A Directory of Towns,
Villages, and Hamlets
Past and Present
of Johnson County, Missouri
Compiled by Arthur
Paul Moser
Johnson County
[1]
Air (Hazel Hill
Township)
The first post-office
in Hazel Hill Township was at the
residence of James Borthurt, who was the
first postmaster. This was long before the
town of Fayetteville was known and the
name of the post-office was Air. Later,
when the new village of Fayetteville
sprang up the office was given the name of
Fayetteville, although the village was
known as Hazel Hill. The first postmaster
in the town was Ben E. Lemmon, who held
the office until the Civil War broke out.
(--History of Johnson County, 1918,
Cockrell, p. 236. Referred to later as
Cockrell.)
Aubrey (Post Oak Township)
A fourth post-office
was established in Post Oak Township
(1875) about four miles northeast of the
village of Cornelia. J. E. Herring was
postmaster. Mail was received once a week.
The office was discontinued and again
opened in the spring of 1881. (--History
of Johnson County, 1881, Kansas City
Historical Company, p. 589.
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme for the use of Railway Mail
Clerks, p. 55.)
Benton (Rose Hill Township,
McClurg (q.v.))
When the Missouri,
Kansas & Texas Railroad was built
through the township a little town was
started on the line in Section 35, in the
northwestern part of the county. The town
was named Benton City and the post-office
was named McClurg in honor of ex-Governor
McClurg. It had several stores, but in a
few years was abandoned. (--Cockrell,
p. 260.)
Benton no longer listed in
Johnson County; is Benton in Scott
County. (--Rand, McNally Standard
Reference Guide of Missouri.,
1974.)
"Big Creek" (Rose Hill
Township, Rose Hill)
The first post-office
within the present borders of Rose Hill
Township was established about 1840 under
the official title of Big Creek. In 1860
the name was changed to Rose Hill and the
first post-office was kept on Scaly Bark
Creek and Garrett J. Wood was the first
postmaster. (--Cockrell, p. 259.)
Blackwater
The village of
Blackwater was started and laid out by P.
L. Hudgins in March, 1856, on the N. E.
qr. of Section 28, Township 47 N, Range 27
West. (--History of Johnson County,
1881, p. 699.)
This area is south of
Columbus; only two buildings are shown
in this section.
[2]
Bluff Spring (Kingsville
Township)
Bluff Spring was
situated at Section 19, Township 46 N,
Range 29 West, north of Kingsville. (--Campbell's
New Atlas of Missouri, 1874, Map
24.)
The first post-office in
Kingsville Township was Bluff Spring and
Benjamin Longwire was the first
postmaster... In 1856, the post-office
was changed to Kingsville. In 1860, Dr.
W. H. Carpenter built a distillery and
carding machine. It later was destroyed
by fire. (--Cockrell, p. 275.)
It is no longer listed.
(--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Bowen
It was platted April
3, 1905, on land owned by W. A. Garrett
and his wife, Alice, when what is now the
Rock Island Railroad was being
constructed. When the coal mines were
operating it was a very busy place. (--Cockrell,
p. 167.)
It is situated at the
Section 29, Township 44 N, Range 24 West
in the southeast corner of the county on
Highway D, north of Henry County line.
(--General Highway Map of Johnson
County, 8-1-62, issued by The
Missouri State Highway Dept. Unless
otherwise noted all map descriptions are
from this map.
Mail via Windsor, Henry
County. (--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Bristleridge
It was three miles
north of Burtville. (--The State of
Missouri, in 1904, Walter Williams,
p. 417.)
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.) No longer listed.
Burnett Station (Post Oak
Township)
A second post-office
was established in 1875, and named Burnett
Station. It was in the eastern part of
Post Oak Township in Section 12. J. J.
Lee, who kept a store here was the
postmaster. (--History of Johnson
County, 1881, p. 589.)
Burnett's Station (Wall's
Store) was a post-office sixteen miles
south, southeast of Warrensburg. (--Campbell's
Gazetteer of Missouri, 1874, p.
290.)
It is no longer listed.
[3]
Burtville
Burtville is
mentioned in Encyclopedia of the
History of Missouri, 1901, Conard,
Vol. 3, p. 457.
