VOLUME 69 % O'NEILL. NEBRASKA. JUNE.T949~ Pioneer Ministers . Knew Hardships First Sunday-School Convened at Prouty Home on December 14, 1873 By ROMAINE SAUNDERS Editor-in-Chief Diamond Jubilee Edition It was sometimes said that when the pioneers ol prairie land crossed over the Missouri river reverence and religious forms were left behind. It has been the genius of the Christ ian religion to send its apostles “far hence to the Gentiles.’ The restraints of ingrained training may be cast aside for a time but mankind in the end will lay hold upon that which transcends his own feeble re sources. So on the prairies of Holt county there was a need for spiritual guidance. There, too, were brave souls among the Eastern clergy who discern m ed the need in homesteadland and leaving the security of ministering in an established •‘charge” cast their lot with the homesteaders, certainly not for any financial reward but for what good they could do. Who was the first clergyman to bring words of solace and in struction to the O’Neill com munity may never be known. And by -community it should be understood not merely the limits of the town. Bartley Blain, a pioneer preacher and as 1 recall the county's second superintend ent of public instruction, compiled early records of the community. Among these records is the story of the first Sunday-school started at a place just down the river from O’Neill called Rockford. This was held at Prouty’s home on December 14, 1873, and prayer- meeting at the same place on December 21 the same year, and these were con ■ tinued until 1875, when Rev. S. P. Van Doozer came back to Rockford and preached the first sermon on April 20 at the home of Elijah Thompson. At this time a church was organ ided with five members: Frank Bitney, classleader; Clara Bit ney, Will Dickerson. M. S. Prouty and Jennie H. Shultz. The Rockford church was supplied services every three weeks by a preacher from Oakdale. In the Summer of 1876, Rev. J. B. Maxfield, the new presiding El der of the district, came to Rockford and held first com munion service. Rev. Blain thought the first Methodist preaching service m the Northeast part of Holt coun ty was at Steel Creek school house by Rev. Hurt, living at Walnut Grove in Knox county, in the Autumn of 1879. It was largely through the efforts of Bartley Blain that the Methodists got a church building in O’Neill in 1883. He was a homesteader as well as a preacher, lived in a tent with his family on his claim near Middle Branch for some weeks before having a shanty to move into and was gone from homq several weeks at a time look ing after isolated church inter est. Mrs. Blain was one of the brave pioneer women who bore the hardships, the loneliness and desolation with fortitude and courage. Histories recount the story of what men have done. Not upon the limits of a page, not within the confine^ of a chapter, but let us dedi cate a sacred volumn to the quiet fortitude, to the calm pat ience and the steadfast faith of our pioneer mothers. rne r>iain iaiimv ucuuc Holt county in 1880, the same year The Frontier was estab lished. This bit of pioneer hos pitality, social interest and de signs of a preacher comes down to us from Mr. Blain’s history: “While looking for a place to make a home we called at the sod house of G. W. Jones. While talkign other landlookers came in. Mr. Jones said: I got some lumber yesterday for a floor for my house and intend to put it in today.’ A young man who had just come in said. ‘It will be a good place for a dance then, won’t it?’ ‘Yes, said Mr. Jones, if the people want to come here and dance they can dance, and if a preacher comes along and wants to preach he can preach too.’ I said to myself, if I set tle in this vicinity I will preach in his house.” G. W. Jones was George Jones, father of Mrs. D. N. Loy and Hurley Jones of O'Neill. About 1886 the Jones family came to O'Neill and Mr. Jones operated a livery and feed bam located just East of where the Ford sales room now stands. It was because of the cour age of Mrs. Blain he left home early one morning on horse back and headed for Kearney in Buffalo county to attend a church conference. Of that trip he writes: “Having ridden about 50 miles I found entertainment at the borne of a congregationalist whose treatment was cordial. On leaving next morning I ask ed what T should Dav. He said •Have vou twenty-five cents.’ T handed him the amount. He took it and placed a half dol- j lar in my hand saying. ‘I like to encourage such as vou. who ( are trving to make the world better.’ “On the second day out I din ed with a farmer on*i creek sev eral miles West of Albion. This man directed me to go past a blowout in the sand hills sev eral miles South. ‘Near that you will see the tracks made by two wagons some time ago. Follow that until you reach a valley, along which there is a fairly plain road.’ That after noon I saw but one living thing besides my horse, a lone med ow lark. Near sunset I reached the valley and there found a plain road which I followed for several miles. There was a small creek running down this valley at the left. Presently I saw a lantern near the creek and asked the man for enter tainment. ‘How are you trav eling?’ was the reply. ‘On horseback, I replied.’ ‘The creek is mirey, you can’t cross here. Go down the road half a mile where you can stay,’ he informed me. I rode on. horse | and rider both tired until the barking of a dog was a very welcome sound. I rapped on the door of a shack, ‘come in,’ I heard in broad Irish as I op ened the door, and asked for entertainment for the night. ‘No sor, I’m away from home myself and the folks here are away, he informed me. ‘I have been riding all day and my horse is tired; I must stay eith er in the house or out of it. I want some feed for my horse 1 and a place to sleep,’ I said, ‘Well I think I can find some feed for my horse,’ he answer ed. The horse was fed and we went in. ‘I can sleep on the lounge here,’ I said, ‘Oim goin lo sleep there myself, sor. Oim here helpin’ with the potato ! harvest an bethought me to write a letter while fifteen miles nearer the post office than my home is,’ he informed me. I said I could sleep on the floor. ‘Alright,’ replied mine host. ‘I tried it but found it rather lively sleeping as there seemed to be two or three fleas on each of my limbs playing hipptyhop with each other the whole night. Was finally glad to get up rather than be a play ground for a flea circus. The grandmother and several child ren were discovered to be at home an I had a good break fast.’ "Started Southward and soon fording the Cedar was obliged to hold my feet up as high as possible to keep them out of the water. T found a fairly plain road but was obliged to ride to ward all points of the compass among the sand hills. Darkness overtook me in a strange land with no human habitation in sight. Not long after dark, I heard boys laughing in the stillness among some small tim ber. I called to them and asked if I could get lodging for the night. ‘Go on to the house and they will tell you, ‘they shout ed.’ A few rods' further I saw a light in a window almost un der my horses feet. Going a little further I rapped on a door. It opened and I saw a well filled table surrounded by half a score of people all en joying their evening meal. One of them was a Seventh Day Adventist minister whom I had known a few years before in Minnesota. I was cordially en tertained. ‘‘Before night the next day a fairly large prairie was reach ed of several miles in extent. Considerably improved near the South side of this prairie was large farm with a house octagonal in form and two stories high. This was also a ho- I tel the largest room of which 1 was also a general merchan dise store, well filled with goods. ‘Late in the afternoon of Thursday I reached Kearney and found the M. E. Church fairly well filled. I saw only one familiar face, that of Mrs Mary C Ninde, of Winona,' Minn. Here on the first day of the session of a new an nual conference they organized Soriety”"S F°reign Missionary The matter used in this story taken from the Blain Histor ical records was first published lM™* Front,er in February, Why General O’Neill Promoted Colonies Discerning the question in 1 the minds of some, Gen. John O’- , Neill, as quoted in Monsignor Cassidy’s history of St Pat- 1 rick’s parish, puts the question into words: “Now, why have 11 gone to the trouble and expense, why have I taken such interest in Irish immigration to the West?’’ “Simply and solely,” he says, “because I have always believed the next best thing to giving the Irish people their freedom at [ home, is to assist and encourage such as are here or who may j come of their own free will in procuring homes for themselves and their children in the free land of their adoption.” “Voice of The Frontier ... WJAG . . . 