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Dodge County History and Information
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Dodge County Facts


Click HERE to see full size D.O.T. County Map

Dodge County was created on February 20, 1855 (Organized in 55) from Rice County & Unorganized Territory. The County Seat is Mantorville. The County was named for Henry Dodge and his son Augustus. Henry Dodge, was territorial governor, delegate in Congress and U.S. Senator from Wisconsin, 1836-57. Augustus Dodge was delegate to Congress for Iowa Territory, 1840-47 and U.S. Senator from Iowa, 1848-55.

Counties adjacent to Dodge County are Rice County (northwest), Goodhue County (northeast), Olmsted County (east), Mower County (south), Steele County (west). Cities and Towns Include Blooming Prairie, Claremont, Dodge Center, Hayfield, Kasson, Mantorville, West Concord. Townships Include Ashland, Canisteo, Claremont, Concord, Ellington, Hayfield, Mantorville, Milton, Ripley, Vernon, Wasioja, Westfield Townships. See also County History and County Courthouse for more details.

 

There are free downloadable and printable forms to help with your research. These include U.S. Census Extraction Forms, U.K. Census Extraction Forms, Research Calendar, Ancestral Chart, Research Extract, Correspondence Record , Family Group Sheet , Source Summary Form.

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Records at the Dodge County Courthouse
PLEASE READ FIRST!! Please call the clerk's department to confirm hours, mailing address, fees and other specifics before visiting or requesting information because of sometimes changing contact information.

All Departments below can be contacted by clicking the link, by contacting the Phone number below for each department or contacting the County Courthouse at 22 6th Street East, Mantorville, MN 55955-7103; Phone: (507) 635-6239. NOTE: The record dates below are from the earliest date to present time.

   Dodge County Recorder's Office has Birth Records from 1870, Marriage Records from 1858, Death Records from 1870 and Land Records from 1856.
   The Recorders Office is responsible for all the real estate records for properties located in the County. Permanent records of deeds, mortgages and other various real estate records are recorded/filed in this office. As Local Registrar, the office protects and issues certified copies of Birth and Death records, Marriage Certificates & Military Discharge Records.

   Dodge County Court Administrator's Office has Probate Records from 1857 and has Court Records from 1859.
   The Court Administrator's Office maintains court files for Civil, Criminal, Traffic, Probate, Conciliation, Juvenile, Tax and Family Court matters.

Search Online Click Here to Search Minnesota Court, Land, Wills & Financial Records! - Researchers often overlook the importance of court records, probate records, and land records as a source of family history information.

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Court Records. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Court Records by clicking the link below:

  • Minnesota Naturalization Records Index, 1854-1957: An index to the microfilmed Minnesota Naturalization Records
  • Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
  • Minnesota Land Records: This database contains information on Minnesota (U.S.A.) land records. The database comes from the Bureau of Land Management's Minnesota Pre-1908 Homestaed and Cash Entry Patent and Cadastral Survey Plat Index. Information recorded in the collection includes patentee name, land office, legal description, etc.
  • Dodge County, Minnesota Court Books at Amazon.com

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Dodge County Tax Records

The Minnesota Historical Society holds large numbers of county property tax records, filed under the respective county. Some of the tax records are for specific municipalities. No determination has been made concerning tax record holdings in the county courthouse.

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Tax Records. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Tax Records by clicking the link below:

  • Dodge County Treasurers Office - The treasurer is responsible for keeping a complete accounting of all monies collected and expended by all the county departments. This includes the investing of available funds and accurately distributing the interest received. The department is also responsible for the collection of taxes and distribution to the various taxing entities within the County.
  • Dodge County, Minnesota Tax Books at Amazon.com

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Dodge County Vital Records
Search Online Click Here to Search Minnesota Birth, Marriage & Death Records! - Birth, marriage, and death records are connected with central life events. They are prime sources for genealogical information. Look also for baptism, christening, and burial records in this collection.

Some documents are just too important to wait six weeks for. With VitalChek Express Certificate Service you won’t have to. Birth, Marriage, Divorce & Death Certificates Signed. Sealed. Delivered. Often in as few as three business days!

   Minnesota Department of Health, Attention: Office of the State Registrar, P.O. Box 64882, St. Paul, MN 55164. It is no longer necessary to go to the registrar's office of the county where the birth or death took place. You may go to a registrar's office in any county in Minnesota for births that took place during of after 1900 and for deaths that took place during or after 1997. They have the following records:

  • Birth Certificates: Avalible since 1900 to 3 months ago.
    • Cost: $16.00 for Certified and $13.00 for Non-Certified Certificates. For births that took place before 1900, go to the local registrar office in the county where the birth took place.
    • Processing Time: Filled requests take 4-6 weeks when ordered by mail (Application for Certified and Non-certified) or 2-5 Days when you order online.
  • Death Certificates: Avalible since Jan 1908.
    • Cost: $13.00 for Certified and Non-Certified Certificates. For deaths that took place before 1900, go to the local registrar office in the county where the death took place.
    • Processing Time: Filled requests take 4-6 weeks when ordered by mail (Application for Certified and Non-certified) or 2-5 Days when you order online.
  • Marriage Certificates: Certified copies may be available from the Local Registrar in the county where the license was issued or you can order them online.
  • Divorces: Certified copies may be available from the Local Registrar in the county where the divorce was granted.