It was situated at Section
19, Township 45 N, Range 24 West, &
Section 24, Township 45 N, Range 25 West
on Highway Y southwest of Whiteman
Airforce Base.
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.) No longer listed.
Basin Knob (Jackson
Township)
Basin Kob is a
beautiful eminence in the center of a rich
fertile valley. The mound contains about
one acre on the flat top. The height is
upwards of fifty feet. (--History of
Johnson County, 1881, p. 675.)
John Winfrey was
postmaster for eleven years at Basin
Knob. He came to the township in 1851.
(--History of Johnson County, p.
678.)
Bear Creek
See Rose Hill.
Bee Branch (Grover
Township)
The first post-office
was established near the Pettis County
line, and part of the time was kept in the
adjoining county. It was known as Bee
Branch, named for a little creek nearby
and Benjamin Prigmore was the first
postmaster. The first postal route was
secured through the influence of Dr. B.F.
Dunkley, from Georgetown to Lexington. In
1858 the post-office was changed to
Dunksburg, later it was changed to Sigel.
However, that name never became popular
and it was known as Dunksburg. (--Cockrell,
pp. 250, 251.)
Carbon Hill
Carbon Hill was laid
out as a village in 1867, and was located
about midway between Montserrat and Knob
Noster. (--History of Johnson County,
1881, p. 505.)
Carbon Hill (Clear Fork)
was a station on the Missouri Pacific
Railroad seven miles east of
Warrensburg. (--Campbell, p.
290.)
It is no longer listed by
either name.
Centerview (Center
Township)
This little village
began as a result of the railroad in 1865.
The post-office was established at that
time and Elhanan Roop was the first
postmaster ... The village is located not
far from the geographical center of the
township bearing the same name. The first
store ever built was built by Elhanan
Roop, and was occupied by R.C. Hall as a
store for general merchandise...The first
physician, Dr. J. H. Kinyown; the first
lawyer, Gordon Turner, who was also a
preacher and teacher...(--History of
Johnson County, 1881, pp. 543, 544.)
[4]
Centerview, on the
Missouri Pacific Range. Range, is six
miles west of Warrensburg. It contained
two flouring mills, with 3 sets of buhrs
and a capacity of 100 barrels of flour
daily, 8 stores, 1 saddle and harness
shop, 1 wagon and 1 carpenter shop, and 1
tannery, besides some other small business
houses. (--Campbell, p. 290.)
It is situated at Section
36, Township 46 N, Range 27 West at the
junction of VV & 58.
Centre Knob (not a town)
Centre Knob, one mile
east of the village of Kingsville,
received its name from the Shawnee
Indians, who had a trail on the southern
face that they followed as late as 1850...
(--History of Johnson County, 1881,
p. 516.)
Charles
Charles was in the
southeast corner of the county, six miles
east of Burtville. (--Williams,
1904, p. 417.)
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905; it is no
longer listed. (--General Scheme,
p. 55; Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Chalybeate
Chalybeate was a
post-office eight miles south southwest of
Warrensburg, in Chilhowee Township. (--Campbell,
p. 290.)
It is no longer listed.
Chilhowee (elevation 915
feet, Chilhowee Township)
Chilhowee Township
gets its name from the Chilhowee Mountains
in Tennessee. It is an Indian appellation.
Its orthography properly ends with the
double "ee", and not an "ie", as some
sophists write it.
The old town of Chilhowee
was laid by Amos Mason Perry in 1857.
The first improvements were made by
James Simpson and Samuel McFarland.
James Murphy was the original owner of
the land...In 1881 there were two stores
and a few shops in the village. (--History
of Johnson County, 1881, pp. 566,
567.)
[5]
The village of
Chilhowee was an accident. A man named
James Simpson had bought a small frame
house from a William Johnson and undertook
to move it to a claim that he intended to
"enter". It was placed upon ox wagons and
was moved to the spot where the old town
now is when something broke down and the
house was then unloaded and Mr. Simpson
put in a small stock of goods, and it was
then called Simpson's Store. This was
about 1855 or 1856...
About that time the place
was surveyed by the county surveyor, A.
M. Perry and he being from Tennessee
named it Chilhowee, a Cherokee name for
the Tennessee or "Smoky mountains"...
When the Missouri, Kansas & Texas
Railroad was built about one mile and a
half south, several of the houses were
moved to the new site and the old town
became a relic only. (--Cockrell, p.
