Introduction

Compiled by the Iowa Writers' Program for WPA in Iowa

Osceola County is one of Iowa's youngest. Its story is largely a story of the struggles of veterans of the Civil War who first rolled onto Osceola's treeless prairies in 1870. The early Osceola frontiersman were poor men, inured to the hardships of battlefields, and they found in their new home a new sort of battle

They found no materials at hand but sod and the long, prairie grass. There were no trees, there was no stone. There was no stream large or strong enough to provide power for a mill.

The Indians had shunned this country, except for occasional hunting. A windblown desert of grass, it offered no protection for them and the constant threat of destructive and rapidly moving prairie fires made the land always dangerous. Many people believed that land which did not support trees would not grow crops either, but here, in 1870, came Captain E Huff, with some of the boards he would need for building of a cabin. Others followed him so quickly that in the fall of 1871 Osceola County elected its first county officers.

Possessed of an unquenchable faith in their land, the Osceola County pioneers stuck to it through blizzard, fire and insect plagues that reduced the entire county to starvation. They stuck and developed their rich soil and built good homes. They founded for their children a tradition of "stick and grin" that is of the very essence of the American way of life.

Transcribed by Kevin Tadd



Osceola County Iowa Genealogy - The IAGenWeb Project