Showing posts with label Cheyenne County Nebraska. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cheyenne County Nebraska. Show all posts

Friday, October 14, 2016

Adam Ickes and Elizabeth Ellen Harbaugh Ickes - Sidney, Nebraska, Part...um...I've Lost Count


Adam Ickes



There is no 1890 census in existence, but the 1890 veteran's census shows the Ickes family living in Potter, NE, so we know Ellen and Alle are still parked on the homestead.  (We know that from the homestead documents as well.)

April 1890 began the establishment of the town of Ickes, Nebraska - complete with a post office set up to serve 75 people. Here's the history as listed online:

"John Brayton had asked to name the post office Fairview. However, that name was crossed out and Ickes written instead. The original location was about 10 miles west of Dalton on Road 58, about 1 mile west of Jay Peter's home (NE 1/4, 34-17N-51W).

"Local information indicates that the post office was in the home of Jacob P. Eckert. John E. Sanders then moved it to his home, the location being 6-16N-51W, close to where Phil Sanders lives on road 56. At some point, it may have been moved again, as Davison's petition for a site change showed a map locating Ickes in the SW part of NW 1/4 26-17N-51W, or about a mile north of the proposed change. On Aug. 18, 1894, James Davison requested locating the Ickes Post Office to SE 1/4, 26-17N-51W, which is where Jay Peter's now lives, about 9 miles west of Dalton on Road 58.

"The Ickes Post Office was closed on August 15, 1915.

"There is a historical marker on that spot commemorating the Ickes Post Office."





Lincoln Evening State Journal

July 25, 1936


(transcript)

Old Water Holes All That Is Left of Pioneer Town of Ickes
SIDNEY, Neb. (AP). One of the last outposts of a frontier civilization that sprung up with the building of the railroad was the old town of Ickes, population seven, located in Cheyenne county about 35 miles northwest of Sidney.

Actually there is no town left on the old site of Ickes, altho [sic] the census maps list it as possible the smallest town covered by the 1930 population county. There never was much of a town, pioneers recall, but the old postoffice and frame ranch house that once occupied a remote spot on the western prarie were welcome sights to many a frontiersman and rancher in the days of horse and buggy travel.

Ickes was named after Adam Ickes, western Nebraska pioneer. The postoffice was near a series of water holes fed by springs, and Ickes was more of a watering stop for stock than a haven for human beings. Yet the old settlement lived for years after civilization settled the panhandle, and it became somewhat of a tradition in the rich history of western Nebraska.

Adam Ickes was the first treasurer of Cheyenne county. In those days Cheyenne county covered most of western Nebraska and it was a good week's journey to cover it from border to border by horseback or buggy. The town of Ickes actually consisted of a crew of ranch hands, together who whoever happened to be postmaster at the time. Never in its history did Ickes have more than eight or ten persons.

Nothing remains to mark the old town site except a few scattered farm dwellings and the old water holes. Pioneers can point out the exact spot where the old postoffice was located, but that section is now served by rural mail route. Adam Ickes has been dead many years and no other members of the family are living in Cheyenne county.




Horace got married in September of 1890 and sometime after that, he didn't say exactly when, moved to Cheyenne, Wyoming and then to Sterling, Colorado where my grandfather, William Bunn, was born in 1895.  So with business dropping off and Horace leaving it could have been sometime after 1890 that Adam relocated his business to a smaller store as discussed in an earlier post. 

16 May 1891 Adam delivered an address to the Sidney, Neb. Teacher's Institute.


Intellectual and Manual Education


The education of the hand must be recognized to be just as necessary as the education of the head.  Our reason should be cultivated because it is one of God’s best gifts to man, the argument applies equally to our bodily powers.  Nearly all men encourage or sanction the intellectual education of the masses as public expense by the public, but, the manual education of the masses is only looked after by the parents, and too often sadly neglected by them.  Parents are very often at fault in permitting their children to grow up without a knowledge of manual labor.  Their sons may be able to unravel knotty problems in mathematics, give an intelligent reason why water will not run up full, but they are unskilled in the use of the saw the hatchet the plow and the hoe and I have seen those make a miserable failure in the attempt to harness and hitch a house to a wagon.  Their daughters can entertain company, talk of the true the beautiful and the good converse freely and intelligently on various topics, discuss the fashions of the day and such like, but they are ignorant of household duties from the cellar up and could not for the life of them make a respectable looking roll of butter or bake a loaf of bread.

It is just as necessary for a man to know how to earn his living as it is to know how to vote.  “Is ignorance dangerous to the commonwealth?”  Idleness is equally dangerous.  “Does the education of the head prepare a man for the better discharge of his social duties?”  So does the education of the hand.  Learning is the ally of morality and virtue”.  So is manual labor.

Learning gives a man a feeling of independence and self-respect, so does industry.  Learning tends to keep a youth from low company and base habits, so does industrial labor.  Physical training is just as necessary for the full development of personal character as intellectual training.

Physical development is essential to the growth and vigor of the mental faculties.  Who does not admire the well developed country lad or lass with sun burn hands and face but with the glow of health and vigor beaming in their countenances, having the courage and strength to hew their way to success.

To be skilled in the capacity of a farmer or tradesman does not unfit a man for the highest profession.  It is rather a source of pleasure and gratification to the professional man to be able to take up a hammer and nicely shape a piece of iron or to turn a furrow with a plow, and vice versa the skilled mechanic or farmer delights in rich intellectual treats.  The martyr Lincoln was a rail-splitter, the hero Grant was a tanner and the lamented Garfield endured the kicks and cuffs administered to subordinates on the ferry boat.

“Man can not live by bread alone”.  The possession of a good common school education, which was once so rare as to be a mark of distinction, is now so common as to be noticed only when it is wanting.  Our wonderful facilities for elementary education has flooded the country with teachers, lawyers, doctors, clerks, salesmen, runners and petty traders.  The evil seems to be that of making a discrimination in favor of the man that lives by his wits, and against the man that lives by the sweat of his face.  Therefore in the train of our immense army of producers and distributors there is following another army of hungry camp-followers, without either the hands to produce or the head to distribute, but with stomachs that must be filled at the expense of honest producers and distributors, and this army is daily increasing in numbers and acquiring strength by organization.  We have now companies, we shall ere long have regiments of tramps bummers, loafers, rough, gamblers and one horse politicians.  What shall we do to correct this evil and stay the ride that is drifting to ruin and desolation so many thousands of our population?

Teachers, we turn to you, a grave and fearful responsibility rests upon you.  You are to lead the onward way to higher and better things.  Your calling high advanced, calls with noiseless and persuasive voice to universal progress.  Are you making the most of your calling?  Will your conduct stand the crucial test of a noble life?

May we not hope that a thorough practical common sense intellectual and manual education of the masses will teach all the plain duty of life and that while the ladder may be crowded there is plenty of room at the top.

A. I.

5/16/91

Sidney, Neb. Teacher’s Institute










And apparently this had been going on...



 Omaha Morning World Herald
September 5, 1891



Omaha World Herald
October 23, 1891





So this Edward McLernon guy was in cahoots with the county board to get Adam thrown out of office and take his place, even though Adam had been re-elected.  Apparently they didn't trust him with the county's money. (Go figure.) The local courts couldn't find cause to force him to vacate his position, so McLernon took it all the way to the Nebraska Supreme Court.  The supreme court sustained the lower court's decision.  Either Adam didn't run for a third term or he was defeated. His political career ended at the end of 1891.

At least his good name wasn't completely tarnished as he delivered a patriotic address on the 4th of July in Chappel, NE.  (I don't have the speech - only the newspaper clipping.)


Omaha World Herald
July 5, 1892




Adam began selling life insurance to supplement his income.  


