Sioux City History

Your link to the past.

Sioux City Stock Yards
Most Popular, Commerce Mary Green-Warnstadt Most Popular, Commerce Mary Green-Warnstadt

Sioux City Stock Yards

The history of the Sioux City stockyards goes back to the very earliest days of our town. It is a colorful story that includes livestock and businessmen, immigrants and packing plants, glory and tragedy. It involves historic Sioux City names like James Booge, John Peirce, F. L. Eaton and Holman Waitt.

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War Eagle Monument
Historic Sites, Most Popular Mary Green-Warnstadt Historic Sites, Most Popular Mary Green-Warnstadt

War Eagle Monument

Wambdi Okicize is commonly known as War Eagle. He was born in either Wisconsin or Minnesota around 1785. While his Indian name means "Little Eagle," whites always referred to him as War Eagle, which is odd because all through his life War Eagle sought to keep peace.

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LGBTQ Community History

LGBTQ Community History

Sioux City PRIDE Roots is a project to preserve and share history of the LGBTQ community in Sioux City. The Sioux City Public Museum received funding in February 2019 from Humanities Iowa and the National Endowment for the Humanities to conduct, preserve and share oral histories and provide a public program with historian/author Neil Miller in June 2019.

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Holman Waitt and the Cattle Business
Oral Histories, Most Popular Mary Green-Warnstadt Oral Histories, Most Popular Mary Green-Warnstadt

Holman Waitt and the Cattle Business

The legacy of the Waitt family's impact on Siouxland began when George Waitt (shown here) started his livestock commission business in the stockyards in 1887. He was part of the reorganization of the Union Stock Yards Co. into the Sioux City Stockyards Co. in 1887. This 1977 interview with his son, Sioux City cattleman Holman Waitt chronicles the family's involvement in the local cattle industry.

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Commercial Men's Boat Club
Art and Leisure Mary Green-Warnstadt Art and Leisure Mary Green-Warnstadt

Commercial Men's Boat Club

The Commercial Men's Boat Club was one of the last boat clubs to be formed in the area. Located in Riverside Park, the purpose of the club was similar to that of a country club today. It included both men and women as members. During the 1940s all the major big bands performed at the club: Glenn Miller, Lawrence Welk, Count Basie, Skitch Henderson, Louie Armstrong, and many others. During World War II, soldiers from the Air Base were frequent visitors.

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