Lake of the Ozarks / Osage Region
Cole Camp gives Benton County a Low German heritage anchor
Cole Camp's own history page points to German heritage, heritage events, and Low German speech as part of Benton County's identity.
Cole Camp sits where the Ozarks meet the prairie in Benton County, and it gives the county a story that is not only about Warsaw or the lakes. The town dates its public life to the first post office in 1839, and its old downtown is on the National Register of Historic Places.
The German thread is still part of the town’s public face. Heritage events and festivals carry it forward, and the local history connects the area to Low German speech brought by earlier families. Main Street, the older buildings, and the festival calendar all point to a small-town identity built around more than lake traffic.
Truman Lake and Lake of the Ozarks explain one side of Benton County. Cole Camp adds a prairie-and-heritage side near the north, with a main-street story that belongs beside the lake story.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Benton County. See every local note for the county on its page.