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© R.J. Christensen
The Indianola Reporter, Thursday August 7,
1941
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Jim Gammill Writes
Interesting Early History of Frontier County
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by J. N. Gammill
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Frontier County was organized in January
1872. Meeting was held in Hank Clifford's
'Wigwam' about one and one-half miles north west
from Stockville.
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Hank and Monte Clifford were French, and
their wives were half breed Sioux. They and J.
H. Dauchey had been freighters together, from
Nebraska City to Denver and Salt Lake before
coming to Frontier County. Drome Dauchy and sons
were fine horsemen and horse raisers. Monte
Clifford was a veterinarian and practiced over a
large territory for years. One morning a
neighbor went by and talked with a squaw. When
he came back by in four or five hours, she said
"come in see the new papoose." And he said,
"what, since I went by this morning?" And she
said, "sure."
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These were all fine people. Mr. Dauchy (and
some others) were thought by many, as being
aloof and not too friendly as he made such
remarks as, the more I know men, the better I
like horses and dogs. But his close friends knew
that among other things he did was give a large
sum of money to buy flour, sugar, beans etc. to
be given to widows and old maid homesteaders and
other needy. But don't tell them Drome Dauchey
is paying the bill, were his orders. Another of
these old timers was A. S. Shelley. He had been
roaming from here to Montana. A Peaceable man,
but was known to knock a big buck Indian down
before his whole tribe, which scared his white
partner pretty near to death. They being the
only whites in hundreds of miles.
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There was a big shot Professor of a large
eastern College with Mr. Shelly on some of these
trips, hunting fossils. The most unique and
comical character of probably the whole west was
W. H. (Paddy) Miles. Born in Fla-a-da the land
of flo-a-ers, as he said it. Was in the
Confederate Army and wanted to tackle ten Yanks
at once. Until he got in the tangle, and then
one was enough. He was a great story teller and
actor. Looked like a southern Colonel. And could
look like a monkey. He enjoyed packing a bone
handled six-shooter. Was liable to shoot up the
town. Once after trying some rifles at a
shooting gallery, which he claimed were no good,
he drew six-shooter and shot the targets to
smithereens. The scared owner who thought he was
ruined financially, didn't know that Paddy
carried a roll of bills that would choke a cow,
to pay all and more of damage done on these
escapades. And by the way, this six-shooter had
belonged to the Russian Grand Duke Alexis who
dropped it accidently when he and Paddy were
chasing a buffalo on Red Willow Creek in this
same January 1872. The Duke didn't know where he
had lost it, but Paddy said he did.
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My father, James M. Gammill, who had worked
on the Union Pacific R. R. around Fort Steel and
Pollans, Wyoming in 1867, decided to settle
down. In April 1873 he walked out from North
Platte and homesteaded in Frontier County. He
went back to Iowa, and the next spring he and J.
H. Morgan drove a hundred head of heifers from
Decatur County Iowa, to Frontier County, having
a cow hitched with a horse to the wagon, so as
to ride one horse. These cattle belonged to my
uncle John C. Gammill, who came out the year of
1874.
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My grandfather and family, William H. Allen
had located the year before on November 8, 1873.
The late Thomas Andrews (of pure bred
short-horns) of Cambridge, had cattle in
Frontier County at this time. He at once brought
a gift of two loads of hay to Allens.
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If my memory is right my father said, out of
the first forty two settlers, thirty six had
been in the Civil War.
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E. L. Clute put Arapahoe on the map. He
owned a store, hotel and liverybarn. And these
old-timers traded there, if it wasn't North
Platte or Lexington which was Plum Creek then.
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In that eventful roundup of 1877, a widow on
the Platte River wanted a man to look after her
interests. And through recommendations of J. H.
Morgan and Burk Brothers, (then on the Platte)
my father took the job. And with success, by his
fist under the chin of a big two gun bully and
telling him some things. There were two riders
from Ogallala that were having trouble, caused
by older one picking on younger. In North Platte
the young one bought a Colts six-shooter
remarking to my father, that this damn thing
will probably get me into trouble. When the
roundup was on Mitchell Creek, about four miles
east of out old place, the men rode out and
fought a duel. The young one is buried there. He
had hardly a chance and was really murder, for
the other was a crack shot and had killed other
men. But he finally reaped his reward (so we
heard) by going insane and dying in an asylum,
supposedly caused by worry over picking a fight
then killing this boy.