780 on your dial. ; Company M of the Third Nebraska infantry regiment, com posed entirely of Holt countyans, entrained at O'Neill for ser vice in the w. r with Fpain. The unit trained for a time in Flor j ida before going to Cuba. J. J. M’CAFFERTY READS EDITORIAL Then He Leaves Cheyenne and Departs for Head of Elkhorn By MRS. JOHN MELVIN Daughter of J. J. McCafferty ‘To live in the hearts we leave behind is not to die.” I asked my father how he came to settle in O’Neill in the first place. He said he was roam ing around in the Black Hills, always looking for something better. When in Cheyenne, Wyo., stopping at a boarding house, he J. J. M'CAFFERTY picked up a copy of the Omaha Herald and read an editorial giv ing General O’Neill and the O’Neill City settle ment such as a “puff” as could come only from the pen of a good writer. He had never heard of O’Neill City but at once made up his mind to come to Holt county and cast his lot with the new set tlement. So next day he took the Union Pacific train out of Chey enne for Fremont and when he stepped off the train at Fremont he asked the first man he met about the O’Neill settlement and in what direction it lay. That man was none other than ■ Geo. W. E. Dorsey, the finan cier and politican who later went to congress from North Nebraska. My father said Mr. Dorsey treated him like a prince and lauded General O'Neill to the sky, saying there was a bright future for the new settlement up toward the headwaters of the Elkhorn. That settled it for my father, who arrived in O' Neill in the late Summer of 1875. His clothes pretty much in rags, he took a homestead on what is.now the townsite of O’ Neill. Patent was issued to fath er for this land in 1881 by the United States government, Ches ter A. Arthur signing the docu ment as president. Father said after making pretty much of a failure at farming he had plat- j ted into blocks and lots the ter- \ ritory known as McCafferty’s j Addition and sold some lots. My sisters and I retain a number of 1 lots that were in father’s home stead and by which we feel a ! justifiable pride. John Robert 1 Gallagher has his home on a part j1 of his maternal grandfather’s homestead also. My father and Neil Brennan formed a partnership in 1878 and opened a hardware and 1 furniture business. This part nership was later discontinued and each member of the firm continued in separate loca tions, Mr. Brennan dealing only in hardware while fath er dealt in both hardware and furniture besides furnishing 1 coffins in which the dead were buried. The first settlers in the im mediate vicinity of O’Neill were a few men from Wisconsin ap parently under the leadership ot H. H. McEvony. This settlement was made in 1873, and 10 months later, in May, 1874, General John O’Neill came up the Elk horn with the first group of col onists and what is now the city of O’Neill began to take shape. This was followed two years la ter by three more groups of col onists. When O’Neill came with first group of 13 men they put up a sodhouse that was tbe liv ing quarters of all in the group for a time. Securing a map of the coun ty which showed where timber could be had, the Red Bird was selected as the place to get timbers for the roof of the sod building. Six men were selected for this undertaking. There was no road over the open prairie, so as a means of finding their way back to the starting point a load of willow branches was cut down at the Elkhorn and on the way to the Red Bird branches were set in the ground at such inter vals as would enable them to follow the trail back. Those 13 men moved into their sod house in the Spring of 1874, put out some crops, went to Eagle Creek and got logs with which to build on their claims. The building of O’Neil] proper started with the arrival of Gen eral O’Neill’s second colony. On October 7. 1882, O’Neill was incorporated as a village. The articles of incorporation were adopted by the county board of commissioners. A ma jority of the taxpayers had sign ed the petition to the county board, which named the follow ing as the board of trustees of the newly-formed village: E. E. Evans, Patrick Hagerty, Sanford Parker and J. J. McCafferty. Inman Originally Designated Yorktown What later became the village of Inman started out as York town, some New Yorkers so des ignating their settlement. Ew ing was first known as Ford but in 1881 took on the name of the community’s first postmaster, Mr. Ewing. Ezra Moore was a lad of 10 in 1881 when his people settled in the Inman valley. He recalls to day his childish fear of the cow boys, whose plaything was the .44 six-shooter and their tar get most anything not seen before. Inman got going in ’81 with a store operated by Clay ton Roth, who also acted as the postmaster. A depot and section house stepped into the prairie picture the following year. Then the Graves lumber yard got un der way with a few sticks. The townsite was laid out on land homesteaded by Bert Smith. A school was established, Metho dist and Presbyterian churches organized, business enterprise undertaken, homes built and by the middle ’80s another flourish ing village was on the map of Holt county. Among those in strumental in developing the immunity were the Cross fam ly, D. L. Pond, the Moore fam ly, L. T. Shanner, the Hallor ans and the Gorees. A store building 16x18 feet lousing a stock of goods and fdostetter’s Bitters dispensed ov ?r the counter by Edward Stringer was about all there was of Ewing until the Autumn of 1881. In the Spring of 1882 the jostoffice was moved, a hard vare store opened by a newcom er by the name of Kay. Leroy Sutler started a hotel and livery ousiness. Bill Beck, Ed Perry, D. .. Conger. J P Spittler, Ames Bros., John Carmical, Trommer ihauser, Selah and others devel oped a lively town that contin ues to supply the needs of a ; arge territory. Stories of atrocities helped gather volunteers.