Enderlin 1966 Jubilee - Enderlin Historical Society
Transcription
Enderlin 1966 Jubilee - Enderlin Historical Society
18 91 -1 96 6 Dedication To the numberless men and women whose steps have echoed down the streets of E n d er lin ; who ran its stores, taught its children, who plowed the fields around it and manned the trains that served it, we dedicate this book. Rich or poor, renoun or unheralded, tragic or comic; each one was a thread in the distinctively patterned tapestry that tells our community story. Foreward ‘M e m o r ie s are e v e r y o n e ’s second chance h a p p in e s s ’ for — Queen Mother Elizabeth The following pages attempt to tell the story of EN D ER L IN community surrounding it. and the This is not a history, for the word “history” implies a depth of research beyond our time and means. We hope that we have caught some of the feeling of what life was like, recaptured memories, and preserved some of the things our children and grandchildren may want to know. Ransom County and the lands along the Sheyenne and Maple rivers are rich in history. The pre-settlement history is well documented and available for those who care to go deeper into the subject. Some day, archeologists and scholars will tap the rich resources of Indian Mounds and relics still known to exist and write a fuller story. When we reach the time of events is more difficult. of first settlement, the accurate retracing Few of the pioneers committed to paper what they saw and did, and few of their children listened carefully; adding to our difficulty is the fact that newspaper files are available of the Enderlin papers only since 1910. We have pieced together the story from memories, early atlases, township and county records when available. histories differ. we ask forgiveness. We information; express to Memories are fallible and sometimes written If not every statement can be documented or a date is incorrect the There was simply not enough time to search every source. our gratitude Senior to Citizens the many committee people and who the helped American Auxiliary members who helped gather fam ily histories; to those who gather Legion delved into fam ily history to those who furnished pictures; and to those who helped in any way to put our book together. We particularly wish to thank Mr. Frank Vyzralek, Jr., who made available information about the Soo Line railroad from material he is gathering for a doctoral thesis on North Dakota railroads. The map in the front of the book shows the location of many of the historic spots of the area— Indian villages and battle grounds, early settlements, townsites and post offices now vanished. Time and progress have obliterated all traces of some, and where they stood are only fields of grain, but the map may serve as an aid to your imagination as you try to visualize the past. The Anniversary Committee Th ese pictu res of E nderlin’s business district around the turn of the cen tury show tw o scenes along R a ilw ay Street. A b o v e is a v iew o f the corn er o f R a ilw a y S treet and Third A v e n u e . In th e foreground is B illy F o w ler’s L iv e ry Barn. Just beyond w as L u k e r’s G rocery, C allah an ’s H otel and R ustad’s H ardw are. B e lo w is a v iew lookin g d ow n R a ilw ay Street from the corn er of T h ird A v e n u e . A v e r y m odem b rick building housed the ban k on the com er. H arper’s Store w as located n e x t to the bank, and the tall fram e building dow n the street is th e Sanness Store. Fourth A v en u e looked lik e this w hen the ab ove pictu re w as taken about 1899. T h e Engles operated a h ardw are and d ru g store, pictu red in the foreground. Just behind the E n gle business establishm ents w as a business ow ned b y W alt Loom is. B elow is a scene show ing the B u rgess Hotel on the site now occupied b y th e Lindem an n building. To the le ft is the hom e of H alvor “ Skedool” Olson, so called because he hauled passengers to the N orthern P a cific depot at S heldon and w aited for no one. “ S k ed ool” w as his rendition of “ schedule.” F arth e r to the le ft are P otter’s P rin t Shop and P ie h ’s B u tch e r Shop. Threshing on the Dagm an farm , with a Case steam engine. L e ft to R igh t: Leonard Peterson, Adolph Skram stad, Axel D agm an, Clyde T rip lett, John Jaco bs, unkown. Replacing horse power, this Case 1 1 0 , manufactured about 1 9 0 7 , was the largest steam er they built. Seated on it are Mr. and Mrs. F ran k Oehlke and daughter Anita. ■ L egend The map on the preceding page notes locations whose place in history deserves documentation, lest they be lost to the memory of man in North Dakota. Asterisks are used to indicate the relative importance of these historical points in Ransom County: five asterisks designating places of greatest interest to a wider public, while one asterisk signifies that the place possesses only a limited, specific association to the whole history, or is perhaps only of interest locally. To indicate to the casual tourist how relatively accessible each place may be in this year of the Jubilee, 1966, and how much he may expect to view upon arrival there, they have been graded A, B, C, and D. A t a spot marked D he might expect to find sparse camera subject, and perhaps after considerable difficulty in getting there. The parallel big bends of the Maple and Sheyenne rivers constitute the basic monuments of this Cheyenne Country which is Ransom County. That part north of the Sheyenne was ceded to the United States government Oct. 2, 1863 by the Chippewa Indians, the treaty being ratified May 5, 1864. South of the Sheyenne, including e.g., Fargo, Abercrombie, Milnor, Oakes, being Sioux territory at the moment of transfer (Cfr. Journal of Robert Campbell, 1832-1833; North Dakota Historical Quarterly, Vol 1, No. 1, p. 45) was cleared of Indian title at a later date. 1. Old “C hienne” (Cheyenne, Shian, Shayon, Shien) V IL L A G E SITE. ***** (A), is also called Biesterfield site, N W 1/4 Sec. 28, Scoville Township 134 N, 54W. Two ditches flanking a village site or saucer-like depressions in the present day pasture land mark the spot where a whole people was displaced by other Indians. The Cheyennes, after a disastrous battle against attackers who had guns, fled westward. It seems the battle was fought five miles southeast of this site, perhaps within sight of Horseshoe Hill. To be safe from their enemies, the Cheyennes fled clear across the Missouri rive in what is now South Dakota, though small groups of the remnants of the nation lingered several years in the area of Long Lake, not far from Napoleon, North Dakota. F ifty years later, Old Menard and other fur traders among the Mandans on the Missouri, noted that the Cheyennes they contacted sometimes wore leather clothes of Spanish design, and had horses with Spanish bridles. No one has demonstrated that the indirect trade with the Spaniards, and possession of horses before the Sioux mastered riding, offset the advantage the latter had gained by acquiring fire-arms from the French and English. But this people of Algonquin stock did survive near extinction, to fight again, as allies however of the Sioux, against General Custer a century later after the Sioux themselves crossed the Missouri. It was 1740, according to the Journal of Alexander Henry Jr. (Coues Edition, 1897, p. 144) when the Cheyenne nation was massacred and driven from their main village, located here. See also No. 6. 2. IN Y A N B O S E N D A T A ***** (A) or a “standing rock,” set up as a monument in the practice of Indian religion. The expedition under J. N. Nicollet, accompanied by young Lieut. J. C. Freemont of California fame, viewed and recorded this rock when the Indians they met in the area still regarded this hill-top mound, with this stone set upright on it, as a place for religious meeting and ceremony, in 1839. Their War Department Map of the Hydrographical Basin of the Upper Mississippi River, 1843 notes two such natural obelisks, the other being shown upstream from Red Wing, Minnesota, on the Cannon River. Standing Rock monument is not to be confused with post office Standing Rock, Ransom County, nor Standing Rock Reservation North Dakota. The stone is the original. Col. Dana Wright, researching accounts by an N. P. railroad construction crew, and verbal information from local land owners, linked up a firm, continuous account for the rock from the day of Nicollet until it was cemented down as it is today. The North Dakota Historical Society’s marker there characterizes it as “one of the sightly and historic spots in North Dakota.” The National recently constructed an access road from N. D. Highway 46. most Guard A s a mound, it falls into the small mound category archeologically, in a mound region extending at least fifty miles both up and down stream. Some were reported by Prof. E. Todd, Catalogue of Prehistoric Works East of the Rocky Mountains, by Cyrus Thomas. See North Dakota Historical Society. Recently local newspaper carried accounts of occasional incidents when skeletons have been unearthed on surrounding hilltops. A mile west, the “L IT T L E Y E L L O W S T O N E ” valley of the Sheyenne sports a tourist park, spring, highway cut that yielded mosasaur fingers in 1963 and the beginning of a pleasant river road. 3. F O R T R A N S O M site: **** (A) seat of a fortified military reserve in the post C ivil War days. The Fort existed to protect workers on railroads yet to be projected, and also to transact Indian payments within a fifty mile radius. One can see distinctly the dry moat or ditch, a line of (root?) cellars or dugouts once under buildings, a parade ground centered on a reconstructed flagpole authentically located; and a reconstructed log munitions house which adjoins the moated square. The Fort was garrisoned by one Company, official strength being set at 83, plus 15 Indian scouts, with an allowance of fifty horses, and one civilian post trader. Commanders could permit civilians in and near the Fort the use of timber, wood, hay and grazing, after the needs of the military had been assured. Bvt. Major Grossman kept a cow for his fam ily’s use. A child was born to the Grossman’s 1868, seemingly the first baby of European stock in the County. Lisbon had been founded when 100 square miles of military reserve was opened to homesteading. General Terry, one of the principals of the later Custer affair, and a great soldier, had picked the site, though it had been noted by preceding expeditions. Across the ravine one can see the Fort’s R IF L E PIT, with its stone-masonary in good condition, and iron and wood parts of the original apparatus for raising and lowering the target. Man-made borings, more than an inch in diameter and eleven inches deep, in several granite boulders on the hither side of the ravine, are subject to various interpretations. See also No’s. 4 and 5. 