Best of Travel
Print

What is The Oldest City in The State of Iowa?

Daniel Conner
Hits: 116

Travel Map IconIOWA STATE - When exploring the history of the Hawkeye State, the timeline begins on the Mississippi River bluffs at Dubuque. Established in 1788, it is the oldest city in Iowa and served as the primary gateway for early European expansion into the region.


What is The Oldest City in The State of Iowa?
What is The Oldest City in The State of Iowa?

The Founding: 1788

Dubuque's origins are industrial, rooted in the area's rich lead deposits.

Indigenous Roots

Long before Julien Dubuque arrived, the region was the domain of the Meskwaki (Fox) people. The Meskwaki were the first to discover and work the lead mines. They guarded the resource jealously, allowing Dubuque to work there only because he had built a close relationship with the tribe (and allegedly married Potosa, the daughter of the Meskwaki chief Peosta). The city's geography remains shaped by this history, with key locations such as Peosta and Catfish Creek bearing names from this era.



A Technical Distinction: The Black Hawk Purchase

Although Julien Dubuque was settled in 1788, there is a temporal gap in the timeline.

Settlement vs. Incorporation

Dubuque is widely recognized as "Iowa's First City." It was officially chartered by the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature (which governed Iowa at the time) in 1837.




Old City West CoastDubuque is the oldest city in Iowa, tracing its founding to 1788 when Julien Dubuque began mining lead under a Spanish land grant located iinthe ancestral lands of the Meskwaki people, who werregion'sgion's iginal miners oWhile legal American settlement did not begin until the Black Hawk Purchase opened the land in 1833, Dubuque's early colonial history cements its status as the State oldest community.


Sources