Order On-Line:  To obtain a certified copy of a vital record by on-line purchase with a credit card, please link to VitalChek.

Order In Person: The Dept of Health no longer accepts walk-in or phone orders because of a change in Minnesota law. However, you may complete your requests by mail or online.

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Vital Records. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Vital Records by clicking the link below:

  • Search the Social Security Death Index for FREE
  • Minnesota Birth Index, 1935-2002: This database is an index created by the Minnesota Department of Health to approximately 5.2 million births occurring in the State of Minnesota, USA, between 1935 and 2002. Information contained in this index includes child's full name, father's full name, mother's maiden name, birth date, birth county, and state file number.
  • Minnesota Marriage Collection, 1958-2001: This database is an index to individuals who were married in the state of Minnesota (U.S.A.) from 1958-2001. Information that may be found in this database for each entry includes bride and groom's full names, their ages, birth dates, and marriage date and place.
  • Minnesota Divorce Index, 1970-1995: This database contains a statewide index of divorces filed in Minnesota between 1970 and 1995. Information that may be found in this database includes: husband's name and age, wife's name and age, divorce date, and divorce county.
  • Minnesota Death Index, 1908-2002: This database is an index of deaths recorded by the State of Minnesota, USA, from 1908 to 2002. The index includes: name of the deceased, city and county of death, date of death, birth date, birthplace, mother's maiden name, and state file number.
  • Dodge County, Minnesota Birth, Marriage & Death Books at Amazon.com

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Dodge County Census Records
Search Online Click Here to Search Minnesota Voter Lists & Census Records! - Few, if any, records reveal as many details about individuals and families as do government census records. Substitute records can be used when the official census is unavailable.

  Countywide Records: Federal Population Schedules that exist for Dodge County, Minnesota are 1860, 1870, 1880, 1890 (fragment, see below), 1900, 1910, 1920 and 1930. Other Federal Schedules to look at when researching your Family Tree in Dodge County, Minnesota are Industry and Agriculture Schedules availible for the years 1860, 1870 and 1880. The Mortality Schedules for the years 1860, 1870 and 1880. There are free downloadable and printable Census forms to help with your research. These include U.S. Census Extraction Forms and U.K. Census Extraction Forms.

See Also Statewide Records that exist for Minnesota

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Census Records. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Census Records by clicking the link below:

  • Minnesota Census, 1835-90: This database contains indexes to the Minnesota (U.S.A.) portions of the 1850-1880 U.S. Federal Censuses as well as indexes to the 1835-1839 Tax Lists, 1849 Territorial Census, and the 1890 Veteran's Schedule. Information contained in these indexes can include name, state, county, township, year of record, and name of record set.
  • Minnesota Territorial and State Censuses, 1849-1905: This database contains the Minnesota territorial and state censuses from 1849-1905. Information available for an individual will vary according to the census year and the information requested on the census form. Some of the information contained in this database though includes: name, enumeration place, age, gender, race, and birthplace.
  • Census Online - Minnesota Census Records
  • The USGenWeb Archives Minnesota CENSUS IMAGES PROJECT
  • Dodge County, Minnesota Census Books at Amazon.com

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Dodge County Maps & Atlases

   Genealogy Atlases has images of old American atlases during the years 1795, 1814, 1822, 1823, 1836, 1838, 1845, 1856, 1866, 1879 and 1897 for other states.
   You can view rotating animated maps for Minnesota showing all the county boundaries for each census year overlayed with past and present maps so you can see the changes in county boundaries. You can view a list of maps for other states at Census Maps
   You can view rotating animated maps for Minnesota showing all the county boundary changes for each year overlayed with past and present maps so you can see the changes in county boundaries . You can view a list of maps for other states and State Department of Transportation Maps at County Maps. The Minnesota Department of Transportation has county maps the show the locations of churches, cemeteries, roads, ect... free for viewing or download here

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Maps. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Maps by clicking the link below:

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Dodge County Military Records
Search Online Click Here to Search Minnesota Military Records! - Military and civil service records provide unique facts and insights into the lives of men and women who have served their country at home and abroad.

   The uses and value of military records in genealogical research for ancestors who were veterans are obvious, but military records can also be important to re-searchers whose direct ancestors were not soldiers in any war. The fathers, grandfathers, brothers, and other close relatives of an ancestor may have served in a war, and their service or pension records could contain information that will assist in further identifying the family of primary interest. Due to the amount of genealogical information contained in some military pension files, they should never be overlooked during the research process. Those records not containing specific genealogical information are of historic value and should be included in any overall research design.