4. W R ITIN G R O C K : -***(B) a page of stone writing six feet wide, which no one has been able to read. It can be found in the vicinity of the rifle pit on the east side of Bear Den Hillock. Other rocks between Matoti and Fort Ransom show only glacial striations. 5. M A T O T I: -***(C), or Bear Den Hillock, mentioned on Nicollet’s map of 1843, noted by many expeditions, is the height of land culminating in an Indian mound, that constitutes one flank of the ravine below Fort Ransom site, and is a continental divide. The creek in the ravine flows to Hudson Bay via the Sheyenne and Red rivers; while Bear (Den Hillock) Creek draining west from it, flows to the G ulf of Mexico via the James, Missouri, Mississippi rivers. Frank M yrick claimed to have traded here as early as 1857. Sully followed up Bear Creek to cross into the Sheyenne watershed near here, 1865. Indians and Metis are known to have hunted and camped with reference to this landmark, as late even as the 1880’s. C. A N C IE N T site:-***(B). A refuse heap, an artificial ditch enclosing several acres on top of a drift-soil bluff facing bends in the Maple river, on land farmed by Mathew and Roger Shea, is under study; its location SE ¼ Sec. 11, Township Highland 137 N, 54 W. Cass County. 7. W A TSO N C R O S S IN G ***(A) of the Maple River. SE¼ , Sec. 26 Township Walburg 138 N 53 W, Cass County. M ay have been used by migrating Selkirkers, 1823. Probably sometimes the fur brigades of Joe Rolette and Norman Kittson used it in the 1840’s. W ell known figures like Governor Ramsey, 1851, Governor I. Stevens in 1853, Fisk and Expeditions in 1862 and 1863, and Sibley on return in 1863 threw in bundles ofbrush to cross over the river at this spot; as w ell as general traffic on the way from Fort Abercrombie to Fort Totten in the early seventies. Completion of the railroad to Jamestown ended the usefulness of Watson Crossing. A s a way station it folded, while the post office continued longer. The historical marker is located near the Lutheran Church. 8. C A M P H A Y E S on S IB L E Y T R A IL, JU L Y 4, 1863 **** (C) Somewhat following an old Indian trail from Brown’s Valley, Minnesota, to Tewaukon Lake (N.D.) to the Sheyenne River, sometimes called the Assinniboine Trail, the famous Sibley Expedition sent out by General Pope at Milwaukee to chastise and check the Sioux because of the Minnesota Massacre, was composed of 3,300 men, 225 vehicles, 2,200 horses and mules, and several hundred beef cattle, made quite a trail and needed considerable space to encamp. A fter crossing the Sheyenne on July 4th, General Henry H. Sibley spread out such a camp on the SE½ Sec. 36, Township B ig Ben 134 N, 55 W. The first celebration of the Fourth of July occurred there. The army raised a flag pole and saluted the States and Territories with 39 shots of their artillery. It remained encamped here for a week. People still locate evidences of the trench-works. M any soldiers visited Okiedan Buttes, a group of artificial earth works or mounds, on the bluffs forming the south bank of the Sheyenne nearly opposite Camp Hayes, speculating as to their origin, as is done today. Indian tradition speaks of one of the incidental fights between Indians, a clash of some Arikara against some Sisseton Sioux, as having occurred near these elaborate mounds some time previously. Soldiers and officers also visited the Cheyenne Village site downstream (Cfr. No. 1) S. C A M P W H ARTON on S IB L E Y T R A IL ** (D) July 11-12, 1963; E ½ 's of Sec’s. 18 and 19, plus corner of Sec. 20, Twp. 135 N, 56 W. (Tuller). 10. C A M P W EISN ER on S IB L E Y T R A IL ; July 13-14, 1963** (D) about Twp. 137 N, 57 W, (Thordenskjold, Barnes County). Sec. 28, 11. P I G E O N P O IN T *** (D), a way-station. David Faribault, a young man of the Metis, serving as one of the fifteen Indian scouts attached to Fort Ransom, was sent out in 1867 to establish a way-station at the lowest crossing point on the big bend of the Sheyenne. He settled on a spot in Section 19, Township 135 N. 53 W. (Owego). It remained until Fort Ransom itself was abandoned in 1872. 12. O W EGO S E T T L E M E N T **** (A) had meanwhile been founded— 1870. It shortly came to be a collection of 12 log cabins constituting a settlement in North Dakota quite a distance beyond the end of the rails, though in hopes of anticipating their advent. But the rails selected Fargo instead of Fort Abercrombie as the place to cross the Red River; and a branch line founded Sheldon in 1879, and business moved to it. The frontier town of Owego disappeared gradually; its place is marked by a park, and early frame schoolhouse, and vestiges: Section 16, Township 135 N. 53 W. (Owego). The virile spirit of its settlers and their descendants influenced the history of entire northeast Ransom County. 13. SH EN FOR D (SHINFORD) * (C) Water was only shin deep at this ford on the Fort Abercrombie-Fort Ransom wagon trail. 14. V E N L O * (A) developed later on this trail, and died later; the last building burning 1964. 15. B O N N E R S V IL LE * (D) another place of business, or town-hopeful that became a memory. Indian campsite along river, between it and P ig e o n Point, is well known locally. 16. JE N K S V IL L E * (D) 17. B IN G H A M PTO N — K IB B E Y (LU CCA ) * (B) Binghampton plotted in 1884 because Dinah K ibbey would not sell her part of townsite to railroad. 18. P E T E R SO N P O S T O F F IC E * (D) Post office for the area before the town of A lice was established. 19. P L Y M O U T H * (B) Section 11, Township 135 North 57 West (Springer) a townsite platted and built upon, on the strength of Griswold’s flour mill. The ditch of the flume or mill race scraped out by horsedrawn scrapers, can still be located in the underbrush. The rated 14 feet of waterfall developed 40 horsepower in twin turbines at 300 revolutions per minute; it represented a capital investment of perhaps $25,000.00. By comparison, corresponding figures for the Walker M ill upstream across the line in Barnes County were listed as: 10 feet, 30 hp. one turbine engine, 160 revolutions; $8,000.00 capital investment in Census of 1885. Griswold’s mine-site, in the widely publicized Ransom County gold rush of 1883, was located in SW 1/4, Section 10 of the same township. 20. M ON U M EN T T O P R O JE C T R A IL R O A D S ** (A) M any railroads were planned, right of way obtained, and grading started, but never finished in the boom days of North Dakota, such as the Dakota & Great Southern (Cfr. Soo Line Story in History of Enderlin, 1966). The railroad grade near Elliott can be seen only as far as the juncture with the Northern Pacific line. Originally it extended only into the next field north. M ANY TH O U SA N D S of years ago, the great Mid-continent of America was covered with a deep sheet of glacial ice. As the glacial period came to an end, basins in the land, ground out by the ice mass, were filled with its melting waters. One such basin formed the ancient Lake Agassiz, which today is known as the Red River Valley. Its successive levels are visible as we drive eastward along Highway 46. The overflow from this lake formed the stream known as the Sheyenne. Draining into it were other ancient waterways as far north as the Turtle Mountains. It was a rushing torrent five miles wide, and it carried silt and debris which finally built up what is known as the Sheyenne Delta. . . the area we fam iliarly call the Sandhills. As the level of the lake dropped, the Sheyenne, which had flowed south, gradually changed course, and, at the edge of the delta, made what is known as the Big Bend, as it turned, dropping north and east to drain into Lake Agassiz and the channel that became the Red River. It has been recorded that when the Spaniards came to the interior of the Continent, they were told by the Indians that it was possible to travel by canoe from the G u lf of Mexico to Hudsons Bay, with only a short portage. This was something that they felt might be important, for they envisioned a line of forts to keep the English from encroaching on the gold of their southern empire. It seems possible that here, where the divide occurs between the rivers draining into the northward flowing Red River and the southward bound Missouri River, is the portage to which they referred. In Northland Township, Bear Den Creek running into the James River and thence to the Missouri R iver, is only four miles from the northbound Sheyenne. The beautiful valley of the Sheyenne got its name from the Indian tribe who made it their home and whose largest village was located near its Big Bend, in Scoville Township. Through it passed military expeditions, trains of teamsters supplying the military posts of the eastern Dakotas, surveying and prospecting expeditions. Their course can still be traced by maps, records and a few remains of camp fortifications. They welcomed its cool beauty and noted the evidences of former Indian life along the stream. Its many springs furnished good water and the sloping banks and firm gravel bottom made it easy to ford. The Maple River, winding through southern Cass County and dipping briefly into Ransom County at Enderlin, was also known to these travelers, for its water was fresh and sweet, in contrast to the brackish water of lakes and streams further west. The story of these expeditions must wait for a tim e, for a word about the people whose story antedates the white man’s coming. Contrary to popular conception, the history of the Indian on these plains is not a continuous one, but goes back only a relatively short two hundred years before the coming of the white man. Scholars do not agree entirely on the subject of earlier Indian civilizations. There are evidences in Ohio, Tennessee and other eastern states of an early people known as the Mound Builders, who had a civilization of relative sophistication. They ranged north, up the Mississippi and Missouri and there are scholars who believe that sometime in the past an agricultural civilization existed in eastern North Dakota, before the American Indian tribes became nomadic. 