In 1908 John Harrop, originally from Roca, Nebraska, filed a homestead claim just west of the Calamus River about thirteen miles north of Taylor in Loup County. Harrop acquired 640 acres under the Kinkaid Act of 1904, which had been passed to encourage settlement in the Nebraska Sand Hills. By 1912 Harrop operated a mercantile store and the Harrop post office at his home. In the mid-1920s Harrop and his son Roy, an Omaha attorney, were leaders in organizing the Calamus Irrigation District. This public operation planned to build a dam on the Calamus River to provide irrigation and promote the growing of crops such as sugar beets. In 1927 Roy Harrop platted and dedicated a townsite named Harrop about one mile south of here, and a few buildings were constructed.
Meanwhile
opposition to the irrigation project led to a series of court battles
and in 1929 the
Nebraska Supreme Court dissolved the irrigation district. John Harrop
died in 1932, along with his dream for the town and the irrigation
project. Today nothing remains of the remains of the Harrop townsite.
Loup
County Historical Society
Nebraska State Historical Society
U.S. 183, 18 miles north of Taylor
Loup County
Marker 375
