HAIR, JAMES T., Ed. Transcribed by Cathy Labath PALO ALTO COUNTY Is in the second tier of counties from the
northern boundary of the State, and the fourth east of the Missouri River. It is
bounded on the north by Emmett County, on the east by Kossuth, on the south by
Pocahontas, and on the west by Clay. It is twenty-four miles square and contains
576 square miles. The west branch of the Des Moines River passes through the
county from northwest to southeast, and affords many good sites for mills and
manufactories, which are much needed. There are seven very pretty lakes of good
water in the county, among which the principal is Medium Lake, in the central
portion. This lake is about three miles long, over a fourth of a mile wide, is
party bordered by timber, and surrounded by beautiful land. The general surface
of the county is partially rolling, and principally prairie, with about fifteen
hundred acres of timber mostly along the Des Moines River. The gentle slopes of
the prairie towards the river, through six townships of this county, are as
beautiful if not more so, than along any other river in Iowa or any other part
of the west. The soil is mostly dry, very slightly sandy on some portions of the
wide river bottoms, and on the prairies it appears to possess those desirable
qualities that make it adapted to both grass and grain. The principal varieties
of timber are ash, oak, elm, maple, hackberry and hickory. |