Tuesday, November 11, 2025

William B. Allison: The Man Who Ran Washington From Iowa


William B. Allison worked the Senate like a quiet machine, oiling the gears while everyone else tried to blow it up. “When he rises in his place,” one reporter wrote, “he leaves all that shouting to the youngsters.” They called him “the Old Fox,” and it fit. He never rushed, never panicked, just waited for everyone else to wear themselves out.

He ran the nation’s money like a farmer minding his crops—steady, patient, and suspicious of fast talkers. One colleague said, “No man who has ever been in the Senate knew so much about it as he does.” Allison didn’t argue. He didn’t have to. He knew where the deals were buried, and most of the bodies too.

Presidents came and went—Grant, Cleveland, McKinley, Roosevelt—Allison just kept showing up, same seat, same half smile that said he’d already counted the votes.

When asked how he lasted so long, he shrugged. “You do what you can,” he said, “and you let the noise take care of itself.”

By the time he died, Washington barely looked up. The loud ones had taken over. Still, every bridge, fort, and railroad budget had his fingerprints on it. William B. Allison didn’t shout or grandstand. He built the country, one quiet deal at a time.

Academy of the Immaculate Conception at Davenport, Iowa


The Academy of the Immaculate Conception sat on a Davenport hill like it owned the place—which, in a way, it did. Built in 1859 and run by the Sisters of Charity, it was where Iowa girls went to learn how to outthink the world. The sisters taught science, music, math, and probably a little bit of rebellion, whether they meant to or not.

For nearly a hundred years, it buzzed with piano music, ink stains, and dreams too big to fit in a classroom. In 1958, the Academy merged with St. Ambrose to become Assumption High. The building didn’t disappear. These days it’s part of Palmer College of Chiropractic.

Before Bigfoot, There Was the Lockridge Moster

Tracks in the mud, scatnottered turkey feathers--not human
October 1975. Lockridge, Iowa. Population small enough to know who’s in church and who’s not. Then something started killing turkeys. Not clean kills, either—these birds were torn apart, like something angry had come out of the timber hungry for chaos.

A farmer named Bill Beavers made the first call. Said he found ten-inch footprints stamped deep in the mud, wide as a man’s palm. “Didn’t look like no animal I ever seen,” he told the Fairfield Ledger. The cops came out, looked around, scratched their heads, and left with nothing but cigarette smoke and a few plaster casts that didn’t make sense.


Beavers said he saw it one night—black, hairy, broad shoulders, eyes catching the light. He fired his gun, it ran. Left behind that smell every farm kid knows: wet fur and something rotting. The Des Moines Register ran a short piece about it—“Iowa’s Own Monster,” they called it—and suddenly the little town of Lockridge had more reporters than cattle.

Sunday, November 9, 2025

Henry Clay Dean Iowa Orator Preacher & Agitator

Henry Clay Dean
Henry Clay Dean was born loud. He entered the world in 1822 in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, with a voice like thunder and opinions to match. By the time he could walk, he was arguing with adults. By the time he could read, he was preaching to fence posts. People said he was born to save the Republic or set it on fire.

He went to college in Virginia, studied law, then ditched it all to become a Methodist preacher—because shouting in court didn’t give him enough range. Dean could make sinners cry and atheists consider hedging their bets. His sermons weren’t polite little Sunday affairs. They were explosions—half scripture, half outrage, and all Henry. “He believed in God,” one man said, “and in Henry Clay Dean, in that order.”

 

When he moved to Iowa in the 1840s, the frontier was still a muddy sprawl of log churches and whiskey. Dean built congregations with fire and sarcasm. His beard grew wild, his eyes burned bright, and his voice could shake rafters. He married, had children, and somehow found time to write angry letters to newspapers about everything from bad theology to bad roads.

 

He had a gift for offending the right people. He loved to debate and hated to lose. When a heckler said his sermons were “too long and too loud,” Dean shot back, “That’s the same complaint sinners make about hell.” The crowd roared. The heckler left early.

James Baird Weaver Iowa Politician Populist Greenback

James Baird Weaver, age 60
James Baird Weaver was born in Dayton, Ohio, in 1833—tall, loud, and sure of himself before he could spell “politics.” His family moved to Iowa when it was still a muddy promise of a state. They built fences, fought grasshoppers, and prayed for rain. Weaver grew up believing hard work should count for something, and that it usually didn’t.

 He went east for school, learned law, and came back ready to make noise. When the Civil War hit, and Weaver joined the 2nd Iowa Infantry, fought at Fort Donelson and Shiloh, and came home with a general’s star and a head full of ideas about freedom and fairness. “A nation that can save itself with blood,” he said, “can save itself with justice.”

 

After the war, he tried being a Republican. It didn’t take. It had turned into a party of bankers, and Weaver couldn’t stomach it. He watched farmers losing their land while railroads fattened on government favors. He said the country was “run by men who never plowed an acre or swung a hammer.” That line stuck. Iowa farmers started quoting it over coffee and seed corn catalogs.

 

Weaver’s enemies called him dangerous. He called himself “an honest radical.” He wasn’t the kind to back down or smooth out his edges. “I never learned to whisper,” he said. “The truth should be spoken loud enough for the thieves to hear.”

Too Loud For Her Time: Annie Nowlin Savery And The Fight For Women's Rights

Annie Nowlin Savery was all lace and lightning—smart, restless, and way too opinionated for a world that preferred its women quiet and breakable. She married James Savery, a businessman with money, charm, and no idea what kind of storm he’d invited to dinner. While he built hotels and railroads, Annie built a revolution.

She threw herself into every cause that promised to make the world a little less stupid—abolition, temperance, women’s rights. Her parlor became a war room for reformers. Picture velvet chairs, cigars, and Susan B. Anthony sitting by the fire planning how to blow up the patriarchy (politely, of course, with pamphlets). Annie wrote editorials so sharp they could slice wallpaper, and she never apologized for making men uncomfortable. “Mrs. Savery’s courage is not of the quiet kind,” one newspaper said.

When people told her that women shouldn’t talk politics, she invited them over and made them listen. When they said women couldn’t own property, she told them to read the law again because she was going to change it. Her energy was nuclear before anyone knew what that meant.

Saturday, November 8, 2025

James Young and Family Jackson County Iowa

James and Amanda Young and Family
James Young was born in Pennsylvania in 1841. Two years later his family headed west to Jackson County, Iowa. His father built a mill and a log house beside it, and James grew up working in the mill.

He stayed there until 1867, when he married Amanda Pierce. The next spring, he and his brother David bought land in Jones County. They worked it until they split the acres and went their own ways. James stayed and farmed his share.


In 1882 he moved to Madison Township, bought more land, and raised seven children. He served two terms as justice of the peace and backed the Prohibition Party, believing liquor was the country’s worst evil.