245.)
Chilhowee, fourteen miles
south, southwest of Warrensburg, had two
stores, one carpenter shop, one church
and a school house. Population about
100, 1874. (--Campbell, p. 290.)
It is situated in the
southwest section of the county, at
Section 13 & 24, Township 44 N,
Range 27 West at the junction of
Highways 2, E & F.
Clear Fork
See Carbon Hill;
neither town is listed.
Columbus
For a long time
Columbus, in Columbus Township, was the
county seat. The courts would meet at the
residence of the late Nicholas Houx or
under a shade tree near by. The county
seat was first located three miles east of
the present site of Columbus on the farm
of Mrs. Fanny Cockrell, but the selection
met with much opposition from other parts
of the county. The commissioners
reconsidered their decision and selected
the present location.
The town laid out by Mr.
J. Epper in 1836. It was one of the
first trading places in the county. The
post-office was established in 1832. The
first postmaster, William Kincaid, was
postmaster for several years...At one
time the office was kept at Blackwater.
In 1881 C. G. Wolf sold
groceries and dry goods. The place also
had a blacksmith shop. The old village
was nothing more than a country store
post-office and a few shops. (--History
of Johnson County, 1881, pp. 668,
669.)
[6]
Columbus, thirteen
miles northwest of Warrensburg, it the
oldest town in the county, having been
settled in 1833...It contained three
churches...one good flouring mill with 3
run of buhrs--100 barrels a day, one
wheel-wright and two wagon shops and four
stores. Population about 150 (1874). (--Campbell,
p. 290.)
It is situated at Section
21 & 22, Township 47 N, Range 27
West on Highway M north of 50 northwest
of Warrensburg.
Mail via
Centerview--rural; no population shown.
(--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Cornelia
The town of Cornelia
was named by Dr. Love in honor of his wife
whose name was Cornelia. James K. Farr and
James Marrow built the first house in
1853...
Although the name Cornelia
is the proper name of the little village
it is generally known by the fanciful
epithet of "Shanghai". At one time Dr.
Love engaged largely in raising Shanghai
chickens. The business was new and the
name artificially elegant to the old
settlers who were not long in applying
the name through accident to the
village. Also a small creek having its
source near the antique village bears
the name "Shanghai", and flows northwest
into Post Oak Creek...
Cornelia had a post-office
with mail twice a week, a grocery store,
one blacksmith shop, two churches and a
public school. It had a population of
about eighty-five souls...Long before
the Civil War Cornelia had a
post-office, and for a long time it was
the headquarters for mail matter. (--History
of Johnson County, p. 589;
Campbell, p. 290.)
It is situated at Section
36, Township 44 N, Range 26 West and
Township 45 N, same range at the
junction of PP & 13.
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.)
Mail now via Warrensburg;
no population shown. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
County Line
At a point called the
Count Line, on Walnut Creek, about six
miles north of Knob Noster, in what is now
Grover Township in the Oglesby and
Thornton settlements was established one
of the first Baptist organizations in the
county. (--History of Johnson County,
p. 353.)
Dearl
Dearl was on R. F. D.
north from Holden and south of Pittsville.
(The State of Missouri, in 1904, p.
417.)
It is no longer listed.
[7]
Dean
Dean was in the
western section of the county, northeast
of Kingsville. (--Map of Missouri,
in 1911; Rand, McNally.)
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.)
Dean is no longer listed
in Johnson County; is listed in Andrew
County. (--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Denton (Chilhowee Township)
Denton was platted
June 27, 1905, by Henry Phillips, when the
railroad was constructed through here. It
is located in the western part of the
township, in Section 7. It had a church,
good stores, etc., and several residences.
(--Cockrell, p. 247.)
It is situated at Section
8, Township 44 N, Range 27 West on
Highway 2, north of O.
Mail via Holden; no
population. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Devil's Ridge (not a town)
In the western part
of Jackson Township is an eminence called
Devil's Ridge, so named during the Civil
War. (--History of Johnson County,
1881, p. 675.)
Doran
It was on the
township line between Centreview and
Madison Townships, northeast of Holden,
possibly Section 6, Township 45 N, Range
27 West. (--New Atlas of Missouri,
Map 24.)