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Military Records. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Military Records by clicking the link below:

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Dodge County Genealogical Addresses

   The Repositories in this section are Archives, Libraries, Museums, Genealogical and Historical Societies. Many County Historical and Genealogical Societies publish magazines and/or news letters on a monthly, quarterly, bi-annual or annual basis. Contacting the local societies should not be over looked. State Archives and Societies are usually much larger and better organized with much larger archived materials than their smaller county cousins but they can be generalized and over look the smaller details that local societies tend to have. Libraries can also be a good place to look for local information. Some libraries have a genealogy section and may have some resources that are not located at archives or societies. Also, take a special look at any museums in the area. They sometimes have photos and items from years gone by as well as information of a genealogical interest. All these places are vitally important to the family genealogist and must not be passed over.

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Genealogical Addresses. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Genealogical Addresses by clicking the link below:

  • Dodge County Historical Society, PO Box 456, Mantorville MN 55955-0456; Phone: 507 635-5508; Hours: Noon-5 Tuesday - Saturday, Sunday 1-5, May 1 - October 15
  • West Concord Historical Society, PO Box 58, West Concord MN 55985-0058
    Location: 600 West 1st St, West Concord MN; Phone: 507 527-2628
  • Dodge County Genealogical Society, PO Box 456, Mantorville MN 55955-0456
    Location: Dodge County Historical Society Museum.
  • Local Minnesota Researchers, Find a local researcher or become a local researcher.
  • Minnesota Historical Society Research Center, 1500 Mississippi Street, St. Paul, MN 55101, (612) 296-6980
    Serves Dodge, Fillmore, Goodhue, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Wabasha and Winona counties.
  • Minnesota State Archives, 345 W. Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55102-1906 • 651-259-3260
  • Minnesota Historical Society, 345 W. Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55102-1906 • 651-259-3000
  • Minnesota Genealogical Society, 1185 Concord St. N. Suite 218, South St. Paul, MN 55075-1187; (651) 455-9057
  • National Archives - Great Lakes Region (Chicago), 7358 South Pulaski Road, Chicago, Illinois 60629-5898; 773-948-9001; E-mail: chicago.archives@nara.gov (Maintains retired records from Federal agencies and courts in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Minnesota.)
  • Minnesota Newspapers & Periodicals Records - Newspapers and periodicals are the diaries of local communities. They are excellent sources of family history details - often recorded nowhere else. Look for obituaries, marriages, legal notices, and more found in our Historical Newspaper Archives.
  • Minnesota Genealogical Society Books at Amazon.com

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Dodge County Church & Cemeteries
Search Online Click Here to Search Minnesota Obituary Records! - This database is a compilation of obituaries published in U.S. newspapers, collected from various online sources. Obituaries can vary in the amount of information they contain, but many of them are genealogical goldmines, including information such as names, dates, places of birth and death, marriage information, and family relationships.

   There are many churches and cemeteries in Dodge County. Some transcriptions are online. A great site is the Dodge County Tombstone Transcription Project.

The Minnesota Historical Records Survey Project of Madison published the Directory of Churches and Religious Organizations in Minnesota in 1941 and Guide to Church Vital Statistics Records in Minnesota in 1942. There are also numerous publications by the project for specific denominations. Extensive microfilm collections of church records in Minnesota are available through the FHL. The State Historical Society of Minnesota and Area Research Centers have a variety of church records including microfilm and original records.

Numerous cemeteries have been read and transcribed by local genealogical societies in Minnesota. The transcriptions are frequently deposited with an Area Research Center, a local library, or the State Historical Society of Minnesota. A considerable number have been printed in the Minnesota State Genealogical Society Newsletter. Some have been privately published.

The Minnesota State Old Cemetery Society, 6100 West Mequon Road, Mequon, WI 53092, publishes a newsletter and maintains an archive of tombstone inscriptions from around the state. Contact the society for membership information

Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Cemetery & Church Records. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Cemetery & Church Records by clicking the link below:

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Family Trees & Genealogy Tidbits

Search Online Click Here to Search Minnesota Family Tree Records! - The use of published genealogies, electronic files containing genealogical lineage, and other compiled sources can be of tremendous value to a researcher.

   When view family trees online or not, be sure to only take the info at face value and always follow up with your own sources or verify the ones they provide. Below is a list of online resources for Dodge County Family Trees, web forums and other family type information. Email us with websites containing Dodge County Family Trees, web forums and other family type information by clicking the link below:

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County History

Minnesota County History Name Index: This database is a name index of eleven county histories and plat books for the area immediately south of the city of St. Paul in the U.S. state of Minnesota. Researchers will find the name of the county resident, the book in which the person's name appears, and the page number. Where information is available, town of residence is also given.
Minnesota Crew Lists, 1929-1952: For several decades in the early half of the twentieth century, Two Harbors, Minnesota was one of the busiest iron ore loading ports in the world. This database is an index to the crew lists (NOT passenger lists) of vessels that arrived at Two Harbors,

The first settlers here found a plentiful supply of timber. Besides the hardwood, Mantorville had white pine on its bluffs, and Concord possessed a grove of cottonwood. Milton had the largest timber area, followed by Mantorville, Wasioja, Concord, Ashland, Claremont and Canisteo townships.