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By 1880 all or most of the creek land was
homesteaded, and the writer arrived on January
6.
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These old timers were mostly stockmen, and
supposed that the upland would never be settled.
But in 1885 and 1886, people swarmed in like
flies. And my father would remark that, "There's
another damned grainger to get located. Ask him
(often a whole surveying gang) in for dinner or,
to stay all night. And sell him timber for his
dugout, whether he had a cent or not.
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Most of these old timers used strong
language at times to express their thoughts,
which horrified some Easterners until they found
out that these men gentle as a dove. But if
needs be could be as hard as steel.
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These people were of all classes. College
graduates, and others who ran away from College,
who's parents had expected them to be priests,
preachers, lawyers, doctors, etc. A rancher told
a story of how he rode up unbeknown one morning
and watched one of these men. He was astride a
calfs neck trying to learn it to drink out of a
bucket. After getting so much milk blew all over
him, he grabbed the calf by the ears and gave it
a good shaking. Saying if it wasn't for my
religion, Damn your little soul, I'd beat hell
and damnation out of you. Now in these hectic
eighties there were a lot more people, also a
lot more stealing and rows of various kinds
going on, that received an airing in court. W.
H. Allen who had ran a Post Office on his ranch,
which he named Equality, (believing in the equal
rights of all) was County Judge, and W. H. Miles
was still Sheriff. Now these two William H's
could be hard boiled if need be to enforce the
law. But they were really peace makers, and
probably spent a dollar out of their own pocket
for every nickel collected as fees. John
Welbourn told about being at Stockville once on
court business, when the Judge dismissed court
for a recess so he could marry a couple who had
driven a long way. And says John, we all had
some liquid refreshments, from the marriage fee.
Quite often the Judge would get a settlement.
Sometimes soon, and sometimes after my
grandmother had worked herself half to death
feeding the bunch. The Judge would say, you
folks settle this and I will throw off my fees
and I think the Sheriff will too. And Paddy
would say, yes sah Judge, I will throw mine off
too.
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The writer remembers of hearing Paddy tell
of a case he had settled that day, he came to
out house to stay all night. An Irish family
living in the east part of the county was in a
family row, and people thought murder was about
to be committed. So Paddy rode some twenty miles
to see about it. He had persuaded them to divide
up their property, and separate out of court. So
he helped them. When they came to a jar of
butter, the old man claimed the jar and the old
woman the butter. So Paddy says, old man what's
your jar worth? Paddy paid him, and gave the jar
to the old woman. But these things happened
quite often from there on. Well they finally
were all settled up. Then they decided to kiss
and make up. But Paddy says, the old man never
offered to give any of the money back.
