Christian County, Missouri
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 37° 01.214 W 093° 12.306
15S E 481755 N 4097136
Home of the vigilante group called the "Bald Knobbers"....
Waymark Code: WM12812
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 03/25/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
Views: 0

County: Christian County
Location of courthouse: Church St., between N. 2nd St. & N. 2nd Ave., Ozark
Location of county: SW corner, one count off southern border; crossroads of US-60, US-65, US-160, MO-413, MO-125 & MO-14, MO-176
Organized: March 8, 1859
Named after: William Christian, Colonel Revolutionary War
County seat: Ozark
Elevation (highest): 524 meters (1,719 feet)
Population: 85,432 (2017)

The Person:
Colonel William George Christian
Birthdate: circa 1743
Birthplace: Staunton, Augusta County, Virginia, United States
Death: April 09, 1786 (38-47)
Death Site: Jeffersonville, Clark County, Indiana, United States (Mortally wounded defending his property from a group of Indians)
Place of Burial: Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, United States" ~ Geni

"William Christian (c.1743 – April 9, 1786) was a Continental soldier, militiaman and politician from the Colony of Virginia who served in the era of the American Revolution. The Town of Christiansburg, Virginia, is named in his honor. He was a signatory to the Fincastle Resolutions and founder of Fort William (now Louisville, Kentucky). Christian helped to negotiate the Treaty of Long Island—making peace between the Overmountain Men and the majority of the Cherokee tribes in 1777.

"Early life
Christian was born in Staunton, Virginia, a descendant of a Manx family which had previously migrated to Ireland. His parents, Israel Christian and Elizabeth Starke, had settled in Virginia in 1740, where they ran a general store.

"Personal and civic life
In the mid-1760s, Christian worked in the law office of Patrick Henry, and married Henry's sister, Anne. Christian resided in Botetourt County, Virginia and then Fincastle County, Virginia. He represented Fincastle County in the Virginia House of Burgesses for three sessions, from 1773 to 1775. He was a signatory to the Fincastle Resolutions, the earliest statement of armed resistance to the British Crown in the American Colonies.

"In 1775, with the approach of the American Revolutionary War, Christian served on the Fincastle Committee of Safety and attended the March 20 and July 17 meetings of the Virginia Conventions.

"The Town of "Christiansburgh," Virginia – as it was originally spelled – was named in honor of Christian, who was an early settler in the region. Originally a concentration of taverns and rest stops along the Great Wilderness Road (present-day U.S. Route 11), the original 1.1-square mile Town was established on November 10, 1792, by an act passed by the Virginia General Assembly. The Town of Christiansburg was later incorporated on January 7, 1833.

"Military duty
At about the age of 18, William served as a captain in the Anglo-Cherokee War under Colonel William Byrd. In 1774, he commanded a regiment of militia from Fincastle County in Dunmore's War, but he and his troops arrived too late to participate in the decisive Battle of Point Pleasant.

"On February 13, 1776, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 1st Virginia Regiment of the Continental Army, and was promoted to colonel in March. When the British-allied Cherokees under Dragging Canoe and Oconostota went to war with the colonies in 1776, Christian resigned his commission in July of that year, accepting a commission as colonel in the militia from the Virginia Council of Defense.

"Christian led an expedition against the Overhill Cherokees, which saw little combat, but razed several villages, and compelled some of the chiefs to agree to peace. He served in the commission which negotiated the "Treaty of the Long Island of the Holston" with the Cherokees, signed on July 20, 1777. He was also a commissioner in a second treaty with the Cherokees – in 1781.

