Bryantsburg, Iowa | |
---|---|
Coordinates:42°34′29″N91°54′20″W / 42.57472°N 91.90556°W /42.57472; -91.90556 | |
Country | ![]() |
State | ![]() |
County | Buchanan County |
Government | |
• Type | unincorporated community |
Time zone | UTC-6 (Central (CST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-5 (CDT) |
Bryantsburg is anunincorporated community inBuchanan County,Iowa, United States.[1] It is located on Highway 150 north ofIndependence and south ofHazleton, at 42.579132N, -91.905063W.[2]
Bryantsburg is located onIowa State Highway 150, near the junction of 150th Street.[3] It lies about 5 miles (8.0 km) north of the county seat of Independence.[3][4]
Founded in the 19th century, the community was originally known asBryant. Later, the name changed toBryantburg (no 'S'). Bryantburg was aflag station on theChicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad; the depot was later upgraded to a full station, and by the early 1900s, Bryantburg was considered a "small town".[5]
Bryantsburg was once home to a bank,[6] schools, and a post office.[7] Early postmasters in Bryantsburg included J. R. Cowell, A. Johnson, C. W. Cowell and J. M. Barclay.[8][9] The post office was closed by 1925.[7]
Bryantsburg was the site of the Free Will Baptist Church, which originally held meetings in the southwestern part ofHazleton Township until 1900, when the church opened in Bryantsburg. In 1914, the church membership was around 50.[5]
TheChicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad operated until 1980, when it was liquidated.[10]
Bryantsburg's population was 41 in 1902,[11] and 52 in 1925.[12]
In 1931, a major hailstorm in northeast Iowa damaged crops and farm products in the Bryantsburg area, as well as inSwisher,Shueyville,Vinton,Fairfax, andLaPorte City. The path of the storm began in Bryantsburg, and the damage in Buchanan County was extensive, accounted as a near total loss of crops. Poultry and pigs were also killed in the storm, which ranged from one to four miles wide in Buchanan County.[13]
The population was 25 in 1940.[4]
By the 1970s, Bryantsburg was included in a list of "dying towns" in theWaterloo Courier, alongsideKiene,Albany,Buck Grove,Grove Hill,Abbott,Irma,Floyd Crossing,Kains Siding,Dalby,Merson,Jubilee, andDeerfield.[14]
ManyAmish families now live in the Bryantsburg area, which is near the Morwood Campgrounds.[15]