It is no longer listed.
Eldorado (Jefferson
Township)
Eldorado was a small
place not now (1918) appearing on the map.
It was a trading point in the early days
and Robert Irwin kept a general store
immediately after the Civil War. Later he
was succeeded in the business and Dr.
George Harris was engaged in the practice
of medicine there. (--Cockrell, p.
167.)
Ernestville (elevation 742
feet)
It is on the
Lafayette County line, at Section 25,
Township 48 N, Range 25 West on Highway KK
north of C.
It is in Lafayette County.
(--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
[8]
Fayetteville (Hazel
Hill, Hazel Hill Township)
The town was named
for Lafayette Collins, who was brought up
here. The name Lafayette is contracted to
Fayette and ville making it Fayetteville.
Ben E. Lemon kept the first store here...
The first post-office was
kept at the residence of James Borthick,
who was the first postmaster. This was
long before the town of Lafayette was
laid out. The name of the office was
"Air", so called for brevity and for the
atmosphere around them. In the course of
time the office was changed to the new
village of Fayetteville, where it took
the name "Fayetteville", and has borne
it ever since, notwithstanding the
popularity of the nickname, Hazel Hill,
applied to the town. The first
postmaster was Ben E. Lemon... (--History
of Johnson County, 1881, p. 653.)
Fayette (Hazel Hill) ten
miles north of Warrensburg, on the
Lexington Turnpike...contained one
church, and seven stores. Population
about 200 - 1874. (--Campbell, p.
290.)
It is situated at Section
11, Township 47 N, Range 26 West on
Highway H west of 13.
Mail via Warrensburg;
population 50. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Elm Spring (now Elm)
Elm Spring, so called
in History of Johnson County, 1881, p.
681.
It is situated at Section
30, Township 47 N, Range 28 West on
Highway 50 east of W.
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.)
Mail now via Kingsville;
no population. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Fulkerson
Fulkerson was in the
northwest corner of the county, four and
one-half miles northeast of Skaggs, Cass
County. (--The State of Missouri,
in 1904, p. 417.)
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme.)
It is no longer listed.
(--General Scheme, p. 55.)
Gallagher
See Montserrat.
Gallaher's Mill (Montserrat
Township)
One of the earliest
mills in the county was Gallaher's Mill on
Clear Fork in Section 6, this township.
This mill was built by Wm. Cheek in 1830
or 1831 and belonged successively to James
A. Gallaher, Montville Huff and Col.
Morton Thompson. There was a store, mill
and gun shop, and it was a favorite resort
of the pioneers. It was the voting place
for Washington Township before Knob Noster
was built. (--Cockrell, pp. 297,
298.)
[9]
Grover (Simpson
Township)
Grover, formerly
called Millford, in the northern part of
Section 13, on Blackwater, had been a
noted spot for many years. Millford, a
name derived from the old Davis mill and
the ford hard by, making a compound word
of mill and ford, which was commonly
called for several years the mill ford
until custom christened it Millford with
accent on the first syllable. The place
was frequently called Kirkpatrick's Mill
in honor of Wm. Kirkpatrick who came here
in 1850...A little store had been kept
here almost without intermission for
several years.
The post-office was first
established as Millford about 1850, but
after the Civil War the name was changed
to that of Grover, in honor of Col. B.
W. Grover, a distinguished militia
officer who was mortally wounded in the
battle of Lexington. (--History of
Johnson County, 1881, pp. 636,
637.)
The office was
discontinued during the Civil War and
resuscitated in the year 1870. (--History
of Johnson County, pp. 636, 637.)
Grover is no longer listed
in Johnson County; Grover in St. Louis
County. (--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Haden
Haden was near
Holden. (--New Atlas of Missouri,
Map 24.)
It is no longer listed.
Harrodsburg
Harrodsburg,
according to the old United States Census,
had a population of twenty-five, with
post-office, two or three stores and
blacksmith shop. It was on the
Warrensburg-Warsaw road. (--Cockrell,
p. 167.)
It is no longer listed.
Henrietta (Johnson Township)
Henrietta was made a
post-office in 1879. W. P. Greenlee was
the first postmaster. (--Cockrell,
p. 167.)
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.)