1 In 1885, a Minneapolis man came to Ransom County and in company with W. F. George and E. C. Lucas of Lisbon, North Dakota, dug into the center of an Indian Mound near Standing Rock. Three layers of skeletons were found. The upper two were Indian skeletons, buried with the usual trinkets and utensils, but the lowest layer contained skeletons of a people with thicker, shorter bones and well developed skulls usually associated with a fairly high degree of civilization. A skeleton was assembled and loaned to the Lisbon School, but its value was not recognized and it was gradually picked to pieces and lost, leaving only the story as a clue for future investigation. Generally speaking, all the tribes of the interior of the country were of the Siouian family, who were generally fine physical specimens. Though customs varied with their environment, the building of mounds for burial and ceremonial purposes was common among them. They made utensils of wood and bone, and many tribes cultivated vegetables and made pottery.Cannibalism was practiced by some as part of ceremonial rites. An interesting story in this connection is told by Mr. Paul Roe of Enderlin. In 1917, he built a house on land next highest in elevation to Standing Rock. In excavating the basement, he found thirty-four skeletons, among them was one whose bones had been evenly broken and then assembled and laid out as a body normally would be. Dr. Labbitt examined the bones and said that they were the bones of an Indian woman. They were of the opinion from the way the bones had been broken, and reassembled, that the body had been eaten as part of a ceremonial rite of some kind. Mr. Roe reports, incidentally, that he carefully reburied all of the disinterred skeletons. A s the white man came to the Southern and Eastern coasts of America, the Indians were gradually pushed ahead of the wave of settlements. Tribes encroached on lands that had been traditionally claimed by others. Old Indian legend tells that the Mandans came from the sea. We know that they came to North Dakota up the Missouri River, for remains of earlier villages have been found below their home at the mouth of the Heart River where the first explorers found them. The Hidotsas are believed to have lived near Graham’s Island at Devils Lake and joined the Mandan Indians when driven west by the Sioux. The Arikaras also came up the Missouri and were allies of the Mandans. A t the time that Verendrye, the first white man known to have visited North Dakota, came to these plains in 1738, Northern Minnesota and North Dakota were peopled by the Chippewa’s. They were of Algonquin stock and had separated from the main body of Algonquins when they reached Mackinaw on their migration from the east. They were at peace with the Sioux, but when they obtained arms from the French fur traders they were able to drive the Sioux and the Fox from the wild rice fields of eastern Wisconsin and Minnesota and push them across the Mississippi into southern Minnesota. The Red River Valley and the eastern part of North Dakota were not favorite territory for the Indians. They considered it poor hunting and fishing ground, except for the Turtle Mountains, the south side of Devils Lake and the “bend” areas of the Maple and Sheyenne Rivers, A t the time of settlement, only 5000 Indians inhabited the entire area of eastern Minnesota and North Dakota. A s the Sioux or Dakotas, as they were also known, were driven out toward the prairies, their life came to center on the buffalo for food, clothing, and utensils. The buffalo entered into their mythology. A demand for buffalo 2 robes and coats developed and they found them more profitable and available than the smaller animals. The various Sioux tribes used to make hunting expeditions to the Missouri to trade or extort goods from the fur traders, who ranged up its muddy waters. The Sheyennes, Shay-en-no-jo or Sha-e-ye-no, as they were variously called by the early explorers were also of Algonquin stock. They had migrated westward earlier than the Sioux and C h ip p e w a and led a relatively settled existence along the river to which they gave their name. Near the Big Bend in Scoville Township, is the remains of their chief village. Time and farm ing operations have obliterated much of it, but early explorers and settlers found extensive earthen fortifications. Within them were the saucer shaped sites of homes, which were built of earth over wooden frames in the manner of the Mandan Indians. On the Roger Shea farm in Section II, Highland Township, there are remains of another Indian village. Archaeologists say that there is no evidence that the Sheyenne ever lived farther North than the village on the Sheyenne, but this village site has a rectangular ditch akin with that on the old Sheyenne site and refuse heaps have produced fragments of pottery, which would indicate that it precedes the invasion of the Sioux, who were not known to be pottery makers. Since the two rivers are so close in this area, it would not be surprising if at one time the Sheyennes had a settlement on the Maple. The Sheyennes had had little contact with the White man and in the early 1700’s; the Sioux, with their superior weapons, started to push into their territory. The last battle between the Sioux and the Sheyennes was fought at Horseshoe Hill, a small windblown sandhill on the western boundary of Sandoun and Rosemade Townships. Defeated, the Sheyennes moved westward where for a time their path was blocked by the Sutaio tribe. They eventually became allies and the tribes merged, drifting into South Dakota and on westward. L ong before there was any thought of settlement, the voyageurs. employees, and agents of fur companies, ranged through all of the Dakotas except the Black Hills, trading with the various tribes. In 1823, a company known as the Columbia Fur Traders operated along the Wild R ice River from Lake Traverse and we can assume that they also traded along the Sheyenne River. In 1812. the Hudson Bay Company established its first post at Grand Forks. The Red River Carts, hauling supplies and furs from Pembina to St. Paul was established in 1842 and regular posts established along the Red River including one at Georgetown, whose traders ranged along the tributaries of the Red River. The first man to map the area which became Ransom County was Jean Nicollet, a French educated geographer, employed by the United States Bureau of Topographical Engineers. He mapped more accurately than anyone previous much of Minnesota and Wisconsin and was the first to relay to the East a favorable impression of the Red River Valley. In 1839, coming up the Missouri on a steamboat of the American Fur Company, his party marched eastward to a trading post known as Oakwood. on the James River, then northeastward to the Sheyenne near where Valley C ity is located, north to Devils Lake and into western Grand Forks County Nicollet did not intend to map on this expedition lands already charted so he swung southward, intending to map Coteau de Prairie, or “Hills of the Prairies.” where the Indians were believed to obtain the red pipestone used in their peace pipes. 3 He reached Ransom County and camped near the site of Fort Ransom, noting on his map the Standing Rock, Okiedou Buttes, and other landmarks, reaching the Big Bend of the Sheyenne about the middle of August, The next recorded visitor was Captain V. E. Sumner, who in 1845 marched north to Devils Lake to parley with the Indian tribes and impress them with the power of the government. His troops crossed Ransom County, camping at Big Bend of the Sheyenne. By 1853, after discovery of gold in California, Americans were becoming empire-minded. The period of railroad expansion had arrived and proponents of a Northern and Southern route to the Pacific Coast were seeking federal help for the high cost of such a tremendous project. Because the question had become a heated political issue it was decided to have each of several possible routes surveyed by competent engineers. In 1853. Isaac Stevens, a former army engineer who had been appointed Governor of Washington, started from St. Paul to survey a northern route. Traveling in covered wagons, his party included engineers, a geologist, and an artist. The party crossed Minnesota and North Dakota fairly fast, for he was anxious to locate passes in the mountains. He spent several days in the Big Bend area of Ransom County and expressed concern about the “tremendous” cost of bridging the Sheyenne. He was apparently scared to death of our North Dakota rivers since his proposed route would cross the state without crossing any major waterway. Roughly, his plan proposed to cross the Red River a little south of Wahpeton. skirt the Big Bend of the Sheyenne, run north between the James and the Sheyenne Rivers and swing west into Montana. This somewhat ridiculous route may be better understood if you remember that he was to be the Governor of Washington and that he had no experience in building railroads. What he was interested in was spending a bare minimum to cross the plains, leaving adequate money for crossing the Rockies and building a first class line in the state of Washington. Apparently his recommendations were widely accepted, for when Fort Ransom was built, it was located in such a position that it would protect future crews on the Northern Pacific Railroad. When construction began, it was abandoned and moved to Fort Seward at Jamestown, where the troops were in better position to protect the crews. Fort Ransom was one of a series of military posts built for of the frontier from the Indians and for protection of emigrant West. It was established June 18, 1867. by Companies G and H, under Captain George Crossman and named for General Thomas the protection trains to the 18th Infantry, Ransom. Its Post Office was at Fort Abercrombie, established in 1858, and the nearest town was M cCauleyville 65 miles to the east. There were quarters for 200 men, built of logs, accomodations for seven officers, three store houses, two hospitals, quarters for six laundresses, a blacksmith shop, two root cellars, and an ice house. Regular supply trains for this and other forts made their way from Fort Snelling at St. Paul. Pulled by teams of two to eight oxen, their drivers were known as “Bullwhackers,” from the long rawhide whips with which they urged onward the slow moving beasts. A day’s journey apart were found storm shelters or camps. One of these, known as Pigeon Point was in the southwest quarter of Section 19, Owego