Gallatin

Gallatin (HM19UE)

Location: Gallatin, MO 64640 Daviess County
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Country: United States of America
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N 39° 54.892', W 93° 57.697'

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Inscription
[Front]
This Grand River town, platted in 1837 as the seat of Daviess County, is named in honor of Albert Gallatin, Secretary of the Treasury, 1801-1813. Settlers were in the area as early as 1830 and in 1836 the county was formed.

Adam-ondi-Ahman, 5 miles northwest was settled by the Mormons on direction of Prophet Joseph Smith, 1838. The name is said to mean "Adam's Consecrated Land," for here, according to Smith, Adam blessed all the patriarchs before his death. At this place, also known as "Adam's Grave," Smith announced the discovery of the altar, on a nearby hill, where, he said, these ancients worshipped. Hostilities broke out between the Mormons and the anti-Mormons and a sharp skirmish took place in Gallatin. In 1839, when the Mormons were expelled from Missouri, Adam-ondi-Ahman was abandoned.

Established in Gallatin were the Daviess County Female Academy, chartered in 1849, and Daviess County Academy and Masonic Hall, chartered in 1855. In 1893, Grand River College was moved here from Edinburg in Grundy County.
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Gallatin, settled on land ceded the U.S. by the Osage Indians, 1808, and by the Sauk, Fox, and Iowa tribes, 1824, served a fertile agricultural area of the Green Hills Region of North Missouri.

Nearby is Grand River, called by the Indians Nischma-Honja and by early French writers Riviere Grande. This chief river of north Missouri has eroded a rock-walled valley paralleling the valley, a few miles east, which before the glacial age carried the Waters of the North, now the Missouri River, to the south.

Gallatin was the scene of the trial of Frank James, elder brother of Jesse, after he voluntarily surrendered to Gov. Thomas T. Crittenden on charges of participating in a holdup of a train near Winston to the southwest. The trial, 1882, highlighted by the appearance of Confederate Gen. Joseph O. Shelby as a defense witness, end in acquittal for Frank James.

Here lived A. M. Dockery, Governor of Missouri, 1901-1905, and Joshua W. Alexander, Secretary of Commerce of U.S., 1919-1921.
Details
HM NumberHM19UE
Tags
Year Placed1953
Placed ByState Historical Society of Missouri and State Highway Commission
Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Wednesday, October 22nd, 2014 at 6:34pm PDT -07:00
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Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)15S E 417814 N 4418750
Decimal Degrees39.91486667, -93.96161667
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 39° 54.892', W 93° 57.697'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds39° 54' 53.52" N, 93° 57' 41.82" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Area Code(s)660, 816
Closest Postal AddressAt or near 102 N Main St, Gallatin MO 64640, US
Alternative Maps Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps, Yahoo Maps, MSR Maps, OpenCycleMap, MyTopo Maps, OpenStreetMap

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