Notable People
-
Anderson, Andrew G.
-
Booge, James
-
Bruguier, Theophile
-
Clark, M. G.
-
Cook, Dr. John
-
Crary, Margaret
-
Darling, J.N. “Ding”
-
Davidson Brothers-Ben, Dave and Abe
-
Eaton, Fred L.
-
Eichelberger, Dr. Agnes
-
Floyd, Sergeant Charles
-
Garretson, Arthur
-
Gordon, William
-
Haddock, Reverend George
-
Hedges Brothers-Charles & Daniel
-
Henderson, Gertrude Brown
-
Hopkins, Harry
-
Kucinski, Leo
-
Leonais, Joseph
-
Leonais, Rosalie Menard
-
Martin, T. S. Family
-
Micheaux, Oscar
-
Peirce, John
-
Peters, Edwin
-
Rice, Sergeant John R.
-
Safford, Mary Augusta
-
Sanford, Stella
-
Short, Wallace Mertin
-
Thompson, William
-
Treglia, Mary and the Mary Treglia Community House
-
Trosper, Elzona
-
War Eagle
-
Weare, George
-
Wilkins, Mary
Leonais, Rosalie Menard
The First Bride's Grave monument was built in 1938 by the Woodbury County Pioneer Club near the grave of Rosalie Menard Leonnais. The Pioneers Club called her the "first bride" because she was believed to be the first bride of a non-Native American in the area that would become Sioux City.
Sometime around 1852, Rosalie's family moved into the area of Perry Creek and the Missouri River. There, the family became acquainted with Joseph Leonais, another French/Canadian fur trapper making his home in the area. Rosalie and Joseph were married by a traveling Catholic priest in 1853. She was in her teens and her husband was about twenty-nine. Rosalie and Joseph had four children together: Joseph II, Josephine, Rosalie and William. At first, they lived in the cabin Joseph had built near Perry Creek, close to what is now 2nd and Water Street. Later they moved to a farm along the Floyd River. Rosalie died in 1865, shortly after the birth of their son William. She was 27 years old. |