North Platte Tribune
March 22, 1893





North Platte Tribune
March 21, 1894




Later, Adam's daughter, Alle, wrote, "He tried farming on a homestead in Pumpkin Creek Valley, Cheyenne County but had to give it up, and then he took up writing Life Insurance for the Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York." But by 1890 Cheyenne County had already been divided and Pumpkin Creek Valley was in Banner County, so maybe she meant he tried farming on his own homestead outside of Potter.  Who knows?  All we know from the above newspaper clipping is that he was still in Sidney in 1894.  And that's the last time we find him there.

The Sidney, Nebraska roller coaster ride had finally come to a stop.



All original content, images, commentary, etc. copyright © by Joy Denison 2015-2016.  All rights reserved. All writings, poems, speeches, essays, images, scans, likenesses, etc. by Adam Ickes (b 1845) as well as personal histories, images, and all other content by all persons referenced and discussed within the pages and posts in this blog may not be copied, shared, or reproduced in any way without expressed permission by the owner unless included here from other referenced sources or are historical records already considered to be in the public domain. 

Pandemonium and the Sidney Banking Fiasco

Omaha Daily Bee
June 28, 1889


(highlights)
Sidney, Neb., June 27. - S.C. Morgan, cashier of the State Bank of Sidney, committed suicide this morning, shooting himself through the head with a Colt's 45 pistol.  He was in bed at the time.

It appears that this morning Morgan called John Echert, who is working at the house, to go up to the bank to get Joe Sharmer's "pop," as he wanted to kill some rats. John got the pistol, brought it to the house and placed it on the table, saying, "here is the pistol," and went out.

At 11 o'clock he returned to tell Morgan his wife had not arrived, she being in Omaha visiting and was expected home to-day. Eckert saw blood on the bed and rushed uptown to inform Sharmer.

The sight that met their gaze was a ghastly one--Morgan lying in bed dead, with the top of his head blown off, the pistol lying along side of him.

Sheriff Eubank and jury have been taking evidence, and everything leads to the theory of suicide. The bank is now closed, but Sharmer assures everybody the financial condition of the bank is unimpaired.

Mr. Frank Johnson, cashier of the Bank of Commerce, who is associated with Mr. Morgan in the bank at Sidney, stated that he could offer no explanation of Mr. Morgan's rash act.  The financial condition of the bank was excellent, and as far as he could ascertain, Mr. Morgan's business and domestic relations were unclouded.






Omaha Daily Bee
June 29, 1889




Omaha Daily Bee
June 30, 1889




Omaha Daily Bee
July 2, 1889





Omaha Daily Bee
July 3, 1889



Omaha Daily Bee
July 4, 1889


(highlights)
Sidney, Neb., July 3. - Frank B. Johnson . . . arrived here on Friday morning at 10 o'clock.  At the depot a large crowd had congregated with eager expectancy to get a glimpse of the man who was to straighten the then unsettled condition of the bank's affairs.

Morgan committed suicide on Thursday morning about 7 o'clock.  The news was spread about 11. Your correspondent immediately went to Joe Sharmer, the old reliable clerk in the bank, and asked him to inform him on the dead square if everything was all right in the bank, as it had become noised around that there was a deficit.  Sharmer said everything was all right and nobody would lose a cent. He had "telegraphed to Frank Johnson, the president of the bank, to come up at once," and later he confirmed it by showing your correspondent a telegram from Johnson saying that he (Johnson) would be here in the morning.

It turned out that Sharmer was ignorant of the true condition of the finances of the bank.

Johnson...in company with J P Cavanaugh, an Omaha attorney...entered the bank accompanied by Sharmer and Adam Ickes, the county treasurer, and James Sutherland of North Platte.

They saw enough of the bank to assure them that there was a large deficit, but when interrogated on the subject they would invariably answer, "We can't make a report yet and it will take several days, as the books have not been posted in nearly two weeks."

...a few of the creditors began suit and had papers served on Johnson as the surviving partner.

When the west-bound train arrived at 10 o'clock p. m. and Sheriff Eubank was presenting his documents to Johnson summoning him to appear in court on August 5 to answer these suits, he got aboard the train, saying he was going to Cheyenne and would be back on Saturday afternoon to assist a committee of three in further examining the books.  He never returned, but it is learned that he took the B & M train for Omaha.  He never intended to come back here.  The result was that County Treasurer Ickes, who has $17,000 deposited there, went to Omaha on Sunday in company with Mr. McIntosh, where they will probably enter suit.

The people here are determined to make Mr. Johnson pay up every dollar, and no compromise will be effected.






Omaha Daily Bee
July 7, 1889




Omaha Daily Bee
July 8, 1889



Nebraska State Journal
 July 12, 1889


(highlights)
Omaha, Neb., July 5 - From the time the bank opened it seemed to prosper.  Morgan was popular with all classes, and the financial standing of his partner aided in securing business.  For nearly three years his was the only banking institution in Sidney, and after a time he was unable to do the business alone.  He then employed Joseph Sharmer, an honest gentleman of some means, to assist him. Morgan always kept the books, and his employee's duties were to pay the checks presented and make out the drafts of the bank's correspondents....At his house he lived very plainly, and his parties did not occur oftener than once a year.  He never played cards for money, and his most intimate friends say he never had any desire to deal in options or futures.  When he opened the bank he adopted the rule never to use liquor during business hours, and rigorously adhered to it. 

The affairs of the bank disclose about $11,000 of not gilt edged paper, no money and $3,000 or $4,000 of real estate.  What has become of the difference is a great question with Sidney's people. Morgan had not squandered it, but where is it? It is generally believed to be somewhere in Omaha, but how it got into the Nebraska metropolis is another unanswered query.

It is believed here that Morgan fully realized when he went home the last time that his bank could not open the next day.  He had no money in the safe and his remittances from Omaha were very uncertain.  The Nebraska banking law he knew would go into effect on the following Monday, his Cheyenne creditors were clamorous for the payment of their claim, he had been unable to dispose of his bank's good will at satisfactory figures, under his agreement he would soon be compelled to yield possession of the building in which he was located and his bank was without funds - these facts the people of Sidney believed dethroned his reason and compelled him to take his own life. 





Omaha Daily Bee
July 19, 1889




Omaha Daily Bee
July 23, 1889




Omaha Daily Bee
July 25, 1889



Omaha Daily Bee
 July 30, 1889


(highlights)
The situation of the State bank affairs this week is practically unchanged, so far as the payment of the bank's debts is concerned.  After much delay, and the breaking of many promises, J.P. Cavanaugh, Mr. Johnson's representative in the matter, arrived in the city, presumably for the purpose of making propositions for settlement.  Johnson's agreement with Messrs. McIntosh and Ickes it is true left out of sight all such things as propositions.  He agreed to assume and take charge of everything.  In the event of his keeping his word a proposition would have been entirely unnecessary.

The proposition appeared quite fair, though it was not by any means what Johnson had promised, and Cavanaugh was asked to put it on paper, that the individual opinions of the creditors present might be had. Mr. Cavanaugh did this, but produced a document so completely different from his verbal proposition that he was told without further argument that negotiations might stop if he had nothing further to offer.

The matter will be taken into the courts if necessary and Mr. Johnson will find himself confronted with facts that to say the least will not be pleasant.





Omaha Daily Bee
August 1, 1889

("Mr. Rickets" mentioned in the article
actually refers to Adam Ickes.)