Tom Holmes, of Holmes Landing (later Fountain City) joined his Indian friends annually and hunted in this region before the settlers came. He once declared to a friend that this was “the most beautiful country he had ever seen in his life”.

Early historical accounts report that herds of buffalo, elk and other game were plentiful in this area. One writer mentions antelope in this region.

Government surveyors set lines for the western townships of the county in 1853. A.A. Crampton, a later Mantorville resident, was one of the group. Dodge County in 1849 was a part of Wabasha County, and in 1851 was divided between Wabasha and Dakota Counties. Dodge County, including a number of townships which later were made a part of Steele County, became a separate unit in 1885.

Dodge County was named in honor of a Wisconsin man – Henry Dodge, twice governor of Wisconsin. One historian includes the son, Augustus C. Dodge, of Iowa, to share this honor.

Dodge County was organized for local government in 1855. Peter Mantor, one of the early founders of Mantorville, took a census of the county in the summer of 1855, discovered more than fifty voters among the inhabitants of the county who then numbered about 100 persons, journeyed to St. Paul and petitioned Governor Gorman to appoint county officials and institute county organization. The governor confirmed the following men to serve as county officers: Peter Mantor, Notary Public; James M. Sumner, George W. Slocum and William Durand as county commissioners; J.B. Hubbell as sheriff; J.H. Shober as Register of Deeds; J.R. Dart as treasurer; Samuel Burwell as district attorney; William Chadwell as county surveyor; J.E. Bancroft as assessor; and G.P. Bancroft, R. Herzog, Alonzo Way as justices. Constables were S.G. Irish, E. Watrous and O.B. Kidder.

An interesting sidelight on this event is that recounted by H.A. Smith in his history of Dodge County. “There has always been a popular legend current in connection with the above appointments, that they were made by the Governor with the understanding that Captain Mantor would recommend only good Democrats – which he perhaps did to the “best of his knowledge and belief – and if afterward many of them proved to be “Black Republicans”, he could hardly be held accountable.”

The county commissioners convened for their first meeting August 4, 1855. One account says this first meeting was held at the Mantor store in Mantorville and that following meetings were held in homes, at the Hubbell House, and at the school house. For some years after this a place of meeting was rented for the board’s sessions. The county auditor, January 5, 1857, reported that the county had spent, up to that date, $1,178.92. Dodge County was placed in the Fifth Judicial District by the State Constitution effective May 11, 1858.

Early Settlers and Settlement

Who the first white person was to visit Dodge county is not known. Some believe that a French fur trader, from Canada, was one of the first, if not the first, to tread the soil here, in the spring of 1655. Later visitors were James Reed, and Indian farmer and Tom Holmes of Fountain City. The latter once made mention of the “Zumbro”. David Cratte, a famous guide, born in 1837, describes this locality as dangerous to travel because of Indians.

In 1854, following the government surveys of 1853, Eli P. Waterman, from Root River Valley, southern Minnesota, and Peter and Riley Mantor from Pennsylvania, came to the present site of Mantorville and established their claims. Later the Mantors returned to their home at Linesville, PA and persuaded Frank Mantor, a brother, E.P. Waterman, James Wilson, William Cunningham, J.M. Sumner, William Fowler, H.O. Parmeter, S.G. Irish, Joel Watkins, M.B. Dolson and two others, whose names are not know, to join them in their return to the new home site they had previously name “Mantorville”.

On April 14, 1854, this little group of immigrants arrived at Mantorville. The next day they pushed on to Concord, felled timber and erected a log house for James M. Sumner, the first residence built in the county. They then returned to Mantorville and began labor on houses for E.P. Waterman, Peter Mantor and William Fowler.

Before the end of the year the future county contained many such cabins, with the exception of the extreme northwestern and extreme southern parts. In May, 1854, a number of pioneers settled in Milton township and other considered building at Claremont. An early writer gives us this picture: “Here and there (winter of 1854) over its (wilderness) inhospitable expanse rose the low roofs that sheltered the indomitable pioneer. At Mantorville and at Sumner’s Grove (Concord) were little nuclei of a few cabins each, while in these same townships, as also in Milton, Canisteo, Ripley, Ashland, Wasioja and Claremont, were a few others, isolated, and several miles from each other – perhaps a dozen or twenty in the whole county.”

Many of the first settlers were instrumental in bringing others to the new land of promise. By July, 1855, a considerable number of immigrants arrived to make their homes in the county. The early settlers were predominantly of New England birth. Some, too, came from Wisconsin, the more settled parts of Minnesota and east central states. A group of New Hampshire homeseekers located at Rice Lake village and the first cabin to be constructed in the village was later used as a stagecoach tavern. The first hotel in the county was built and operated by John R. Hubbell at Mantorville, who came here from Illinois. It was a log affair, 16 by 24 feet, two stories in height. The later structure, built of Dodge County stone, was started in October, 1855, and opened for business on Thanksgiving Day, 1856.

