Westward Ho! Fifty Years Ago The people of this generation have little idea of travel in the west 50
years ago; nor how wild and comparatively unsettled the country was west of Ohio, so I thought I would
give an account of a trip I made as far west as Iowa, 48 years ago. On May 1st, 1851, I started on my
trip for what was then the "far west". I started from Castle Fin and went to Baltimore where I got a
ticket over the B & O R. R. for Wheeling, Virginia on the Ohio River. Arriving there I crossed the
river, and went out about 2 miles in Ohio to where my uncle, GEORGE WISE lived. I remained in the
neighborhood till the 15th of November following. In company with three others, I then concluded to go
west to Iowa City, Iowa. We went to Bellaire, Ohio where we got tickets to Columbus. We arrived there
at ten o'clock that day and had to remain there till 9 o'clock that night on account of a broken
bridge. In our party were PHILLIP WISE, ANDREW KILGORE, JAMES ALEXANDER, [father of MRS. T. M. CRAWFORD
and MRS. CHARLES R. McCONKEY] and myself.
While waiting at Columbus, we all concluded to visit the penitentiary, so we went to the office and
asked leave. They sent a man with us and we got orders not to speak to the prisoners. What we saw there
was a lesson for life. If all could see such places of punishment, I don't think there would be so many
criminals in prison. When our train was ready to pull out, we got tickets for Rock Island, Ill. on the
banks of the Mississippi River. That was as far as we could go by rail. We crossed the river to
Davenport, Iowa, from which it was still 60 miles to do down the river bottom. We started at 8 o'clock
at night and placed ourselves in the care of the driver. He had a quart bottle in his pocket, which he
used too freely, and about half way down he upset the stage and all that was in it. We helped to lift
the old stage back on the road, but were detained about two hours. When ready to start, the driver
wanted us to drink with him but not feeling in the best of humor, not one of us touched it. We got to
the end of that route by daylight the next day. We took another stage out across the prairies 30 miles
to Iowa City. The weather was very cold for that time of year. We got there about 2 o'clock in the
afternoon. I don't recollect setting a house from the time we left the Mississippi River till we got to
Iowa City, and indeed, there were scarcely a dozen houses in Iowa City, and I know of but one railroad
in the state at that time. It was the C. B. & Q. and crossed the Mississippi at Burlington. We all
went to Iowa to buy land, and had considerable money with us for those times--about $3500.00 in all.
The talk was when we left home, that land could be bought for $125.00 per acre; but the weather was so
cold and there were so few settlers in that part of the country that we got disgusted and left. We
returned to the Mississippi River, where my company left me for home. I went down the river 90 miles to
Burlington, crossed the river and traveled 12 miles out through Illinois, to where my sister, MRS.
ELLEN DOUGLASS lived near Biggsville. I remained there all winter and part of the next summer, and
enjoyed myself very much. There were but few settlers in that part of the country at that time; houses
a long way apart, wild game of all kind was abundant, such as deer, wild geese, wild turkeys, prairie
chickens, wolves, and rabbits too numerous to mention. I hunted a good deal and killed all kinds of
game. The native prairie was very beautiful, clear of stone and all rubbish--no sand and not a stone as
big as a chestnut. I think that country must have been under water at one time. In digging a well close
to Biggsville, the well digger found a log 22 feet down. The land is very black and rich. Amoung the
first settlers in that part of the state was a Kentuckian. He had broken twenty acres of prairie and
put in corn 20 years in succession and had a good crop last year as any other. Every thing was
plentiful there except wood and water. Farmers had to haul wood 10 to 15 miles; but there is a good
deal more wood there now than there was then....The prairies were burned over in the spring to give the
little shoots a chance to grow into timber. Grist mills were scarce. The nearest woth anything was 30
miles from Biggsville, down the Mississippi River.
My brother-in-law MATTHEW DOUGLASS, and myself went on one trip to that mill. It was a big one and
did a power of grinding; never stopped day or night, or Sunday. They didn't take toll; but ground for
money. Corn was plentiful that there was little sale for it--even at 13 cents per bushel; and I was
told that some had been sold for 9 cents. Not much wheat was raised, and that was of poor quality on
account of the cold winters. The farmers raised big crops of corn and a great many hogs, which was
their main dependence to money. One man could work 50 acres of corn. They did not cut it, but drove a
team to the field and husked it on the stalk and put it in large cribs 50 to 100 feet long. They
shelled it by horse power. The farmers carefully saved the cobs for fuel, and sometimes burned corn,
cob and all, when they had no wood. Some of these things may seem strange to some people who read these
lines but to the best of my knowledge, it is all correct. May 25, '97 [1897] William K. Kilgore Castle
Fin, Pa. This was typed from a newspaper clipping [copy] that was sent to me by Hazel Landreth of
Springfield, VA who said this article was in her great grandmother's scrapbook. PHILLIP WISE is the son
of GEORGE and KESIA KILGORE WISE of Bellaire, OH. Keziah is the sister of JOSHUA KILGORE and the aunt
of WILLIAM K. KILGORE and ELLEN DOUGLASS. ELLEN DOUGLASS and WILLIAM K. KILGORE are also the siblings
of JOHN KILGORE who moved to Biggsville, Henderson Co., IL in 1878. ANDREW CUNNINGHAM KILGORE was the
son of LEVI KILGORE and nephew of JOSHUA KILGORE. JAMES ALEXANDER, father of Margaret Ann and Rachel
lived in Peach Bottom Township, York Co., PA Their mother ELIZABETH McGREAGOR ALEXANDER is a native of
Peach Bottom Township. The Alexander family are from Belmont Co., OH. James Alexander sold his land in
Fawn Township and moved to OH.
Submitted by: Gail Meyer Kilgore