Platte
County
Platte is one of 6 counties formed from the U.S. Government's 1836
Platte Purchase in which Iowa, Sac, Fox and small bands of other Indian tribes
gave up over 2 million acres of land for $7,500 and other benefits. The
Purchase was annexed to Missouri, 1837, and Platte County, comprising 414 square
miles, was organized, 1838. The name comes from the nearby Platte (Fr.
shallow) River.
In a fertile, glacial plains region, Platte County, early leading hemp
grower, is now noted for its tobacco, grain, livestock farms. Missouri's
oldest continuing county fair is Platte County's begun, 1858.
First settler near Platte City, the county seat, was Zadoc Martin who came,
1828, and ran a Platte River ferry for traffic to Forth Leavenworth.
Weston, early thriving Missouri River port, now noted for its pre-Civil War
architecture and tobacco market, was founded, 1837-38, to the northwest by
Joseph Moore and Bela M. Hughes. Parkville, prominent early town to the
southeast was settled by George S. Park, 1838. Northward Camden Point and
New Market were settled in the 1840's.
Settled largely by Southerners, Platte County expanded with a planter
economy. The rich soil of the area was early noted by the 1804 Lewis and
Clark Expedition.
Platte County was deeply involved in the Kansas border strife over the
extension of slavery that broke out when the Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed slavery
north of 36° 30' in 1854 by repealing the 1820 Missouri Compromise. At
Parkville, the press of the "Industrial Luminary" was thrown into the river when
editor George S. Park criticized activities of proslavery men. In the
Civil War, the area was torn by guerrilla warfare and Platte City, a proslavery
center, was burned in 1861 and in 1864.
Among 15 schools of higher learning in the county by 1890's is today's
noted Park College, founded by George S. Park and John A. McAfee at Parkville,
1875.
Guy B. Park, governor, 1933-37, and David R. Atchison, pro-Southern leader
and senator, 1843-55, lived in Platte City. Ben Holladay the "Stagecoach
King" lived at Weston. Near here is the pioneer Flintlock Baptist Church
~ text of marker