The Hubbell House at Mantorville has in its present possession the original desk register from the early day Hubbell House. This register contains such names as Horace Greeley, General Sherman and other notables. Once under way settlement progressed rapidly. Stores were built in Mantorville. A photographic copy of the front page of the first issued of The Mantorville Express (July 16, 1857) the first paper published in Dodge County, portrays an interesting column of business and professional “cards”. Three Attorneys are listed: A.J. Edgerton, Mantorville; James George, Wasioja; and M.N. Fowler, Mantorville. Dr. J.R. Dart was the county’s first physician and surgeon, with “office at the drugstore”. M.B. Lewis advertised himself as “Steamboat Agent, Red Wing, M.T.” also “Receiving and Forwarding and General commission Merchant”. Mantorville Lodge had a “card” which reads: “No. 11, A. of F. & A. M., meet in the Masonic Hall, every Thursday evening at 6 o’clock. R. Mantor, Sec’y”.

William Chadwell was County Surveyor, residing at Mantorville village. A Mrs. G.W. Shultes, has a business card reading: “Fashionable Milliner and Dress Maker, first door south of Hubbell’s Hotel, Main St., Mantorville, M. T. A general assortment of Bonnets and Bonnet Trimmings constantly on hand”. W. Stanard announces himself as “Boot and Shoe Manufacturer, also Leather Dealer. A general assortment of boot and shoe leather and findings for sale. One door north of the Printing Office, Mantorville, July, 1857.” C.B. Russ advertises the Russ House “The proprietor having refitted and furnished the new and spacious Hotel, formerly known as the Mantorville House, is prepared to accommodate permanent and transient boarders and the traveling public generally.” The last business card in the column is short and to the point: “MONEY TO LOAN. Inquire of Z.B. Page.” Characteristic of early day newspapers there is not a news item to be found on the front page.

In the first few years of the county’s growth Norwegians and Germans came for settlement. In the southern portion of the county a colony of Norwegian people formed in the 1850’s. Ole Erickson and Jens Olson Fossum are recorded as first settlers in Hayfield Township. There were also groups of Swiss and some Danish, Scotch, English, Irish and Canadian home seekers. John Armstrong, of Irish descent, was Vernon Township’s first settler. The village of Berne, in the northern part of Dodge County was the center of a Swiss settlement and received its name from motherland city.

Morris Dolson, son of Mr. and Mrs. M.B. Dolson, was the first white person born in this county. M.B. Dolson broke the first ground and planted the first crop in the county, at Concord. Early historical accounts tell of a “Terrible hail storm (in the summer of 1858), so violent as to destroy nearly all the crops, and in some instances, pigs and cattle.” Its force was felt most in Milton, Concord, Mantorville, Ellington and Wasioja townships. Ice cakes ten inches in circumference and one half to two pounds in weight were reported to have fallen. Suffering the privation threatened the settlers, but aid from various sources even as far distant as New York, relieved the situation. Mr. A. LaDue, at one time foreman and joint publisher of the Mantorville Express, writing to the Express on its twenty-fifth anniversary referred to his association with the newspaper and mentions the storm. “That being the year,” he said, “of the never to be forgotten hail storm, when what few settlers we had were obliged to subsist on slippery elm bark, corn meal and turnips…”

Deep and terrible tragedy sometimes struck in the early pioneer homes. The three sons of Peter DeSent, in Ripley township, were killed by lightening in the spring of 1870. The lads were in bed, asleep at the time.

Among the earliest settlers were: Isaac Irish, Ripley Township’s first home builder; Isaac N. Taylors and Lorenzo Sanborn, first to settle in Wasioja Township; Dr. J.N. Dart, who began his practice of medicine in Dodge county in 1855. Ellington Township’s first settlers were William South and James Harvey.

The first birth recorded in Vernon Township was that of Thomas Thompson, born July 4, 1856, son of Andrew Tompson and wife. Born on the same day was Mary Sabin of Ellington Township – first white child of the township; and first white child born in Wasioja Township was Neil Mason, July, 1856.

INDIANS

Sioux Indians annually gathered at what was known in the early days as “Rice Lake” to harvest wild rice. The region of Dodge County was common hunting and combat ground for the Mdewakanton Sioux who often battled the Sauk and Fox Indians ranging this distance from their Iowa encampments. Indians resided in Vernon Township as late as 1856-57. Some died there during a winter’s residence and were buried in the snow until the spring trek west. A band of Indians living in Milton Township lost a number of their members my smallpox in 1855.

On the third of July, 1855, Chief Waupaconta and a fellow tribesman visited the village of Mantorville and on their way back to the encampment in Milton Township removed provisions, money and a coat from a cabin belonging to a Mr. E.A. Bunker, who having faith that no white settler would stoop to thievery, he organized a band of 15 white settlers armed with rifles and pistols, and rode to the big timber where more than 300 men, women and children of the Sioux tribe were encamped. Dismounting and creeping close to the camp through high grass bordering it, the band of whites dashed into the Indian village and quickly surrounded the chief’s teepee before he could escape. The Indian leader denied complicity in the theft, but by means of threat was finally persuaded to produce the money and return the coat.