Township and was kept by Dave Faribault, son of John Baptiste Faribault, one 4 of the early Frenchmen in Minnesota, and his beautiful and educated half-breed wife, Nancy. Another camp was at Brunton’s Ford in Bale Township and is said to have covered twenty acres, with stockades for the protection of livestock. This was presided over by a half-breed Indian known as “B lack Tiger.” This route was the dry season trail, used in winter and when the water was low. In the Spring it was necessary to detour around the B ig Bend, rejoining the trail near Pigeon Point. Another such station on the F ort Totten trail was located in Watson Township on the Maple River and was known as the Walburg Station. With the discovery of gold in Montana and Idaho more emigrants were venturing west and in 1862 Captain James Fisk was authorized to get up an expedition and conduct an escort for an emigrant train from Saint Paul as an experiment in overland travel by the Northern Route. The weather was good and most of the members of the party were used to frontier life. In 1863 Congress appropriated $10,000 for protection of an overland train from Fort Abercrombie. This expedition also made the trip successfully, but a third expedition in 1864 ran into Indian trouble after leaving Fort Rice on the Missouri River. Near Marmarth, North Dakota, on the Little Missouri, after several days of siege, the troops from Fort Rice arrived with orders to send them back. While it is romantic to think that the Northern Route of the Oregon Trail traversed Ransom County and some trains did pass through, it was never a major route of overland travel. In the year 1862, the Sioux Indians, angered because the government had not made payments and fulfilled promises made in the Treaty of Traverse deSioux, arose in a massacre that brought terror to the frontier. Bands of rebellious Sioux struck various Minnesota communities. The few settlers along the Red River fled to Fort Abercrombie, which was under siege for a month until relieved by troops from Fort Snelling. In consequence, in 1863 General Sibley was sent with an expedition of 3400 men to secure the frontier. Bands of Sioux had gathered around Devils Lake and they were given to understand that unless they surrendered and returned to the reservation they would be shown no mercy. W hatever the military achievements of Sibley’s expedition (and there is evidence that they were negligible) it adds an interesting note to the history of our area. Colonel Sibley started from Fort Snelling with a party of troops, supply wagons and teamsters whose number is said to have been 3400. Reporters with the expedition recorded that when the head of the expedition had traveled six miles, the rear guard had not started. They entered North Dakota at the upper end of B ig Stone Lake in June. By July 4th they had entered Ransom County. They made camp near the Scoville Ford, naming the spot Camp Hayes. Here was held, one hundred and three years ago, the first July 4th celebration in North Dakota. A tall Liberty Pole of white ash was erected, and toasts and patriotic addresses were made. On July 5th they moved to Camp Whorton, near Brunton’s Ford in Section 30, Fuller Township where they spent eight days waiting for supply trains to arrive. They swung northwestward, camping one night near Storhoff’s slough and crossing the Sheyenne River just below Valley City. Eighteen Sixty-three was a dry year . . . great cracks crossed the dry prairie. Grasshoppers were so numerous that soldiers would have to guard their tents to keep them from being eaten. The south wind burned and blistered as if it came from a stove. In a typical Dakota weather change, on the 11th of July there was frost on the ground. Neither Sibley nor the newspaper men, who 5 accompanied the expedition, had anything good to say about North Dakota. “Dakota is good for nothing, is nothing, means nothing. . . at least to the White man,” wrote one newsman. Weather improved during the latter part of the summer— rain fe ll and the prairie became more hospitable. On the return trip they marched from Lake Jessie, crossing the Maple River at the Watson Crossing near St. John’s Lutheran Church. Private Henry Hogadorn, who kept a diary of the trip, wrote that from the Maple River to Fort Abercrombie was the most beautiful country he had ever seen, with abundant grass and large groves of timber every three or four miles. Another group of soldiers, under Captain Wadsworth, was sent to meet General Sulley in 1864. The weather was much better and they crossed this area in June. Among them was a young soldier named Henry Ihme, who returned later to homestead in Watson Township, telling his children that the huge flocks of ducks, geese and other birds, the abundance of grass and the sweet smelling prairie flowers made it seem like a paradise. Other men, too, who first marched across the prairies with these troops returned to claim land in Raritan and Pontiac Townships. The 1862 rebellion was the last stand of the Sioux Indians in Minnesota and the eastern Dakotas. A fter the Northern Pacific Railroad pushed across the state to Mandan in 1872, only an occasional band of Indians, wandering between reservations, disturbed the settlers. While they sometimes were bold and insolent, frightening the lonely families into giving them food and feed for their horses, or taking it without a by-your-leave, for practical purposes, this was the W H ITE M A N ’S CO U N TR Y . In 1861 a territorial government was established for the Dakotas with the capital at Yankton. Though there were only a handful of people in the territory, that first legislature passed one hundred and sixteen laws and twenty memorials to Congress. A long struggle began for the creation of a new territory or state from the Northern half, which many wanted to call Pembina. The legislature formed four large counties along the eastern border of the state, with most of Ransom County in what was known as Sheyenne. These county lines were juggled several times before they took their present day boundaries. Little interest was shown in the area until the coming of the Northern Pacific Railroad, which played a major role in the settlem ent of the state, and contributed to the growth of the northern part of the Territory so that b y the time statehood was achieved, North Dakota had outstripped South Dakota in population and development. A t the time that Fargo was only a few shanties along the Red River, Ransom County had its first settlement. This was also the first North Dakota townsite scheme, conceived by a free-wheeling promoter named Lafayette Hadley. Presumably relying on the Stevens survey for the coming railroad, he persuaded a group of neighbors from southern Minnesota to come with him to the spot where he expected the railroad to cross the Sheyenne. The company included Orange Hadley, K elly Bowden, S. R. Day, Samuel Horton, Louis Thiergart and Helmuth Schultz and they settled at what proved to be Section 16 of Owego Township when it was officially surveyed. It was named the Owego Colony for Hadley’s former home in New York. Although this was land open for homesteading, Mr. Hadley plotted the land for five miles around and set a price of $15 to be paid to him for the privilege of settling in his townsite. Twelve buildings were erected; hauling the lumber from M cCauleyville, 65 miles to the east, by ox team. A cottage and office were erected for Mr. Hadley, and he was able to persuade the settlers 6 to donate the hauling of lumber for his home. Mr. Hadley had himself named postmaster of the third post office in the state and mail was delivered by freighters on the Fort Abercrombie to Fort Ransom Trail. Pete Bonner, the F. W. Baguhn fam ily and John M cCusker joined the Colony in 1871. During the summer of 1872, the men worked on the railroad being built from St. Cloud, Minn., and many started breaking claims along the river. An Indian scare drove them away at one time, but most of them returned. In 1873, as soon as warm weather returned, the settlers scattered; some to work on claims, some taking their families to where they found work on the railroad. Then word came that Fort Abercrombie was to be moved and the post office discontinued. The hoped-for railroad had passed them by, and tired of living alone on the townsite, the Hadleys moved to M cCauleyville and started a restaurant. By fall the colony was deserted and the buildings were later burned by Indians, but some of the colonists remained to claim land when the official survey of the county was made. The survey began in 1870, and various parties under contract to the U. S. Surveyor General sub-divided the county in successive years. They noted on their surveys the settlers they found. Joseph Knutson on the S.W. 1/4 of Section 21, Scoville Township and Phidlem Letonneau in the N.E. 1/4 of Section 20, Shenford Township, had arrived in 1870 and built good houses and barns. Letonneau raised the first grain in the county. In September of 1872, the surveyors found E. Whitcomb, Peter Bonner, Philo Kendall and Emma Bowden with claims in the area. When the official survey was approved, Ludwig Theirgart was the first to receive a patent in Fargo Land District, September 30, 1875. A fter the departure of the Hadleys, the settlers petitioned for a direct mail route from Fargo. F. W. Baguhn was carrier, making the trip once a week with two Indian ponies. During the summer, he carried a shotgun and so abundant was the game that he made more selling it to a Moorhead hotel than his $400 carrier’s salary. The other stations were Barrie, Power, Kindred and Horace. In 1875 the Baguhns moved to Fargo and another carrier took the route. Three new post offices were established above Owego: Bonnersville, Shenford and Scoville. In 1879, the Baguhns came back to Owego and bought their long-time home farm from the Northern Pacific Railroad. The coming of the Northern Pacific Railroad to North Dakota was the key that unlocked the door for extensive settlement and in order to understand how our area was settled, a little of its history must be included. The Northern Pacific was granted a charter in 1864 to build a road from Lake Superior to Puget Sound. By way of federal assistance in so costly an enterprise, they were granted all of the odd numbered sections for forty miles on either side of the right-of-way. . . 