
Andrew
county, organized 1841, is one of 6 counties in the Indian Platte Purchase
Territory annexed to Missouri, 1837. named for Andrew Jackson David, St. Louis
editor, the county was first settled in the middle 1830’s. Pioneers were from
Ohio, Ind., Tenn., Ky., VA., and other parts of Missouri.
Savannah, the county seat ,
was laid out in 1841. First Briefly called Union, it was renamed for
Savannah, Ga. The Platte Co. R. R. (C. B. & Q.) reached there in 1860,
and today’s Chicago., Great Western in the late 1880’s. In the post
Civil War years, the town grew as shipping point and trading center.
A divided county during the
Civil War, Andrew sent troops to both sides. In Aug.,
1861 come 1500 from Andrew and other counties joined the
pro-Southern Mo. State Guard at Camp Highly in eastern Andrew County
while others joined a large Union cap in adjacent Gentry County. In
1861, Union troops seized “Northwest Democrat,” a pro-Southern
newspaper, in Savannah and troops from Camp Highly seized the “Plain
Dealer,” Union newspaper. Raiding Guerrilla bands overran the county
through 1863.
Andrew County’s glacial
plains support fertile livestock, grain, and fruit farms. In the county
are One Hundred and Two and Platter rivers and forming its west border
are the Nodaway and Missouri. In 1804 the Lewis and Clark Expedition
camped on an island the mouth of Nodaway and members of fur trader
Wilson P. Hunt’s 1811 Astorian expedition wintered near the river’s
mouth.
Among the county towns are
Amazonia, once on the Missouri River, now inland, laid out in 1857 near
the site of Nodaway City, early river port; Fillmore’ 1845; Whitesville,
1848; Rochester, 1848; Bolckow, 1868; Rosendale, 1869; Rea, 1877;
Helena, 1878; and Cosby, 1882.
Andrew County is the
Birthplace of Nellie Tayloe Ross, the first woman Gov. of Wyo., 1925-27,
first woman Dir. U.S. Mint; Joseph k. Toole (1851-1929) first Gov. of
Mont., 1935; W. Elmer Holt, Gov. Mont., 1935 Edwin W. Toole (1839-1905)
noted Mont. Lawyer; Eugene W. Caldwell (1870-1918) noted roentgenologist.
In Savannah lived John P Altgeld, Gov. of Ill., 1893-97; Henry S, Kelley
(1832-1911) legal textbook writer; James P. Somerville, one of founders
of Sertoma Clubs International.
(The
above was taken from a plaque erected by the State Historical Society of
Missouri and State Highway Commission, 1960)