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All About Hamilton, MO

Hamilton is a city in Caldwell CountyMissouri, United States. The population was 1,809 at the 2010 census. It is known as the hometown of James Cash Penney, who built a large apparel-related business, J. C. Penney, and the hometown of Jenny Doan, who has built a large quilting-related business, Missouri Star Quilt Co.[6] and Brooklyn Dodgers Hall of Fame baseball player Zack Wheat.

Hamilton, Missouri owes its existence largely to the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad.[7] Prior to 1854 the area around Hamilton was unsettled prairie land belonging to the U.S. Government. With the coming of the railroad, the Hamilton Town Company was formed to develop a tract of land along the rails.

At first the name Prairie City was intended for the new community.[7] However, Albert Gallatin Davis, a key member of the Town Company, chose Hamilton instead, in honor of two early Americans, Founding Father and first Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, and Joseph Hamilton, an early American lawyer and military leader killed at the Battle of the Thames during the War of 1812.[8][9]

The first house in Hamilton, fittingly, was built by Davis in the summer of 1855, as well as the first business, a general store, in 1857. The store would serve as Hamilton's first post office and Davis as the first postmaster in 1858.[7] The Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad was finally completed on February 14, 1859, and the first train arrived that day. A railroad depot was constructed by the fall of 1859, with Albert Gallatin Davis appointed the first railroad and express agent.[7]

By the outbreak of the American Civil War, Hamilton consisted of about 25 homes and businesses. The town saw little involvement in the war, despite northwest and north-central Missouri being a hotbed of guerrilla warfare. The majority of the towns residents held strong pro-Union sympathies, with the few pro-Confederates among the populace forced to take an oath of allegiance.[7] Being on the rail line made Hamilton a tempting target for Confederate "bushwhackers", so beginning in the fall of 1861, a company of the 50th Illinois Infantry arrived to help the local Home Guard unit defend the town.

Once the war ended Hamilton experienced a period of rapid growth, and was incorporated in 1868.[10] At that time several new sections of land had been annexed into the original town plat and the population grew to several hundred. After a brief slowdown caused by the Panic of 1873, growth resumed. By the mid-1880s, Hamilton had two newspapers, the Hamiltonian and the News-Graphic, as well as two banks, two hotels, flour mills, grain elevators, and other businesses supported by a population of around 1,800.[7] Coal mining became of some importance to the town's economy in the early 1880s. The Hamilton Coal Company was organized in the spring of 1882 and began mining operations the following year about two miles outside of the town. A railroad spur line was constructed to connect the coal field to the Hannibal & St. Joseph main line.[7]

Team
Our City
Missouri Star Quilt Company

Phone: (888) 571-1122

JC Penney Museum

Phone: (816) 583-2168

Quilt Town USA is home to Missouri Star Quilt Company, the Disneyland of Quilting!  With over 14 quilt shops, you are sure to find that missing peace of fabric.

Come visit the JC Penney Museum and JC Penney's childhood home.

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Missouri Quilt Museum

Phone: (435) 849-2564

spoolkaren.webp
World's Largest Spool of Thread

300 East Bird

The Missouri Quilt Museum is a show stopper! Multiple Quilt Galleries including a featured Gallery from the National Quilt Museum. Not your ordinary quilt museum, they also boast a large Toy Sewing Machine Exhibit, Vintage Sewing Machines and Treadles, Thousands of Thimbles, Pin Cushions and Other Notions- you will enjoy this stop!

22 feet tall, 8 feet wide and over ONE MILLION YARDS of Aurifil thread. You don't want to miss this road side attraction!

Need more details? 

We are here to assist. Contact us by phone, email or via our Social Media channels.

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