25,600 acres for every mile constructed. Construction costs were in excess of what had been anticipated. Mr. James Fiske, the New York banker who undertook to sell their bonds, labored mightily, but the directors built so far and fast and recklessly that he was unable to sell bonds fast enough to cover the bills. A s a result, the road went into receivership in 1873 and the resulting panic shook the economy of the country. Mr. James Power, Land-agent for the Northern Pacific, and later president of North Dakota State University, was convinced of the possibilities of North Dakota and played a leading role in efforts to rescue the railroad from its difficulties. Reports on North Dakota by military expeditions and early travelers had done little to interest people in the area and a selling job had to be done. The newly broken lands of the Red R iver V alley had produced some 7 remarkable yields of wheat. Mr. Power induced George Cass and Benjamin Cheney, directors of the road to start the first of the large scale operations that became know as the “bonanza” farms. A s word of the spectacular crops reached the East, speculators were able to buy the nearly worthless bonds, exchange them for land and start their own operations. The Northern Pacific Railroad sold land on a cash, time or bond exchange basis, and to make the exchange attractive, offered to exchange P a u l Roe o f E nderlin discovered the rem ains o f 34 Indian skeletons w h en he m ade the e xcavatio n fo r a basem ent b uilt on land n ear Standing R ock in Ransom Coun ty. T he bones seem ed to h a v e been e ve n ly broken and reassem bled. T h e opinion w as ven tu red th at the body had been eaten as part of a cerem onial rite. Roe ca re fu lly reburied the skeletons. bonds for land at $1.10 on the dollar. Some bond holders, anxious to recoup losses, took advantage of this to start similar farms. Bonanza farms alone would not provide traffic enough for the railroad to operate successfully and the alternate sections of free land were in competition to sale of railroad lands. Mr. Power was wise enough to see that settlers meant revenue, regardless, and was a prime mover in the gigantic advertising campaign carried on by the Northern Pacific Railroad to bring settlers to the area. In 1880, the Northern Pacific Railroad sent an exhibition train to the East, laden with North Dakota products. By 1883 there were 124 general land agents in Norway, Sweden, Germany, etc., and 831 local land agents in the British Isles. A t the same time, Jim Hill was using every effort to induce settlers to follow his Great Northern line. Steamship companies promoted the profitable traffic from Europe. The stage was set for the Great Dakota Boom. From 1879-1886, people poured into the area. By the time statehood 8 came, in 1889, all of the free land in Cass County had been claimed and only 7500 acres remained in Barnes County and 16,000 in Ransom County. They were a venturesome crew on the early prairies . . . teachers, merchants, mechanics, sailors, etc. Many of the first were the restless or adventurous from the settled East, or Scots, Irish, and English, who had emigrated earlier to Canada. Some were men who had first seen the country with Sibley or Civil War Veterans coming to claim their government land. T hey even included a fur-trader, Peter Goodman, who had been associated with Probstfield at the Hudson’s Bay Post at Georgetown. Reputedly the first settler in Cass County, when the Fargo area was settled, he and his brothers took land in the Sheldon area and played a role in that town’s history. Another associate of Probstfield, Adam Stein, was an early settler in Pontiac Township. M any were ill-equipped by experience or inclination for farming. Joe Bayliss, the first settler in Clifton Township, used to recall that he and his neighbor, each with a horse, wanted to use them as a team to go to Tower C ity for supplies. They had no double harness and no idea of how to hitch the two together so they hitched them to the wagon and, seated side by side, each drove his own half of the team. W illiam F raed rich standing in fron t o f th e sod house w h ich in N orth D akota. E ld erly gentlem an is his uncle. w as his first home Not all of these first settlers remained. M any found life too difficult, bad weather in the eighties discouraged many, and they returned home or drifted west looking for greener pastures, but they made their mark on the state, for they brought with them the pattern of government they had known in the East. They organized local and county governments and for a time 9 monopolized them, for the Scandinavians, overcome the language barrier. Austrians, and Germans had to This they did rapidly, for most had a good basic education in their native countries. Far from home, they had no choice but to stay and struggle through and today their descendants make up the largest ethnic groups in the community. Norwegian settlement in the United States came in three great waves. The first settled in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin and Southern Minnesota. The second in the region of Minnesota and the Red River Valley, the third stopped briefly at earlier settlements and then, with the sons and daughters of these earlier immigrants, moved into North Dakota. “Preston” township and “Fillmore” church are names brought from earlier settlements along the Minnesota-Iowa border. Most of the German settlers in this community came directly from Germany, in the wake of depressed conditions following the Franco-Prussian War. A n early German settlement in the Casselton-Chaffee area was a magnet that drew many relatives and friends to Cass County. From there they gradually filled the townships to the West. Like the early timber settlers, they first claimed lands along the rivers, for fuel, shelter, and water; then ventured to the open prairie. Some bought railroad land or “relinquishments” of earlier settlers, but most were looking for tree claims or homesteads and the pattern of early settlement was a checkerboard with the settlers’ shanties on the even-numbered sections and the odd numbered railroad sections unbroken. There were no bonanza farms in the immediate area with the exception of the Watson farms in Watson and Highland Townships and M ajor Buttz’ operations at Buttzville, but the proximity of these and the Dalrymple, Amenia-Sharon and other Cass County farms provided work as a source of cash for many of the early settlers to make their own start. The area around Enderlin was all settled at approximately the same time; starting in about 1878 in Walburg, 1879 in Highland and in the northwestern edge of Pontiac, about 1880 in Liberty, Moore and Clifton. The greatest problem of the pioneers was transportation. Supplies had to be hauled many miles from the railroad. Grain to be sold, lumber with which to build, meant several day trips to Fargo, Casselton or Tower City, often with slow moving oxen. To solve this problem, small country stores, flour mills and post offices were set up and freight lines established that have vanished today, but which recall the problems of pioneer life. A tiny cemetery near Harold Reynold’s farm recalls the early day settlement known as “Jenksville. ” Set up by a railroad promoter named Wilcox, who apparently guessed wrong about where Sheldon would be established, he had a store, post office, and a stage route running twice a week to Tower C ity for mail and supplies. Northeast of the Glennis Hamre farm, an old log cabin still stands that was the Maple post office and store operated by Anton Mostel. Several locations near the Watson-Walburg boundary mark the sites of the much traveled Watson post office. The Dennis M ueller farm ju st west of Alice was the location of the Peterson post office, then operated by the Wadesons, which received mail carried from Lucca by John Conlon. One of the interesting stories of the early settlements is that of the vanished town of Binghamton. It owed its original name, Kibby, and its existence to George Ellsbury, father of Tower City, who envisioned a railroad running from Tower C ity to the south. The story of the Milbank, K ibby and Tower C ity Railroad is a long and sad one. The nearest it came to reality was 10 the grading of several miles of roadbed by the farmers route through Barnes, Cass and Ransom Counties. along its proposed However, in anticipation of its coming, the townsite of Kibby was established by Eli Northrup, an associate, and Mrs. Dinah Kibby, Ellsbury’s sister. He set her up with a small way station for the freighters hauling freight from Tower C ity to Lisbon and secured her an appointment as postmaster of Kibby. In 1884 the Milbank, K ibby and Tower C ity was absorbed by the Dakota and Great Southern and Mrs. Kibby apparently not being willing to share the townsite, the company platted a townsite across the road and named it Binghamton. The traces of its existence are still in evidence across the road and slightly to the north of the Wadeson farm about seven miles north of Highway 46 on the Cass-Barnes County line. A thriving settlement sprang up. The Rev. James Vance and his family had taken claims in the area and he operated a store. A lumber yard, a blacksmith shop owned by Fremont Ellsbury, Mrs. Beale’s Warehouse, where teams hauling from Tower C ity now stopped, the Jennings general store, and several homes were built. The town boasted wooden sidewalks, a creamery owned by Mr. Northrup, and an imposing school, also promoted by the persuasive gentleman. It was reported that he even sold cemetery lots to Eastern investors. A large hotel was erected, but before it was finished the Soo Line came through in 1891. The Minnesota Land and Trust Company which operated as a townsite company for the Soo Line, plotted the town of Lucca about a mile south of its present location. Despairing of the Dakota and Great Southern’s future, the townspeople moved their buildings to Lucca. Once again the community flourished. A report in the Sheldon Progress in October, 1891, said that there were 117 inhabitants before the railroad reached the new town. However, in 1900, the Marian branch of the Northern Pacific Railroad located its crossing a mile north and once again the townspeople picked up and moved en masse to the present location, making Lucca probably the only town in the state with three names and four locations. Some of the buildings of old Binghamton still exist in other locations. The hotel kitchen was moved to Lucca where it became a restaurant, then to a farm and finally to Enderlin, where it is now the home of Fred Johnson. In