerous tributaries. Limestone, sandstone, potter's
clay and gypsum are found in considerable quantities.
The annual
product of the farms averages nearly $4,000,000. In 1910 the total value
was $3,875,000, of which winter wheat brought $1,213,000; corn,
$819,000; tame grass, $272,000; animals sold for slaughter, $893,000.
Other important products are: butter, eggs, poultry, milk, fruit,
prairie grass, sorghum, Kafir corn, oats and Irish potatoes. There are
more than 150,000 bearing fruit trees. The live stock on hand in 1910
was worth $3,130,593. A great deal of this is thoroughbred. The
aggregate number of head of horses, mules, asses, cattle, swine and
sheep was 77,681.
Contributed 2002 by Carolyn Ward, transcribed from Kansas: A Cyclopedia of State History, embracing events, institutions, industries, counties, cities, towns, prominent persons, etc. ... / with a supplementary volume devoted to selected personal history and reminiscence. Standard Pub. Co. Chicago: 1912. 3 v. in 4.: front., ill., ports.; 28 cm. Vols. I-II edited by Frank W. Blackmar, Volume II, Pages 418-419.
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