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Pursuing this trail for three days generally brought the emigrant face to face with ‘Squire John Williams and his five sons, who settled in, or about 1831, three miles northeast of the town of Mount Vernon.
A number of families accompanied Judge John Williams from Tennessee in 1831, but on reaching the creek and breaks near the eastern part of the county all turned back disheartened except the Judge and his son Samuel S. Williams, whereupon the creek was called Turnback, and still bears that name.
The area that would become Lawrence County, Missouri, was long occupied by the Osage, Delaware and other Indian tribes before the first settlers put down roots in 1831.
Benjamin Stahls, William Truett, Washington Smith, Robert Kimmons, Price Anderson, Richard and Samuel Price, A. B. Baugh and others arrived in the year 1838.
Township 28, Range 26, was opened for entry September 23, 1839.
Township 29, Range 25, was offered for sale September 23, 1839.
In 1839 many others came in and settled, among whom were John Toliver, Asa Wormington, James Cherry, William Orr, Stephen Powell, William Connel, Thomas M. Polk (a cousin to James K. Polk, ex-President of the United States) and Jesse M. Taylor.
Section 17 L. W. Allen, George M. Gibson, John Hawkins and Jesse Hawkins purchased in 1839-40.
Abel Burton bought on Section 21 in 1839.
Township 27, Range 29, was opened for sale May 18, 1840.
Reuben Vermillion and Eldridge Miller bought on Section 31, and Reuben M. Browning on Section 33 in 1840.
In 1841 Michael Archer purchased on Section 13.
Dempsey Jackson, Robert C. and Pleasant McGehee and Elisha H. Jackson purchased on Section 4 prior to 1842.
Section 18 was bought in 1842-44 by Susannah Richardson, John P. and George W. Messick, Jacob and Harvey Heshaw.
At the session of the General Assembly in 1842-43, Lawrence County was formed out of territory off of the north end of Barry, and south end of Dade.
Township 26, Range 29, was offered for sale February 6, 1843.
On Sections 29 and 30 Joseph R. Beard, Jeremiah Evans, Sampson Looney and Jesse Le Grand purchased in 1843-45; Thomas W. Bingham on Section 35 in 1843, and the Wormington’s on Section 36 in 1843-44.
Under the special act of February 25, 1845, Joseph Schooling, Joseph Rinker and Robert B. Taylor were appointed judges of the county, meeting at the house of Robert B. Taylor.
Section 16, Township 28, Range 28, was ordered to be sold April 7, 1845, on petition of the residents of that township.
On June 8, 1845, the court met at the house of George White, Mount Vernon, and
In April, 1846, William H. Otter was appointed circuit attorney, but W. C. Jones served in that office as Otter was the attorney defending John McDavid from the charge of perjury.
In November, 1846, Judges Schooling, Rinker and Taylor presided with Wade H. Stroud, sheriff, and George White, treasurer.
In May, 1847, Stroud returned $67, being $13 over the amount due for the first lots sold at Mount Vernon.
In May, 1848, Achilles Richardson was appointed agent to receive $1,315, the share of the county in proceeds of sales of lands donated to the State.
The revenue for the year ending May, 1848, including balance, was $722.72 and expenditures $718.
Slavery Days.--Jonathan, a runaway slave, who was confined in jail in April, 1849, was sold April 16 by the sheriff to Achilles Richardson for $485.
Margaret Higby was granted her petition, and in October, 1849, Levan McNatt was released from all duties and liabilities incurrred by his marriage with Elizabeth Kellough.
The revenue for the year ending February 5, 1850, was
In May, 1851, William A. McCanse was appointed agent to receive from the State $751, being the county’s share of proceeds of State land sales, and also $309.50.
In November, 1852, Samuel M. Anderson, county agent for building a fire-proof clerk’s office, advertised for bids; $5,300 was appropriated.
The total county revenue for year ending May 3, 1854, was $2,090.05, and the expenditures, $903.63.
On November 6, 1854, the justices, with John D. Allen, sheriff, and William W. Gay, clerk, met in the new building for the first time.
In the year 1854 a new court-house was built in Mount Vernon, costing about $7,000.
