The Harris Centennial
Harris --The past 100 Years

Notes of Progress
Page 14-19

1914 Notes of Progress Edition About A Progressive, Prosperous, Northern Iowa Town

Published history of Harris seems to be brief and incomplete, and at best difficult to obtain.  Official records show that the town sprung into existence in 1889.

During the latter years of the eighties, the settlement of Osceola County, and especially the more desirable portion of it, which embraces the eastern townships of the county, had increased quite extensively, and the increase in population had become so pronounced as to create an irrepressible demand for a railroad station, a grain elevator and a post office.  Acting upon this demand, a number of farmers held a meeting and determined to take action such as would vouchsafe for them the desired acquisition.  V.P. Burley, one of the prominent farmers and early settlers, was designated as a committee to solicit funds for the purchase of a tract of land to be set apart as an original townsite.  Eighteen acres of land were so purchased and this tract was offered to the Rock Island and A.W. Harris & Co., the Sibley grain dealers, as a partial inducement for the erection of a railroad station and a grain elevator.  The land was purchased of Mr. Burley, who at that time owned the land upon which the present town of Harris stands.  Mr. Burley sold the 18 acre tract at the exceedingly low figure of $10 per acre.

Both the Grain Company and the Railroad Company acted upon the proposition of the petitioning farmers, and thus came into existence the railroad station now prominent throughout the county as Harris, Iowa.
Soon after the railroad station was established the postoffice then known as Rush Lake, a distance of three miles away, was moved to the new townsite and the name changed to conform to the name of the new town.  That Harris is surrounded by a good farming country is evidenced by the fact that during the year 1912, there were shipped from that station 220 cars of grain, stock and hay.

In 1890 or 1891, M. B. Smith moved from eastern Iowa, erected the first residence house in the town, and at the same time opened a lumber hard and harness shop.  At about the same time J. Watling came in and started a blacksmith shop.

During the early nineties the little town made scarcely any progress, but in the three years succeeding 1895, quite a village sprung up and a number of very desirable and substantial business enterprises were started.  Among this number was the present Beeler Building, which was erected by G. W. Thomas, who had been appointed postmaster.

During the years elapsing between 1898 and the present time, Harris has experienced a slow but steady growth.  While it has never made a wonderful record for rapid material advancement, its progress has been sound and substantial, and by reason of the fact that it has a choice territory of the finest farming country in the world surrounding it, there is every indication that the place will, at a no distant future time, become a still more prosperous and progressive little city above the average in size and importance.

The town is prettily situated in the midst of a grand, boundless rolling prairie farming country, noted for its beauty and fertility, profusely decorated with thrifty farms, costly farm residences, barns, schoolhouses, churches, and other improvements of every description.  Such elegant farms and farm homes would astonish the down-easterner who has been spending half his days in making faces at western resources and western enterprise.  The country here is composed of that same splendid farm, hay and pasture land which has furnished homes of plenty and prosperity for thousands of people from all the civilized quarters of the globe and made the state of Iowa, in common with such as Illinois and Wisconsin, famous throughout the civilized world.

Products

The commercial exports of Harris are cattle, horses, hogs, hay, seeds, wheat, corn, oats, barley, flax, potatoes, butter, eggs, poultry and fruits.

With reference to cereal products it is true that while here, as elsewhere, some things do better than others, there is no cereal, vegetable, or fruit grown in this latitude of the United States that will not grow in the vicinity of Harris.  Of course, the vast majority of people are engaged in farming, dairying and stock raising, and this must always be the principal occupation of those who make their homes in this locality.  More than 80 percent of the land is now under cultivation, and the wonderful crops of corn and small grain annually produced in Osceola County can feed a by no means insignificant portion of the world’s population.

Corn

While the early pioneers of Osceola County, believing that they had passed north of the Corn Belt, did not plant corn with much confidence, that cereal has no become one of the principal crops of the country.  Corn never fails to ripen, though the immense stalks often reach the height of eight and ten feet, and the well-filled ears not seldom grow to the size of twelve inches.  The corn is always of good quality, finely developed and generally overruns the standard in weight.  There are farmers in the vicinity of Harris who are worth from $25,000 to $75,000 and the foundation of their wealth is corn.