No longer listed in
Johnson County. There is a Henrietta in
Ray County. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Hazel Hill
See Fayetteville.
[10]
High Point (not a
town)
The great elevation
of Jefferson Township called "High Point"
is in Section 12, on a divide separating
the waters of Tebo from those of the
township running north and south... (--History
of Johnson County, 1881, p. 598.)
Hoffman
Hoffman was on the
northern edge of the county near Lafayette
County line. (--The State of Missouri,
in 1904, p. 417.)
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.)
It is no longer listed.
Holden (elevation 850 feet)
In the latter part of
1858 Jacobs & Cummings erected a box
house on the corner of Second and Olive
Streets, and started a store containing
all kinds of articles needed by
farmers...About this time Dr. C. F.
Carter...erected the frame building used
as a residence in Holden...In the same
year Horatio Cox built a blacksmith
shop...
For several years before
the town of Holden was laid out, there
was a post-office northeast of the
present site, a few hundred yards on the
line of the stage running from Jefferson
City to Independence. This post-office
was kept by Mr. Isaac Jacobs and when
Holden was laid out and Mr. Jacobs'
store was put up, the post-office was
moved there... (--History of Johnson
County, 1881, pp. 451, 452, 470.
Cockrell, p. 179.)
Holden at the junction of
the M. P. R. R., with the M. K. & T.
R. R. .. is the second town of
importance in the county. It contained
five churches, two hotels, one large
flouring mill...about twenty stores,
three lumberyards, one livery stable,
one gun smith, one saddlery &
harness shop, two carpenter shops, two
grain depots and one nurseryman.
Population about 2500. (--Campbell's
Gazetteer of Missouri, p. 291.)
It was named for a public
official. (--Our Storehouse of
Missouri Place Names, Ramsay, p.
57.)
It covers several sections
in Township 45 N, Range 28 West at the
junction of 58 & 131.
Kingsville (elevation 915
feet)
The village of
Kingsville was laid out in 1856 by Gen.
Wm. King, whose name the village now
honors. Gen. King built the first house in
1853; Samuel Bolerjack followed. Rufus
King had built a dwelling, at that time,
on the prairie, some distance away, in
1851. The village is located in four
sections and four different townships--
Section 6, 1, 31 and 36, Townships 45, 46,
Range 28 and 29. (--History of Johnson
County, p. 527.)
It is situated at the
junction of Township & 58.
[11]
Garden
Garden was east of
McClurg post-office in Rose Hill Township.
(--New Atlas of Missouri, Map 24,
Campbell.)
No Garden listed in
Johnson County; is Garden City in Cass
County. (--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Globe (Centerview Township)
It was situated at
Section 16, Township 44 N, Range 27 West.
(--New Atlas of Missouri, Map 24.)
It is no longer listed.
Greendoor
It was in the north
central section of the county, north of
Warrensburg. (--Map of Missouri, 1911, (--Rand,
McNally.)
Kirkpatrick's Mill
See Grover.
Knobnoster (elevation 804
feet)
Knobnoster, on the M.
P. R.R., ten miles east of Warrensburg,
derives its name from a prominent mound or
knob that stands near it, isolated, on the
prairie...The town was laid out in 1845,
incorporated in 1852, and contained five
churches, one school, one newspaper...two
hotels, two livery stables, twenty stores,
one wagon and saddler's shop, two
lumberyards, one nursery and 1 grain
depot. Population about 2,000 (1874). (--Campbell,
p. 211.)
Residents of this Johnson
County farming community believe--and
probably they are right--theirs is the
only town in the world named Knobnoster,
a combination of English and Latin,
meaning "our knobs"; the name was coined
by a school teacher, shortly after the
town was founded in 1858, by Samuel
Workman. (--The Empire that Missouri
Pacific Serves, p. 227.)
It is situated at Section
15, 16, 21, & 22, Township 46 N,
Range 24 W, at the junction of J. D
& 50.
Lafayette
See Fayetteville.
Latour (corporate name for
La Tour, elevation 785 feet)
It is in Rose Hill
Township. (--Cockrell, p. 104.)
It is situated at Section
3, Township 44 N, Range 29 West, in the
southwest corner of the county on
Highway 2.
