RoadsideThoughts
A Gazetteer for the United States and Canada
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Do you know of Reed's Landing ???

This page is an orphan - a placeholder until we can discover more about Reed's Landing. When we encounter a name that is new to us, we add it to our Gazetteer with the hope that we'll discover more information in the future. Such is the case with Reed's Landing.<1>

Our sources for Reed's Landing (see Mentions and References below) indicate that it was a community with a post office. Unfortunately our sources aren't clear about the location of Reed's Landing other than they indicate that Reed's Landing would be found somewhere in Wabasha County, Minnesota.

Miscellaneous References and Mentions for Reed's Landing ...

We've created the following list to keep track of the sources that proved useful in adding to our knowledge about Reed's Landing:

Along The Tracks, A Directory of Named Places on Michigan Railroads
Written by: Meints, Graydon M.
Published by Clarke Historical Library, Central Michigan University - 1987
(Available from Amazon.com)

Business Atlas and Shippers' Guide (1895)
Published by Rand McNally & Co.

A note taken from the Shipper's Guide for Reed's Landing - Services available: had a Post Office, Railroad Station, Express Office

More Orphans in  Wabasha County ...

Can you help?

As we explained above, when we encounter a name that might be a community or a post office we add it to our Gazetteer. If we have little information to go with the name, we call them Orphans. Below are Orphans that we believe to be located in Wabasha County.

Bright'sKing's Cooley
  
Cook's ValleyLakey
 Lyon
East Wabasha 
 McCrackens
Forest Mound 
FunkPawselin
  
GlasgowReads Junction
Greenville 
 Smithfield
Hammondsford 
Hyde ParkThielman
 Thielmanton
Jacksonville 
 Watopa
KeeganWoodland

Footnotes ...

<1>This entry could have originated in error. It might be that a source had a misprint, was simply wrong or we made a transcription error while referencing it. Many of the documents we reference are from the 1800s and the early 1900s, with some easier to read than others.