But while corn has become a favorite crop, there is yet a good deal of wheat raised.  Oats and barley have become very popular as feed-producing staples, and an increased acreage of both is produced each year.  In fact there is no section of country in the world where oats and barley do better than they don on the land in the vicinity of Harris.

Grain and Produce

While Harris has not had an opportunity to develop in some line in industry as it will later on, it has built up a grain and stock market which excels all of its competing points.  Its three monstrous grain elevators, as well as its two rustline stock shippers, are kept busy almost day and night during the shipping season of the year taking care of the vast amount of grain and stock that is brought here to market.  The writer has made a careful investigation of the grain and livestock shipping industry of Harris upon the basis of this information that he places the annual grain shipments alone at Harris at not far from one-half million bushels, while the stock shipments have now reached the immense amount of over 200 cars a year.  It is considered doubtful if there is a town this size in all of northwestern Iowa where this amount of stock and grain is marketed every year, and where better prices are paid than in Harris.  The town has therefore every reason to congratulate itself on the fact that it has a set of active and enterprising grain and stock dealers, who are doing much toward the general advancement of the community.

Stock

The entire section of the country in the midst of which Harris is conspicuously located is emphatically a stock and dairy country, and even in the few years it has been on a state of productiveness, the country has become one of the greatest cream and butter producing sections in the west.  Tons upon tons of cream are being annually converted into a very superior quality of butter by the local dairymen, and shipped to the great eastern markets.  The vast amount of cream that is shipped out of Harris every month has created a marked demand for the re-opening of the local creamery, which was established here some years ago, but was obliged to close up, owing to incompetent management.  The right kind of a man at the head of this institution would get an immense patronage from the farmers of this surrounding country, all of whom have come to realize the fact that a creamery at their hometown would be a source of greater profit to them.  A practical creamery man who understands his business would find something to his interest by writing to Mr. L. J. Hagerty, Harris Town Recorder, Harris, Iowa.

The underlying cause of the great cream and butter industry in this locality is the fact that plenty of pure water, nutritious grasses, cheap hay and a climate that is perfectly adapted to stock, besides the finest shipping facilities in the world, have contributed to making the business of stock raising and dairying a most profitable one.  Many farmers already have fine herds of good cattle, and the quality of livestock is constantly improving.  The great demand for the dairy and creamery products of Northwestern Iowa in the great eastern markets is evidence of the future greatness of that industry in the vicinity of Harris, where its inducements are supremely attractive and promising.

Sheep and Hogs

In this connection it is proper to state that the raising of sheep and hogs is an industry which has attracted surprising attention throughout the vicinity of Harris, and has been marked with wonderful success.  Sheep and hogs can always be depended upon to bring dollars to the farmer’s purse in this locality, where an abundance of pure water and the best of feed is exceptionally well adapted to the well-being of the animals. The extensive packing houses of St. Paul, Sioux Falls and Sioux City are close by, and the farmer is always sure of top prices for his swine product, as well as for his beef and mutton.  For sheep the dry climate wards off those diseases to which the sheep of other states and localities too often fall a victim.  Already many farmers have large herds of sheep, and there are not a few who are ready to declare that there is more money in sheep than there is in anything else to which the Northwestern Iowa farmer can turn his attention.

Soil, Water, Climate

The soil in the vicinity of Harris differs in some respects from that of other localities, but it possesses in a high degree the essential elements for producing all sorts of cereals, fruits and vegetables.  It requires no artificial fertilizer to produce excellent crops, though the prudent farmer has discovered that it pays well to use his animal manure on his land even in the rich and productive Harris district.  A peculiar feature about the soil here seems to be that it absorbs moisture very rapidly and yet is capable of resisting unusual drought.

Water, both in quality and quantity, throughout the entire Harris region, could hardly be more desirable.  The supply is inexhaustible, good water being obtained anywhere at a depth of from 25 to 150 feet, and wells of that depth never fail.  The water is of good taste and is considered of the very best quality for both man and beast.

So far as the climate is concerned, the writer is firm in the conviction that, all things considered, it is the most favorable of any on the American continent.  True, the summers are usually very warm, but there is almost always a mild breeze, which keeps the atmosphere comparatively cool and agreeable, and it is seldom that the heat of summer becomes too intense to permit outdoor work.  On the other hand, the winters are quite mild and agreeable as a rule.  Though sometimes very cold and stormy, they are mostly open and more congenial for both health and comfort than they are in the eastern states.

