- Established: January 15,1851
- Organized: October 2, 1854
- County Seat: Allison
Butler County [582 square miles] was named in honor of General
William Orlando Butler (1791-1880), a Kentucky statesman, officer
in the Mexican War, and unsuccessful Democratic candidate for
Vice President in 1848.
Before the county was officially organized, it was attached
to other counties. But by 1853, enough settlers had located
in Butler County to warrant setting up the county's own governing
body, and an election was held in August. Although a full staff
of county officials was elected, the offices were not considered
sufficiently lucrative to warrant a trip to Independence to
be sworn in, so the elected officers failed to qualify.
Another election was held in August 1854 and this time the
elected officials took the oath of office and the county took
over the governing of its own territory. The first court was
held at Clarksville in October 1854 in a little log hut in
which its owner, Mr. Clark, sold groceries. However, the struggle
for the location of the county seat, which involved many interests,
extended over several years. The bitterness it aroused lingered
on for many more years.
The town of Clarksville was originally surveyed in August
1853. The original proprietors of the land were Thomas and
Jeremiah Clark, Daniel Mather, and D.C. Hilton. Although there
were earlier attempts to erect a courthouse, the first to be
built was begun in 1856 and completed in 1858 at Clarksville.
Located in a square near the center of town, this 40' x 60'
two-story brick courthouse cost $20,000. However, it was sold
to the local school district only four years later for a mere
$2,800, when the location of the county seat was changed. The
building then served as a schoolhouse from 1863 to 1903, when
it was torn down.
Even before the completion of the first courthouse, the jealousy
of other towns was evident. Georgetown, which today is only
a name, contended unsuccessfully (by a margin of only seven
votes) for the county seat in 1958. Georgetown was located
in the geographical center of Butler County, where Jefferson,
Jackson, West Point, and Ripley Townships come together. In
April of the following year, electors voted 357 to 336 (a majority
of only 21 votes) to remove the county seat to Butler Center,
which had been laid out in 1856. Protesting residents of Clarksville
obtained an injunction and, in July 1859, the district court
sustained the contention that there had been irregularities
and issued an order voiding the election. Another election
was then held in April 1860 which gave Butler Center a margin
of 80 votes. So, beginning in 1860, and for a period of 20
years, Butler Center (located two miles south of the paper
town of Georgetown) had the courthouse. It was a small, two-story
frame building, 26' x 36', with an outside wooden stairway,
and was built at a total cost of around $2,000. The two acres
on which the courthouse at Butler Center was located were donated
to the county by Arthur Mullarkey, a farmer who owned considerable
land in that vicinity.
According to A.T. Andreas in his 1875 Illustrated Historical
Atlas of the State of Iowa, Butler Center was, except for it
being the county seat, "a place of no commercial or other
importance." Andreas continues, "The village contains,
besides the court house, so called, two general stores, and
wagon and blacksmith shops. The best public structure in the
place is a two-story frame school house, 20x40, capable of
seating 160 pupils..."
In the years following, people became disenchanted with Butler
Center because of its inaccessibility, particularly in the
winter. Clarksville again sought to obtain the county seat,
as did Bristow and Shell Rock, all without success. With the
coming of the Dubuque and Dakota Railroad to Butler County
in 1879, the town of Allison, named for United States Senator
William B. Allison (1829-1908), was platted and was successful,
after several elections, in having the courthouse built there
in 1881 at a cost of $10,680. (Senator Allison, a Dubuque Republican
lawyer, had been a delegate to the 1860 convention in Chicago
that nominated Abraham Lincoln for President.) The contractor
for the courthouse was L.D. Harvey of Clarksville. The people
of Allison contributed $7,000 in cash to the $8,000 to $10,000
construction cost, and the Stout family donated 10 acres of
land.
The county records were moved to Allison on January 10, 1881
and placed in temporary quarters until the Italianate courthouse
was completed. The county clerk, the recorder, and the sheriff
were located in the upper story of a building owned by A.M.
McLeod. The auditor and the treasurer were stationed in a drugstore
owned by a Dr. Riggs. Allison grew rapidly and, since it was
quite centrally located, the county seat controversy soon ended.
To the 50' x 55', two-story courthouse, a 20' x 51' addition
was constructed on the north side of the building in 1903 at
a cost of $5,000. During the summer of 1927, a jail was built
to the east of the courthouse for a total cost of $14,306.90.
In 1937, another addition (27' x 38') was constructed on the
east side of the courthouse at a cost of $9,420.50. A proposal
to build a new courthouse was voted down and, in 1959, approximately
$5,000 was spent to remodel the courtroom.
The building site, at the head of Main Street on the crest
of a gentle slope, is said to be the highest point in Butler
County. The spacious courthouse grounds were beautifully planted
with a variety of shade and ornamental trees. With its additions
and other remodeling, the 1881 wooden frame with brick veneer
courthouse continued to serve its purpose as best it could.
But the building developed inadequacies and structural cracks,
requiring the citizens of Butler County to again face the issue:
remodel or replace? On June 2, 1970, 13 of the 16 townships
in the county voted down a proposal to build a new courthouse
which was to have a cost about $1 million. Meanwhile, several
grand juries recommended replacement, and the board of supervisors
stated that it would be impractical to repair the 1881 building.
Court sessions had to be canceled sometimes because of poor
heating and inadequate and overloaded wiring caused problems.
Lack of space in the old courthouse caused overcrowding and
necessitated renting additional space in downtown Allison.
Another bond election -- the fourth (previous elections were
held in 1956, 1957, and 1970) -- was set for Tuesday, April
10, 1973 for the construction of a new courthouse. The proposal
was for a $940,000 bond issue, of which $200,000 in revenue
sharing funds was already on hand. The 85' x 161' building
was to be constructed of masonry concrete and brick.
A severe, state-wide snowstorm made it necessary to postpone
the date of the election to Tuesday, May 22, 1973, at which
time the proposal to construct oa new courthouse carried by
a vote of 2,323 in favor and 896 against, or 72.17 percent
approval. All but two townships (Albion and Bennezette) gave
majority approval.
A total of 13 bids on the new courthouse were submitted and
opened at Allison on January 23, 1974. The combined three low
bids totaled $927,176. Ground was broken for the new structure
on Monday, April 14, 1974.
The new courthouse, located immediately in front of, or south
of, the previous one, was designed by Cervetti-Weber & Associates,
Inc. of Marshalltown, Iowa, who were paid $48,878.84. The general
contractor, Ramker Construction and Supply, Inc. of Waverly,
Iowa received $641,887. Landscaping was by the Earl Ferris
Nursery of Hampton, Iowa. The total cost of the building was
$939,950.84, or slightly less than the $940,000 allowed by
the bond election.
Dedicated on Sunday, December 14, 1975, the "sound, functional,
and aesthetically pleasing building" is electrically heated
and air conditioned. It is expected to be used "for many
years to come."
In the meantime, the 94-year-old Butler County Courthouse
continued in the news. On November 25, 1975, an Iowa National
Guard helicopter lifted the round cupola off the building.
The cupola will remain on the courthouse grounds as a Butler
County American Revolution Bicentennial Commission project,
and will be turned into a historic display to include a hall
of fame of Butler County residents. One month later, Butler
County officials signed a contract to pay the Anderson-Davis
Wrecking Co. of Des Moines $4,720 to tear down the old courthouse
-- just before the chairman of the Butler County Board of Supervisors
received word that a California attorney was interested in
buying an Iowa courthouse to dismantle and haul to California
to restore as a law office. But the fate of the old courthouse
at Allison was sealed and, in April 1976, it was demolished. |