Text of marker:
Webster County
Webster County was organized on March 3, 1855 and encompasses 590 sq. miles of the highest extensive upland area of Missouri's Ozarks. The judicial seat, Marshfield, which lies 1,490 feet above sea level. highest county seat in Mo. Pioneer Legislator John F. McMahan named the county and county seat for Daniel Webster, and his Marshfield, Mass. home.
Marshfield was laid out in 1856 by R. H. Pitts on land given by C. F. Dryden and W. T. and B. F. T. Burford. Until a courthouse was built, the county business was conducted at Hazelwood; where Joseph W. McClurg, later Gov. of Mo,, operated a general store. Today's Carthage marble courthouse, built 1939-41, is the county's third.
During the Civil War, a small force of pro--SouthernState troops was driven out of Marshfield, Feb.1862, and ten months later a body of Confederates was routed east of town. On January 9, 1863, Gen. Joseph O. Shelby's troops burned the stoutly built Union fortification at Marshfield and at Sand Springs, evacuated earlier. By 1862, the telegraph passed near Marshfield on a route later called the "Old Wire Road."
In Webster County, straddling the divide between the Missouri and Arkansas rivers, rise the headwaters of the James, Niangua, Gasconade, and Pomme de Terre rivers. A part of the 1808 Osage Indian land cession, the county was settled in the early 1830's by pioneers from Ky. and Tenn. An Indian trail crossed southern Webster County and many prehistoric mounds are in the area.
The railroad building boom of the post Civil War period stimulated the county growth as a dairy, poultry, and livestock producer. The Atlantic & Pacific (Frisco) was built through Marshfield, 1872, and by 1883 the Kansas City, Springfield, and Memphis (Frisco) crossed the county. Seymour, Rogersville, Fordland and Niangua grew up along the rail routes. Early schools were Marshfield Academy, chartered in 1860, Mt. Dale Academy, opened , 1873; and Henderson Academy,1879.
Astronomer Edwin P. Hubble (1889-1953) was born in Marshfield . The composition "Marshfield Cyclone" by the Negro musician John W. (Blind) Boone, gave wide publicity to the April 18, 1880 tornado which struck the town, killing 65 and doing $1,000,000 damage.1
Erected by State Historical Society of Missouri
and State Highway Commission, 1950