[12]
Latour...was laid out
when the St. Louis & San Francisco
R.R., was built in 1885. The town is
located on Section 3, Township 44 N, Range
29 West. The original site was owned by
Howard and Emily Stitt and the town plat
was recorded July 21, 1885. (--Cockrell,
p. 260.)
Latour is a family name.
(--Our Storehouse of Missouri Place
Names, Ramsay, p. 79.)
Leeton (elevation 945 feet)
Leeton came into
existence with the advent of the M. K.
& T. R.R...As soon as the location of
the station was decided upon, J. J. Lee,
H. E. Fewel and R. L. Granstead purchased
about forty acres of land and laid out two
hundred fifty-eight lots. The plat was
recorded October 21, 1895...The town was
incorporated May 14, 1906. (--Cockrell,
pp. 230, 231.)
It is situated at Section
20, 21, Township 44 N, Range 25 W, at
the junction of 2 & EE east of 13.
McClurg (Benton)
It was a station on
the M. K. & T. R.R., eight miles
southwest of Holden. (--Campbell,
p. 291.)
Johnson County has no
McClurg. Taney County has a McClurg. (--Rand,
McNally, 1974.)
Magnolia
Magnolia is on the M.
K. & T. R.R., ten miles southeast of
Holden. It was laid out May 9, 1896, about
the time the railroad was being
constructed. W. H. Hogemeyer was the owner
of the land upon which the town was
platted. It had a bank, lumber yard, two
churches, a high school, a physician and
general stores. (--Cockrell, p.
247.)
It is situated at Section
4, Township 44 N, Range 27 W on Highway
O south of 58.
Mail via Holden;
population 35. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Medford (Rose Hill
Township)
When the Rock Island
Railroad was constructed, the town of
Medford was established on their line on
Section 34, Township 45 N, Range 28 W. The
town was platted by M. R. Snyder and the
original plat recorded January 31, 1905.
(--Cockrell, p. 260.)
It is on Highway 131 north
of 2.
Mail via Holden. (--Rand,
McNally, 1974.)
Medford or Olive Hill
post-office.
So designated on Map of
Missouri, 1911, Rand, McNally.
[13]
Millford (See
Grover, Simpson Township)
Simpson Township
contained one small village which at first
was known as Millford, taking its name
from a ford across the Blackwater near the
Davis mill. Later the village was known as
Grover, and now -- 1918 -- appears on the
map as Valley City...
A post-office was
established at Millford about 1850, but
after the Civil War was changed to
Grover, in honor of Col. Benjamin W.
Grover...who was mortally wounded in the
battle of Lexington. During the Civil
War the office was discontinued and
re-established in 1870 and lasted till
general rural service. Wm. Kirkpatrick,
Wm. Cook and Thos. McDonald were early
postmasters here. (--Cockrell, p.
290.)
Montserrat (elevation 804
feet)
Montserrat
village...is on the line of the Missouri
Pacific R.R., about three miles west of
Knob Noster...It is properly located in
the south half of Section 13, Township 46
N, Range 25 W. It was laid out by John A.
Gallaher, August 24, 1870...
In 1881 C. B. Baker was
saloonist and postmaster, W. H. Anderson
was carpenter and justice of the
peace... (--History of Johnson County,
1881, p. 505.)
Montserrat (Gallagher) on
the M. P. R.R., six miles east of
Warrensburg, contained two churches, a
public school, a grain elevator, and a
few business houses. Population about
100. (--Campbell, p. 291.)
It is situated at Section
13, Township 46 N, Range 25 W, on
Highway 50.
Mail via Knob Noster. (--Rand,
McNally, 1974.)
New Castle
A possible situation
is at Section 26, Township 44 N, Range 25
W, southeast of Leeton.
New Town
See Warrensburg.
New Town in Sullivan
County. (--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Old Town (See Warrensburg.)
In 1836 John Evans
opened the first store in Old Town and for
the following six years there were only
two stores in the village. Evans conducted
a general merchandise store, selling
groceries, dry goods, harness and whiskey.
The store stood in the hollow a little
east of the center of town.W. H. Davis
& Company were the first to open a
store on the hill near the center of the
old town...
[14]
The town was extended
eastward into the district known as New
Town by the official platting of Grover's
Depot addition, October 15, 1857...The
general tendency of business was toward
New Town when the railroad was built. This
was in 1845. (--Cockrell, pp. 202,
203.)
