From
the History and Families of Ripley Co. MO
This is the cover of
this beautiful book that would make a perfect addition to any genealogy
library.

The followng article is part of The History of Ripley Co MO up to
1850. It does not include info after 1850. It is
reproduced here with the permission of the Ripley Co. Historical
Society and the publisher, the holders of the copyright.
It is reproduced here with the idea in mind that if you don't own this
book you should consider purchasing it. The third printing is
available and can be ordered from the Historical Society. It is
one of the few resources the Historical Society
has for funds and without their assistance our genealogy research would
be seriously lacking.
Ripley
County
Historical
Society
105 Washington Street,
Doniphan MO
63935
573-996-5298
Meetings are held on the 2nd Monday of each month at 7:00
p.m. at
the Doniphan Community Center at 105 Washington Street, Doniphan MO.
Individual
membership fees are $15.00 per year (January 1 - December 31) and
includes 4
issues of "The Ripley County Heritage" the Society's official
publication.
Ripley County History
Book
The price is now $60.00. If needed, add $6 for shipping and
handling.
The First Settlers
of Ripley Co.
Just prior to the Louisiana Purchase
of 1803 a French trapper, Francis
ADOR, was living with
the Indians on Current River at the site of Doniphan. But how
long he stayed, and where he later
went is a mystery. In an interview with historian HUME in 1900,
Lindzy DUDLEY reported
that the first European resident was a "Wees RILEY" who arrived in 1802
with a Delaware
Indian wife who soon died in childbirth. In 1804 in St.
Genevieve, he married Hanner
WALKER of Vincennes, IN. They returned to Ripley County where he
died in 1837. HUME's
writings refer to RILEY as a Spaniard, probably because he came west
from Mine Le Motte,
which was near Potosi and was Spanish territory in the late 1700s.
Another early pioneer, and perhaps the first American, known to have
settled in the area was
Isaac KELLEY who by 1808 had traversed Current River again and again
and found his chosen
spot, later called KELLEY Plantation, seven miles north of the present
day Ripley/Carter
County line where he established an Indian trading post.
Earlier in 1803, William HIX settled on the southern border of Ripley
County near the Indian trading
post of Buckskull, late the site of Currentview. HIX may have
been the first settler, but even
more significant to local history, he established a ferry service
across Current River at Pitman,
AR, thus demonstrating the importance of the Natchitoches Trail.
The new arrivals found much
of the future county covered with an open forest consisting mainly of
red, white, and black oak,
with walnut, hickory and elm on the red limestone soils. In the
northern and northwestern parts
of the county, short leaf yellow pine was dominant on the drier and
chertier areas of Clarksville
silt loam. Red and white oak and walnut were on the lower
slopes. The southeast lowlands were
swampy with cypress, tupelo gum and other swamp species.
The Louisiana Purchase had made southeast Missouri part of America in
1803 and by 1812
Congress created the Territory of Missouri and what eventually became
Ripley County lay within
New Madrid County. Three years later Lawrence County was
established, which included all of
southern Missouri west of the St. Francis River as well as a portion of
northern Arkansas. The
configuration changed again in 1818 with the creation of Wayne
County. This massive county
included one-fifth of the land lying within the Missouri Territory and
Greenville was the county
seat.
The first permanent white settler in what was to be the Doniphan area
may have been young
Lemuel KITTRELL (ca 1804-1865). His father Samuel had brought the
family from Kentucky
to Cane Creek in present day Butler County in 1819. Lemuel was
spending time in Ripley
County by the next year and homesteaded a farm on a bluff overlooking
Current River just south
of Doniphan probably in the early 1820s, given his age. He built
a small grist and carding mill
just below his farm on the river.
Other families entered what is today's Ripley County before 1820.
Micajah and Sarah HARRIS
moved west after the 1811-1812 New Madrid earthquakes. The HARRIS
family, with five
children including sons Washington (born 1813) and Travis (born 1815),
built a one-room log
house along the Natchitoches Trail on a bluff over-looking Harris Creek
just south of Oxly by
1816 when Micajah was listed as a Lawrence County Justice of the
Peace. A relative, Essex
HARRIS, lived nearby. Loban ASHENBRINNER and "old man PITMAN"
were living in the
county by 1810 according to Lindzy DUDLEY, and a Mr. CUNNINGHAM was
running the
Buckskull trading post as early as 1804. Judge John POWERS was
born on Little Black in 1820
and on his death in 1889 The Prospect News called him "the oldest
native-born citizen of Ripley
County."
