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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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ROCKDALE

From Encyclopedia Dubuque
Revision as of 01:51, 18 September 2008 by Randylyon (talk | contribs) (New page: ROCKDALE. Platted, unincorporated village. Annexed to the city of Dubuque in the late 1970s, Rockdale was settled by miners from the Swaledale Valley in Yorkshire, England, who were lured...)
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ROCKDALE. Platted, unincorporated village. Annexed to the city of Dubuque in the late 1970s, Rockdale was settled by miners from the Swaledale Valley in Yorkshire, England, who were lured to the region by the search for LEAD.

By 1834 the area boasted possibly the first grist mill in the state. A small building with only one set of French burrs about three feet in diameter, the mill was said to produce a quality product. WALLER'S FURNACE was also present. The first Rockdale church and a school was established by 1838. Originally called "Catfish Settlement," the name was changed in 1851 or 1852 by a minister of the Rockdale Methodist Church. Anthony Simpson was the first postmaster when this office was established on August 15, 1857. The office was closed on November 14, 1902 when Rural Free Delivery (RFD) was established.

On the evening of July 4, 1876, a summer shower turned into a violent downpour when caused CATFISH CREEK to surge from its banks to a depth estimated at twenty-four feet and a width of hundreds of feet. The community lost a hotel, saloon, post office, blacksmith shop, two stores and several houses. Some survivors were found clinging to tree tops. The death toll listed forty-two people.