Nebraska State Journal
August 9, 1889




In a nutshell, the bank partner/cashier committed suicide because all the money was gone.  Nobody really knew where it went.  Frank Johnson initially denied being a partner in the bank then tried having his lawyer negotiate a settlement with all of the bank's creditors.  By August, they're still negotiating and hoping to make a deal. Ultimately though, Adam was responsible for ALL of the county money.  If Frank Johnson couldn't come up with it Adam was supposed to make good on it.

It appears that Adam's term in office was two years and he was up for re-election. I'm not exactly sure of the purpose of his next speech - I guess it could have been delivered at a political rally - actually, I really don't know what to think. It was written on the back of Cheyenne County Treasurer stationery.



Unappreciated


Under this head there seems to be two classes viz: The unappreciated and those who do not appreciate.  The first class appear to be the most numerous.  It is certainly not a pleasant thought if we have genius, that the world refuses to recognize the fact.  To shoulder a musket in the army when we have enlisted to wear the start of a general is hard; and we are often obliged to follow where we think we ought to lead, therefore we are not appreciated.

There is danger of too high an estimate of our ability, we often confound the aiming at a mark with hitting it, thus failing to merit a high estimate of our ability.  We do not enter the avocations of life by bringing into requisition all the zeal the energy and the powers of our being but ask for harvests without plowing or serving, wages without thought or work.

Are there not many of us who sometimes think others are in our places, that we have been overlooked and that positions intended for us to fill have been usurped by others?  The world may be very slow to find us out, we may seek for place and may not find it, but if we are truly worthy we will be found at last.  But, of one thing we may be assured that whether we are found or not the world will move on today and tomorrow and forever.  Great men only have climbed to imperial heights by slow, hard and patient toil.  It is the only sure, safe and successful path through which all must travel in order to gain prominence.  We are often too ready to conclude that because we are not in affluent circumstances we are shorn of certain privileges in society, and this seems to be the case more especially with the female sex.  This ought not so to be; it is possible for the poorest the humblest in this glorious land of freedom to outshine in beauty of character the glittering gold of the millionerre (sic.); it is not in gaudy dress or sparkling pearls, but in the culture of the mind and the heart that we are brought into prominence before the world.

We sometimes think that our opportunities have passed by and with sincere regret look back and wail and lament over neglected duties and wasted privileges when you, yea even wish that we were a “robust boy” at fifteen or a rosy cheeked girl at “sweet sixteen”, with what energy and determination would we enter upon the work before us; forgetting all the while that all of us were girls and boys once and did not then think of it.  The future is before us, many of us perhaps have not lived out half our days and if we have neglected our youth let us begin now and by faithful hard and earnest work endeavor to retrieve our loss.

We would not have you believe that all talent comes to the front, that all persons may be brought prominently before the world; for it is possible that,

“Full many a gem of purest ray serene
The dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear
Full many a flower is born to blush unseen
And waste its sweetness on the desert air”.

We shall now attempt to say something about that class who do not appreciate.  It must be a great comfort to some failures that the fault rests not with them but us; for surely it is a strong proof of smallness of brains on our part that we can not rise up to the sublime appreciation of this world’s heroes – these poets, politicians, lawyers, doctors and philosophers all kept down because we don’t appreciate them, well, if we hav’nt (sic.) the ability to appreciate, then that ought to be the end of it; for surely no man is responsible beyond his actual capacity.  We very often fail to appreciate real merit, because of inattention or a certain dislike, whereby we do not suffer ourselves to become interested, conseqnently (sic.) we are not benefitted.  Perhaps the fault lies at our own door and if we can not appreciate, we should at least have the goodness to allow our neighbor to hear and enjoy the benefit by not ignorantly and willfully exhibiting a want of appreciation.  Our eyes have pained and our feelings revolted at young men and ladies too, who not only do not allow themselves to be interested, but by talking and laughing to the annoyance of others near them have shown a lack of culture rather than that of appreciation.  It’s an evidence of ill-breeding that ought to be frowned down; it’s a crime that ought to be punished; it’s shallow and disrespectful and merits the condemnation of all sober-minded good thinking people. 

A studied effort should at least receive our respectful attention, for in no other way are we capable of rightly judging as to its merits. Because we don’t like the cut of a man’s coat or that he wears a cuff for a collar or articulates through his breathing apparatus, is no reason why we should not appreciate his effort, especially if it be logically arranged, showing evidences of thought and study; neither should we pass lightly upon the studied effort of a lady though we may not admire her beauty or approve the train she draws after her.

In conclusion, would we be appreciated?  Then let us endeavor to prove ourselves worthy of it by diligent duty and faithfulness.

Would we appreciate?  Then let us show it by not only standing out of other people’s way when they are entitled to the way, but by a manifestation of that esteem and respect which are the true characteristics of a noble culture.

A.I.

Sidney 8/23/89
                









Believe it or not, Adam was re-elected County Treasurer of Cheyenne County Nebraska for another term.  But back to wrap up the whole banking fiasco.  

Being privy to future documents and newspaper articles helps put some of the pieces together within this time frame.  I'll start with all the rest of the documentation available to me.



Omaha Evening World Herald
March 3, 1893




Omaha Morning World Herald
May 8, 1894


(transcript)
CHEYENNE COUNTY FUNDS.
J. J. McIntosh, treasurer of Cheyenne county, was asking $9,000 in Judge Blair's court Monday as a balance due on an $18,000 account which Cheyenne county had with Frank B. Johnson, one of the proprietors of the now defunct Bank of Sidney. This balance was an account still due, 1889, it is alleged, when S. C. Morgan, Johnson's partner, died tragically and the bank failed. The court decided that the evidence failed to show that Johnson was interested in the bank at the time of the deposit and decided in his favor.


SUPREME COURT OF NEBRASKA

[decision in McIntosh v. Johnson]


JAMES J. MCINTOSH, TREASURER OF CHEYENNE COUNTY, NEBRASKA, v. FRANK B. JOHNSON. 
No. 7211. 
SUPREME COURT OF NEBRASKA 
March 17, 1897, Filed 
PRIOR HISTORY: [***1] ERROR from the district court of Douglas county. Tried below before BLAIR, J. Reversed. 
DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED. 
COUNSEL: L. F. Crofoot, Breckenridge & Breckenridge, and W. P. Miles, for plaintiff in error. 
Wharton & Baird, contra. 
JUDGES: NORVAL, J. 
OPINION BY: NORVAL 
OPINION: [*34] NORVAL, J.

During 1888, and a part of 1889, the defendant, Frank B. Johnson, and one S. C. Morgan were partners engaged in a general banking business at Sidney, Cheyenne county, under the firm name and style of the State Bank of Sidney. In the latter part of June, 1889, Mr. Morgan died, leaving the defendant the sole surviving partner, and the bank being insolvent at the time, closed its doors, and did not afterwards resume business nor pay its depositors. From January 7, 1888, to June 26, 1889, both dates inclusive, Adam Ickes, the treasurer of Cheyenne county, in his official capacity deposited in said bank, on open account, large sums of money belonging to the county, and withdrew a portion thereof as required for use. On the day the bank suspended payment Mr. Ickes, as such county treasurer, had upon deposit therein county funds to the amount of $ 17,357.40. Plaintiff is the successor in office [***2] to the said Adam Ickes, and as such instituted this suit to recover from the defendant, as surviving partner, the sum of $ 11,857.40, alleged to be the balance due the county of Cheyenne on account of the moneys so deposited in said State Bank of Sidney. A trial of the issues raised by the pleadings was had to the court, resulting in a finding and judgment against the plaintiff. Two defenses are relied upon by the defendant to defeat the action, to-wit: (1.) Neither the county of Cheyenne nor the plaintiff ever had any [*35] legal claim against the defendant or the State Bank of Sidney on account of the funds deposited by Treasurer Ickes. (2.) Accord and satisfaction. These propositions will receive attention in their order.