An Indian panic in the summer of 1862 was reported by the Mantorville Express of that time. Indians were reported as a threat in a southerly direction from Mantorville and many people rushed to the village for refuge, some ready to seek protection behind the stone walls of the Hubbell House.

COUNTY SEAT

In the beginning of the county’s incoming immigrant movement Mantorville was the leading settlement. It thrived to the extent that it was once regarded as a possible rival to Rochester and other cities of size in the state. Unable to retain railroad service and, perhaps, from other contributing causes, Mantorville dropped from the race for sizable growth and now remains an inland village. It has however, since the first meeting of the first county board August 4, 1855, remained the seat of the county government. The sate legislature, in 1856, officially located the county seat at Mantorville with the provision that its permanent location should be subject to the voters of the county.

Voters in the fall of 1857 rejected a proposition to move the county seat to the village of Sacramento, a settlement platted in 1855 on the Zumbro River and adjoining the west edge of the present Mantorville Township. Then, in 1859, Wasioja aspired to be the county seat but lost by a vote of 117 for, 415 against, the change. Dodge Center tried unsuccessfully in 1899 to be the seat of county government, but the electorate at a special election, decided by a vote of 1,577 to 1,125 to make no change in the location of the county seat.

TOWNSHIPS

The twelve townships of Dodge County, named as at present, were divided by the County Board of Commissioners April 5, 1858. They were organized on the following dates: Ashland – July 15, 1858, Canisteo – no date found, Claremont – May 11, 1858, Concord – May 11, 1858, Ellington – May 11, 1858, Hayfield – March 30, 1872, Mantorville – May 11, 1858, Milton – May 20, 1858, Ripley – May 14, 1858, Vernon – March 4, 1858, Wasioja – April 1858, Westfield – March 22, 1868. Canisteo Township held their first election October 1856.

In the spring of 1869 an attempt was made to divide Mantorville township and make a new division known as “township of Kasson”. Officers were elected, but later the Supreme Court ruled the action unconstitutional.

VILLIAGES

The village of Claremont was incorporated in 1878. The Winona and Saint Peter Railway Company is credited with building the town of Claremont and obliterating the hamlet of Rice Lake, on the north shore of the small lake of that name in Dodge County. The settlement had been platted in 1856, and it had a post office, blacksmith shop, church and a few stores and houses. Dodge Center was platted in 1869 and incorporated in 1872; Hayfield was incorporated in 1896; Kasson was platted in 1865 and incorporated in 1870. It was laid out by Jabez Hyde Kasson and named for him. A Pennsylvanian, he came to this county in 1856. Mantorville was platted in 1856 and incorporated in 1857; West Concord was incorporated in 1894. It was given its title because it lay to the west of Concord, one of the oldest communities of Dodge County.

In January 1870, the state legislature passed a bill changing the name of Dodge Center to Siles. The bill was reconsidered the next day, tabled and never further acted on.

THE CIVIL WAR

Dodge County made a total contribution of 451 men to the war between the states. Broken into townships we have the following order: Mantorville – 105, Wasioja – 104, Concord – 59, Milton – 58, Ashland – 40, Claremont – 38, Canisteo – 16, Ellington – 15, Ripley – 10, Vernon – 6. Seventy-two men from Dodge County were mustered in as volunteers in the Second Minnesota Infantry in July, 1861. James George and Peter Mantor were captains; H.T. Couse and C.B. Cilley were lieutenants. The first county casualty was James M. Underwood, Co. F. First Minnesota Volunteers. He was killed July 21, 1861 at Bull Run. Mr. Underwood enlisted from Concord. The second county casualty was Joseph R. Garrison, who died in Libby prison from wounds suffered at Bull Run. In January, February and March 1863 men from Dodge County were enlisted for service against the Indians on the frontier.

SOME EARLY BEGINNINGS

In June, 1869, Dodge County purchased the 200 acre Evarts’ farm in Wasioja Township to convert into a county poor farm. Five thousand dollars was the sum paid. The Dodge County Agricultural Society was organized July, 1857, at Mantorville. The officers were H.A. Pratt, J.E. Bancroft and H.P. Whallom.

Kasson’s I.O.O.F. Lodge No. 45, had its beginning in that village the summer of 1874. The Milton Grange was organized with 44 members February, 1872. The Grand Lodge of A.F. & A.M. granted a charter to Mantorville Lodge No. 11, A.F. & A.M., January 6, 1857.

Early day postmasters of the county included Robert Moffett, who, in the summer of 1856, became Ashland village’s first postmaster. In February, 1879, M.J. Ellingsen was appointed postmaster at Oslo, but Ole Havey was Vernon Township’s first postmaster. Date, 1868. Wasioja had its first post office in 1857. Postmaster was C.H. Moses. Claremont’s first post office came in 1855; George Hitchcock was in charge. D.L. Tyler was not only the first mercantile store proprietor in Dodge Center, in 1867, but also the village’s first postmaster. Berne had a post office in 1858. West Concord’s first postmaster was Luke Garvin. The office was established about 1886. Mr. Garvin was also first agent for the C.G.W. Ry. at West Concord.

