Carroll County Genealogy

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Carroll County Home Page

History of the County

Organized January 2, 1833, from Ray County and named for Charles Carroll of Carrollton. At the organization of the county the intention was to call it "Wakanda," after the river of that name already referred to, and the bill forming the new county had passed its first and second reading by that name, but when it came up for its third reading and final action, the news of the death of Charles Carroll, of Carrollton, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, had just been received in Jefferson City, and in lieu of Wakanda, it passed without a dissenting vote, and was signed the 3d day of January, 1833, the county having been laid off in townships in 1816, and sectionalized in 1817

Courthouse History

Carroll County planners reserved the highest point within the 80-acre grant to the county for the courthouse. The first courthouse was built in 1834 according to specifications in the County Court Record filed in July 1834. The building was 18 by 20 feet, of hewn logs, 1-1/2 stories with either brick or stone chimney, and underpinned with rock and mortar. William Glaze, contractor, completed the building in November 1835 at a cost of $273.50. The building and lot sold for $450 in May 1841.

The second courthouse, a 40-foot-square, two-story, brick building, occupied the center of the square. Window frames, sash and staircase were to be of walnut. The floor on the east side of the first floor, for the judge's bench, was elevated and laid with brick, the remainder of the floor laid with oak plank. Woodwork was painted white, the doors mahogany. Specifications called for four interior wood columns to be painted marble. The clerk recorded a description of the building in the County Court Record.

Work began in September 1839. The exterior was to be completed by November 1842; interior finishing continued into 1843. Costs are difficult to estimate. Initially, $4,000 was appropriated with subsequent amounts of $1,000 in 1841, and $375 for the cupola. Warrants for $1,728.90 were issued in December 1840; thereafter many orders were rescinded or altered, and piecemeal work progressed slowly.

Although original plans called for a cupola, apparently it was not built until citizens petitioned for construction in 1855. Commissioners presented a plan for a cupola in August 1855 similar to the one on the seminary, which had been built in 1854. The commissioners reported in December 1856 that the work by Thomas Tweedy was not completed as required by contract and ordered him to comply or the county would sue him.

The work seems to have dragged on, for a new commissioner, Joseph Troxel, was appointed in April 1857. Samuel Turner and S. A. Clark's Twentieth Century History of Carroll County, Missouri. 1911, reported that according to tradition, the building was unsafe and was razed in 1865.

In 1867 $2,500 was appropriated for a new courthouse and Henry Sloan appointed commissioner. The contract for the two-story, brick building was given to Jacobs, Farris and Co. for $12,350. They completed construction in December 1867. Funds came from the general fund and a bond issue. An illustration of the proposed building indicated a larger, more elaborate building than the one built. This building, razed in 1901, was bought for $900.

Participants in a mass meeting held early in 1901 came to three conclusions: Carroll County needed a new courthouse that should not cost over $60,000; it should be financed by direct tax; and it should be built in the center of the square. An illustration of an accepted design proposed by Jerome Legg accompanied news items related to the May 1901 election. Other Missouri courthouses built by Legg about this time include Shelby, Gasconade, St. Charles and Mississippi. However, all bids exceeded the $60,000 limit, and Legg was dismissed.

The court then solicited new plans and accepted the proposed design of Robert G. Kirsch. In December 1901 the court accepted a bid from John Scott and Sons, Lancaster, for $45,900. Cornerstone ceremonies took place in June 1902, and the building that continues to serve as the Carroll County courthouse was completed in June 1904 for $51,600. Historic Afghan Kirsch did similar buildings in Adair, 1897, and Polk and Vernon Counties, 1906.

source: My Missouri Genealogy

Organization of Carroll County

At the organization of the county the intention was to call it "Wakanda," after the river of that name already referred to, and the bill forming the new county had passed its first and second reading by that name, but when it came up for its third reading and final action, the news of the death of Charles Carroll, of Carrollton, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, had just been received in Jefferson City, and in lieu of Wakanda, it passed without a dissenting vote, and was signed the 3rd day of January, 1833, the county having been laid off in townships in 1816, and sectionalized in 1817.