In Jan 1819, explorer, geologist and ethnologist Henry Rowe SCHOOLCRAFT
passed through
Ripley County on his way from Batesville, AR to Potosi, MO.
SCHOOLCRAFT, who was on
the return leg of a round trip through the interior of Missouri and
Arkansas, crossed Current
River on the HIX ferry. The explorer, who would later lead the
expedition that discovered the
source of the Mississippi River described the Current as "a noble
stream... and affords in its
whole length, bodies of alluvial lands well worthy the attention of the
planter and speculator."
Traveling up the Old Military Road, SCHOOLCRAFT spent the night of
January 25 at the
HARRIS cabin six miles northeast of HIX's ferry and found breakfast at
a cottage three miles
further on the next morning. He was soon in the Little Black
River valley and observed, "the
newness of the buildings, fences, and clearings, indicate here, as at
every other inhabited part of
the road for the last 100 miles, a recent and augmenting
population. This is chiefly composed of
emigrants from Pennsylvania, the Carolinas, Kentucky and Tennessee."
Pioneers, mostly of Scots-Irish descent, from those eastern states
continued to move west and
what would be Ripley County soon found REDFORDS, SANDLINS, VANDOVERS,
CAPPSes, EPPSes and others moving in from Cane Creek as KITTRELL had
done earlier.
The MERRELLS settled in what would become the Pratt community in
1824. William
LITTLE and Thomas PULLIAM homesteaded on Fourche Creek, John Elijah
DALTON was
on the south fork of Fourche in 1828 and Thomas PRICE could be found in
the Mill Creek area.
Those holding Ripley County land patents prior to 1830 were Isaac
KELLEY, Thomas
CHILTON, John William GEORGE, James SANDLIN, Philip GARTMAN, and
Samuel
LEUSDELL.
Some of the early settlers were hunters and squatters who moved on, but
the ones local history
recognized were usually subsistence farmers. Single family or
small extended family farmsteads
were the unit of settlement. In their 1975 examination of the
settlement pattern of the Little
Black River watershed, archeologists Dr. James E. and Cynthia PRICE
wrote. "The farm usually
consisted of a log cabin, either single or double cribbed with fences
and at least one outbuilding.
Horses, cattle, hogs, and chickens were kept. Corn, which was the
staple food, was grown in
small family plots for family use and was processed at home with a
stump mortar and a pestle or
small hand mill. There was a heavy reliance on wild plant foods,
particularly cane, acorns and
grass to supply food for the domestic animals."
Hunting provided a large portion of the meat used by early
settlers. The bear was most important
for oil and meat and deer and bison were highly valued for their
hides as well as meat. Turkey
and elk were hunted as well as beaver, raccoon, rabbit, squirrel and
opossum. Fish was also
common fare as well as wild honey and a wide variety of nuts and fruits.
The early farm was not an isolated, self-sufficient frontier entity.
The pioneers, situated
themselves along trade routes and major stream valleys and were part of
a wider social-political
setting. Micajah HARRIS, for example was a road commissioner and
a
Justice of the Peace for
the Current River area. The family had a variety of English and
American ceramics, cast iron
cooking vessels, clay pipes, glassware and other manufactured items.
Ripley
County Formed
The state of Missouri entered the Union on August 10, 1821, but
it was not until January 5, 1833
that the General Assembly formed Ripley County out of a large portion
of Wayne County and
established its seat at Van Buren. The county was named after
General Eleazar W. RIPLEY, a New
Hampshire native and War of 1812 hero who had no known connection to
Missouri. Its territory
also encompassed what would later become Oregon, Howell, Carter and
Shannon Counties.