The first contention is to a greater or less extent sustained by two decisions of this court, viz., State v. Keim, 8 Neb. 63, and First Nat. Bank of South Bend, Ind., v. Gandy, 11 Neb. 431, 9 N.W. 566. The first case was an action by the state to recover certain public funds belonging to it which had been deposited with the defendants, who were engaged in the banking business at Falls City, under an agreement that it should [***3] be delivered upon demand. It was held there could be no recovery, since the deposit was unauthorized, and there had been no ratification of it by public law. The writer by no means concedes that an illegal or unauthorized deposit of state moneys in a bank constitutes no cause of action in favor of the state to recover such moneys; but accepting the decision in State v. Keim to be sound, is it decisive of the question before us? We do not think so. After it was rendered the legislature, in 1879, passed the following act, which received the approval of the executive:

"An act to provide for the collection of public funds and moneys.
"Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Nebraska:

"Section 1. That in all cases in which public moneys, or other funds belonging to this state, or to any county, school district, city, or municipality thereof, have been deposited or loaned to any person or persons, corporation, bank, copartnership, or other firm or association of persons, it shall be lawful for the officer or officers making such deposit or loan, or his or their successors in office to maintain an action or actions for the recovery of such moneys deposited or loaned, [***4] and all contracts for the security or payment of any such moneys or public funds made shall be held to be good and lawful contracts binding on all parties thereto; Provided, Nothing herein contained shall be construed to in any manner affect the [*36] liability of any surety or signers of any official bond heretofore or hereafter given or made in this state.

"Sec. 2. All actions heretofore brought by any public officer, either in his own name or officially, for the recovery of any public [**523] moneys heretofore loaned or deposited shall be sustained, and all remedies allowed in other cases, by attachment or otherwise, shall be admissible and allowed in such actions as in other cases." (Compiled Statutes, ch. 8, secs. 40, 41; Session Laws, 1879, p. 156, secs. 1, 2.)

It was the decision in State v. Keim, supra, doubtless, which prompted the legislature to enact this law, for the purpose of authorizing the collection by suit of public moneys illegally loaned or deposited by their custodian,-- a remedy which this court had ruled did not theretofore exist in this state. If the act above quoted is to be given prospective operation, and not a retroactive [***5] effect merely, then it is very evident that the present action is maintainable. It is argued by the defendant that the purpose of the act of 1879 was to legalize prior contracts made by treasurers for the depositing or loaning of public funds and to empower the treasurer making such loan or deposit, or his successor in office, to collect the same by suit, and that this law has no prospective application. The case of the First Nat. Bank of South Bend, Ind., v. Gandy, 11 Neb. 431, 9 N.W. 566, is authority for such interpretation. The question there involved was whether county moneys deposited in a bank by county treasurers prior to the enactment of the present depository law are subject to garnishment process in a suit to recover a debt of the officer depositing the same. It was held that they were, since it did not lie in the mouth of Mr. Gandy, or any of his privies, of which the depository bank was one in respect to the funds, to assert that they were not the individual moneys of Mr. Gandy, which alone he had a right to deposit in bank, and the latter might lawfully receive from him on deposit. The only reference made in the opinion in that case to the law of 1879 [***6] above quoted is the following: [*37] "I do not deem it necessary to make any reference to the act of February 24, 1879, cited by counsel for defendants in error, further than to say that by its own terms said act only covers cases of loans of public funds made before the passage of said act, and so does not apply to the case at bar." We are persuaded that the author of that opinion either misread the statute, or had not in mind three well recognized rules which should have obtained in ascertaining the meaning, scope, and effect of the act. The statute is in some respects a remedial one, and therefore should receive a liberal construction. ( Rogers v. Omaha Hotel Co., 4 Neb. 54; Swearingen v. Roberts, 12 Neb. 333, 11 N.W. 325; Harmon v. Omaha, 17 Neb. 548, 23 N.W. 503; Wright v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 19 Neb. 175, 27 N.W. 90; State v. Fremont, E. & M. V. R. Co., 22 Neb. 313, 35 N.W. 118.) Again, an imperative rule of construction is that effect, if possible, must be given to every clause and part of a legislative enactment. ( Hagenbuck v. Reed, 3 Neb. 17; McCann v. McLennan, 2 Neb. 286; [***7] King v. State, 18 Neb. 375, 25 N.W. 519; State v. Babcock, 21 Neb. 599, 33 N.W. 247.) Another familiar canon governing the interpretation of statutes is that they will be given a prospective operation unless a contrary intention is plainly expressed. ( State v. City of Kearney, 49 Neb. 337, 70 N.W. 255, and cases cited.) There is nothing, either in the title or the body of the act, which indicates the least intention on the part of the legislature that the law should operate retroactively alone. On the contrary, it is manifest that it cannot be so construed if effect is given to each word and clause of the statute in question. That it was the purpose to legalize actions then pending for the recovery of public moneys brought by any officer either in his individual name or officially, and also to legalize prior contracts for the deposit of such money cannot be successfully disputed; but that the law was intended to have a retroactive effect alone we deny. The interpretation contended for by defendant renders meaningly the words "or hereafter" used in the proviso clause of section 1, which declares that "nothing herein contained shall [***8] be construed to in any [*38] manner affect the liability of any surety or signers of any official bond heretofore or hereafter given or made in this state." Construing the words "heretofore or hereafter given" in connection with the rest of the section in which they appear shows that the act was to have both a prospective and retroactive effect, and was intended to apply to, and cover, contracts or deposits made after the passage of the act, as well as those made prior to its adoption. The act in unmistakable terms empowered the bringing of suits upon contracts which should thereafter be made for the deposit of public funds, and not merely actions upon contracts which had been made before the passage of the law. To construe the act so as to give it both a retroactive and prospective application, effect can be given to every word therein contained, while the language of the law, without a forced or arbitrary construction, will not support a mere retroactive effect. The decision in First Nat. Bank of South Bend, Ind., v. Gandy, supra, is disapproved.

The facts upon which the defense of accord and satisfaction is predicated are these: In December, 1889, after the [***9] death of Mr. Morgan, the defendant entered into an agreement with Mr. Ickes, the county treasurer of Cheyenne county, by the terms of which Mr. Ickes, as county treasurer, accepted certain real estate in the city of Omaha of the agreed value of $ 6,000, owned by Mr. Johnson, and the promissory note of the latter for $ 3,000 in settlement of the amount due from the bank for the county funds which had been deposited therein. Mr. Ickes at the time executed and delivered to Mr. Johnson a receipt, of which the following was a copy:


"OMAHA, NEB., Dec. 11, 1889. 

"Received [**524] of F. B. Johnson his note for three thousand dollars, bearing even date herewith, payable in one year, with interest at seven per cent per annum, which, when paid, will be in full of all claims against him in connection of State Bank of Sidney. 

ADAM ICKES, 

"Co. Treas. Cheyenne County."



[*39] That the above mentioned note was subsequently paid by the defendant is conceded. Whether the county commissioners accepted the benefits of said settlement and ratified the same with full knowledge of the facts, in our view it is unnecessary to determine, since the compromise is not binding for want of a consideration. [***10] It was admitted by the defendant upon the trial that he was a partner of Mr. Morgan in the State Bank of Sidney, and that at the time of the death of the latter there was on deposit in said bank, to the credit of the county treasurer of Cheyenne county, the sum of $ 17,357.40. No payments had been made upon this indebtedness at the date of the compromise. There was therefore at that time a liquidated amount due from the defendant as sole surviving partner of over $ 17,000, and this admitted liability was settled by the acceptance of property and note of the defendant of the actual and agreed value of over $ 6,000 less than the amount of the indebtedness. The acceptance of part of a liquidated demand past due, in full settlement, is not a bar to an action on such demand. In this case the amount of the indebtedness was admitted, and the defendant being the sole surviving partner, there was no room for dispute that he was liable for the payment. There was no consideration for the agreement to accept a lesser sum than the amount due; hence there is no complete accord and satisfaction. The proposition is too plain to require the citation of authorities in support of it. The judgment must [***11] be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.



