Troy, Missouri | |||||
| County | Zip Code | Elevation | Population 1990/2000 | Year of Visit | Major Highways |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lincoln | 63379 | 572 ft. | 3,811/6,737 | 2001 | US 61 & SR 47 |
Troy, laid out on the site of Woods' Fort in 1819, lies on an old Sac and Fox Indian Campsite where first settlers Joseph Cottle and Zadock Woods built their cabins in 1801. It was the Sac and Fox tribes, outraged by their 1804 land cession which included this region, who carried the War of 1812 est of the Mississippi into north Missouri. To defend their homes, pioneers in this area, which is now Lincoln County, aided by Rangers under Nathan Boone, built Woods, Howard, Stout, Calrk, and Cap au Gris forts as a first line of defense. At Fort Cap au Gris, Maj. (later U.S. Pres.) Zachary Taylor's command rendezvoused, Sept., 1814, and five months after the war, at Fort Howard, May 24, 1815, Black Hawk's band skirmished with settleres and Rangers in the Battle of the Sink Hole. In 1824 the Sac and Fox finally gave up all claim to the region. The Lincoln County seat, earlier at Old Monroe and Alexandria, was located here in 1829. The county, organized in 1818, was named by its first settler, Christopher Clark, for Lincoln counties in NC and KY which honor Revolutionary Gen. Benjamin Lincoln. Troy serves as a trade and legal center for a Mississippi River county in Missouri's Glacial Plains Region, an area of livestock, grain, and poultry farming. As early as the 1790's, roving hunters and trappers took up Spanish land grants in the county's fertile Cuivre River Valley. During the Civil War, the fighting missed pro-Southern Lincoln County, though Union troops occupied Troy almost continually. The area prospered when the St. Louis and Hannibal RR reached Troy in 1882. Early schools here were Lincoln Academy (later Troy Christian Institute) chartered in 1835 and Buchanan College founded in 1894. Troy was the birthplace of Frederick G. Bonfils (1860-1933) noted co-editor of the Denver Post. Wlliot W. Major, 33rd governor of Missouri, was a native of this county, and Congressman Clarence Cannon, noted parliamentarian was born in Elsberry. Among points of interest in Troy are the Woods Fort Marker near the town spring; the 1870 courthouse; and the 1859 Christian and 1868 Presbyterian Churches. Just east of Troy is Cuivre River State Park. |
|
|
The County Courthouse mentioned in the narrative above. |
|
The Troy Presbyterian Church built in 1868 and mentioned in the narrative above. |
|
A marker for the location of Woods Fort which was the original site for Troy. In the background are two log buildings from the early days of Woods Fort. |
![]() ![]() The "City Limit" sign on the West side of town. The East side of town is in the process of rapid growth and no sign could be found. In spite of the rapid growth at the edge of town, the downtown area remains vital. The city has placed numerous banners along the main street. |
![]() One of the City of Troy water towers. |
|
The Post Office is located in town and off of the main thoroughfare. |