Thomas CHILTON represented Ripley County in the state legislature the
year after it was
formed. Court was held in the home of Isaac KELLEY on the west
bank of Current River south
of Big Spring until a courthouse was built in Van Buren. This
first county building was a
two-story log structure with two rooms upstairs and two rooms
downstairs. A huge stone
fireplace was built through the center of the building. The
first justices of the county court were
Isaac E KELLEY, John W. GEORGE and Silas M. LORIMONS. Andrew L.
GEORGE was
Circuit Court Clerk, Alfred WHEELER was County Court Clerk and Zimri
CARTER was the
Sheriff. A post office was opened in 1834 and Andrew GEORGE was
postmaster.
The 1830s saw slowly increasing settlement along the eastern Ozark
escarpment.
PATTERSONS, MURDOCKS, and KEELS, homesteaded in the Fourche
Creek area.
Stephen and Elizabeth SMELSER were on Logan Creek by 1832. Andrew
KELLEY opened a
store on Mill Creek and established a post office in 1837. Two
mills were reported on Current
River. The 1840 census reported the large area still thinly
populated with 2,856 souls. A few
families were fairly well off as 23 households reported a total of 218
slaves. Life, however,
wasn't easy for most. Flu, pneumonia, cholera and malaria were
present. In a July 16, 1844 letter
to their daughter Sally's family, Douglas and Elizabeth MERRILL wrote,
"The winter sickness
waved wonderfully last winter. Swept off many persons."
Early
roads: The Trail of Tears
The Natchitoches Trail continued to be central to the county's
development and place in
American history. An expedition to the Rocky Mountains commanded
by Major Stephen H.
LONG crossed Current River at HIX's ferry in 1820. As early as
1827 it was being used as a
post road with riders carrying the mail weekly from Greenville to
Batesville, AR and back. In
the early 1830s the U. S. Army widened and improved the Natchitoches
and it soon became
known as the old Military Road. Ripley County's first tourists,
Englishman George
FEATHERSTONHAUGH and son, and Germans Frederick GERSTAECKER and Dr.
George
ENGELMANN, journeyed separately down the Old Military Road in the 1830s
and wrote
extensively of their adventures. The HARRIS cabin near Oxly was a
rest stop and is mentioned
in the journals of SCHOOLCRAFT, LONG, and FEATHERSTONHAUGH. In
the 1820s
many families certainly traveled that southwesterly route, following
the direction of Stephen F.
AUSTIN of Potosi, MO, to Texas where they could get cheap land.
In the 1830s Missourians,
including Ripley County men like the BURLISONS - James, Joseph, and
Preacher Jonathan -
went down the Trail to fight for Texas independence.
In 1835 a treaty between the U. S. Government and the Cherokee nation
took away the remainder
of Cherokee land in the east and their forced migration to Indian
Territory began. Although the
Old Military Road would have been the most likely route for the
Cherokees to travel from Cape
Girardeau to Indian Territory, later Oklahoma, it wasn't the most
frequently used trail. The
common route was to the north from Cape Girardeau through
Farmington, Caledonia,
Waynesville and Springfield, MO. Provisions were more readily
available along that more
settled route.
One group of about 1200 Cherokee, the BENGE Party, did come down the
Cape Girardeau Road
in the harsh winter of 1838-1839, passed through Wappapello and forded
the Current River
above Pitman's Ferry at about where the state line today crosses the
river. According to Wash
HARRISS' widow, they camped one night in a field across from her
cabin. This detachment was
later reported arriving in Batesville, AR making the Old Military Road
part of the Trail of Tears.
Historian HUME aptly characterized the meaning of the Road when he
described it as "one of
the oldest and most interesting roads in the Middle West, because it is
woven into the warp and
woof of our pioneer life in such a way as to make it inseparable from
our national history."
There were other roads that also served as avenues for the
pioneers. In 1820 a road was started
from Potosi to Little Rock, AR that at first passed by KITTRELL's mill
and crossed Current
River below it. To the north it became known as the Greenville
Road and to the south as the
Pochantas Road. Overall, it was the St. Louis to Little Rock Road
and was a Butterfield Stage
route before the Civil War. The Bellevue Road was an early route
that came down from Van
Buren through the western portion of the county and ended at
Pocahontas. It paralleled what is
now J highway south, then east to Briar, on to Mill Creek and left the
state at what would later be
Burr.