Omaha Evening World Herald
March 19, 1897



So here's the bottom line. Adam lost $17,857.40 of county money. On 11 December 1889, Adam signed a note agreeing to accept $6000 of real estate owned by Frank Johnson and $3000 cash payable in one year at 7% interest as payment in full. That would have taken care of half of it. It was reported in a newspaper a few years later that Adam had already transferred "all his property" to the county and the county commissioners were looking for someone else to sue for the remainder of what was due. If that were true and Johnson paid up as promised, the county would have been out less than half of what was lost. But when J.J. McIntosh, the County Treasurer who succeeded Adam, took his suit against Johnson all the way to the Nebraska Supreme Court in 1897, Cheyenne County was still due a balance of $11,857.40, meaning that only $5500 had actually been paid.  How much of that came from Frank Johnson and how much of that came from Adam's own pocket is still a mystery to me.  (As a side note, the lower court had thrown the suit out, finding that there was no evidence that Frank Johnson was, in fact, a bank partner and therefore not liable for the debt.  The supreme court, however, determined that it was Frank Johnson who had advised Adam to put the money in the bank in the first place, and by that fact sent it back to the lower court to be re-tried.)

We have to consider, too, that if Adam trusted the bank with the county money he would have trusted the bank with his personal money.  We have newspaper evidence that an agreement was reached between the bank creditors and Frank Johnson, but we don't know if Johnson ever really paid them any money. Besides, if Adam did get any of his personal money back he probably would have been required to hand it over to the county.

1889 also turned out to be the year the Union Pacific Railroad completed the rail lines into the Black Hills. Other surrounding routes were completed soon thereafter. Sidney merchants were left competing for local business only as all of those out-of-towners could now get goods and supplies delivered to local merchants by rail.

Adam was broke and business was a fraction of what it used to be.  1889 turned out to be a very, very bad year for Adam Ickes.



All original content, images, commentary, etc. copyright © by Joy Denison 2015-2016.  All rights reserved. All writings, poems, speeches, essays, images, scans, likenesses, etc. by Adam Ickes (b 1845) as well as personal histories, images, and all other content by all persons referenced and discussed within the pages and posts in this blog may not be copied, shared, or reproduced in any way without expressed permission by the owner unless included here from other referenced sources or are historical records already considered to be in the public domain. 

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Adam Ickes, County Treasurer

Horace Bunn Ickes

Horace, Adam and Ellen's son, spent the last few years of his life living with his mother, Ellen, and sister, Allegra.  He wrote a short personal history, probably at Alle's insistence.  Among his memories of Sidney he wrote:
I attended school in Pleasantville until the Spring of 1884 when we moved to Sidney, Nebraska, my father, mother, sister and I.  Sidney at that time was a very busy place.  [It] was a rough and ready frontier with a population of about 1300.  There were 27 saloons and dance halls and no churches.  There was a U.S. Government Fort located there.  I worked in my father's store for several years and later was taken into the business, as there was plenty of money to be made. Freight and passengers were conveyed to the Black Hills from Sidney by Ox Teams and Stage.  Soldiers would act as an escort to protect them from Indian raids.  Gambling supported many people.  Miners would come in from the Black Hills with a small stake and expect to take the train for their old home, but they would be enticed into one of the gambling games and by morning they would be broke and then they would retrace their steps beck to the Hills for another stake. Customers would come for a distance of 150 to 200 miles, making but two trips a year and they would buy goods by the bolt, groceries by the case and sack and pay cash. This was then a great cattle country and the cowboys would help to make the town gay.  Yes, they were wild and woolly days, but you made real friends there, attended to your own business and you were never molested. It was only a short time until the railroad entered the Black Hills and that ended the nice money making business.

On 30 May 1885 Adam delivered a Memorial Day address to the town of Sidney.  As a veteran of the Civil War and a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, I'm sure he came across as a true patriot, an inspired leader, and an eloquent orator. (Interestingly though, May of 1885 was the same month he reported that he was busily engaged in building his house on the homestead 19 miles out of town. What a great multi-tasker he must have been!)

Comrades, Ladies and Gentlemen:


This beautiful custom of a grateful people is said to have had its origin in the fact that on the 13th day of April, 1862, one year after the fall of Fort Sumter, Mrs. Evans, with the wife and two daughters of Chaplain May, of the 2nd regiment Michigan volunteers, decorated the graves of a considerable number of soldiers buried on Arlington heights, near Washington.  In May of the following year they rendered the same sadly pleasant attention to the graves of soldiers buried at Fredericksburg.

The custom became so popular and met with such unqualified approval that in 1873 congress declared the 30th of May a legal holiday.

And now another year in life’s campaign brings us again to Memorial day, with it’s sad memories and tender associations, and as the nation bends over the graves of its heroes and pays to noble dust the tribute of its love, let us remember that we are not only to cast our floral offering upon its graves of our former comrades in arms, but standing in their presence to rededicate ourselves to the unfinished work they have left us to do.

We shall stand to-day (sic.) at the graves of our former comrades who marched with us one year ago. At these graves we are reminded that our ranks here are rapidly thinning, and with each vacant place come new and weightier responsibilities.  But a few years ahead and that noble army that broke rank in 1865 & returned to their homes will be no more.  Their memories alone will remain.  Thousands already have heard their last “tattoo”. X (sic.) Their work is done their mission ended.  To us, their comrades, is given the duty of keeping fresh and green their memories; of perpetrating and transmitting intact to posterity the country perfected by their sacrifices and sufferings.  Resting from their labors the start of their lives jeweled by deeds of valor & patriotism shall inspire in the hearts of all the people a love for country & flag that shall keep the land forever united, beautiful and free; that there may be no north, no south, no east, no west, but every where, all over this broad land from the lakes to the gulf, from Plymouth Rock to the Golden Gate, millions of patriotic, public-spirited men & women, whose highest aim shall be a moral & religious elevation of all the people & purity in public affairs, until there shall not be a “blot or stain upon the fait escutcheon of America’s greatest Republic”.  Then methinks the “Angels of Advent who sing the song of “peace on earth, good will to men”, shall bend over their harps to pour rapture down upon a world growing green and blossoming with beauty, a world of teeming activity invention & production, in which fraternity charity & loyalty shall dominate supreme.

At Sidney 5/30/85

Adam Ickes







On President's Day, 22 February 1886, Adam addressed a crowd in the town of Potter, Nebraska (not far from his house) on the subject of George Washington.

Ladies and Gentlemen,


The subject of this sketch was born on the 22nd day of February A.D. 1732 in Westmoreland Co. State of Va.  His genealogy is a matter of greater importance to the memory of his ancestors that to his own; he throws back far greater glory than he can inherit.  The family and name are traced by genealogists to the 12th century.

His great grandfather emigrated to this country in 1657, and settled in Virginia.  His father died in 1743, leaving a valuable landed property to his widow and five children.  To our hero, the oldest son of the second marriage, he gave the estate opposite Fredericksburg Va; the income of the whole being left with the mother, till the sons respectively should come of age.  The mother was a woman of superior intelligence and energy, and ruled her family and household with a firm hand.

