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May 14, 2013 -
Stretch Glass
March 01, 2013 - Gary Lewis has on display in the collection room some examples of stretch glass.
The Story of Manti
The story of Manti (the first town founded in Fremont
County) is tied to the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of
the Latter Day Saints (Mormon Church). Joseph Smith, Jr.,
founded the Mormon Church in New York in 1830, but their
religious doctrines made them unpopular with a number of other
religious groups. As a result they were driven from many towns,
the last of which was Nauvoo, Illinois. Smith was killed in 1844
and succeeded by Brigham Young, who organized a migration to a
“Promised Land” in the West. They traveled from Nauvoo across
Iowa to Kanesville (present day Council Bluffs, Iowa).
Alpheus Cutler was among the Mormons on this “Great Trek.” A
New Hampshire native and member of the Church’s High Council
until the death of Joseph Smith, Cutler disagreed with the
Mormon doctrine of polygamy. As a result, Cutler and his
followers broke away from the main body of the church in the
fall of 1846. The “Cutlerite” faction then left Kanesville and
sought a new home n southwest Iowa and northeast Kansas.
In 1851 the Cutlerites sent Edmund Fisher to scout for land
in Fremont County, Iowa. Fisher found an area suitable for
settlement in the Lower Nishnabotna River Valley along what was
then called Little Walnut Creek. It was n the northwest corner
of what became Fisher Township, Fremont County, Iowa. Fisher and
his family settled there in the fall of 1851 and called the
place “Manti”, a name taken from the Book of Mormon. The
following year, Cutler brought his followers to Manti, and by
1855 it was a bustling settlement of 30 to 40 families. For a
number of years the town was the principal settlement in western
Page and eastern Fremont counties.
Most families in Manti farmed, but business necessary for
the frontier life also appeared in the little town. The cabin in
the museum, built from wood taken from an actual pioneer Manti
barn, illustrates what a typical Manti dwelling was like in the
1850’s and 1860’s. It provided only basic shelter, a wood stove,
a cabinet and water crock. Children slept in the loft and
parents on a rope-strung bed. An oil lamp furnished light, but
only when necessary.
After 1865 sixty-two Civil War veterans (many with families)
came from Illinois to settle in Manti, even though they were not
Mormons. The settlement prospered, but that changed with the
coming of the railroad. In 1870 the Burlington & Missouri River
Railroad ran a branch line southward between Red Oak and Hamburg
Iowa. Hopes were high that the new rail line would pass through
Manti, but instead it was laid two miles east of the
newly-platted town called Fair Oaks (modern day Shenandoah,
Iowa). It was clear that the future of the area was there and
not in Manti. In the summer of 1870, most of Manti’s businesses
moved their stock and sometimes even their buildings to Fair
Oaks. By 1871 little remained of Manti. In 1878 the last
resident moved away, and the town was totally deserted.
Today, Manti is a farming area, noted for its scenic beauty
and walnut trees. The only reminders of our region’s first town
a cemetery, livery stable (now a modern barn), Cutler’s house
and a road that was the main street. Beginning in 1929 the
Daughters of the American Republic, the Shenandoah Kiwanis Club
and others have preserved the cemetery and constructed a park
and campground nearby as a memorial to those early settlers. It
is now a park under the control of the City of Shenandoah.