Ivanhoe, Iowa
Ivanhoe, Iowa | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 41°53′00″N 91°27′45″W / 41.88333°N 91.46250°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Iowa |
County | Linn |
Township | Franklin |
Laid out | 1838 |
Surveyed | 1841 |
Founded by | Anton Cowles |
Ivanhoe was a town in Franklin Township, Linn County, Iowa, United States.[1] It was founded by early Iowa settlers, and laid out as a town by Anton Cowles at the intersection of the Old Military Road and the Red Cedar River.[2] It was laid out in 1838 and surveyed in 1841. Ivanhoe was never platted, though it did have its own post office from 1845–49.[1] Unlike other towns founded around that time on the Old Military Road, Ivanhoe faded away; many of its residents relocated to Mount Vernon, Cedar Rapids, or Marion.[2] The February 1921 edition of The Palimpsest describes the area as having been "a refuge for horse thieves and dealers in counterfeit money", though it is unclear whether that was during the time that the town existed or afterwards.[2] Besides the cemetery there are no standing structures left of the old town.
Notable person
[edit]- George Greene, Iowa legislator and judge
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Linn County Place Names - Past and Present". IAGenWeb Project. 2005. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
- ^ a b c Briggs, John Ely (February 1921). Parish, John Carl (ed.). "Along the Old Military Road". The Palimpsest. II (2). Iowa City, Iowa: State Historical Society of Iowa: 49–52. ISSN 0031-0360. LCCN 22022850. Retrieved October 6, 2014.