“Bridgewater”
(Note: any text in italics has been taken from the official SDSHS records.)
Marker Text
The Milwaukee, building from Marion to the Missouri, in 1880 soon reached the Nation, platted in 1879 by Robert and J.B. Nation, with Orlan K. Bullard its postmaster on 5 January 1880 and when changed to Bridgewater on November 20th he continued to serve. The election that year shifted the county seat form Cameron to Bridgewater, 119 to 109, when the canvassing board threw out 76 votes for Montrose on the pretext that it was nonexistent. The Cameron pioneers flocked to Bridgewater and to Melas (Salem in reverse), and County Clerk H.H. Pierce took the records to the new Courthouse in Bridgewater on the corner of Poplar & 3rd Streets. Tabor & Berry, storekeepers at Cameron, shifted to Bridgewater too and had their store S of the tracks where the Shannard elevator now is located and all went through the terrific blizzard winter of 1880-81 without a train from January to April. That spring J.P. McKee’s general store and W.J. Bollinger’s hardware were put up on Poplar and Nation’s bank at 3rd & Main. Salem won the county seat in the 1882 election. The school was moved from south of the tracks and a fine new 36 x 40 building erected in 1883 as well as the Catholic, Methodist, & Presbyterian Churches.
The Tribune was started in February 1881 and E.C. Kibbe ran the “Cricket” as an opposition paper. Thus for 80 years Bridgewater has been a good place to live and gets better every year.”
Location
McCook County, corner of Hwy 262 and Main Street in Bridgewater (2006)