A passion for education, opposition to slavery, and yearning for a moral
life led Josiah B. Grinnell and his band of like-minded New Englanders
to establish a town and a college on the Iowa prairie in 1854. Over the
years, a remarkable number of dreamers and doers from all walks of life
have emerged from Grinnell, including pioneer aviator Billy Robinson;
Harry Hopkins, advisor to Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Robert Noyce,
cofounder of Intel Corporation. Today, Grinnell is a distinctive blend
of urban and rural culture that has been marked by the idealism of its
beginnings, molded by the surrounding agricultural economy, and shaped
by prestigious Grinnell College. Proudly known as the Jewel of the
Prairie, Grinnell is recognized in the National Register of Historic
Places with two historic districts and 15 individual buildings. The
Merchants National Bank designed by Louis Sullivan is a National
Historic Landmark.