Iowa, Iowa, Iowa

So let’s continuing on the theme of items uncovered while researching Geographic Matryoshka with US States. I’ll also recognize the upcoming Presidential primaries in Iowa in a couple of weeks. Maybe an Iowa topic might be appropriate.

I’d uncovered a wonderful triple sequence formed by Iowa Township in Iowa County in the state of Iowa. That put it right up there in exalted territory along with Oklahoma City/Oklahoma Co./Oklahoma and New York Co. (i.e., Manhattan)/New York City/New York. The latter two were a little more obvious and significant. I hadn’t anticipated Iowa.

Iowa Township was rather obscure. There were only 148 people living in Homestead, its principal settlement, as of the 2010 Census. That made it just a tad less meaningful than the more obvious trifectas of Oklahoma and New York. Still, the relationship existed and it counted as much as the others for purposes of this exercise.

The triple layer arrangement had been around for a long time, too. I turned to the History of Iowa County, Iowa (1881) which helpfully noted that Iowa Township existed ever since Iowa County was first subdivided in 1847. It was one of the county’s original townships in a much larger form until chipped away to create additional townships in later decades, as more people moved in to farm its fertile soil.


Brush Run

One never knows what one may uncover while searching for information on obscure jurisdictions. Often it was very little. However the History of Iowa County turned out to be a goldmine. That little Iowa Township tucked within a rural county of the same name hid quite a colorful past, particularly in its former Brush Run community.

Depravity

Brush Run sounded like a quiet, relaxing name and yet the History claimed “… the first settlers along the section of country where Brush Run is were very depraved…” I’ve consulted a lot of similar county history books over the years and they’ve tended to be puff pieces exclaiming the wonders of their out-of-the-way domains. I’d never seen any of them refer to settlers within their own boundaries as depraved. And it got better:

“Though Brush Run is scarcely any run at all it is noted in history. No creek or flow of water in Iowa county has witnessed so many deeds of love and hate, so many scenes of joy and sorrow, so many drunken revels and fights, so many suicides and murders… the headquarters of drunkards and cut throats.”

It then kindly offered several examples of depravity and debauchery, most distressingly,

“A child six years of age was attacked with delirium tremens one day in November, 1857, at Brush Run. The father was in jail at Iowa City for selling whisky, and the mother, in a fit of drunkeness had recently fallen and killed herself.”

Whitewashing

Brush Run did not appear on any modern maps, nor did it receive a mention within the records of the US Geological Survey’s vast database of place names, past or present. I supposed local officials changed it somewhere along the way given Brush Run’s notoriety. They simply erased the name from the map. However, the paper trail hadn’t disappeared completely and I was able to trace its evolution. Brush Creek faded, and Homestead soon replaced it at the same approximate location.


Homestead

The Homestead settlement bore no resemblance to Brush Creek whatsoever, in fact it was pretty much its polar opposite. Homestead arose as a rail depot and shipping point for the nearby Amana Colonies. Amana had its roots in a religious movement that began in Germany and settled on the American prairie to escape persecution.

“In 1855 they arrived in Iowa. After an inspired testimony directed the people to call their village, ‘Bleibtreu’ or ‘remain faithful’ the leaders chose the name Amana from the Song of Solomon 4:8. Amana means to ‘remain true’. Six villages were established, a mile or two apart, across a river valley tract of some 26,000 acres – Amana, East Amana, West Amana, South Amana, High Amana and Middle Amana. The village of Homestead was added in 1861, giving the Colony access to the railroad.”


The Meteorite

Homestead. Photo by Jon Taylor; (CC BY-SA 2.0)
The Homestead Meteorite

Homestead was the only one of the seven Amana villages in Iowa Township. The remainder were across the nearby border in Amana Township. Homestead didn’t receive much attention after that except for the meteorite that exploded directly overhead.

“The Amana Meteorite flashed into Iowa between 10:00 and 11:00 pm on Friday February 12, 1875. Its bright fireball was visible from Omaha to Chicago and St. Paul to St. Louis… it exploded over Amana, producing a meteorite field approximately 3 miles wide and 5 miles long.”

Don’t let references to the “Amana” Meteorite fool you. The closest settlement was Homestead, and indeed the Meteoritical Society declared Homestead as the meteorite’s OFFICIAL name. People still search for fragments of it today.


And… Ashton Kutcher?

Ashton Kutcher by David Shankbone. CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Things remained quiet in old Homestead for more than a century after that, remaining in obscurity until Ashton Kutcher grew up there. Recently he even renovated his childhood home. He was one of the few people who could claim that he lived in Iowa Township in Iowa County in the state of Iowa.

Somehow I never saw that one coming.


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One response to “Iowa, Iowa, Iowa”

  1. January First-of-May Avatar
    January First-of-May

    Arkansas Post, the first European settlement in the lower Mississippi Valley and the former capital of Arkansas Territory (as previously described in Riverboat Adventure Part 4), is located in Arkansas Township, Arkansas County, Arkansas.
    Best I can figure out, this “handful of houses set deep in the countryside” (to quote from the previous article) is the only populated place in the entire township. (It is certainly the largest if it’s not the only.) And given its previous history as a territorial capital, it is presumably what the township (and likely the county) was named for.

    As far as I can tell, there are no other examples of X township in X county of X state, but I hadn’t checked very carefully.

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