
In
1804, Lewis and Clark held council with the local tribes
on a nearby bluff and called the area Council Bluff.
The
Mormons--bound for Utah--first arrived here in the 1840s
and named the place Kanesville. Over the next few years,
the community became an important way station for the Mormon
faithful. As westward travel over the trail on the north
side of the Platte increased, this area became one of the
more popular jumping-off places. Mormon population in the
community reached its peak in 1848, but there were still
several thousand here in 1852, when word came that all the
Latter-day Saints should go on to Salt Lake City. After
the last of the Mormons departed, Kanesville was for a time
without government, because the Mormons church was the only
government the town had. The remaining inhabitants re-adopted
the name of Council Bluffs.
In
1863 the town was chosen as the eastern terminus of the
Union Pacific railroad. Actual construction of the railroad
to the West was begun in 1866. By 1870 five railroads had
made connections with the Union Pacific here.