The means of education were scanty.  He was taught reading, writing, book-keeping, and at a later period surveying.  His early education did not extend beyond his own language.  But by long practice, attentive reading of good authors, and scrupulous care in the preparation of his letters and other compositions he acquired a correct and perspicuous English style.  He is unquestionably to be added to the list of eminent men whose characters have been moulded by a mother’s influence.  He evinced in his boyhood the military taste.  The self-elected but willingly obeyed leader of his comrades, he formed them into companies for their juvenile battles. 

His early repute for veracity and justice with his athletic prowess beyond his years, made him the chosen umpire of their disputes.  A spot is still pointed out, where, in his boyhood he threw a stone across the Rappahannock.  At the age of 16 yrs. he was employed by Lord Fairfax to survey his vast estates, which required 3 yrs.  A portion of the country traversed by him formed a part of that debatable land the disputed right to which was the original moving cause of the 7 yrs. war.

No military schools existed at that time even in the mother country.  His experience in border life prepared him for his military education, and at the age of 19 he received the appointment of adjutant  general with the rank of major.  The struggle of France and England for the exclusive possession of the Eastern portion of the American continent was the great national drama of the 18th century.  It subjected the entire frontier to all the horrors of remorseless border and savage war.

At the age of 21 he performed a most perilous duty – that of carrying an official document from James River to the shores of Lake Erie.  The distance was 5 or 6 hundred miles, through wilderness, over mountains, and across rivers, with all the hazards of an Indian frontier.  The return journey was a series of the severest exposures and the most imminent perils.  With but one companion and an Indian guide, they were dogged through the woods by Indians and the guide himself exerted all the arts of savage cunning after leading them out of their way to get possession of our hero’s gun.  After dismissing their guide they pursued their journey through the long Dec. night.  They expected to find the Allegheny River frozen over, but in this they were disappointed.  With a single hatchet they constructed a raft and launched it upon the river, but were soon wedged in by drifting masses of ice.  In his endeavor to stop the raft he was thrown into the river where it was 10 ft. deep.  He saved his life by slinging to a log; and they were compelled to abandon the raft and pass the night on an island in the middle of the river.  In the morning they were enabled to cross on the ice thus escaping the tomahawk of the pursuing savages.

This adventure throws light on traits of his character which in after-life were more fully developed in his circumspection and prudence.  The first blow struck in the 7 yrs. war, being in command of a trifling force it devolved upon our hero to repel it.  A severe action in which the French forces from Fort Duquesne greatly outnumbered the English, resulted in the capitulation of our hero with his command.  The following year General Braddock in the hope of reducing Fort Duquesne led his army of 1460 men into an ambuscade, in which, after a terrific and deadly struggle for 3 hrs. lossed (sic) in killed and wounded nearly 2/3 of his command, himself mortally wounded.  Our hero was an aid to the general and relates that “By the all-powerful dispensations of Providence I have been protected beyond all human probability or expectation; for I had 4 bullets through my coat, and two horses shot under me; yet I escaped unhurt, though death was leveling my companions or every side of me.”  But our article is growing too long.  We have somewhat in detail dwelt upon the character of our hero as a young man and will pass by his connection with the army in the 7 yrs war, which by the provisions of the treaty of 1763 extinguished the French dominion in North America.

To do full justice to the character of our hero, as the great leader of the American revolution would far exceed my limits.  And are they not well known to almost every school boy?

His marriage was a fortunate circumstance.  His wife brought him a large accession of fortune for those days; and by her solid virtues, cheerful disposition, and simple & amiable manners, relieved him from the cares of domestic life, strengthened the attachments of his friends, and adorned the high public stations to which he was successively called.  Her simple life is worthy the emulation of every American lady.  Twice president of the United States, he retires to private life, of all men that have ever lived, the greatest of good men and the best of great men.

Posterity will not be left without a faithful representation of his person.  You will find them over the land, and as the years roll by, on each successive 22nd of February the American people will assemble to do him reverence.

He may have made some mistakes, but our long and unbroken devotion to him keeps the heart so young and so fresh that we revive only his best deeds.  His was a mysterious quality of character, manifested in a long life of unambitious service which called by whatever name, inspires the confidence, commands the respect, and wins the affection of contemporaries, and grows upon the admiration of successive generations, forming a standard to which the merit of other men is referred, and a living proof that pure patriotism is not a delusion, nor virtue an empty name, no one of the sons of men has equaled George Washington.

Potter 2/22/86.









As a successful businessman and a popular speaker, he was making the rounds and becoming quite a big fish in his corner of the world. In November of 1887 Adam ran for County Treasurer and won. He took office in January of 1888. 




As County Treasurer he had many interesting and important civic duties to perform.


Omaha Daily Bee
8 February 1888


In March of 1888 he was also elected treasurer of the Cheyenne County Republicans.



Omaha Daily Bee
28 March 1888


In May of 1888 he delivered the Memorial Day address in Gering, Nebraska.

Comrades of thy Grand Army,


                Ladies and Gentlemen:
This beautiful custom of a grateful people is said to have had its origin in the fact that on the 13th day of April, 1862, one year after the fall of Fort Sumter, Mrs. Evans with the wife and two daughters of chaplain May, of the 2nd regiment, Mich. Volunteers, decorated the graves of a considerable number of soldiers buried on Arlington heights, near Washington.  In May of the following year they rendered the same sadly pleasant attention to the graves of soldiers buried at Fredericksburg, Md.  The custom became so popular and met with such unqualified approval that in 1873 through the efforts of that noble volunteer soldier the lamented John A. Logan congress declared the 30th of May a legal holiday.

And now another year in life’s campaign brings us again to Memorial day, with its sad memories & tender associations, and as the nation bends over the graves of its heroes and pays to noble dust the tribute of its love, let us remember that we are not only to cast our floral offerings upon the graves of our former comrades in arms, but standing in their presence to rededicate ourselves to the unfinished work they have left us to do.  Friends, upon this closing day of the budding Spring, when “hoary frosts have fallen in the fresh lap of the crimson rose,” our smiling land presents a scene that should forever blot from the record the slander of the poet and the silly carping of the politician.

Millions of people have gathered to-day (sic) to sing paeans of gratitude to their sleeping benefactors and with one loud voice to chant anthems of sweet appreciation, that may rise from earth to heaven like “Sabean odors from the spicy shore of Araby the blest.”

We have come to claim our share in this beautiful and grateful service, & to perform our parts in an act that possesses no quality of a task.  To be an American citizen officiating in a service of gratitude to the fallen defenders of his country is but second to being numbered among those to whom this homage is rendered.  No more lofty acts are to be found in the records of authentic history than the noble sacrifices of the American soldier upon the field of battle and the votive offerings of his countrymen upon the holy altar of the memory.

Over a quarter of a century has fallen into the abyss of eternity since the vernal air of an April morning rang out the announcement that war was full upon our people.  That was not a large gun that opened upon Fort Sumter, but it was the most significant gun that ever belched forth the dread missiles of death.  Its reverberations were heard throughout the length and breadth of the land, nor ceased to thunder until over 2 million patriots voluntarily left their homes, their families and their peaceful pursuits to defend upon battle-plain and over the swelling wave the principle then submitted to decision under the dread arbitrament of war, nor until 360,000 graves mark the number of those killed in battle, & dying in hospitals, upon road sides, in prisons, as the results of wounds, or disease, of hardships and exposures, nor until 300,000 union soldiers & sailors were made cripples for life, and left more than a million devoted mothers, widows, sisters, and orphans to mourn for their loved ones who did not return.  Who is here today that does not remember the sad partings of father, husband, brother, son, sweetheart and loved ones, and the intense anxiety through those long terrible years until the smoke of war cleared away.  Let memory revert to the songs that were sung, the letters that were written, the long farewells, the hopes, joys and disappointments of those dreadful years when the nation was baptized in tears and blood and we shall catch an inspiration that shall fill our hearts with devotion and praise on account of a free and united country.