The revenue for the year ending June 2, 1856, was $3,494; the expenditures, $3,026.77.
The townships of Buck Prairie and Spring were established December 22, 1857.
J. P. Pool was assessor in 1857; James Cherry, Thomas Colley and James M. White, judges of the county court.
Jesse M. Wilks was school commissioner in 1859.
In 1859 the revenue was $3,586.21, including balance from former year; the expenditures, $2,973.58.
On the night of November 20, 1860, the store of Whaley & George was entered by robbers, and the safe, in which $340 of county money was deposited, broken open.
The revenue for 1860 was $4,632.68; and expenditures, $3,967.24.
On May 14 this company with Company B, of the Rifles, and Capt. cole’s company, Fifth Missouri Volunteers, opened the campaign in Southeast Missouri, May 14, 1861, at Potosi.
Sigel, in his retreat from Carthage July 5, 1861, reached Mount Vernon on the 6th, and remained there until the 8th.
On February 3, 1862, James Cherry, J. C. McNatt and Thomas Colley, who were commissioned county judges, S. E. Roberts, sheriff, and George W. Rinker, clerk, qualified.
John M. Richardson, of the Mounted Rangers, left Springfield for Mount Vernon February 22, 1862, with forty-one rangers; the next morning arrived at Gullette’s farm, eight miles below Mount Vernon, where they met Capt.
On August 1, 1862, Coffee’s 1,000 men passed through Marionville, Lawrence County, and at night arrived at Nield with 500 men.
Subsequently it formed part of Totten’s division, and was the first to enter Fayetteville in October, 1862.
The Fifteenth Missouri Volunteer Cavalry was organized April 1, 1863, as the Second Provisional Regiment, at Mount Vernon.
On May 5, 1864, George W. Rinker was appointed county agent to prepare papers in the case of claims for bounties due to widows, orphans and disabled soldiers.
In 1864 L. Williams, of Spring River, Leroy Mullins and M. B. Phillips, of Mt.
The delegates to the State Constitutional Convention, held at St Louis, January 6, 1865, included Archibald Gilbert, of Mount Vernon, and Joel M. Grammer of Cassville.
The total revenue for year ending June 29, 1866, was $15,691, and the expenditures, $13,473.69.
The revenue for year ending May 23, 1867, was $14,034, and the expenditures, $12,552.
County Poor Farm.--In February, 1868, B. L. Hendrick, agent of the county, purchased of Daniel Biddlecome, administrator of Samuel K. Winkle, deceased, the east half of the southwest quarter, and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter, and
On May 11, 1868, the first case of “railroad company aggressiveness” appears on record, as follows:
Charles A. Williams, county pension agent, retired November 9, 1868, and J. B. Wheat resigned the office of cattle inspector.
In the spring of 1868 Margaret M. Fullerton, with “Tommy” Hutton, started with George Hutton en route to Ohio.
Prior to this time, in February, 1869, O. P. Johnson discovered lead ore northeast of Mount Vernon, two miles from Turnback.
The murder case of Holden, at Verona, June 17, 1870, by Boughman, resulted in the commitment of the criminal by Justice James Davis; but Judge Hendrick admitted him to bail in $10,000, it having been proven that Holden attempted to kill Broughman thirty minutes before the tragedy.
For 1870-71 the revenue was $10,613.73, and the expenditures, $11,556.41.
In October, 1871, John W. Wellshear, John B. Woods and George W. Rinker were county judges, William H. Johnson, sheriff, and Wyatt Harris, clerk.
In February, 1872, Mount Pleasant Township was re-established, and the new township disappears.
The expenditures for year ending May, 1872, were $11,591.41.
Robert W. Crawford, who died at Neosho, October 19, 1873, was a lawyer of this county, at one time residing at Mount Vernon.
Aurora Township was established in July, 1874, on petition of J. C. McNatt and others.
The revenue for the year ending 1874 was $12,359.17, and expenditures, $16,290.44.
In June, 1875, Joseph Browning and Thomas Adams were traveling a few miles south of Marionville, when they were attacked by a panther.
A tornado swept through the county in August, 1875, doing much damage on Stone Prairie.
The murder of George Riddle, of Honey Creek, by John Allen, was perpetrated August 24, 1875.