Source: "History of Carroll County, Missouri 1882"; p. 207

Carroll County Courthouse Information from University of Missouri

Carroll County planners reserved the highest point within the 80-acre grant to the county for the courthouse. The first courthouse was built in 1834 according to specifications in the County Court Record filed in July 1834. The building was 18 by 20 feet, of hewn logs, 1-1/2 stories with either brick or stone chimney, and underpinned with rock and mortar. William Glaze, contractor, completed the building in November 1835 at a cost of $273.50. The building and lot sold for $450 in May 1841.

The second courthouse, a 40-foot-square, two-story, brick building, occupied the center of the square. Window frames, sash and staircase were to be of walnut. The floor on the east side of the first floor, for the judge's bench, was elevated and laid with brick, the remainder of the floor laid with oak plank. Woodwork was painted white, the doors mahogany. Specifications called for four interior wood columns to be painted marble. The clerk recorded a description of the building in the County Court Record.

Work began in September 1839. The exterior was to be completed by November 1842; interior finishing continued into 1843. Costs are difficult to estimate. Initially, $4,000 was appropriated with subsequent amounts of $1,000 in 1841, and $375 for the cupola. Warrants for $1,728.90 were issued in December 1840; thereafter many orders were rescinded or altered, and piecemeal work progressed slowly.

Although original plans called for a cupola, apparently it was not built until citizens petitioned for construction in 1855. Commissioners presented a plan for a cupola in August 1855 similar to the one on the seminary, which had been built in 1854. The commissioners reported in December 1856 that the work by Thomas Tweedy was not completed as required by contract and ordered him to comply or the county would sue him.

The work seems to have dragged on, for a new commissioner, Joseph Troxel, was appointed in April 1857. Samuel Turner and S. A. Clark's Twentieth Century History of Carroll County, Missouri. 1911, reported that according to tradition, the building was unsafe and was razed in 1865.

In 1867 $2,500 was appropriated for a new courthouse and Henry Sloan appointed commissioner. The contract for the two-story, brick building was given to Jacobs, Farris and Co. for $12,350. They completed construction in December 1867. Funds came from the general fund and a bond issue. An illustration of the proposed building (Figure 1) indicated a larger, more elaborate building than the one built (Figure 2). This building, razed in 1901, was bought for $900.

Figure 1

Proposed Carroll County Courthouse, 1867. (From: An Illustrated Historical Atlas Map of Carroll County, 1876)

Figure 2

Carroll County Courthouse, 1867-1901. (From:Carroll County, Missouri, 1910-1968)

Participants in a mass meeting held early in 1901 came to three conclusions: Carroll County needed a new courthouse that should not cost over $60,000; it should be financed by direct tax; and it should be built in the center of the square. An illustration of an accepted design proposed by Jerome Legg accompanied news items related to the May 1901 election. Other Missouri courthouses built by Legg about this time include Shelby, Gasconade, St. Charles and Mississippi. However, all bids exceeded the $60,000 limit, and Legg was dismissed.

The court then solicited new plans and accepted the proposed design of Robert G. Kirsch. In December 1901 the court accepted a bid from John Scott and Sons, Lancaster, for $45,900. Cornerstone ceremonies took place in June 1902, and the building that continues to serve as the Carroll County courthouse was completed in June 1904 (Figure 3). Kirsch did similar buildings in Adair, 1897, and Polk and Vernon Counties, 1906.

Figure 3

Carroll County Courthouse, 1901-. Architect: Robert G. Kirsch. (Courtesy: State Historical Society of Missouri)

Bibliography

Books

Carroll County, Missouri, 1910-1968. Carroll County Historical Society, 1968.

History of Carroll County, Missouri. St. Louis: Missouri Historical Company, 1881.

Turner, Samuel Kirkwood and S.A. Clark, Twentieth Century History of Carroll County, Missouri. 2 vols. Indianapolis: B.F. Bowen and Company, 1911.