A store was opened at Berne by Robert Schmidt in 1856. The first general store in Mantorville was operated by John Shober in 1854. We learn from the West Concord Enterprise of Oct. 3, 1935, that the first store building erected by Watson G. Avery who, for many years prior, had been a successful merchant at Concord, 3 ½ miles west of West Concord. The first dwelling house in the village was that of T.J. Dykes; the second was built by C.E. Sheils. The first law office in the county was established in Mantorville in the year 1855. In May, 1856, a steam sawmill was constructed in Ashland village by Messrs. Sumners and Webster. Henry Naegeli, Sr., organized the first brass band in Dodge County in the winter of 1861. A brewery was constructed on the South side of Fifth street in Mantorville, May 1, 1857, by John Hirschi, of Switzerland. In January 1862, B.S. Cook paid Dodge County fifteen dollars for the county’s first license to sell intoxicating liquor within its boundaries. In the summer of 1874 President Grant sent Peter Mantor, of Mantorville, to Bismarck Territory of Dakota, as Register of the U.S. Land Office there. Mantorville was host to the first county fair held in Dodge County. It was held late in the fall, October 8, 1857. It was also the first county fair in the Minnesota Territory.

The first marriage ceremony performed in Dodge County was solemnized at Mantorville October 3, 1855. The groom was John Hart, and the bride was Amanda Orcutt. The marriage took place in a tent with Justice of the Peace, G.P. Bancroft, officiating. The first wedding in Vernon Township took place in the spring of 1857. The parties were Lars Langland and Miss Aasa Olson. The first marriage in Westfield Township was that of Guttorm Hilson and Jane Christenson, July 27, 1857.

The first white person to die in Dodge County, says an old Atlas, was an infant child of Milton residents – Mr. and Mrs. John Livengood; but from the book “History of Medicine in Dodge County” we find the claim that in February, 1855, “Mrs. Mastin died in what is now Kasson, the first death of a white person in the town and county.” Later county deaths of distinguished persons were those of Hon. Samuel Lord, Sr., Judge of the Fifth Judicial District, who died February 22, 1880, at Mantorville, when 49 years of age; Peter Mantor, who died in the village bearing his name, September 23, 1888 at 72 years of age; and then Hon. A.D. LaDue, who died at Mantorville, Jan. 12, 1899; an early pioneer attorney, legislator, newspaper publisher and railway builder. Twelve hundred persons attended the funeral of Dr. Josiah R. Dartt, September 11, 1874, at Mantorville. Dr. Dartt was Dodge County’s first physician.

NEWSPAPER

Dodge County’s first weekly newspaper was the Mantorville Express, published by J.E. Bancroft and R. Winegar. The subscription price was two dollars a year and the advertising rates were: “One column, per year, $50.00; Half column per year, $30.00; Quarter column per year, $18.00; one square (12 lines or less) one insertion, $1.00; each subsequent insertion, 50 cents. Business cards (6 lines or less) one year, $3.00; one square one year, $10.00.” After Mr. Bancroft’s death March 15, 1866, at 39 years of age, Mrs. Bancroft took over the editorship and performed that function for nearly three years, the only lady editor in Minnesota.

Published only one day later than the first issue of Mantorville Express was the Wasioja Gazette. The Express made its first appearance July 16, 1857, and the Gazette, July 17, 1857. Charles Blaisdell and S.L. Pierce were the pioneer publishers of the Wasioja Gazette. The Minnesota Historical Society has a few rare copies of the Wasioja Gazette and quite complete files of the early years of the Mantorville Express. It is interesting to note that an ox team hauled the printing machinery and equipment for the Express to this county in 1857 and in fording the Zumbro River near Oronoco some equipment accidentally dropped in the river and had to be recovered from its watery bath. With the exception of one lapse, due to sale and discontinuance of the paper in 1946, the county seat has had continuous publication of a weekly since the founding of the Express in 1857.

There are at present six weekly papers in Dodge County. There are: The West Concord Enterprise, L.W. and D.L. Smith, publishers; The Claremont News, Dana A. Hinckley, publisher; the Dodge Center Star-Record, Myron A. Stivers, publisher; the Hayfield Herald, Arch Crawford, publisher; the Dodge County Independent, Phil S. Duff and B.A. Montgomery, publishers; and the Mantorville Co-op Express, published by the Mantorville Coop Printing Company.

West Concord’s first newspaper was established October 4, 1893 by H.P. Ramsborg and G.E. Sloan. These young men purchased the plant of the “Concord People” a Populist publication which had published a small sheet at intervals. More equipment was added to the shop and the name of the publication changed to West Concord Enterprise which they published weekly on Thursdays. On May 17, 1894 the paper was sold to D.E. Ash and E.A. Berdan. Circulation was around 350 at that time and the paper a five-column sheet. June 12, 1895 the paper was again sold. U.B. and B.W. Shaver, Kasson publishers, acquired possession. They installed F.W. Hall as editor, and in April 1898 A.E. Ball took charge. A.E. Pennell, a former Brainerd Dispatch publisher, next purchased the Enterprise and took possession in August 1901. The paper was enlarged to a six-column, 8 page publication and a new press and equipment purchased.

