Grinnell
By Lynn Cavanagh and Mary Schuchmann
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About this ebook
Lynn Cavanagh
Lynn Cavanagh and Mary Schuchmann are writers who share an interest in history, a belief in community, and a love of Grinnell. The images used in the book come from the Grinnell Historical Museum, Drake Community Library, and the Grinnell College Archives, as well as through the generosity of local individuals and families.
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Grinnell - Lynn Cavanagh
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INTRODUCTION
The influence of the first settler in any community is never lost. Character bears better fruit than
acres. It is not the trees of the streets that have made the town famous but its men and women.
—Rev. David Otis Mears, son-in-law of J.B. Grinnell
A vision of a New England town on the Midwestern prairie led Josiah Bushnell Grinnell, a 33-year-old Congregational minister, to advertise in a New York newspaper in 1854 for men of good character and high ideals and some means
to help him establish a new community. Acting on a valuable tip from the builder of the Rock Island Railroad, J.B. eyed a spot in east central Iowa where two rail lines would one day intersect. Further advertising attracted three men who shared J.B.’s Congregationalist ties—Homer Hamlin, Henry Hamilton, and Dr. Thomas Holyoke. The four traveled together by rail, wagon, and foot in March 1854 to a grove four miles south of. the promised rail juncture, near what is now the Jacob Krumm Nature Preserve.
After a lively debate over locating the settlement on the open prairie instead of near a river where timber would be readily available, J.B. got his way, and the town was established at a treeless spot where red flags marked the future rail intersection. Another debate centered on a name for the town. Hamilton wanted to name it Stella, but J.B. prevailed once again, and it was called Grinnell.
Decisions made, J.B. journeyed to Iowa City to file a claim for 5,000 acres that were divided among the four men. J.B. platted the town and directed the construction of a primitive shelter for new arrivals as well as a combination church and school. From his own holdings, he set aside land for a park, donated land for a cemetery, and sold lots to arriving settlers at cost.
As families from the East began to appear, J.B. took the leadership role for the new settlement. In keeping with his desire for a moral community, the deeds for sales of land in the early years stipulated that if liquor were sold on the premises, the title would revert back to J.B. The constitution of the church stipulated that no intoxicating wine shall be used at the Lord’s Supper, nor shall any intoxicating liquor be used by the members as an article of drink or traffic.
The abolition of slavery was also written into the church constitution: No person shall be admitted to the church, or allowed to remain in it, who either practices or is not earnestly or actively opposed to buying or selling human beings, or holding them in slavery for gain.
J.B. was fervent in his desire to make the church and school paramount and attractive institutions from the start.
In addition to building a school for the town’s children, he donated 20 acres to establish what he named Grinnell University. Hamilton also demonstrated his commitment to university education by donating a percentage of the profits from the sale of his land holdings to the future university.
Before any buildings were constructed or students enrolled, however, J.B. lured an existing college, Iowa College in Davenport, to merge with Grinnell University and move to Grinnell. The school, known as Iowa College until it was renamed Grinnell College in 1909, has shaped the town’s character from the beginning to the present day.
Although J.B. picked a site for his town because of the promise of intersecting rail lines, it was not until 1863 that an extension of the east-west Rock Island Railroad, known then as the Mississippi & Missouri Railroad, actually reached Grinnell. The north-south extension of the Central Railroad of Iowa arrived in 1869. J.B. himself built a third rail line in 1875 to connect the town to the county seat of Montezuma, 22 miles to the south. The enterprise was called the Grinnell & Montezuma Railroad Company.
The young town had its share of setbacks. A cyclone in June 1882 killed 39 people and destroyed the entire college campus as well as 120 buildings in town. Rebuilding took place almost immediately, and commencement at the college went on as scheduled. In 1889, a fire destroyed the major part of the business district. Merchants immediately relocated to temporary shanty quarters in the park across the street while new buildings (brick and stone this time) went up to replace the burned-out wooden structures.
While agriculture dominated the town’s early years and continues to have a major influence on the local economy, manufacturing has also played an important role. First, it was buggies and gloves and then automobiles, washing machines, and shoes. In more recent years, products have included playground equipment, farm machinery, sportswear, mufflers, signage, and windows and doors.
Grinnell’s location has benefitted more from proximity to major roadways than to the railroad tracks. First, it was the River to River Road, the first road across the state (roughly the present Highway 6), built in 1910. Later, it was Interstate 80, the cross-country highway that passes three miles south of the city. The portion of Interstate 80 near Grinnell was completed in the early 1960s. Because of the increasing popularity of automobile travel, the last passenger train stopped in Grinnell in 1970. The train depot, abandoned for many years, was restored and turned into a restaurant in the late 1990s.
Grinnellians over the years have made their marks on the world. A young aviator, Billy Robinson, invented a rotary airplane engine, built his own plane, and set a record for continuous flight in 1914. His dream of manufacturing airplanes in Grinnell under the name Grinnell Aeroplane Company ended with his death in 1916 in an attempt to set an altitude record. During the Great Depression, Harry Hopkins was an advisor and confidant of Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Hallie Flanagan ran the Federal Theater Project. Robert Noyce helped revolutionize modern technology by coinventing the integrated circuit and cofounding Intel Corporation.
Today, Grinnell is known for its wealth of architectural styles from the late 1800s and early 1900s, including Gothic Revival, Italianate, Queen Anne, Richardsonian Romanesque, Neoclassical, Foursquare, Shingle, and Prairie.
The city is represented in the National Register of Historic Places with two historic districts and 15 individual buildings. The Merchants National Bank, designed by Louis Sullivan, is a National Historic Landmark.
One
BUILDING A TOWN
In 1855 there was not a tree within three miles of Grinnell. We could see for
miles, and all my longings for vast open spaces were