Fruit

Fruit raising has been a sadly neglected industry all over Northwestern Iowa, in common with the entire northwest.  The pioneer settlers had the impression that fruit was one of the impossibilities among the products of this country, and the succeeding population seemed to imbibe the same conviction.  The industry has therefore been slow of development.  But in the last ten years the adaptability of the country to fruits of all kinds has revealed itself and thus the industry is becoming annually more popular. Already several good commercial orchards are in existence in different parts of the county, and nearly every farm in the Harris District has its own apple orchard giving results in accordance with the amount of cultivation and attention given.  A large variety of apples, plums and cherries, and all the different kinds of small fruits, thrive in this climate and soil whenever properly cared for.  According to reports from several practical experiments with strawberries, this fruit yields enormously, in several instances returning a cash revenue of $1,200 per acre on a single crop.  Present conditions point to a large and profitable commercial fruit industry for this section of the country.

Population

Harris has a population of not far from 400 industrious, enterprising, and progressive people.  The population of the county is about 15,000.  The inhabitants of both town and county are greatly varied in point of nationality, religious and political sentiment, education and occupation, but the people in and around Harris are a quiet, well-be-haved, sober, industrious and law abiding class of citizens.  The majority of the inhabitants of the county as well as this locality, are American born descendents from the Swedish, German, Danish, Norwegian, Scotch, Irish and Dutch, but there is also a large proportion of English Americans. Of the foreign born population the majority are Germans and Hollanders (Dutch) but they are progressive in their ideas and practices, adapting themselves readily to the American methods of industry and society, and they have distinguished themselves for their fine farms, splendid farm homes, school and churches, and for their model citizenship.  Most of them are staunch Christian people, and a more honorable and prosperous class would be hard to find.

With a clean, peaceable and honorable class of citizens, the society of Harris is all that could be desired.  There is no aristocracy and every man is regarded as good as another as long as he conducts himself in harmony with the prevailing standard of society and observes the laws of the land as a good citizen should.

CIVIC AND BENEVOLENT ORGANIZATIONS

Civic and benevolent organizations are plentiful in the Harris area and do a great deal of good in maintaining a high social standing for the town and helping with local improvements and charitable causes wherever needed.

Records, made in 1914, show the IOOF Lodge had a membership of 140, and its auxiliary, the Rebekah Lodge, also a large membership.  Both lodges are still active but the former now has only 20 members and the Rebekah’s have only 13 members.

In past years, Modern Woodmen of America Lodge, Royal Neighbor Lodge and Brotherhood of America Units had large memberships here, but these three have not existed here for many years.

At present social clubs are numerous; PIO, the oldest, who celebrated its 50th anniversary in 1963; Keeping-Up, Priscilla, H.S., 15, O’Sirrah, Sewing Circle and Fair View, all women’s clubs; boys and girls 4-H, Sportsmen’s Club, and Community Club.

Update:  The IOOF Lodge and Rebeccah Lodge are no longer active in Harris.  The few remaining members united with Lake Park.

The Harris clubs are fewer than in 1964, and membership is smaller.  Priscilla Club, 15 Club, Fairview Farm Bureau Women’s Club and Sportsmen’s Club decided to disband.

The P.I.O. Club has been organized the longest and celebrated its 75th Anniversary in 1988.  It is a social club with seven members.

The Keeping Up Club was organized in 1916, and federated in 1928.  In 1988, the Club observed its 60th year with G.F.W.C. and 72 years as a Club.  It is a study club and presently has ten members.

The H.S. Club absorbed the members of the 15 Club and Priscillas when they disbanded.  It has seven members, is a social club and organized in 1928.
The O’Sirrah Club belongs to the G.F.W.C. and was organized in 1954.  It is a study club and has ten members.

The 4-H boys and girl’s clubs are the Fairview 4-H’ers and Ocheyedan Indians.

The Community Club boasts a membership of 65 plus.  Many fine community projects have been completed through the Club.  In 1985, Harris won third in the State Community Betterment Award Program – and in 1988, again won an award as fourth place in the State.

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