We are not here to-day to talk of the causes that led to this great sacrifice.  Men & women are before me today in the full growth and estate of maturity who have come upon the stage of life and action since that appalling event occurred.  But they know as well as the actors in it the sad story of that blighting conflict, when men of the same nationality met in opposing ranks upon the field of battle.  Their hearts swell with the same pride of country and palpitate with the same beat of gratitude as do the men & women who lived through the crucial test, whereby the strength of the Republic was tried in the fire of steel.

It is no new custom to offer oblations in memory of the dead.  In every age of intelligent man, the struggles of life have been sustained by a belief in and a “longing after immortality”.  There is no existing record of the human race that does not attest this interesting fact.  Monuments, mounds and sepulchers that have survived the names of individuals & outlasted their more perishable bodies alike bear witness of it.  The pyramids of Egypt, some 70 in number were built as tombs for fearful monarchs yearning after the gods & longing for immortality.  These piles represent an amazing effort at construction.  The mighty Cheops, standing upon a level base within the Lybian chain, still rears its lofty peak 543 ft. thus towering within a few feet of the pinnacle of the beautiful shaft erected upon the banks of the Potomac to the father of a mighty nation.  One hundred thousand men toiled beneath the sun of Egypt for half a century to erect that tomb in order that the pigmy who was to occupy it might under the Egyptian theology be saved to the longed for immortality.  For 4000 years it has waged battle with the elements.  Within that period men have come & gone, empires risen 7 fallen, nations have been born and have decayed, & the world has emerged from darkness to light.  But the great pile of Cyclopean masonry stands today the marvel & wonder of the theologian & scientist.
The monument period of America represents a still later era and a more advanced people.  

Monuments in Mexico and other places reveal the same belief in a future state that have constantly budded from the flower of hope – from the first day that man’s voice vibrated upon the cheery air of morning.

The universal credence in an unrevealed future sought fitting expression in the very earliest times, in a tender regard of the living for the dead.  Before the full development of language some of the most beautiful truths of nature have been illustrated by symbolic expression.  It was no less natural than poetic to call in the vegetable & floral worlds to represent the verdict of the ages against the hopeless doctrine of final extinction.  The growth of flowers in Spring indicates the revival of the fruitful earth, after a period of quiet which bears a semblance of death.  In the ancient Republics of Greece & Rome the crown of honor was formed of laurel or of olive leaves.  Victors in the Pythian games were crowned with a wreath of laurel leaves, which thus became the symbol of triumph.  Julius Caesar constantly wore a laurel wreath, indicative of dominion, & Augustus & his successors followed his example.  Among the Romans oak leaves the patriots crown; bay leaves the poets; myrtle was the crown of beauty; olive the token of peace; ivy the representative of Bacchus, & cyprus the emblem of mourning.  By one poet flowers have been called “the blooming alphabet of creation,” & by another, “the prophets of immortality.”  They have been largely used as a device of heraldry, & as such the fleur de lis became an ornament of the crowns of royalty & of the dross and armor of the nobility in such countries as Germany, Spain and England; & in the latter the red & white roses signalized the warring houses of Lancaster & York.  The fleur de lis became the national emblem of France, the thistle of Scotland, & the shamrock of Ireland.

But the beautiful ceremonies of love & remembrance now so universally performed with flowers came to their fullest expansion through the growth of the Christian religion.  Branches of palm were thrown in the path of the Savior as he entered Jerusalem.  The crucified Christ received a crown of thorns by his executioners, but flowers strewn by unseen hands exhaled their fragrance around the cave wherein his body was laid.

The important feasts of all the churches are now celebrated with flowers.  Every religion that promises a renewal of life after the sleep upon earth symbolizes its faith through the blooming beauties of the floral tribes.  From the baptismal font to the last couch of man there lies but a single step; and the rose which unfolded its crimson petals to the morning air of the child may in the evening give place to the gentle amaranth, that unfading emblem of immortality, as it speaks of hope from the grave of man.

Comrades and friends we have come with beautiful flowers, culled by the eager hands of our brothers and woven into speaking forms by the fair fingers of our sisters, to render the homage due to patriots who have died for their country & for all mankind.  The now silent soldiers, whose life-work is finished, championed a principle toward which the warriors and armies of the world have been constant by drifting from the earliest recorded struggles upon the plain of Shinar.  This principle – the rights of man & the liberty of the individual – which was planted with the first blood ever shed in behalf of government, has, like the flower, bloomed upon the morning air of all the ages.  It has been the task of royalty to cut it down as a weed incumbering the grain. Out brothers whose memory we honor to day (sic), gave their lives to perpetuate its growth & progress to the end of time.  The world will little note nor long remember what we say on these occasions, but it will never forget what they did, “and the story of their lives, their bravery and heroic deeds through hunger & suffering & blood shall live to remotest time the heritage of the nation and a grand and glorious example to all her sons.
Let us bring flowers in the Springtime my friends, and by their gentle office – whether the bodies of our comrades & defenders lie buried beneath the soil of our common country, or await the final transition in the bosom of the ocean – we may symbolize our faith, & load the atmosphere with the fragrant gratitude of an appreciative generation.

Bring flowers, then, to their memory;
Throw hither all your quaint, enameled eyes,
That on the green turf sucked the honeyed showers,
And purple all the ground with vernal flowers.
Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies;
The tufted crow-tow and the pale jessamine
The white pink and the pansy streaked with jet;
The glowing violet.
The musk-rose, and the well attired woodbine,
With cowslips wan that hand the pensive head,
And every flower that sad embroidery wears.”

We shall stand to-day at the graves of our former comrades who marched with us one year ago.  At these graves we are reminded that our ranks here are rapidly thinning, and with each vacant place come new and weightier responsibilities.  But a few years at most and that noble army that broke ranks in 1865 & returned to their homes & peaceful pursuits will be no more.  Their memories alone will remain.  Thousands already have heard their last “tattoo”, and have gone to join the majority on the other shore.

“Comrades & brothers, soon shall we all join the majority.
Thomas McLellan and Meade,
Hancock and Cavalry Custer;
Garfield and burnside and Steenman,
And Logan, the peer of the peerless;
Grant, the great Captain of Peace
Transfigured on mountain McGregor;
Gone and fast going our leaders,
Pillars and pride of the union.
Aye, and the men who returned with them,
Out of the fire and the fury,
Out of the craters of conflict,
Crippled, and scarred, and dismembered;
Those who go up in the anguish,
Waiting on war and its heritage;
Up from the Almshouse and alley,
Up from the taunts of the craven;
Patriots all, going to join the majority.
Come with your laurels and palms,
And fair immortelles to heap o’re them,
Come with your tears and your tributes
Strew honeyed phrases above them.
Come with your sons and daughters,
Your youths and your beautiful maidens,
Say to them; ‘Here are the men who loved you, and saved you, and died for you.’
So shall the Union they wrought
Live in the hearts of the people.
In the sons full of valor and strength,
In the daughters of beauty and promise;
In the splendor of flower and fruition,
That follows the storms desolation;
When we in our low spreading tents,
Dear comrades and brothers,
Have answered the final tattoo,
And joined the majority.”

