Long Description:
Sedalia
"Queen City of the Prairie," Sedalia is the home of the
Missouri State Fair and the seat of Pettis County. George R. Smith,
legislator, railroad promoter, founded Sedalia, 1857-60, when
Georgetown, the county seat, refused land to the Pacific Railroad
(Mo. Pac.). The railroad was routed through Pettis County when,
under Smith's leadership, some $170,000 in Pacific R.R. bonds were
raised to defeat other competing counties.
Named for Smith's daughter Sarah, whose pet name was "Sed,"
Sedalia was the terminus of the Pacific R.R. by Jan., 1861. The
Union Army had headquarters and a supply base here. Confederates,
lead by General M. Jeff Thompson, raided the post, Oct. 15,
1864.
Sedalia had its first civil government and was designated
county seat in Feb., 1864. By 1868, town population was 6,768. The
Tebo and Neosho R.R. (M.K.T.) reached here, 1870; two branches of
the Missouri Pacific were completed by 1879; extensive railroad
shops opened 1870-73. Sedalia and Pettis County raised $770,000 for
railroad bonds by 1880, and county population had increased from
13,934 in 1868 to 27,271.
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Railroad town and seat of Pettis County, Sedalia is a city of
diversified enterprises. It lies 910 feet above sea level on
fertile prairie in a region claimed by the Osage tribes until 1808.
The county, organized in 1833, is named for Mo. Congressman Spencer
Pettis.
The State Fair opened here, 1901, on 160 improved acres given
by Sedalia Now 276 acres, the fairground has over 60 handsome
buildings. In Sedalia, 1894-1924, was George R. Smith (Methodist)
Negro College built on land given by Sarah R. Cotton and Martha E.
Smith. Several of Sedalia's early schools specialized in business
education.
Men associated with town and county are David Thomson,
founder of Georgetown; J. West Goodwin, editor; and legislators
John H. Bothwell, William Gentry, and John T. Heard.
Among noted med who lived here are Mo. Supreme Court Judge
Henry Lamm; Federal Judge John F. Philips; U.S. Sen. George G.
Vest; surgeon Walter E. Dandy; statesman Charles E. Yeater;
Missouriana Collector F.A. Sampson. A Historical Museum is in the
courthouse. ~Marker text