The
Founding of Doniphan
In the early 1840s Ripley County began to shrink with Shannon County
being established in 1841
and Oregon County (including what would be Howell County) in
1845. Thus Ripley was
reduced to the size of today's Ripley and Carter counties. At the
same time a settlement was
growing up around KITTRELL's mill and store that would move and become
Doniphan.
Archibald PONDER had a store, saloon and distillery near KITTRELL'S
home as early as 1842
and Oeise (Wes) RILEY, son of the first pioneer, had a mill in the
area. George LEE (1780-1853), who had
arrived from
Virginia in the l830s, owned 40 acres west of present day Grand Street
and south of Brooks
Street,
and built a cabin on what is now Washington Street. In 1844 Miles
DISMANG settled south of Hurricane
Creek and set up a tannery. Millwright John CHENOWITH was living by Bay
Mill Eddy on
Current River. John
WOODS settled on Logan Creek and John F. MARTIN built a tavern/inn on
the Natchitoches
Trail near present day Oxly that also became the Martinsburg post
office in 1842.
Ever since Ripley Co had been in existence many settlers living south
of Van Buren had argued
for moving the county seat in their direction. After the county
was divided, their voices were
heard in the legislature and John F. MARTIN and Martin SANDLIN were
named to a
committee to locate a site for a “seat of justice.”
On October 7, 1847 a crowd gathered at the home of George LEE and as
historian HUME later
reported, “proceeded to wrangle about what the place should be called
and where it should be.”
Some wanted it where Fairdealing now stands; others preferred a place
that was later Joe
DALTON’s place near Ponder. A third group, led by Aden LOWE,
favored LEE’s farm as the
site. The national road from St. Louis to Little Rock passed by
this farm which included several
springs. There was also argument over the name. Leesburg,
Ponderville, Dudleyville and others
were suggested but agreement could not be reached, Hume reported.
The three commissioners,
adjourned into three different camps and met again on October
17th. More people had joined
LOWE’s group and LEE, who had acquired additional land, offered to
donate 32 acres for a
town site. The argument over the location of the new town had
been resolved.
Agreement on the name soon followed. Col. Alexander Doniphan had
recently completed his
epic march into Mexico, which had resulted in victories at the batt1es
of Brazito and Sacramento
and the capture of Chihuahua. Doniphan and his lst Missouri Volunteers
had returned in triumph
to St. Louis only four months earlier. With Doniphan's exploits still
echoing throughout the
nation, and the war not yet over, naming the town after Missouri's
latest hero was a natural
decision.
The next day LEE's orchard, which adjoined the old Cherokee campground,
was selected as the
center of town and the place for the courthouse. The laying out of the
town was later described to
HUME by Lindzy DUDLEY in these words.. ''I driv the pegs at the
corners of the lots and
streets and Ade LOWE hope the surveyor and Mart SANDLIN hilt the
pegs while l driv them.''
Local legend has it that before the work began a barrel of whiskey was
rolled out in celebration.
A tap was driven in the bottom of the barrel and tin cups were hung
around the top. When the
founding fathers finished their work they discovered the town had been
located 60 feet over an
adjoining property line and some of the streets intersected at odd
angles. There is still evidence
of this in the town today.
A wooden courthouse was soon erected in LEE's apple orchard (the site
of today's courthouse)
and the county government was moved from Van Buren, making Doniphan the
new county seat,
effective 1847. A post office was installed in the building with
Anson DEARMON becoming
the first postmaster on January 19, 1848. The settlement around
KITTRELL’s mill, including
PONDER’s store, moved to the new town and a Methodist Church was
founded. A small frame
church building was raised about two blocks north of the Courthouse at
the corner of Spring and
Lafayette Streets. Lemuel KITTRELL was the main sponsor of the
church. In 1849 the Cane
Creek Association of Baptists, led by Elder Timothy REEVES, put up a
log church on the
Greenville Road near a spring just east of the present Doniphan High
School athletic field. Prior
to that time circuit-riding preachers conducted church services
sporadically, usually outdoors.
....................................
researched and produced by Ray Burson
This article is continued in "The History and Families of Ripley Co."