Newspapers

Carrollton Democrat, Feb. 22, March 8, April 5, 12,26, May 3, 10, July 12, Aug. 9,16, Oct. 25, Dec. 13, 1901; April 11, June 13, 20, 27, 1902; April 10, Oct. 30, Nov. 20, 1903; Feb. 26, March 25, April 8, June 10, 1904.

Atlases

An Illustrated Historical Atlas Map of Carroll County, Missouri. [n.p.] Brink, McDonough and Comapny, 1876.

Standard Atlas of Carroll County. Chicago: George A. Ogle and Company, 1914.

UED6016, new May 1981

source: University of Missouri Extension Service

  • Civil War History (Resources available at the Kansas City MO Public Library.)

    • Bugle Call Was Death Knell for Four Brothers - Article about the Creighton family in Civil War Carroll County, Missouri, including Colonel Ian Creighton, possessor of "an empire of land in north Missouri and droves of slaves to tend it," killed along with four sons of his brother John for his large stable of prize horses and other property.

    • When John Withers Set Out to Reopen Civil War - File containing illustrations and a biographical article about John Withers, a slave-owning farmer and Confederate veteran of Carroll County, Missouri making "a personal declaration of a second War Between the States, a few years after the first war ended." Marching to Washington, D. C. in 1868 until stopping in Ohio due to sickness of his horse and himself, thus averting a renewed conflict.
       
       

  • Fort Orleans (Resources available at the Kansas City MO Public Library.)

    • Article about recently discovered building plans of Fort Orleans, "the first French military outpost on the Missouri River," existing from 1723-1728.  From the Kansas City (MO) Public Library Collection.

    • Fort Orleans of the Missoury [sic] - History of Fort Orleans, "earliest military post in the Missouri valley" operated by the French "from 1723 to 1728 on the north bank of the Missouri river, some two miles west of the Wakenda river in what is now Carroll county, Missouri [two counties east of Clay County]."

    • Fort Orleans, the First French Post on the Missouri - Article about Fort Orleans, "the first French post on the Missouri" River, established in Carroll County, Missouri in 1723 by Etienne de Bourgmont and razed by 1728. Also the site of a village of Missouri Indians (long gone by the 1800s).

    • Has the Site of Fort Orleans Been Discovered?  Description of the ruins and remains at the recently discovered French outpost of Fort Orleans in Saline County, Missouri, with Indian artifacts, animal bones, and numerous guns.

    • Historical Notes--Fort Orleans on the Missouri - Article questioning many possibilities for the site of the former Fort Orleans, built around 1724, including Lewis and Clark's account, considering it "washed away."

    • Historical Notes--Fort Orleans: Where Is It? - Article about the founding of Fort Orleans in 1724 by the French, led by "M. De Bourgmont," in reaction to the failed effort of the Spanish in 1720 to establish a fort there to secure lands west of the Mississippi River. Description of the destruction of both parties by Indians and the question of the exact location of Fort Orleans, described as "washed away" by Lewis and Clark in 1804.

    • Historical Notes--Early Notices of the Missouri River and Indians [Second Paper] - Article describing events and descriptions of Osage Indian and French military settlements in the late 1600s and early 1700s, in the vicinity of Saint Louis and possibly Fort Orleans.

    • History--Early Notices of the Missouri River and Indians (Third Paper) - Article describing events and descriptions of Indian and French military settlements in the late 1600s and early 1700s, in the vicinity of Saint Louis and possibly Fort Orleans.

    • La Decouverte du Missouri et L'Histoire du Fort D'Orleans (1673-1728) - Book about the discovery of Missouri and the Missouri River, including the fur trade there, and the foundation of Fort Orleans in the late 1600s and early 1700s, in French.

    • Scientific Miscellany--Notes and Queries - Response to the article by John P. Jones from the preceding issue, attempting to aid in the location of the site of Fort Orleans, pointing out perceived errors in Lewis and Clark's judgment.
       

  • National Register of Historical Places
     

  • Township History of Carroll County
     

  • Towns, Ferry Crossings, Railroads, & RR Stations

 

 



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Last Updated 7/29/2008