MEADOW
GROVE -- MADISON COUNTY
Perry Vanado Lewis and his brother Van Buren
arrived from New
York in 1868. Perry homesteaded and established a
timber claim,
planting a large grove of cottonwood trees in 1873.
When the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley
Railroad came
through in 1879 it established a station which it
named
"Meadow Grove," because of the meadow to the west
and
the cottonwood grove to the south. Prior to this,
George Rouse
had run the Deer Creek Post Office about two miles
east, with the
mail brought in by buckboard or stage.
Lewis built a grist mill on Buffalo Creek,
southwest of the
present town, in 1883, where his son-in-law, Joseph
Beech, set up
a grocery store and post office. Since Lewis could
see the need
of a better location, he offered land on the timber
claim as a
town site. It was platted in 1886, and the store
from the mill
site was moved to the new town. A lean-to added for
the post
office, with J. W. White as postmaster. (This
building has been
restored as a museum.) Other stores were needed, so
Lewis gave
lots to those who would start new businesses.
F. J. Hale Warehouse Co. handled grain, coal,
lumber, and
general merchandise. It was managed by J. W.
Warrick, Sr. until
1894, when he and his brother Emmet went into
business. The
Warrick Lumber & Grain is still in business with
the
grandsons, Robert and John Warrick III, as operators
and owners.
A hotel was built, David Ames had a blacksmith
shop, and
William Hopkins operated a mercantile store in 1888.
The Meadow
Grove State Bank was incorporated in 1890 and the
Security Bank
established in 1905. Both closed in 1929, and we
presently have
the Meadow Grove Credit Union. Peter O'Shea had the
first drug
store. Later, Fred Evans bought the business and
moved it to a
new location where he operated a drug store until
1968. This
building is now used as the community center.
A Methodist Episcopal Church was established in
1872. It was
followed by the Latter Day Saints in 1896 and St.
Matthew
Lutheran Church in 1910. Currently we have three
churches: a
Methodist, Christian Missionary Alliance, and
Lutheran.
A school
was built in 1888. When a new brick school was built
in 1912, the
old school was moved down town and used as a city
hall. The
Meadow Grove and Tilden districts merged in 1967,
and are now
called "Elkhorn Valley Schools."
The "Meadow Grove News," started by A.T.Evans, is
currently published by descendants, Jim Evans and
family.
Dr. Kindred, the typical country doctor, came to
Meadow Grove
in 1893 and continued to minister to the sick until
his death in
1945. He delivered over 3,000 babies.
In the early days, the opera house was the town's
entertainment center. It was used for church
services, dances,
plays, wrestling matches, and movies. Lawrence Welk
played for
dances at Meadow Grove on several occasions. Large
celebrations
such as the 4th of July, reunions, and mission
festival were held
in the cottonwood grove.
Meadow Grove claims to be the first town in the
United States
to show free outdoor movies. It is said that it
often brought
crowds of over 2,000 to town.
The "Yellow Banks Park," a large recreation resort,
opened in 1928 northeast of town along the Elkhorn
River. An
estimated 15,000 people attended the opening day
celebration. It
had the world's longest billboard, three-fourths of
a mile long.
It was a small town in itself, with cottages, a
dance hall,
restaurant, and other businesses. In 1937, during
the Depression,
the park closed.
The town celebrated its centennial in 1986 with one
of the
highlights being a "Hike to History" tour to the
site
where the old mill, grocery store, and post office
were located.
Meadow Grove, the population peaking at 500 in
1904, is
holding its own with the current tally nearly 400.
The number of
businesses declined when automobiles made it
possible for people
to drive to larger towns to do their buying. The
town's only
grocery story closed in 1988.
Meadow Grove, with a good number of the original
trees
remaining, still has its cottonwood grove. Many
former residents
have returned to the peace and quiet they remember,
retiring in
Meadow Grove.
By Lenore Kuchar, Rte 2 Box 8, Meadow Grove, NE
68752
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL: They Called It Meadow Grove,
by Lenora
and Gary Kuchar, 1979; and Do You Remember, by
Lenora Kuchar,
1986.
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