The expenditures for year ending May 1, 1877, were $6,523.38, county revenue; $509.20, grand jury and witness; $1,620.80, poor fund; $147.73, inquest fund; $1,609.83, jail bond fund; $823.58, jail bond interest; $115.19, county road fund; $58.44, road and canal fund.
The revenue for year ending February 1, 1880 was $12,817.66, and the expenditures $10,327.12.
In July, 1881, John W. Johnson, in digging a well two miles north of Mount Vernon, struck two veins of lead.
The expenditures for year ending February 1, 1882, were $1,041.24, contingent fund; $3,033.68, poor fund; $686.81, jury and election fund; $891.35, circuit court scrip; $4,209.15, office and salary fund; $1,915.27, jail fund; $1,350.63, road and bridge fund.
In the latter year the locusts destroyed the crops, but in 1882 fortune smiled again on agriculture, and crops henceforth were above the average of any previous decade.
Reunion.--The beginning of the old settlers’ reunions in this county dates back to August 18, 1883.
The expenditures for year ending February 3, 1884, were $789.09, of the contingent fund; $2,390.05, poor fund; $4,788.02, office and salary fund; $2,124.96, road and bridge fund; $1,443, jury and election fund; $14.36, jail fund.
John Vermillion was shot July 3, 1884, by Wesley Pritchett, and died some days later.
Robert Crockett was murdered at Mount Vernon, February 24, 1886.
In March, 1886, a son of Widow Demick, of Marionville, accompanied a school teacher of that town, named William M. Taylor, to Taney County.
In October, 1886, Taylor was tried and acquitted, there being no witnesses.
The expenditures for year ending February, 1887, were $3,024.84, contingent fund; $4,694.62, poor fund; office and salary, $4,186.64; road and bridge fund, $3,507.37; jury and election fund, $3,228.05; Pierce Township bonds, $1,210.66.
Lawrence County’s selection as the site of the state’s first tuberculosis sanatorium in 1906 had a great impact on the county and on the people, who now found a place of hope in the treatment of “The Great White Plague" of tuberculosis.
Once 1941 Massachusetts Street began serving as a KU residence hall, it appears to have provided a pleasant if somewhat improvised living environment.
In the summer of 1946, the board of the Women’s Club announced that it had voted to continue renting the building to the University for the next academic year as housing for 22 female students.
Finally, in 1975 – after two more lawsuits – the dwindling membership that by then numbered less than 20 reached an agreement to sell the house and land and invest in community betterment by donating the proceeds to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
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| Company name | Founded date | Revenue | Employee size | Job openings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| City of Warrensburg | - | $400,000 | 50 | - |
| County Nursing Home | - | $15.0M | 350 | - |
| Visit Kingsland, Georgia | 2007 | $3.7M | 125 | - |
| Florida Forest Service | - | $1.4M | 15 | - |
| Cityofni | - | $320,000 | 2 | - |
| City of Conover, NC | 1874 | $4.7M | 125 | - |
| Village of North Hills | - | $8.7M | 50 | - |
| Pearsall City Hall | - | $600,000 | 3 | 5 |
| Pleasant Valley Nursing Home | 1827 | $14.0M | 350 | 2 |
| Pekin Police Dept. | 1849 | $570,000 | 9 | 2 |
Zippia gives an in-depth look into the details of Lawrence County Manor, including salaries, political affiliations, employee data, and more, in order to inform job seekers about Lawrence County Manor. The employee data is based on information from people who have self-reported their past or current employments at Lawrence County Manor. The data on this page is also based on data sources collected from public and open data sources on the Internet and other locations, as well as proprietary data we licensed from other companies. Sources of data may include, but are not limited to, the BLS, company filings, estimates based on those filings, H1B filings, and other public and private datasets. While we have made attempts to ensure that the information displayed are correct, Zippia is not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of this information. None of the information on this page has been provided or approved by Lawrence County Manor. The data presented on this page does not represent the view of Lawrence County Manor and its employees or that of Zippia.
Lawrence County Manor may also be known as or be related to Lawrence County Manor, Lawrence County Nursing Home District and Lawrence County Nursing Home District (Missouri).