Comrades and friends scarce one years have elapsed since this beautiful valley was the abode of the coyote and the ox.  To-day (sic) these surrounding hills and valleys resound with the melody of the plowman the milkmaid and young America.  This promising town, yet in its infancy will continue to flourish and grow by the energy and thrift of its people until it shall take rank with the best towns of Western Nebraska.  The “boys in blue” who were at Shilo and Missionary Ridge and Gettysburg & all through the war, some of them are here today to lend a helping hand in the development of this frontier country.  Contrary to the predictions of some of our would-be wise statesmen at the close of hostilities, instead of a mob to over run the country and demoralize society they have proved themselves men in the truest sense and have been largely instrumental in the settlement and development of the great states of Kansas and Nebraska.

Those who are here today, who have in years gone by joined with comrades and friends to honor the beloved dead, must not forget that way back in our eastern homes, kind and loving hands have gathered choice flowers from field and garden and are today placing wreaths upon the graves of our loved ones.  To us their comrades is given the duty of keeping fresh and green their memories; of perpetuating and transmitting intact to posterity the country perfected by their sacrifices and sufferings.  Resting from their labors, the story of their lives jeweled by deeds of valor and patriotism shall inspire in the hearts of all the people a love for country & flag that shall keep the land forever united, beautiful and free; that there may be no north, no south, no east no west but, everywhere, all over this broad land from the lakes to the gulf, from Plymouth rock to the Golden Gate, millions of free, patriotic, public-spirited men and women, whose highest aim shall be the intellectual, moral & religious elevation of all the people & the encouragement of purity in public affairs, until there shall not be one “blot or stain upon the fair escalation of America’s greatest Republic.”

Then methinks, the “angels of Advent who sang the song of “peace on earth, good-will to men,” shall bend over their harps to pour raptures down upon a world grown green and blossoming with beauty, a world of teeming activity invention & production, in which fraternity, charity and loyalty shall dominate supreme.

at Gering 5/30/88






















In September of 1888 Adam spent an entire week in Kearney, Nebraska with his Comrades, reenacting and reminiscing his Civil War days.


Omaha Daily Bee
17 September 1888


Adam had also joined the Knights of Pythias, a Masonic organization, and was considered to be numbered among the "intelligence and wealth" of the city of Sidney.


Omaha Daily Bee
25 October 1888

1888 was a very good year for Adam. And if my theory about William Barr was correct, it falls right in line with what Horace wrote in his short personal history.  That could be exactly the time Horace took over William's duties.  And with a family member in charge, Adam was able to concentrate even more on self-promotion and his own self-interests. 

And, oh yeah, where did Adam say his wife of 25 years was while he was giving speeches and winning public office and attending to civic duties and greeting his public and traveling to week-long reunions and dining at grand banquets and hob-knobbing with the intelligent and wealthy?  Oh, I remember now...




1889 began as a banner year for Adam as well.  Horace had indicated that there were no churches in Sidney.  The only reason I can think of that he would believe that would be because he never had occasion to attend church.  Since he was 16 when they moved to Sidney I would imagine if his father attended church he would insist, or suggest...or at least invite, his teenage son to attend with him. Actually, there was a Methodist church and a Presbyterian church in Sidney when they arrived. Other denominations would follow. I believe I can safely assume church attendance had been put on the back burner for quite some time. So where exactly Adam delivered his next speech, dater 21 April 1889, we'll never know, but it must have been within some type of religious institution.


Easter


I am happy, surrounded by so much loveliness & hope.  These bright faces around me must be expressive of pure & holy thoughts within, while these lovely flowers & eggs of various tints that have been so artistically arrayed by the fair hands of the ladies express a language that is truly symbolic.

4000 yrs. ago was the age of pyramids, built as tombs for fearful monarchs, yearning after gods, & longing for immortality.  In Egypt, the mighty Cheops standing upon a level base within the Lybian chain, still rears its lofty peak 543 ft, thus lowering within a few ft. of the pinnacle of the beautiful shaft erected upon the banks of the Potomac to the father of a mighty nation.

Within that period men have come & gone, empires risen & fallen, nations have been born & have decayed, & the world has emerged from darkness to light.  But the great pile of cyclopean masonry stands today, the marvel & wonder of the theologian & scientist.  The ornamental period represents a still later era & a more advanced people revealing the same belief in a future state that has constantly budded from the 1st day that man’s voice vibrated upon the air of morning.

But the beautiful ceremonies of love & remembrance now so universally performed with flowers came to their fullest expansion through the growth of the Christian religion.  Branches of palm were thrown in the path of the Savior as he entered Jerusalem.  The crucified Christ received a crown of thorns by his executioners, but flowers strewn by unseen hands exhaled their fragrance around the cave wherein his body was laid.  The growth of flowers in spring indicates the revival of the fruitful earth, after a period of quiet which bears a resemblance of death.

The important feasts of all the churches are now celebrated with flowers.  Every religion that promises a renewal of life after the sleep upon earth symbolizes its faith through the blooming beauties of the floral tribes.  From the baptismal font to the last couch of man there lies but a single step; and the rose which unfolded its crimson petals to the morning air of the child may in the evening give place to the gentle amaranth, that unfading emblem of immortality, as it speaks of hope from the grave of man.  So this beautiful display of flowers which are delightful to the eye speak to us of the beauty & joy & blessedness of a life with the risen Lord. 

The origin of the custom of giving eggs at the Easter festival is lost in obscurity but may be traced back as far as the days of our Saxon ancestors.  The Saxons, when they took possession of Britain, worshiped various pagan deities, amongst whom was “Eoester”, whose festival was kept at the full of the moon in the month of April.  She represented the revival of spring, the resurrection of nature from her long winter sleep.  In her honor the people went in gay procession, with music & dancing, to offer at her shrine the products of the early spring, consisting chiefly of flowers, water cresses & eggs; geese being kept by the Saxons & Britons in flocks of hundreds & thousands, & forming an important article of homestead property.  Britons never ate the flesh of the bird, considering it impious to kill the creature which supplied them with so useful & ambitious an article of food.  The egg was regarded as emblematic of the life of nature which had so long slept & was now about to burst forth.  When the Saxons, through the preaching of the early missionaries, embraced the Christian religion, they continued to celebrate these festivals; only converting them from the pagan rites to the worship of Christ.

To-day (sic.) therefore, in place of the pagan salutation of “Eoester” hath awakened: we now hear the religious expression:  “The Lord hath arisen.”

Sidney 4/21/89










I would like to think the preparation of this speech brought Adam somewhat back to his senses and once again able to embrace that which was truly important in his life - God and family.  From all appearances those had been severely lacking in his life ever since his arrival in Sidney, Nebraska. But if not, sometimes God himself has a way of bringing us to our knees when we neglect Him for too long.

By the way, there's something I failed to mention earlier.  A primary responsibility of a county treasurer was to take charge of the county funds.  By Nebraska law, county funds were to be kept in the county safe in the county office building or county courthouse.  Instead, some county treasurers chose to deposit county money in the local bank so they could collect interest on it.  The interest wouldn't be credited to the county - they would PERSONALLY profit from the interest earned. Apparently Adam got wind of this practice and thought it was a great idea. So he took all of the money belonging to Cheyenne County Nebraska out of the county safe, which totaled $17,357.40, and deposited it in the Sidney Bank.

When C. S. Morgan, partner and cashier of the Bank of Sidney, woke up on the morning of June 27, 1889 he knew something that no one else knew.  He knew that ALL of the bank's money was gone. So instead of going to work that day, he picked up a colt 45 and blew his brains out.



All original content, images, commentary, etc. copyright © by Joy Denison 2015-2016.  All rights reserved. All writings, poems, speeches, essays, images, scans, likenesses, etc. by Adam Ickes (b 1845) as well as personal histories, images, and all other content by all persons referenced and discussed within the pages and posts in this blog may not be copied, shared, or reproduced in any way without expressed permission by the owner unless included here from other referenced sources or are historical records already considered to be in the public domain.