In January, 1916, half interest in the Enterprise was sold to Leslie W. Smith, who had worked for this father-in-law, Mr. Pennell for several years. In August, 1925, Mr. Pennell, due to poor health sold his interest to Mr. Smith who, in February of 1926, installed an Intertype typesetting machine and other modern equipment, making the paper an all home-print publications.

Following the close of World War II, Mr. Smith’s son, Donald L., returning from war service, entered into partnership with his farther January 1, 1946, and these two, L.W. and D.L. Smith are the present owners and publishers.

The Enterprise plant was once entirely destroyed by fire on May 20, 1923. But it missed no issues, getting its paper printed at the Leader plant at Kenyon, Minnesota for a few weeks until new equipment was installed for local project publication at West Concord. Claremont’s first newspaper was a small, two-column project called The Windmill. Doctor Horace P. Porter, a graduate of an eastern medical institution, located in Dodge County at Kasson, then went to Claremont in September of 1874. During the close of that year he began publication (December) of a small, four-page newspaper which he entitled The Windmill “circulation immense” and “published when we feel like it.” The book “History of Medicine in Dodge County” tells us this paper was printed at Kasson and distributed at the doctor’s own expense. In December, 1880, the editor began another publication which he titled “The Cosmopolitan”, but this was short lived. Dr. Porter left the state in 1883 but returned in 1884 to Claremont and managed the Cleveland House, sold drugs, and began another publication called The Q. In 1886 he left for Kansas and later died in Missouri (1912).

Some of the Windmill’s ads and business cards give light on early-day business. Porter & Blakeslee, druggists, advertise a long list of drugs and also state they have “Toys for the Holidays, Valentines in Due Time, Wall Paper in the Spring, Paints and Oils when we are fixed for keeping a stock of that line of goods.” Liniment and Cough Syrup are listed as well as a “Nobby Mustache Persuader.” The same business partners advertise coal for $16.92 per ton. “Dr. H.P. Porter is our authorized agent in this matter,” the ad declares. Henry Riddle carried a business card announcing himself as “Deputy Sheriff” and further informs the public that “Life Insurance and Collecting” is a specialty. G.H. Houghton carries an ad offering “Pictures, Picture Frames, Cords, Tassels, &” and “Best assortment of Ammunition in Town.” A milling concern call themselves the “Claremont Flouring Mill Co., and add “We toll but one-eighth, toll but once, and only one man tolls.” Edward Buehler was Insurance Agent and also “Dealer in Farm Implements and Machinery.” From the Wind Mill we find that “Best dry oak wood was “5.00 per cord” and Green Oak, $4.00,” in 1874.

The present Claremont News has been published since 1909.

The Dodge Center Star-Record has been published under that title since June 1936, and is a merger of the Dodge Center Record published since 1909, and the Dodge County Star published since 1890. The Dodge Center Record was formerly the Dodge County Record which, in 1885, followed after the Dodge Center Index, established in 1880.

The present Hayfield has been published since 1917. In August 1896 the Dodge County Herald began publication at Hayfield and was followed by the Dodge County Transcript in August 1899. The Transcript was published as the Hayfield Transcript from 1899 to 1902, also from 1915 to 1916, with which was merged the Hayfield Guard which began publications in 1905 and continued to July 1917.

At Kasson, the first village newspaper was the Dodge County Republican, which published its first issue May 3, 1867. Ulysses B. Shaver was publisher and editor. Benjamin A. was at the helm from 1898 to 1903, followed by Julius P. Nottage and George W. Nottage 1903 – 1938. From 1938 to 1942 James Melone published the Republican, succeeded by Harold and Vanya Sattler, 1942 – 1949.

The name, Dodge County Republican, was changed to Dodge County Independent, June, 1949, when the paper was purchased by Philip S. Duff, Jr., and Bernard A. Montgomery. In the early 1950’s Ralph Walker and Bernard A. Montgomery were the owners and publishers. In June of 1963, Folmer Carlson became owner and publisher, and is the present owner and publisher. The present Editor is Randy Carlson.

County Courthouse

On April 18, 1865, the Dodge County Board of Commissioners chose Lots 1, 2, 3, Block 22, Mantorville Village, as a site for the erection of the county court house. The land was donated to the county by the citizens of Mantorville. The total cost of the building was $15,000.00 financed, in part, by a bond issue of $8,000. The building committee was composed of Samuel Willson and Thomas Marshall. A Milwaukee, Wisconsin architect, C.T. Mix, was employed.

The county officials moved into their new quarters late in the fall of 1865, though the building was not completely done until September, 1871. Improvements were made on the building in 1900.

Because of its prominent porch or portico supported by four columns, which were added in 1900, the building is usually described as Greek Revival.  However, the dome, arched windows, steep gables, and other aspects of the building are more Renaissance style. 

The flagpole was donated by the Mayo Clinic in 1975, the same year in which the roof was replaced, the wood was repainted, downspouts were added, and other improvements were made.

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