Skip to content

Welcome to Milo Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 11/14/2009
Difficulty:
4 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Related Web Page

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:

Looking for a camoed pill bottle in Centennial Park. Please observe park hours. Place back as found and enjoy this small town park. This is where the 4th of July fireworks are set off at.
Bring your own writing device.

After reviewing other cache hides of this type I am upping the D rating.

FTF Goes To TANNC WTG on your first ever.

History

The following information outlines the circumstances leading up to the founding of Milo. The source of this information is from the book, Milo Centennial; 1880 to 1980 including Belmont and Otter Townships.

The Railroad and the Rise of Milo

The very first inhabitants in Warren County and the City of Milo were Native Americans known to archeologists as the Woodland Culture, who came to this area about 3,000 to 700 years ago. The land found by these first inhabitants was rich, untouched prairie land. Eventually, this grassland was transformed into fertile agricultural land used for farming, much as it is used today.
Milo1.gif (19041 bytes) The founder of Milo, Smith Henderson Mallory, was born in 1835 in central New York. He was fifteen when he left for Illinois where he joined the railroad building business. By 1861, S.H. Mallory was a construction engineer for the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad in Illinois. In 1867, he moved to Chariton, Iowa. By 1870, he was president of the First National Bank. Mallory's financial power began to grow with his ownership of large amounts of property in Chariton and Lucas County, and banking interests in Creston. In 1877, he was elected to the state legislature where his association with the Chariton, Des Moines, and the Southern Branchline led to the routing of the railroad through what is now known as Milo, Iowa. This is where S.H. Mallory and his family built their 945 acre estate.
Location of a railroad through a small town helped its success. the railroad gave life to Milo while devastating the surrounding towns of Schonberg and Hammondsburg. Building railroads was a national business and Iowa was no exception. Except for a slight interruption during the Civil War, railroads had become a huge industry for Iowa. The central line across Iowa that became the Rock Island reached Des Moines in 1867. The southern railroad, the Burlington and Missouri (to become the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy), made its way across Iowa, from Ottumwa to Albia, in 1866, and on to Chariton in 1867.
In order to speed the process of spanning the state, construction began on another railway system which started at the Missouri River and extended eastward. This railway line was completed near Red Oak on November 26, 1869, with a ceremony involving J.S. Wolf and S.H. Mallory.
By 1870, all major east and west railroads across Iowa had been completed. Meanwhile, the construction of the north and south lines continued to move forward. In February 1876, S.H. Mallory was elected president of a newly formed Southern Railway Company, along with his financial partner, Joel Jacoby, who became the vice president. The railroads in Iowa grew rapidly, partly because they had the power of eminent domain. This power of eminent domain caused many problems between the surrounding railroad communities and Milo. For example, the surrounding towns of Liberty Center and Hammondsburg were blamed for being "cat paws" because the railroad lines were smoother in towns like Oakley or Lacona. The tracks leading to Lacona were rougher than the other surrounding tracks. Train service to Lacona from the south was completed by December 24, 1878 with the entire line completed by February 12 of the same year.
On May 6, 1879, John A. Notestine sold the west 100 acres of his northwest quarter of section 19, Belmont Township to the Chariton, Des Moines, and Southern Railroad for $3,600, as well as a 100 foot right of way for the location of a new town. Originally called Belmont, this new town came to be called Milo early in 1879. The trains rolled through the town of Milo from 1879 to 1961.
Milo2.gif (30843 bytes)

Additional Hints (No hints available.)