Thursday, July 5, 2018

Why Amazonia? (They have monkeys)

I'm guessing this is from about the 1870s: train wreck in Amazonia, MO
     When the (Samuel/Anna) Jennis arrived in America in 1869, they soon settled in Amazonia, MO, a farming community.
     It's pretty sleepy. A village, really.
     Why did they settle there? —Aside from the fact that these immigrants traveled up the Missouri River (Amazonia is on that river), I just don't know.
     There's some circumstantial evidence that they eventually sought to escape Amazonia. After all, Samuel and Anna's sons, Frederick and John, left, in the early 1880s, for something better in the west. They eventually homesteaded in "Cottonwood," Montana (Beaver Creek/Lewistown).
     In about 1882, family head, Samuel, left Amazonia for New Orleans—evidently planning to collect the rest of the family when he set up there. According to one family account, he was never heard from again, so, since, by 1884, Frederick (and John) were flourishing in Montana, they invited mom (Anna) (and some of their siblings?) to move to Montana. She lived in eldest son, Frederick's, cabin, which was improved for the occasion. She died there, of pneumonia, two years later.

Locating Amazonia: on the Missouri, just north of St. Joseph,
which is north of Kansas City, MO
Old Andrew County map
     There are indications that the Flueckingers also settled in Amazonia—or at least in Andrew County, MO, where Amazonia resides. There's evidence that the Flueckingers and the Jennis knew each other. Perhaps there was a minor Swiss community there.
     The Andrew County website offers these historical factoids:
     A divided county during the Civil War, Andrew sent troops to both sides. In Aug., 1861 come 1500 from Andrew and other counties joined the pro-Southern Mo. State Guard at Camp Highly in eastern Andrew County while others joined a large Union cap in adjacent Gentry County. In 1861, Union troops seized “Northwest Democrat,” a pro-Southern newspaper, in Savannah and troops from Camp Highly seized the “Plain Dealer,” Union newspaper. Raiding Guerrilla bands overran the county through 1863. 
     Andrew County’s glacial plains support fertile livestock, grain, and fruit farms. In the county are One Hundred and Two and Platter rivers and forming its west border are the Nodaway and Missouri. In 1804 the Lewis and Clark Expedition camped on an island the mouth of Nodaway and members of fur trader Wilson P. Hunt’s 1811 Astorian expedition wintered near the river’s mouth.
     The state historical society offers this unhelpful remark:
     In the early days there was a village near the site of Amazonia known as Boston (q.v.). No information concerning why the name was changed to Amazonia when the present town was laid out could be found. It is said that the founder selected the name for its euphonious qualities. 
     Elsewhere, they explain:
Amazonia (q.v.) was at one time called Savanah Landing, presumably because it was the nearest town to Savannah [the County seat] on the Missouri River.
     I've been looking for images of Amazonia. Here's what I've found. Not much.


The United Methodist Church of Amazonia
Evidently, this is a hay ride to a pumpkin patch in Amazonia.



Amazonia and Wooldridge, MO: flood of 2011

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