Ransom County another townsite of the Milbank, K ibby and Tower C ity Railroad was platted, known as Wisner. It was promoted by a New York banker of that name, who built a small water-power .red flour mill about five d e miles east of Fort Ransom. A general store and post office known as Plymouth existed there, but the mill was sold when the railroad did not materialize, and and moved to Enderlin where it was operated by the Munt family, parents of Mrs. Bodo Lindemann, until it burned down. Mr. Munt built a mill near his home just below the hill on Cleveland street. It is time now to look away from the railroads that did not arrive and toward those that did. The coming of the Northern Pacific branch line to Sheldon and Lisbon in 1882 did much to ease the difficulties of transportation, and changed the focus of the area from North to the South. tech n ica lly, the line was built by a separate company, the Fargo and Southwestern. Nothing had been said about feeder lines in the original charter. The Northern Pacific Railroad and many other railroads took to the practice of organizing subsidiary companies for this purpose. The story of Sheldon is typical of frontier development. The line was surveyed in 1880, passing about five miles north of the present location. When construction began the plans were changed to take advantage of the Sheyenne River traffic. Goodman and Greene moved out from Fargo in 1881 and started 11 a store about three or four miles east, where they anticipated the line would go. D. B. Wilcox, one of the promoters of the line, secured the location of the townsite and bought the section where the town is now located for $3200. He had more hope than money, and since he could not pay for it, he let it go to E. E. Sheldon for $3,8 4 0 . . . a profit of $680 for three weeks’ ownership. Sheldon platted the town; deeded half to the railroad for locating there, sold a few lots and in 1882, sold what was left for $8,000. The first train reached Sheldon, November 4, 1882. The Northern Pacific Elevator Company had a place ready to take grain before the tracks reached Sheldon and nearly 300,000 bushels of grain were sold that fall and winter. “G et in line before breakfast and get unloaded after supper,” was the saying. The great need of the country was capital and Eastern capital immediately moved into Sheldon. The risks of a new country prompted high interest rates and those willing to take the risks could profit handsomely. A number of the early settlers of the Sheldon area came from Michigan including Jim Banks, N. B. Hannum, Fred Underwood, who figured later in the development of Enderlin, the Greenes and Ed Pierce, who was aleading figure in the growth of Sheldon. An early resident relates that “it was the Jim Banks and N. B. Hannum relatives from Michigan whohad the money. Ed Pierce invested it to their advantage.” Within three years the town had elevators, stores, a school, two churches, and the Sheldon Opera House. Mrs. C. G. Bangert, whose husband started his career in Sheldon says, “It was odd that you could come to a town of 300, no lights, and not much of a street: but with no feeling of settling on an isolated place on the prairie. Sheldon was the greatest little town in the west. . . more sterling silver and oriental rugs, even a grand piano inthe Hoff home.” T y p ic a l first prairie home. T h e above photo, taken abou t 1905, show s th e farm hom e o f M r. and Mrs. G u st Foss and son Edwin. T h e farm stead w as located about fou r and a h a lf m iles w est o f Enderlin. 12 They were able to draw on the trade of the rapidly filling community, grateful for a closer market. The first settlers to come into Maple River Township, later re-named Liberty because of a similar township in Cass County, were Ever Gullickson, Peter Shelver and Erik Gunderson. Gullickson filed on Section 4, overlooking the present site of Enderlin. The following Spring his mother filed on the remaining land in Section 4. Meis Olson, whose daughter Eleanor also filed on land which became part of the Enderlin townsite, the John Dagman family, the Christianson, Solem, Kranz and Austad families all took claims in 1881, to be followed in 1882 by Faucetts, Martin Kaspari, the Wolds, Hansons and Stevensons. To the west, Moore Township was being opened up as well. Torre Syverson filed the first claim in 1880, followed the same year by Peder Solheim. In 1881 Ed Storli, R. Wallin, the Moore family, C. Henderson, John Peterson, P. Henderson, Brent Hoover, P. O. Vie, E. Rognaldson and the Galbreaths arrived, to be followed shortly by Kabers, Kelleys, Christophersons, Groths, Nords, Husemoens, Lunds, Thompsons, and many others. To the north, in Raritan Township, in addition to the Binghamton settlement, early pioneers included: Galbreaths, Charles Hackett, Peter Liddle, the Stowells, Baarstads, Jensons, Skramstads, Gillunds, Millers, Strands, Conlons, Obitzes, Manns, Robertsons, Nordlands, Walters and Dragers, among others. The first settler in Highland Township was Shea Healy in 1878. In 1879 and the early 80’s, the people who made up the Jenksville settlement arrived: Patrick Pierce, Robert Anderson, the Casgroves, Pattersons, Morrises, Cowans, Mclntoshes, Bricks, Bauerschmidts, Boyles, Fraedrichs, Boehms, Westphals, Ihmes, and the Oehlkes. O ver in Pontiac Township, as nearly as can be determined from available records, the first settlement was on the north and west of the township, James Scott came about 1879 as did J. G. Dole and Eli Vertrees. In 1880-1881 the M cKays, Lundahls, the Vance fam ily, Peter Smith, Aaron Phillip, Herb Root and Mike Matsehenbocker arrived. The years 1882-1887 saw the bulk of the settlement with the coming of the Bleeses, Petrichs, Lindemanns, Krafts, Utkes, Trapps, Millers, Andersons, Marschkes, Martins, Oeders, Pollocks, Fraedrichs, Golzs, and Conlons. Much of the Northern Pacific land was owned by the Smith family, New York state bankers and Northern Pacific stockholders. C. A. M alette came out as their agent, homesteaded a quarter and acquired considerable land in the township for himself. The years following early settlement ware difficult ones There were a series of severe winters, the most notable being the winter of 1887-88. The winter came early and unusually heavy snow accumulated. Late in the spring, on a fine warm day, a sudden blizzard filled the sky with powdery snow. The thermometer fell from 74 above to 25 below zero, in 24 hours. Farmers died in the fields and children on the w ay home from school. The toll of this one storm in Dakota was 235 people. The summers were hot and dry. Farm records kept by Henry Trapp show a yield of 8 bushels of wheat per acre in 1889, 10 bushels of oats, 8 bushels of barley. For 1890, the crop was even poorer; wheat ran 4 bushels; oats, 5; barley, 5; and flax 114 bushels an acre. Depressed prices added to their difficulties. Rex Lindemann recalls that one winter their entire cash assets, seven pennies, laid on the window sill all winter. They got along as best they could on what they had in the way of home grown produce. Committees were formed about the state to get seed for North Dakota farmers. The columns of the Fargo Argus were filled with charges that the Minneapolis bankers and grain dealers were trying to profiteer on the distress 13 of the farmers, with high prices for seed and excessive interest on seed loans. Township boards used the credit of the township to secure seed. The records of the Trinity church show that the pastor obtained a carload of seed for the relief of the people of his parish, from contacts in the East. Those who were able to borrow money paid a high price for credit. Tw elve per cent was the common interest rate. Mrs. Carl Lindemann used to tell that when you borrowed $100 from the Sheldon bank, twenty dollars was taken out as a discount, or service charge, though you paid interest of 12% on the entire sum. Then you went across the street to Grange’s Furniture Store and the banker picked out a chair or other item which you bought him to show your gratitude for the loan. Attem pts of the legislature to improve the rules of the game met with much protest from financial interests. When a bill was introduced to extend the time of redemption after foreclosure to two years, agents of eastern mortgage companies predicted a “tornado” of foreclosures and threatened that no one would loan money in North Dakota if the bill passed. The long awaited and bitterly contested day of statehood in 1889 produced little excitement, Hiram Drache notes in his book, “Bonanza.” The people of North Dakota were too preoccupied with drought, foreclosures and depressed farm prices to care. The years which saw the coming of the Soo Line Railroad and the birth of Enderlin marked a turning point and once again eastern papers proclaimed the riches to be made on North Dakota farms. “A North Dakota farm may be compared to a gold mine,” wrote a New York Times correspondent who visited the area. Real estate companies holding large amounts of North Dakota land began an advertising campaign in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and southern Minnesota where land prices were higher. The Soo Line Railroad ran immigrant trains with those who bought land having their fare refunded. Special rates were available for immigrant cars for shipping machinery and livestock. The result was the final wave of immigration to the state, this time from the earlier settled areas of the Midwest. The Ransom County Immigration Association headed by Edward Pierce boasted of bringing 200 farmers to the area in a single year. Perhaps the most notable feature of pioneer days in North Dakota was that they were so brief. A combination of circumstances; the invention of the reaper, and other improved farm machinery coming at the time that large amounts of free or relatively cheap land were available meant that North Dakota farms would be larger and mechanized earlier than previously settled areas. Settlers who broke sod with oxen were in a few short years threshing w ith traction steam engines. By 1900, those who had survived the rigors of the early years were well enough established to start building the ten and fifteen room houses; which, while often necessary for their substantial families, were also their equivalent of the sports car and color television as a status symbol. Early in 1890, the Sheldon Progress was reporting railroad. In August, 1890, surveying crews arrived. They about the location of