Sesquicentennial ~ Polk County & Bolivar, MO
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 37° 36.411 W 093° 24.458
15S E 464020 N 4162273
The county is Jan. 5, 1835 and the city is Nov. 18, 1835 but they celebrate them together
Waymark Code: WMN12T
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 12/05/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
Views: 2

County of capsule: Polk County
Location of capsule: College St. & Albany Ave., Neuhart Park, Bolivar
Time Capsule Vault donated by Butler Funeral Home
This marker of Missouri Red Granite donated by Wommack Monument Co.

Time capsule text:

POLK COUNTY and BOLIVAR
SESQUICENTENNIAL
TIME CAPSULE
1835   ~   1985
BURIED
Jan. 26, 1986
Open    2036

"Bolivar has existed as a city since Nov. 10, *1835, when proclaimed as such by the Polk County Court and designated as the county seat. Bolivar and Polk County in 1985 celebrated their sesquicentennial. Bolivar was organized as a fourth-class city Feb. 15, 1881. The settlement which was to become Bolivar developed along the trail used by the Overland Stage, hence the reason Bolivar’s streets don’t run true north and south, instead being offset about 22 degrees to the west.

"The location of Bolivar as a settlement was also directly related to Keeling Spring, located behind the Bolivar Post Office and next to the Bolivar Herald-Free Press office. That spring is now mostly covered by a concrete monument that commemorates the importance of the spring to the location of Bolivar. Back in the year of 1823, Ezekiel Polk and Thomas Hardeman settled with their families in an area of southwestern Tennessee that was known as Hickory Valley. A new county was organized there later on and named Hardeman County after Thomas Hardeman, the early settler. The county seat of justice was named Hatchie at the beginning, but as news began to reach the United States of the heroic military feats which were being achieved in South America by General Simon Bolivar, the people of the young county took steps to change the name of their county seat from Hatchie to Bolivar.

"Now the other pioneer settler, Ezekiel Polk, had three grandsons: John Polk Campbell and his brothers, William C. and Ezekiel, all of whom moved to Missouri and settled in an area that later became Greene County. In 1835, plans were made to create a new county out of the northern part of Greene. The Campbell brothers submitted the name of Polk for the new county after the family of their grandfather, Ezekiel Polk. Since the majority of the settlers had also come from Tennessee, many having been friends and acquaintances back there, it seems that there was no opposition to their suggestion for a name. Therefore, the Missouri General Assembly acted to have the county of Polk organized.

"Next followed the search for a suitable location in which to place the county seat of justice. While that was in progress, the Campbell brothers came forward with a name for the forthcoming village—the same name as that of the county seat of Hardeman County, TN, where their grandfather Polk was living—Bolivar. That would be an ideal name! Because like that of Washington, it symbolized liberation. Bolivar, Polk County—the two names went together well because Ezekiel Polk had distinguished himself as a colonel in George Washington’s Revolutionary Army. Public opinion appears to have been unanimous in favor of the name Bolivar since the minutes of the county court on Nov. 10, 1835, simply state that the seat of justice shall be called Bolivar.

Information Contributed by Bolivar Herald-Free Press" ~ City of Bolivar


Polk County:
"Polk County, Missouri was originally the territory of the Osage Native American tribe until the late 1820s. James Smithson and James Mooney became the first non-Native American settlers before the Osage had officially ceded the land. Smithson and Mooney settled along Keeling Spring. However, not wishing to pay rent to the Osage, they left and settled near the James River, only to return and settle near present day Brighton in 1829. In 1830, John and Mary Jane Russell Williams became the first permanent settlers of the area, paying rent to the Osage with bacon and corn. “Bees,” an affectionate name for older citizens of surrounding areas, helped the first settlers of the Polk County area to build their homes. The main crops were oats, corn, tobacco, timothy hay, peaches, pears, and apples. The county has natural springs and rivers, including the Pomme de Terre River and Sac River, and fertile soil. All of these natural attributes made it a desired location for settlers to establish their homesteads.

"On January 5, 1835, Polk County was officially formed out of Greene County and was named after Revolutionary War Colonel Ezekiel Polk. Colonel Polk was grandfather to James Polk Campbell and Ezekiel Madison Campbell, two prominent settlers of Greene and Polk Counties. Ezekiel Madison Campbell, as the first county surveyor, drew the county lines. In November of 1835, Bolivar was named the county seat after Bolivar, Tennessee, and the birthplace of Colonel Polk. They also named the town of Brighton after Brighton, Tennessee.

"The increased white settlement of the area pushed most of the Osage and Kickapoo out of the area, but in 1837 they threatened to return. Residents of Polk County appealed to Missouri Governor Lilburn W. Boggs to protect them, who called in Brigadier General A.F. Nall and his troops to go and defend the county and its residents. After an 18 day conflict between the troops and the Osage, the Osage dispersed from area.

"As the population continued to grow, a Presbyterian academy was established in 1849 and the area eventually became known as Pleasant Hope, after the name of the academy. In 1856, several Polk County residents left to assist relatives in Kansas, who were caught in the middle of the battle between abolitionists and pro-slavery residents of the state. Most brought their relatives back to Polk County. The 1860 census shows the population to be almost 10,000 residents, with a slave population of 512 individuals. When the Civil War began, Polk County citizens were caught in the middle: some supported President Lincoln and looked to him to defend the Union from the secessionists, some allied with Governor Claiborne Jackson, who sought to defend the state of Missouri from the Union and join the Confederacy.

"Polk County residents were part of several military regiments. In June, 1861, the Polk County Regiment Home Guard formed to protect Polk County residents from both Union and Confederate armies. In December of the same year, the 8th regiment, State Militia Cavalry formed in an effort to keep communications between Springfield and Rolla open. Polk County residents were also members of the 15th regiment, U.S. Reserve Corps, who were stationed in Jefferson City to protect the railroad. The 26th Regiment, Enrolled Missouri Militia formed in July, 1862, to help control guerrilla warfare. Finally, the 15th Missouri Cavalry formed in November of 1863 to control the bushwhackers.

"Several small battles and skirmishes took place in Polk County. On February 8, 1862, Union troops entered Bolivar to capture any rebel soldiers who were hiding in the city. This day became known as the “Affair at Bolivar.” On March 26, 1862, a small and brief battle took place near Humansville. Finally, on August 28, 1864, Polk County was the site of a Union attack on Confederate Captain Pace, who was killed in the skirmish.

"As with many areas of the country, the Civil War had devastating effects on Polk County. Many homes were burned and destroyed; crops and livestock were stolen or killed and burned. After the war, many lawsuits were leveled against the “rebels of Polk County” who continued livestock thefts and other unlawful behavior after the war was over, in hopes of some kind of repayment for losses." ~ Springfield-Greene County Library District

Subject: City

Commemoration: Sesquicentennial

Date of Founding: Nov. 10, 1835

Date of Commemoration: 1985

Address:
College St & Albany Ave., & Springfield Ave. (Bus. MO-13),
Neuhart Park,
Bolivar, MO


Overview Photograph:

Yes


Detail Photograph:

Yes


Web site if available: [Web Link]

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