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Like
many counties in Minnesota, Dodge County was
originally inhabited by American Indians. The
area was a common hunting and battle ground for
the Mdewakanton Sioux, often fighting the Sauk
and Fox Indians who had wandered into their
territory. The first white person to visit Dodge
County, however, is not known. It is believed by
some that a French fur trader from Canada was
the first, setting foot on its soil in the
spring of 1655. Guides deemed this area unsafe
due to the Natives living there. But, it was not
until over two hundred years later the locality
truly came to life.
The
original founders of Dodge County were settlers
from New England. These people were "Yankee's",
that is to say they were descended from the
English Puritans who settled New England in the
1600s. They were part of a wave of New England
farmers who headed west into what was then the
wilds of the Northwest Territory during the
early 1800s. Most of them arrived as a result of
the completion of the Erie Canal. When they
arrived in what is now Dodge County there was
nothing but a virgin forest and wild prairie,
the New Englanders laid out farms, constructed
roads, erected government buildings and
established post routes. They brought with them
many of their Yankee New England values, such as
a passion for education, establishing many
schools as well as staunch support for
abolitionism. They were mostly members of the
Congregationalist Church though some were
Episcopalian. Culturally Dodge County, like much
of Minnesota would be culturally very continuous
with early New England culture, for most of its
history. It was in 1853 that government
surveyors set lines for the townships. A year
later, the Mantor brothers, along with Eli P.
Waterman, established their claims, which would
later be an important town to the area known as
"Mantorville." Still a year later, in 1855,
Dodge County was organized for local government.
Later on in its history, immigrants from
Germany, Sweden and Norway would settle in the
county. With increasing growth and improvement,
Dodge County was officially placed in the Fifth
Judicial District by the State Constitution on
May 11, 1858. Its name was given in honor of
Wisconsin governor Henry Dodge. The Dodge County
Courthouse, designed by E. Townsend Mix and
built of locally quarried limestone in 1865, is
the oldest working courthouse in
Minnesota.
On Line
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| Cities Blooming
Prairie Claremont Dodge
Center Hayfield Kasson Mantorville
(county seat) West Concord Unincorporated
communities Berne Concord Danesville
Eden Oslo Wasioja Ghost
town Rice Lake |
Townships Ashland
Township Canisteo Township Claremont
Township Concord
Township Ellington Township Hayfield
Township Mantorville Township Milton
Township Ripley Township Vernon
Township Wasioja Township Westfield
Township
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