ATTENTION PROPERTY OWNERS:  If you have experienced flooding in your home from the recent rains and your insurance company has deemed your losses to be 50% of your property value or more, you may qualify for a local option abatement. Contact the Brown County Assessor’s office before July 1st @ 507-233-6606 to speak with an appraiser to request an inspection.

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The History of Brown County

In October, 1854, four men came to the home of Joseph La Framboise on the Minnesota River four miles below Fort Ridgely. The men were part of a group seeking a place for settlement by the Chicago Land Verein. Friendly La Framboise suggested a site for their settlement at the present location of New Ulm, but the first winter was spent at an abandoned Indian village in present Milford Township. This was near La Framboise, and close to Fort Ridgely for supplies and protection.

In the Spring of 1855, the Chicago colonists moved to the present location of New Ulm. The name "New Ulm" was chosen because many of the colonists came from the City of Ulm in Wurtemberg Province, Germany.

In February, 1855, the Territorial Legislature established Brown County, an area formerly in Blue Earth County. The size of territorial Brown County was enormous, covering forty-two thousand square miles, west to Missouri River, and south to Iowa. Northward it included the Sioux reservation lands south of the Minnesota River as far as Big Stone Lake to the northwest. After Minnesota became a state in 1858, Brown County was frequently reduced in size as new counties were created. It has remained at its present size since 1865.

The county was named for Joseph Renshaw Brown, who came to Minnesota in 1819, and became well known as a trader, businessman, politician, speculator, and inventor. In 1855 he was a member of the Territorial Council when the county was created.

On February 18, 1856, the Territorial Legislature declared Brown County an organized county and established New Ulm as the county seat.

In October, 1856, the first county election was held and the Board of County Commissioners had a meeting of three members. The commissioner system was replaced for a short time from 1858 to 1860 by a Board of County Supervisors. In 1860 the commissioner system was restored and in 1869 the membership increased to its present five members, a standard number in Minnesota with 85 of the 87 counties using this system.

The coming of the Civil War in 1861 saw many volunteers leaving the sparsely settled county. When the Sioux uprising occurred in August, 1862, the settlers were ill-prepared for self-protection. Many who were able to seek safety in flight from lesser settled regions came to New Ulm, for one week from August 18th to the 25th, with but few weapons for defense, they built barricades within the center of town and were engaged in two battles. By August 25th, when New Ulm was temporarily evacuated, over one hundred and forty were dead in the county and the loss of property was enormous.

Before 1864, the Sioux Reservation land, which came to a point on the Little Cottonwood River about four miles above Lake Hanska, cut a huge wedge out of Brown County. This greatly impeded settlement to the west. This reservation land was opened to settlement after the uprising.

Earliest settlement, mostly by Germans, was made along the Minnesota and Cottonwood Rivers and the adjacent prairies. As early as 1856, however, the Norwegians discovered the beautiful lake county in the southeastern Brown County. The largest of these lakes, Lake Hanska, meaning "long", retains its Sioux Indian name today.

Other nationalities soon followed the Germans and the Norwegians to Brown County. In 1860 a considerable number of Yankees lived along the Cottonwood in present Stark Township. Irish, Danish and English immigrants also came, settling mostly in western Brown County after 1866.

An impetus was given to expanded settlement by the coming of the railroad to the county in 1872. By 1877 it extended west from New Ulm to Springfield. The next year a spur was extended northwest of Sleepy Eye to Evan in Prairieville Township. By 1899 railroad transportation covered the south part of the county with stations in Comfrey in Bashaw Township and Hanska in Lake Hanska Township.

Cottonwood, Leavenworth and Milford Townships were organized in 1858, Linden in 1859. Sigel in 1862, Home In 1866, Eden in 1867, Stark in 1868, Prairieville, Lake Hanska and Albin in 1870, Burnstown and Mulligan in 1871, North Star in 1873, and Stately in 1879. New Ulm was incorporated in 1857, Sleepy Eye in 1878, Springfield in 1881, Comfrey in 1900, Hanska in 1901 and Evan in Cobden in 1904.

The geography of Brown County varies from the lake country in the southeast to the bluffs and wooded ridges along the Minnesota and Cottonwood Rivers to the gently rolling plains and fields of western Brown County

Brown County is agriculturally oriented.

For more information about Brown County History, Contact the Brown County Historical Society

Brown County Calendar

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Jun 06, 2023
Commissioner Meeting

County Board Meeting

Documents are updated the Thursday before a meeting.

County Commissioner Information

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Contact

Office Hours: 8am to 4:30pm
(most offices)

Main Office Phone: 507-233-6600

Courthouse Address:
14 S State St
New Ulm, MN 56073

Individual Office Hours may vary.

 

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