There is an Old Town in
St. Louis County. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Olive Hill Post Office
See Medford.
Owsley
Owsley was an early
settlement in Jefferson Township. (--Cockrell,
p. 167.)
It is situated at Section
36, Township 45 N, Range 24 W, in the
southeast section of the county on an
unmarked county road east of D,
southeast of Knob Noster.
The post-office was
discontinued prior to 1905. (--General
Scheme, p. 55.)
Mail now via Green Ridge,
Pettis County. No population. (--Rand,
McNally, 1974.)
Pertle Springs
Pertle Springs which
is located about one-half mile south of
Warrensburg (1918) is one of the most
desirable health and pleasure resorts of
the State...
Pertle Springs in
connected with the city of Warrensburg
(1918) by a railroad which runs from the
business district of the city, near the
Missouri Pacific depot, through the
residence district to the springs. (--Cockrell,
pp. 195, 196.)
It is no longer listed.
Pittsville (Jackson
Township)
The village of
Pittsville was laid out about 1858, and
named in honor of Rev. Warren M. Pitts, a
prominent Methodist divine, who was born
in Kentucky...The village of Pittsville is
on the Holden-Lexington road, and was the
only post-office in the township (1881).
The village has never grown much since the
Civil War...Part of the village was burnt
during the war by guerillas.
The post-office was first
established at Basin Knob, and called by
that name for several years, and John
Winfrey served as postmaster for eleven
years... (--History of Johnson County,
1881, p. 680.)
It is situated at Section
27, Township 47 N, Range 28 W at the
junction of 131 & 50.
Mail via Holden;
population 65. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
[15]
Post Oak (Post Oak
Township)
A third post-office
was established (1855) on the Warrensburg
and Clinton mail route, five miles south
of Cornelia, with M. M. Irwin, postmaster.
The post-office was named for the
township. (--History of Johnson County,
1881, p. 589.)
The town is on the line of
the C. R. I. & P. R. R. and M. K.
& T. R. R. S which were afterwards
built through and in 1918 had a store,
blacksmith shop, school house and
several residences. (--Cockrell,
p. 228.)
It is situated at Section
25, Township 44 N, Range 26 W, on
Highway 13 near Henry County line.
Mail via Leeton;
population 40. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Quick City (Rose Hill
Township)
Another station on
the St. L. & S. F. R. R., located
about a mile from the Henry County line,
south of the center of the township, was
platted by Morris Quick, from whom it
takes its name, and the plat was recorded
February 3, 1886. It had a post-office,
two churches and several residences. (--Cockrell,
p. 266.)
It is situated at Section
20, Township 44 N, Range 28 W, west of B
north of Henry County line.
Mail via Holden;
population 20. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Ramey (Kingsville)
This village on the
Missouri Pacific R.R., nineteen miles west
of Warrensburg had 1 hotel, 6 stores, a
flouring mill and a carpenter shop.
Population about 300. (--Campbell,
p. 291.)
See Kingsville.
Robin (Robins)
It is in the northern
section of the county four and one-half
miles from Fayetteville. (--The State of
Missouri, in 1904, p. 417.)
It is situated at Section
5, Township 47 N, Range 26 W on Highway
H south of Lafayette County line.
Mail via Warrensburg; no
population. (--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
[16]
Rose Hill (Rose Hill
Township)
The town of Rose Hill
was laid out by Garrett J. Wood, one of
the first business men of the place, and
named for the sweet, fragrant wild rose
that attracted his notice in the vicinity
in 1842. Henry F. Baker and N. Baker were
prominent merchants. The little town grew
and prospered till the (Civil) War, which
was the death of the "City of Roses"...The
railroad with the thriving town of Holden
twelve miles away, did much in the work of
retrogression which the war had
inaugurated...
The original town of Rose
Hill was divided into six blocks. The
town plat bears date of May 5, 1842,
signed by G. J. Wood and recorded by
Z.T. Davis, County recorder, May 12,
1842.
The first post-office in
the vicinity was established about 1840,
and was called "Big Creek" till 1840,
when the name was changed to Rose Hill.
The office was first kept on Scaly Bark
Creek. Some of the first postmaster were
Garrett J. Wood, Henry F. Baker, and N.
