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"A
Glimpse of Iowa in 1846; or, the Emigrant’s Guide, and State Directory; with a
Description of the New Purchase: Embracing Much Practical Advice and Useful
Information to Intending Emigrants, also The New State Constitution"
By J.B. Newhall, Second Edition, Burlington, Iowa,
W.D. Skillman, Publisher, 1846
p.16
Prairies
Beauty
of the landscape similar to many views in England, France, and
Belgium.
Erroneous notions of their susceptibility for cultivation.
"These,
the unshorn fields, boundless and beautiful,
For
which the speech of England has no name –
The
Prairies." - Bryant
Undoubtedly
one of the most captivating features in the landscape
scenery
of a great portion of the upper Mississippi valley, is the
unique
and beautifully diversified Prairies, or unwooded tracts. They are,
in fact, the gardens of nature. And who that has been an eye witness
can ever forget the impressions made upon his feelings, when,
or
the first time, he gazed with rapturous delight upon the boundless prairie?
The characteristic peculiarity of the prairies, is the entire absence
of timber; in other respects they present all the varieties of soil
and surface that are found elsewhere. Sometimes they are spread out in
boundless plains; at other times they are gently rolling, like the swell
of the sea after a subsiding storm. A diversity of opinion exists as to
the origin of prairies. Their undulating and finished surface, crowned
with the richest alluvial mould, bears ample proof, (in the writer’s
mind) of their having been, at some anterior period, submerged beneath
the waters of vast lakes, or inland seas; and these, subsequently
receding, have formed the natural channels through which our
vast and numerous rivers flow. Hence the rich alluvial deposit, and fossil
remains that so frequently occur; also, the laminae formation of secondary
lime rock; and successive strata of soil, are all evidences of a
once submerged country.
These
meadows of nature are covered with a rich coat of natural grass, forming
excellent grazing for cattle; and, in the season of flowers, present
the most captivating and lovely appearance. The traveler now beholds
these boundless plains, untouched by the hand of man, clothed with
the deepest verdure, interspersed here and there with beautiful groves,
which appear like islands in the ocean. The writer has often traveled
amidst these enchanting scenes, on horseback, for hundreds of miles,
long before civilization commenced; sometimes threading a narrow defile
made by the "red man," through the tall grass, and again suddenly
emerging
to a broad expanse of thousands of acres covered with ever variegated
flowers.
It
has been urged by some that, however our prairies may have added to the
beauty of the landscape, they are impediments to the settlements of a
country. Ten years ago, this objection was urged much more strenuously than
at present. For in that length of time may prairies, both in Illinois
and Iowa, have been converted into highly cultivated farms. Upon
which the "croakers" of early times predicted that no settler would ever
venture; and in ten years more, that such an objection ever did exist
will be a matter of wonder. A little calculation would convince the
most skeptical that it is cheaper, in the proportion of four to one, to
haul fencing (rail) timber two or three miles (which is about the extent
that any Iowa or Wisconsin farmer need go,) than to expend eight
or
ten years of toil and labor in clearing the heavily timbered lands of Ohio,
Indiana, Kentucky and Canada.
I
have often inquired of those individuals who reason against the
settlement
of the prairies, if they ever knew a man to leave the Prairie for
the Timber? I have always inquired in vain. But we do know that tens of
thousands annually leave the Timbered countries to settle upon the
Prairies.
A
popular error has prevailed, to a considerable extent, in the Atlantic States,
that our prairies were universally low, wet, swampy lands!
Prairie
does not imply wet or flat lands. Our rolling prairies present all
the undulating features and diversity of surface that are to be met with
in many other countries.
The
associations of the New Englander, and most of the inhabitants of the
Atlantic States, (respecting a new country,) are woods – interminable
woods. The English, the French, and the Belgians, have a better
simile of comparison with their own landscape. I will remember my first
impressions, some three years ago, the first hour I set my foot upon
the shores of old England , landing upon the shore of a beautiful bay
on the coast of Sussex.I involuntarily exclaimed, (casting my eyes over
the bright and verdant landscape,) how much the scenery of Britain
reminds
me of the prairie scenery of America. Subsequently, I was often forcibly
reminded of the striking similarity of scenery. For instance, the
vale of Worcestershire and Herefordshire; likewise the scenery of the
Thames above London, affords a striking resemblance of many beautiful
spots upon the banks of the Des Moines. And that charming panoramic view
from "Richmond Hill" may justly be compared to the scene which
the traveler beholds from the grave of Julien Dubuque, or from the "Cornice
Rocks" above Prairie du Chien.
The
American tourist who has or ever may travel over that pleasant road,
from
Brussels to the Field of Waterloo, along the forest Soigoine, will
have
an admirable standard of comparison for much of the scenery of
Iowa,
Illinois and Wisconsin. Performing a pedestrian tour through that
picturesque
and highly cultivated country, in the summer of ’44, I often stopped
by the road side to contemplate the scene before me. It required no
stretch of the imagination to shadow forth many of the identical
spots
that I was wont to look upon in my native land.
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