pg. 130
Dry Mill Branch on section 17, township 93, range 4, in
December. When they commenced work upon it, the stream
was sufficiently large to carry a saw mill to do a good
business. One morning in February, 1837, upon going to
the stream they doscovered, much to their astonishment,
that it had entirely disappeared and there was no water
left. *
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*Upon following up the bed of the stream about half a
mile above the mill, they found a sink where the water
went under ground, but thinking this might be stopped,
work upon the mill was continued until it was completed
about the first of May, and a log put on the carriage
ready for sawing. The sink was then stopped, then others
opened that were also stopped; but showers came and
washed them open again, and the mill was abandoned
without even starting the saw, and has always been known
since as the "Dry Mill," After failing in the
mill, Mr. Boardman concluded to try his fortune at
farming, and accordingly purchased two additional yoke of
oxen to make a breaking team, and commenced breaking on a
piece of bottom land situated half a mile below Elkader,
on the east side of the river and about ten feet above
low water mark. After plowing five or six acres, the
Indians stole three of his oxen. Search was immediately
made for them and one was traced to Yellow River near the
agency; the remnants of one was found on High Prairie
where he had been killed, but no trace of the other could
be found. To supply the place of these, others were
purchased at Prairie du Chien.
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pg. 130 continues
About the first of June, Bronson commenced building a saw
mill for Hetfield on Buck Creek, about four miles from
Garnavillo, which was completed in December following.
In the year 1836 the public surveys were begun, and the
county was run into townships. The year following the
most of the townships were subdivided into sections,
except that portion within the "neutral
ground".
Up to the year 1830, this part of the State was occupied
by hostile tribes of Indians who were continually making
war under pretext of trespasses on their hunting grounds.
the Dakotahs or Sioux, on one side, and the Sacs and
Foxes on the other. The former occupying north, and the
latter south of an imaginary boundary line, leaving a
very indefinite location. To remedy this difficulty, on
the 15th day of July, 1830, the United States Government
entered into a treaty with the above names tribes, by
which each of the contending parties ceded to the
Government a strip of land twenty miles in width along
their line of division, from the Mississippi ina
southwesterly direction to the head waters of the Des
Moines. This was called the "neutral ground,"
and both parties were to have the privilege in common, of
hunting and fishing upon this broad division line. About
three townships in the northwest part of this county,
were included in the neutral ground. The whites were not
permitted to settle or make any improvements upon this
tract, until after the Indians were removed in 1838.
In the Spring of 1838, the Governor of Wisconsin
Territory appointed John W. Griffith the first Sheriff of
Clayton county, who proceeded to summon the grand and
petit juries for the first term of the "District
Court appointed to be holden at Prairie La Porte, in and
for the County of Clayton, in the Territory of Wisconsin,
on the fourth Monday of May." When the time arrived,
the Court was organized by Hon. Charles Dunn, District
Judge, in a log house, the residence of Herman Graybill.
Dr. F. Andros, was appointed Clerk, William Banks, United
States Attorney, and James Churchman, Posecuting
Attorney. As Grand Jurors, the following named persons
who had been summoned, appeared and were empannelled:
Elisha Boardman, foreman; David Springer, Dean Gray,
Eliphalet Price, Edward Dickens, Henry Redmon, Solomon
Wadsworth, George W. Jones, Daniel Rugby, Luther Mead,
William Rowan, Horace D. Bronson, Allen Carpenter,
William W. Wayman, E.R. Hill, Wm. D. Grant, and Ava
Durrin. *
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*Those summoned, but not appearing, were James Henderson,
James Brown, Robert Campbell, and Nahum Dudley, and an
order was entered by the Court, requiring them to show
cause at the next term, why they should not be fined for
contempt. The Grand Jury after being charged by His
Honor, were attended by the Sheriff, who conducted them
to their private apartments in a shingle shanty belonging
to Graybill, having a roof and three sides boarded up,
and situated upon one of those peculiar mounds that are
scattered over that prairie. The jury deliberated and
whittled shingles; while the Sheriff rode sentinel on
horseback, back and forth at a respectable distance on
the open side of the shanty, occasionally halting to
inquire, in his individual capacity it is presumed, if it
was not "about time to go and take something."
The only bill of indictment found by this jury, was in
the form of a memorial to the court, upon the subject of
the location of the county seat at Prairie La Porte,
which as "they firmly and zealously believed was
effected for the purpose of promotoing the private and
individual interest of a few, to the great inconvenience
of their fellow citizens, and highly detrimental to the
general welfare of the county." The persons summoned
to attend this Court as petit jurors were, Robert
Hetfield, Isaac H. Preston, Dudley Peck, H.F. Lander,
John W. Gillet, William Beazley, William Harper, D.C.
Vansyckle, Samuel McMasters, Chauncey S. Edson, Samuel
Hastings, Baldwin Olmstead, Matthew Peck, Herman Graybil,
Martin Vansyckle, Andrew Whitaker, Nathan Springer,
Andrew S. Cooley, Ambrose Kennedy, and William McDowell.
The jurors and officers presented their accounts for
attendance, and had them certified, when the "Court
adjourned until Court in course," to Herman
Graybill's grocery, to partake of a meal of venison and
wild fowls, and drink raw whiskey. A general
jollification was held until evening, when the most of
them left "with building material in their
hats."
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