Baker... (--History of Johnson County,
p. 557.)
Rose Hill, seven miles
south southwest of Holden, had three
stores and a public school. (--Campbell,
p. 291.)
It was situated at Section
1, Township 44 N, Range 29 W, on Highway
2 east of Latour.
It is no longer listed.
Scott
Scott was in the
south central section of the county south
from Warrensburg, near Post Oak Creek. (--The
State of Missouri, in 1904, p. 417.)
No Scott listed in Johnson
County; Scott City in Scott County;
Scott's Corner, Andrews County. (--Rand,
McNally, 1974.)
"Shanghai"
See Cornelia.
Sigel
See Dunksburg.
Sutherland (Jefferson
Township)
Sutherland was a
station on the M. K. & T. R. R., with
a store and other houses. (--Cockrell,
p. 167.)
It was situated at Section
17 & 20, Township 44 N, Range 24 W
on D north of Henry County line.
It is no longer listed.
[17]
Stone (Post Oak
Township)
Stone post-office,
named for that prominent family, also gave
service for a while. (--Cockrell,
p. 228.) (Location is unknown.)
No Stone in Johnson
County; Stone Hill, Dent County. (--Rand,
McNally, 1974.)
Slabtown
Slabtown was located
at Section 10, Township 45 N, Range 25 W,
southeast of Warrensburg on an unmarked
county road, east of Highway 13 north of
Y.
No Slabtown in Johnson
County; is Slabtown in Madison county.
(--Rand, McNally, 1974.)
Simpson (Simpson Township)
Simpson Post Office
was established January 11, 1880 and
discontinued the summer of 1881. Mrs.
Sarah D. Wood was postmistress. Mail once
a week. The office was kept at the
residence of R.H. Wood, in the northeast
part of Section 29. (--History of
Johnson County, p. 637.)
It is no longer listed.
Sissonville (Jefferson
Township)
It was situated at
Section 3, Township 45 N, Range 24 W, in
the southeast section of the county. (--New
Atlas of Missouri, Map 24.)
It is no longer listed.
Valley City (elevation 685
feet)
It is situated at
Section 13, Township 47 N, Range 25 W on
MM & E, east of CC, south of Lafayette
County line.
Davis or Kirkpatrick Mill
was near Valley City. (--Cockrell,
p. 80.)
Mail via Knob Noster; no
population shown. (--Rand, McNally,
1974.)
Wall's Store
See Burnett's
Station.
Warrensburg (elevation 881
feet)
Warrensburg was laid
out and platted by Geo. Tibbs, then county
surveyor in 1836, and the plat was
recorded May 22, 1837...This was what is
now "Old Town". (--Cockrell, p.
202.)
[18]
The town was laid off
in 1835 by John and Martin Warren, for
whom it was named. The first term of the
county court was held there in 1836; it
was incorporated as a town in 1846 and a
city in 1855. It contained three
newspapers, 13 churches, ...two flouring
mills, about 30 stores, a good city hall,
one carriage and one agricultural
implement manufacturing company, two
hotels, one carding and spinning machine,
three lumberyards, and various other
establishments....(1874.) (--Campbell,
pp. 291, 292.)
Warrensburg was named for
George Warren, a Revolutionary War
soldier who built a farmhouse on the
present townsite sometime during the
early 1800'Section...
The old court house here
was the scene of a famous trial growing
out of the shooting of Charles Braden's
hunting hound, "Old Drum", by his
neighbor and brother-in-law Leonidas
Hornsby, who charged the dog with sheep
killing. This precipitated a series of
trials and appeals and in the final
trial plaintiff and defendant hired an
array of lawyers, each of whom later
attained success in industry and
politics. The closing argument by George
G. Vest, later United States Senator
from Missouri for 24 years, included his
"Eulogy to the Dog", still regarded as a
classic example of oratory. Vest's
client, "Old Drum's" owner, won the
case. (--The Empire that Missouri
Pacific Serves, p. 252.)
Warrensburg covers several
sections in Township 46 N, Range 26 W at
the junction of 50 & 13.
"West Lawn"
"West Lawn" was the
residence of Dr. J. M. Ward...He had two
excellent and commodious barns besides
other buildings. It was in Post Oak
Township. (--History of Johnson County,
p. 595.)
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