the road, but it was apparent that it Sheldon and the editor wondered that they should by-pass so rumors of a new were tight-lipped would be west of important a town. In March, 1891, the Progress reported that Edward Pierce was starting a new town 13 miles north on the new railroad and was offering the company big inducements to build a depot and sidetracks on the town site. . . the editor predicted much success for the new venture. June, 1891, saw construction started on the Anselm bridge and Sheldon 14 W illiam F raed rich ’s b irth d ay party. T h e Sheyenne R iv e r fu rn ish ed both fu n and food! L e ft to rig h t: unknow n, unknow n, A lb e rt Fraedrich, Julius F raed rich, A u gu st F raed rich, John A lb e rt Fraedrich, unknow n, unknow n, W illiam F raed rich, un kn ow n and, holding the spear, the tra ve lin g photographer. business places were doing a booming business with the throngs of strangers coming to work on the railroad. An interesting sidelight on the practice of the grain trade is found in the files of the Sheldon Progress for that F all of 1891. A n active partnership between the railroads and the grain trade existed and most railroads had a complimentary elevator company. One of the chief grievances of the farmers was the grading and pricing of the “line” elevators. The September 8th issue tells of efforts of the Northern Pacific Elevator Com pany to freeze out the locally owned Southwestern Company by jum ping the price of wheat considerably over the market. The September 15th issue tells of the efforts of the Southwestern Com pany to establish an elevator on the new railroad. A fter failing to get any answer from company officials they set up a scale and platform on the siding near Anselm and started buying grain. A s soon as the elevator company following the railroad completed its elevator, section crews were ordered to tear out the scales, which were a few inches onto the railroad property. The Southwestern moved the scales back onto their own land, but the crews then tore out the portion of the siding leading to them. The editor reports that as soon as this was done the price of wheat at the line elevators dropped three cents. B y mid-September, cars of new lumber were arriving daily at the new townsite. Farmers with teams found a source of revenue in helping grade the road bed. The going wage was a dollar a day for a man and a dollar and a quarter for a team. Crews predicted that passenger trains would be running in two weeks and Sheldon merchants were making plans to open branches on the new railroad. Enderlin owes its location, in a spot where few of the pioneers ever expected to see anything but ducks and geese, to two things; the sheltered location in the Maple River valley and the abundance of water in even the driest years. The rapid growth and size it attained it owes to the fact that it was, from the first, designated as a division point, for few other towns established when the road passed through already settled territory ever grew beyond an elevator, post office, and a few stores and houses. The townsite was purchased by Edward Pierce, acting as attorney for the Minnesota Land and Trust Company from Eleanor Olson, Ranei Gullickson, and Johanna Pierce, and the official plot of the town filed October 7, 1891. It might be well to note here that while for brevity we have always referred to the Soo Line, its official title was the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault St. Marie. Only in 1961, after the merger and reorganization, did it bow to the inevitable and became officially known as the Soo Line Railroad. The source of the town name has been a matter of much debate. The myth that it derived from “end of the line” has been exploded, for V alley City was the end of the line in 1891. O fficial Soo Line word is that it was named by Mr. F. D. Underwood, then General M anager, for a name he had seen in an English book. Considerable building started in the F all of 1891. Patrick Pierce erected the first house and moved his fam ily to the townsite, that house is now occupied by the Lewis Anderson family. Some years later, when Railway Street was extended, records of the city show that money was appropriated to pay him for moving his barn which was blocking the path of progress. Several houses and a small depot were put up by the railroad. Nels Akre put up a small shack to house the post office. The first elevator, managed by C. D. Hodges, was in operation as was the Arnold and Sawyer Lum ber Yard. The real rush of settlement started in the Spring of 1892. By 16 mid summer the Sheldon editor, on an expedition to view the new town, reported that fifty buildings had been completed. Golberg & Benson M eat Market, Goodman & Sanness General Store, Rustad’s Hardware, Ole V ie’s Soo Line Clothing Store, a restaurant operated by Nels Peterson and his sister, Mrs. Erick Johnson, Larson and Suter Farm Machinery were in operation. The Hilton Hotel, two more elevators, a four stall round house and several more homes were being built. Haney and Madden were building a barbershop, Thompson’s Hardware and Gus Dahm’s M eat M arket were almost completed. C. C. Chamberlain had taken over the management of the Arnold and Sawyer Lum ber Yard, and W. J. Fowler had started the first livery stable on the corner where the Red Owl now stands. The first drug store was operated by B. Egeberg, a native of Denmark, whose avocation was politics and whose party was Socialist. He published a small Danish language paper and was so outspoken in his views that he was in frequent difficulties. Before too long he gave up and went back to Denmark, but he is credited with bringing the town its first doctor, Dr. Richardson. The new Enderlin State Bank had a building completed on the corner of Third and Railway. This building was moved when the brick structure which now houses the Gamble Store was built. It was later a post office, a photography studio, and now houses the Pierce Implement Company. The bank was organized by Edward Pierce of Sheldon, its president. The cashier was S. T. Wolfe and the board of directors were John Smith, A. O. Runice, James Banks and Patrick Pierce. Capital was $5,000.00. The John Hanson home was nearly completed, on the corner where the Pure O il Station now stands. Back of it Mr. Hanson was building the town’s first feed mill. It’s heavy millstones were operated at first by a horse, blinded and hitched to a pole, which he pulled around and around. This was also the means of operating the first elevator. That summer saw Enderlin’s first Fourth of July celebration. The Lundahl family, two miles west of town on the farm now owned by Arthur Ritter, had taken a tree claim and in the decade since planting, the trees had grown to where they seemed, to eyes accustomed to the bare prairie, like a veritable forest. T hey invited the entire community to a picnic in their grove. Led by the band under “Professor” honorary, since Mr. Mathieson operated a and buggies, each decorated with bunting, the farm where from a large pole the bountiful picnic lunch, speeches, music and Mathieson (the title was apparently lunch counter) a train of wagons made its way across the prairie to Stars and Stripes was flying. A games was the program of the day. When the Sheldon Progress reported this affair, they also took occasion to boast of the superiority of the celebration Sheldon had enjoyed, as compared to that of Lisbon. It is difficult to chart accurately the growth of the town in those early years. Businesses failed or changed hands frequently, for they were often started with more hope than capital. Buildings were moved from place to place very casually and the frame buildings heated by stoves were frequent fire casualties. Among the businesses established in the first few years of Enderlin’s history were the first harness shop, owned by Walt Loomis, Burtness General Store, H off and Shirley Drug Store, Blish Fruit and Candy Store, Emil Forguet’s Pool Hall, Ratchje’s Hardware, Austad General Store, Callahan’s Hotel, and Crockett’s boarding house. The Engle brothers, sons of a pioneer doctor in the Binghamton area, had all taken claims west of Enderlin. Soon after the town was established they sold their farms and opened businesses in Enderlin. C. M. Engle’s Hardware, W. G. Engle’s Furniture and Mortuary, 17 O n e of the first offices o f the T h e Enderlin Independent in E nderlin. Editor Charles P otter is pictu red in the foreground. T h e w om an, left, and th e L inotyp e operator, in th e backgro un d , are unknow n. P otter w a s associated w ith T h e Independent in various capacities from 1897 u n til 1922. and C. E. Engle Drug Store. had an early hat shop. Their sisters taught school and Miss A rabella J. C. Harper, long time Enderlin merchant, established his store here in 1897 and James Walsh opened his first meat market in that year as well. Dr. O laf Sherping built the first hospital, which was combined with his residence on the site of the present Trinity Lutheran Church parking lot. Other early doctors were Dr. Kennedy and Dr. Kron. Dentists were apparently not deemed as necessary by our forebearers, for the first dentist, Dr. E. F. Peterson, did not arrive until 1903. Dr. G. H. Nelson arrived in 1906 and served the town until his death in 1947. The rush of building required carpenters and while many people turned their hand to the work, the early professional builders included a man named Crandall, Julius Klingbeil, and a gentleman known as “Lord ’arry” Mattson, for his highly imaginative description of his early life and antecedents. The last of his construction in Enderlin was the Labbitt building. Volume 1 of the Enderlin Journal appeared December 30, 1892. Published by Charles Allen, a brother-in-law of W alter Loomis, he published the paper until 1896, when he moved to Hope, North Dakota. C. H. Potter,had in the meantime, established the Ransom County Independent. For a few years in the early 1900’s, Mr. Potter operated a laundry and the paper was published by T. H. Longley. A third paper, the Enderlin Headlight, was established about 1907 by K night and Kvello. Mr. K vello acted as editor until 1910, when the Headlight and the Ransom County Independent merged to become The Enderlin Independent, Mr. K vello continuing as editor for a time and later being replaced by Mr. Potter. Less publicized establishments of the early days were the “blind pigs.” Strong efforts of Temperance groups had resulted in North