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In 1880 the most dangerous man in the whole
County moved in. He settled about one and
one-half miles from us. He was really a crazy
man. And in these days would be locked up in an
asylum. He was a powerful man at any time. And
when mad (which was often) could do super-human
stunts. Such as picking up a mowing machine and
putting it in a wagon. The man who located him
had lied to him, telling him that a large
spring, or rather the head waters of Sand Creek
was on this land. Otherwise this Swede would not
have paid him the $50. The locator soon made
himself scarce. The owners of this water was
Mrs. Sherwood (a widow whose husband had been
killed in the Civil War) and he son Eugene. This
Jonas Nelson was always threatening to kill
Eugene, and would have done so once with a
shovel if some men hadn't stopped him, who were
with the County Surveyor. Jonas finally did kill
him in 1885 or six, I don't remember which. He
hid behind a tree and shot the top of his head
off with a shot gun. Then he goes to the barn
and shoots himself through the hand with his own
pistol. Leaves both guns in his shanty and
starts for North Platte, changes his mind and
comes to our place. He told my father his story,
which my father did not believe. It is said that
my father was one of the few that was not afraid
of Jonas. As quick as he saw the hand, he
accused him of shooting himself, and said I'll
bet you've killed Gene. Elwood Clark a young
cousin was with my father, and they were working
near the house of Orville Work (who had been in
the same company in the war, and was the best
fiddler in the neighborhood) so Orville and
Elwood watched Jonas with a shot gun, while
father ran over to see what had happened. There
was snow on the ground which made everything
plain what had happened. Gene had on heavy
mittens and had never cocked his gun. He never
knew Jonas was there. Father was soon back and
sent Elwood for the Sheriff. The Sheriff then
takes Jonas to Judge Allen, who gives him a
hearing. A crowd of people wants to hang him,
but the judge orders him taken to North Platte
to appear before the District Court. Jonas had
burned hay stacks etc. on the Platte for people
he was mad at, and a crooked lawyer there by
getting a Swede jury had turned him loose. Jonas
said that would happen again, and he would come
back and kill everyone that had anything to do
with this trial. When Sheriff Miles started with
his prisoner for North Platte it was getting
late, so he decided to stay all night in a place
that happened to be in the neighborhood where
this murder was committed. He said a bunch of
masked men had him covered with guns that night,
and ordered him to turn over his prisoner. And
what else could he do. The next morning he and
some other men found Jonas hanging to the tree
that he had been behind when he had killed,
twenty-two year old Gene, as he was called, as
nice a young fellow as could be found in the
county. They cut Jonas down and buried him a few
rods back from his dugout.
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The writer has some faint memories of the
big county seat fight of 1886. I can remember
seeing my father getting his old 50-70 needle
gun and other neighbors having some guns and of
a lot of excitement. And grandfather Allen and
our family going to Stockville and staying all
night. I found out since that it was reported
that they were coming down from Curtis to steal
the Records from the court house. My Uncle J. C.
Gammil was appointed Captain of a bunch of men
to protect the records, and a crowd of women was
at a private residence with most of the records
hidden under a table. It was said that a man
rode to Curtis and told them what would happen
if they came to Stockville and apparently they
didn't want it to happen. These old pioneers
were about the greatest, if not the greatest
generation that trod this earth. I would like to
see how the man, or men look, that could have
made these men believe that there were
democracies in Europe, or that there were
anyone, or all that could come over here and do
anything to them. Well our spineless,
thoughtless generation of picnicers, have had
quite a spree. We went to school (when we had
any) in a log cabin, soddy or a dugout. And they
taught us to write so that you could read it.
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In the summer time we fished for five and
ten pound catfish and caught them.
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Everyone played baseball, croquet and
seven-up. Filled up at leisure on wild plums,
grapes, chokecherries and hackberries. We ate
watermelon that were dandy near as big as
heating stoves. Went to a Fourth-of-July picnic
that was a humdinger. Took in the county fair,
and saw our first fakers. Also saw some peaches
and oranges and could sample one for a nickel.
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In the winter the cellar contained a lot of
wild fruit. Mostly in the shape of butters and
jellies. About fifty bushels of spuds and some
other vegetables. At least one barrel each, of
cucumbers and sorghum molasses; for you know it
takes a lot to feed eight kids, and that seemed
about the average. It didn't cost much to come
into the world, if you were lucky enough to get
a doctor at all. He and his horses ate a meal or
two and didn't say much more about it. Nurses,
hospitals and nippled bottles were almost
unknown, and every kid had to do its own
milking.
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We had boxing and wrestling, as well as good
hunting. At parties we popped corn and pulled
taffy, and played ring around rosey. Had old
time dances, where fiddlers could really play,
"Sally Goodin" and "Old Leather Breaches." The
girls and boys were bashful. (The writer went
with his future wife a year before he huged
[sic] her, and was dang near scared to death
then.)
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Well here we are in 1941. And most of us
have lost our financial inheritance, and we are
trying damn hard to lose everything else that
our forefathers suffered, fought and died for.
But we shall always keep those sweet but sad
memories of those great pioneers. Our FATHERS
and our MOTHERS.
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