—Pictures from the Charles Hardina collection. * County Division and School Districts — Sixty-five years ago county ' j division was being agitated by interested citizens in the West j half of the county, who thought the empire of Holt should be split in the middle. The county board provided for the question i to be voted on and for a period of 20 years one division scheme j after another bobbed up. Then there was the school districting question. A. J. Doremus had published in O’Neill papers his solution of the matter with dia grams that the printers labor iously put into form with the material at hand in the type cases. These diagrams were specimens of what the early day craftsmen could do with type as well as comprehensive outlines of proposed school districts. Six- ! ty-five years later there is the agitation of the question of re districting and consolidating school districts. Rev. Bartley Blain, pastor of j the Methodist church in O’- ^ COLONEL BRYAN LEADS REGIMENT Company M, Organized in O’Neill, Part of Famous Third William Jennings Bryan, per haps Nebraska’s best-known son, commanded the Third regi ment of the Nebraska volun teers of which Company M was a part. He held the rank of col onel. Roster of Company M, as or ganized in 1898, follows: Captain, Richard F. Cross, At kinson. 1st Lieutenant, Charles E. [fall, O’Neill. 2nd Lieutenant, John W. Wertz, Stuart. Sergeants: 1st, Arthur M. Coy kendall; 2nd, Caleb J. Woods; 3rd, William H. Gallagher; 4th, Martin F. Cronin; 5th, Wilber Ilorton; 6th, George E. Lord. (Corporals: 1st, Oscar P. List; 2nd, William T. S. Ayer; 3rd, William R. J3itney; 4th, Charles L Harding; 5th, Walter J. King; 6th, Ernest C. Nyrop; 7th, Wal lace J. Fullerton; 8th, Michael J. Sherry; 9th, Alva S. Likens; 10th, John Olson; 11th, Richard Williams; 12th, Ulysses E. Pier son. Musicians: John M. Sturde vant, Lester E. Porter. Artificer: Gottfried Wyss. Wagoner: Thomas Lynch. Privates: C. Glenn Adams, George B. M. Alter, Charles Barber, Virgil E. Barker, Miles Bennett, Geo. Biegler, Frank E. Bishop, Fred Bitney, Andrew J. Brewick, James D. Brown, D. W. Cameron, Oliver W. Camp bell, John Cantello, Charles S. Chenowerth, Walter Clark, Mat this Classen, Otto E. Clevish, Patrick Condon, McKinney S. Conover, William Coleman, Rob ert F. Corrigan, Samuel Cous tan, Michael F. Cross, Marshall Custard, Rosco Doyle, Nils Dru struk, Frank J. Eaton, J. B. Farnsworth, Oscar F. Feelhaver, Henry Fleming, Fredrick W. Foster, John S. Foster, Forney L. G. Fox, Warren Galleher, Fred Gossman, Alonzo Graham, Burt Griggs, LeRoy Hanlen, William B. Hackett, Ole J. Hanson, Wal ter Houseman, John A. Hardy, Robert D. Heisler, William A. Hensel, Levi Hershiser, Robert D. James, Frank Judd, John Kanlen, Morris Klinesmith, Har ry H. Leonard, Charles Madden, George Mayes, Joseph E. Max well, Joseph E. Maxwell, George E. McKee, N. J. Olson, Chris Pet erson, Edmond C. Pickett, Ja son L. Ratekin, J. Ross, James S. Short, John J. Slaymaker, Lewis Slaymaker, William C. Smith, Charles W. Stolze, Louis Sivick, Alfred D. Timmons, An drew J. Trapp, James F. Updike, James Verplank, Frank Wagner, James S. Weaverling, Cluade H. Weedman, Lawrence F. Whalen, Jacob Wiseman, Olander Wilson, Charles E. Wilson, Elmer Wise, Rudolph Wyss, Edward D. Zink Neill, was also county superin tendent and at the time the mat ter of districting was under con sideration he published notices of teachers’ examinations to be held in the country school houses. 1 111 "T Holt County Aberdeen-Angus Breeders’ Association FOURTH ANNUAL Show and Sale TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1950 . . . SELLING . . . 40 BULLS 15 FEMALES Consigned by the Following Members: Leo T. Adams, Chambers Harry E. Ressel & Sons, O'Neill Hugh Carr, Amelia Ernest E. Young, Chambers Blaine Garwood, Atkinson Clyde Van Every, O'Neill Fora L. Knight, O'Neill Arthur Hibbs, Star Freeman Knight, O'Neill Roland Miller, Middlebranch E. L. Miner & Son, O'Neill Will Sit*, Atkinson Ray Siders, O'Neill E. J. Revell & Sons, Star Ray Siders, O’Neill, President and Sale Manager Leo T. Adams. Chambers, Secretary-Treasurer