FACTORYVILLE

Gypsy Heart

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Nov 29, 2005
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Ozarks
--This town was situated on the Missouri River, eighteen miles south ofPlattsmouth, five miles southwest of Union and on the south branch of the Weeping Water River. The first settler In the area in 1859 erected a frame mill on the Weeping Water. It was torn down in 1880. The next settler in 1869, George Jennings, also built a mill and called the quarter-section it was situated on "Factoryville." A third mill, a very large one, was built in 1880. In addition, Fractoryville had one general store, two blacksmith shops, one doctor and about fifty inhabitants in 1882.
 

I've seen it on a few maps of Cass County, but for some reason always thought it was just a paper town. You ever been able to hunt the place? With all those mills, it must've been a fairly busy place for awhile.
 

Could be worth a trip to see what remains in that area. Maybe its roadtrip time now lol. See if i can find any maps showing the area
 

There are ALOT of now defunct towns in eastern Nebraska. The problem being that they have long since become farm land and private property. If you start asking for permission to hunt before they start planting they are usually much more receptive.

And towns that used to be located along the missouri are usually no longer there because the river moved and flooded away to towns.
 

Factoryville is a ghost town in Cass County, Nebraska, United States. Located approximately halfway between Union and Nehawka, the town straddled the Lincoln-Union Highway and neighbored a smaller village called Mount Pleasant. It once featured a flour mill, stores, hotels, a post office, and a Methodist college called Factoryville College. Founded in the late 1850s, in 1873 its name was changed to Union Mills, and in 1880 it was changed back to Factoryville.[1] The post office was established in the late 1860s when a local named Isaac Pollard was traveling to the Eastern United States. Along the way he stopped in Washington, D.C., where he selected the name Factoryville, along with the name Nehawka for a neighboring town.[2]

The construction of the railroad on the opposite side of Weeping Water Creek from Factoryville led to the demise of the town, and by the 1890s there were only empty buildings
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factoryville,_Nebraska
 

If it was 5 miles south west of Union it couldn't be between Union and Nehawka as Nehawka is about 5 miles NW of Union.
 

Another interesting fact is that while that gentleman was naming these towns he was looking through a book of indian tribe names. Thats where he came up with the name for the town of Nehawka. If anybody is interested at all there is alot of history in Cass county. Google searches can return alot of information.
 

I know exactly where Factoryville was located some of the remains are still evident.. It is located exactly 2 miles west and 1/2 mile south of Union
 

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