Post-revolution
In 1785, Christian moved his family to the neighborhood of the Louisville settlement, where he executed claims to 9,000 acres (36 km²) of land. He was killed in the Illinois Country (in the area which is now southern Indiana) the next year during battle with the Wabash Indians. Christian is buried in Jefferson County, Kentucky in the Bullitt cemetery in Oxmoor, near his residence, a log house still standing." ~ Wikipedia



The Place:
"In March 8, 1859, Christian became the 113th of Missouri’s 114 counties. It was carved from portions of Greene, Taney and Webster Counties, the latter two having earlier taken their territories also from Greene County. Only Worth, the state’s smallest county, and the independent city of St. Louis were created later. Mrs. Neaves, a landowner hesitant to lose her citizenship of Greene County in order to join the proposed county, agreed to do so if it were named for her former Kentucky residence, Christian County.The few early arrivals, who left when the federal government moved numerous Indian tribes from the east here in the early 1820’s, returned when the natives were removed to Kansas City and the area re-opened for settlement in 1833. Although the earliest families were from Ohio and Indiana, soon most settlers were arriving from Kentucky, Tennessee, the Carolinas, Virginia, Maryland, Alabama, and Mississippi.

"Here, water formed the land and the lifestyle – from the valley-spanning entrance to Smallin Cave; the water mills along the James and Finley Rivers where settlements began; and the hills and hollows along Bull Creek, Swan Creek and lesser streams where residents sometimes supplemented their incomes with illegal stills to the spas that thrived in the 1880’s near springs at Reno and Eau de Vie; trout hatcheries enjoying a current revival; and the many social activities that centered about the streams.

"In Christian County history, lead mines, dairy farms and cheese factories, subsistence farming, tie and timber companies, tomato farms and canneries, logging and oak furniture manufacturing, and gristmills have each enjoyed economic predominance. Diversified manufacturing today includes plastics, electric motors, apparel, stretch limousines, boat trailers, vinegar and safes. Other strong industries are construction, real estate, banking, antiques and handicrafts.

"Annual festivals include Nixa’s Sucker Days (that’s a fish) in May; Sparta’s Persimmon Days in November; Chadwick’s Railroad Days in June; the Billings Fair in August; and the Clever Fourth of July celebration. Ozark observes State High School Rodeo championships in May; Village Days, Ozark Mountain Rendevous, and Celtic Games in June, County Fair in July, and Festival of Lights in November and December. Major annual fundraisers for charity are Rubber Duck Races in June; Ozark Rodeo in July; Bull Rides in June and August; and the Ozarks Arts and Crafts Festival the first weekend in October.

"Christian County’s location between Missouri’s third largest city, Springfield, and America’s music boomtown, Branson, has fueled growth that increased the 1980 population of 22,402 by nearly 150% to the 2000 population 54,285. Estimates for population at the end of 2003 ranges from about 60,000 to around 62,000.

"The abundant natural beauty, the exhausting reality of surviving from the land, and the traditions and heritage of its people have taught residents to entertain themselves. Artists, poets and writers have abounded here, though few have sought or found national recognition. Restaurateur and supplier of liquor in prohibition days, Howard Garrison; electrician Lyman Herston who recently had a one-man show some thirty years after his death; and currently prolific muralist and print producer Scottie Snider are three of the better known of dozens of artists whose works grace area homes and businesses. Playwright Lanford Wilson, Missouri’s “Poet Laureate” George Nicholas Rees, humorist and novelist Suzann Ledbetter, and musician Slim Wilson lived here. Native siblings, Leon “Abner” and Frank “Cicero” Weaver and June “Elviry” who was married to one brother and later the other, performed in the 1920’s and 1930’s a nationally-known vaudeville act, The Weavers. Among well-known legal cases, the vigilante “Bald Knobbers” group was formed to help restore order after more than a decade of rampant lawlessness followed the Civil War. In 1889, three members paid with their lives for the murder of two men, killed as the organization was disbanding. In 1932, Jennings and Harry Young, members of a highly respected and law-abiding local family, had begun with petty crime and advanced to the slaughter of six policemen in a shootout just across the Greene County line – the most lawmen killed in a single attack in American history." ~ Christian County Missouri

Year it was dedicated: 1859

Location of Coordinates: County Courthouse

Related Web address (if available): [Web Link]

Type of place/structure you are waymarking: County

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