Dakota coming into the Union as a dry state and many were the stratagems used to supply the thirsty. A n early Enderlin watering spot was presided over by one Albert Hendrickson, who had made some money in the gold fields. He put up a building on the location of the Kraem er Implement lot, but apparently sin was not too profitable, for he moved on; the building was taken for debts he owed and moved to the site of the Citizens State Bank, where it became a barber shop. Enderlin was in its early days something of a wide-open town. A s a division point, large crews of men headquartered here. There were many “boomers,” itinerant railroad men who worked when they needed money and then moved on to another town or another line. Many of the first crews did not bring their fam ilies or were young, unmarried and looking for excitement. One of the more notorious entertainment centers was the Stabler Brothers Bowling A lley and Pool Hall, located where the C ity Bakery now stands. The basement housed the bowling alley, the first floor the pool hall and lunch room. . . in the rear, a game was usually available with various professionals now and again in residence to take the measure of the unwary. On the second floor, according to report, accomodating ladies were sometimes available when they were able to evade the sharp eyes of the law. Its railroad heritage has always made Enderlin a little different from most small towns. The frequent moves required of railroad fam ilies has meant a greater turnover of population, with less of a tendency to become ingrown and tradition bound. The population of the town has always been more varied and cosmopolitan than that of most small towns. Perhaps the most colorful figures of the early years were the Greek 19 workers employed in the yards and on the road crews. Mostly young men, they differed from other immigrants in that few brought their families with them and apparently they planned to make a stake and go back home. Unable to speak English, they relied on the foreman to handle their business affairs, which sometimes led to bloodshed, if they suspected him of misappropriation. Many of them lived in shacks near the roundhouse and in the spring, at the time of the Greek Orthodox Easter, a couple of cars were shunted into the siding, the traditional Greek foods and wines were prepared and a several day feast and celebration took place. By 1897 Enderlin was too big a town to remain under the tutelage of the Liberty township board and a village government was set up. The A v ie w of R ailw ay S treet in 1902 show ing the B urgess Hotel on the present site of the Lindem ann building. T h e structure pictured here housed a barber shop and G ru y e ’s C afe in addition to the hotel. From le ft to right, the persons standing along the w alk are B ill Burgess, Sam G olberg, B ill Reed, A l K ab er, tw o unknow n boys, and C arl Darelius. first board of trustees consisted of P. L. Hodges, Henry Rustad and Dr. Olaf Sherping. C. H. Potter was clerk; P. P. Burtness, the treasurer; P. H. Callahan, assessor; W. J. Loomis, marshall; and Frank Blish, justice of the peace. The village government had all manner of affairs to consider during that first year. . . fire hazards, the care of the sick and indigent, licensing of pool halls and bowling alleys ($2.50 per table each month and $5.00 per alley each month). License for “non-intoxicating” malt beverages (beer?) was set at $60 a year. The city funds were spent with great caution. A plat of the city, which the clerk had been told to obtain, arrived in a tin case for which a separate bill of 25 cents was submitted. When bills were presented, that for the case was laid over until the next meeting. A t the next meeting it was tabled indefinitely. About six months later it was finally allowed, the clerk apparently having paid it out of his own pocket to avoid further correspondence. He was reimbursed with a warrant for 25 cents drawn on the contingency fund. June 27, 1898, 64 electors petitioned for the organization of a separate school board. A t the election July 12, Fred Underwood, C. C. Chamberlain, 20 W. G. Engle, Mrs. O. Sherping and Mrs. J. D. Thomas were elected to the first board. Apparently it was felt that a village organization was not fitting for such a thriving community; Fred Underwood, a man of many ideas, and with a passion for doing things the way they should be done, is credited with circulating petitions for a city government. A ugust 30, 1898, the village trustees met and turned over their authority to the new city council. Dr. Olaf Sherping was the first mayor. Councilmen were W. J. Fowler, C. C. Chamberlain, W. J. Engle, P. P. Burtness, P. L. Hodge and Isaac Luker. C. H. Potter was appointed clerk and P. H. Callahan, chief of police. One of their first matters of business was the building of the new jail at a cost of $289.00 for the building and $50 for the lot. It was located on the rear of the present Kraemer Motors storage lot, facing Third Ave. A prime concern of the first city council was fire protection and at a meeting on July 3, 1899, a motion was made that all available tanks be placed on principal streets and filled with water for fire protection during the July 4th celebration. Later that year bonds for $4,000 were issued to buy a hand engine, a chemical engine, 800 feet of hose, hooks and ladders at a cost of $1,380. The balance would be used for wells and hydrants, and an artesian well to be dug near where the city hall now stands with three water tanks provided. The equipment was horse drawn and was at first stored in a livery stable and later in an old empty frame bank building on Third Avenue. Apparently an organization was started in 1903, for a fire chief, assistant, a secretary and treasurer of the Fire Department which were made appointive offices. In 1904 a committee was named to reorganize the fire department. The present fire department was organized in 1905, with C. A. K vello as chief. C. M. Engle assistant, T. J. Meisenberg secretary. Tom Pierce was treasurer and Herman Shirley fifth member of the board. A fire hall was built in 1906 at the site of the present city hall and in 1907 a hook and ladder truck was purchased. In addition to its duties as protector of property, the Fire Department was in those days a M en’s Club and social center. Membership was a cherished activity. Equipment was primitive and the most that could be done was to save adjoining structures a good deal of the time. The most frequently used piece of equipment was an axe with which to chop holes into the walls or roofs to get water to the location of the fire. There was a tendency on the part of some zealous souls to get carried away in the excitement of the moment. A t one time when a building burned next to the telephone office, Dr. Strong is reported to have decided to “save” the telephone switchboard and chopped through all the cables, throwing the city out of telephone service for some weeks. The cart carrying hoses was drawn by hand and at one time races between fire companies were much in vogue. Periodically “new blood” was brought into the department. . . young men who were supposed to have the speed and endurance to make time with the fire hose cart. Enthusiasm dwindled for this type of competition when the Department appropriated $100 to send a hose team to the State Convention at Carrington. The group started celebrating prem aturely and never got farther than V alley City. Other matters considered by the first city council included raising the salary of the Chief of Police to $10 a month and instructing him to see that all slot machine playing for money was stopped at once, approval of $56 to finish paying for instruments for the Enderlin Cornet Band, a motion to purchase four gasoline vapor lamps and a report that for $700, 10 acres of 21 A B U N C H O F T H E B O Y S — W hen A n d y F au cett w as m arried, he le ft his tru n k to be shipped. H is frien d s decorated it w ith rope, w ild su n flow ers and old shoes. L e f t to righ t, unknow n, F rem o nt Hanson, H erm an S h irley, B ill S h aw , D raym an W iper, "D u tch " N e rw iek and E ditor K v e llo . A B U N C H O F T H E G IR L S — (One w as a m illin er! ) B a ck row , le ft to right, unknow n, E dith B a y liss K aechler. F ron t row , M ary C ard W old and M am ie H elsing. land could be obtained for a cemetery and 1 1/2 acres across the Maple River for a city dump. Enderlin was now officially a city. Still, each morning the crowing roosters aroused each other from one end of town to the other. Cows were led to pasture each day and returned at night for milking. In the dusk, children played Run, Sheep Run in the many open areas of the town. The creek below the hill still ran freely and ponds of water dotted the open spaces between houses on the outskirts (Sixth Avenue! ) making a happy home for the numberless frogs whose music filled the evening air. The rhythmic “whoosh” of the roundhouse exhaust was an ever present sound to the town, and the wail of the numerous trains "whistling in.” Hal 22 Boyle says, “The raucous hoot of the diesel horn holds none of the magic of the old steam engine’s cry, wailing across the prairies, echoing in the hills, sending little shivers up the spine of all who heard it. ” To numerous Enderlin families, the various whistles meant even more. They told when Daddy would be home and when the housewife should start getting supper on the table. They knew what train it was and if it was late or not— Enderlin ran on railroad time. Enderlin still kept growing. New names were added to the businesses of the town: Luker’s Store, G ruye’s Cafe and Candy Store, Sather’s Harness Shop, The Idle Hour Theater, Hoffman’s M eat Market. A second bank known as the First National Bank was organized in 1902. In 1907 it was to be absorbed by the Enderlin State Bank. The Soo Line Railroad was adding facilities with a stockyard and additions to the roundhouse. A new brick school house was built in 1905. The time for urban improvement was at hand, and a few dates and figures may be interesting. 1 9 0 2 . . . a franchise was granted the Noxem Brothers to establish the first telephone exchange. 1 9 0 5 . . . bids were accepted for a waterworks system to replace the surface and artesian wells about the town. 1 9 0 6 . . . a franchise was granted to M. A. Abbott to construct and M r. and Mrs. F red O ehlke are p ictu red above in one o f the first cars in E nderlin— a 1912 Ford. T he sporty lookin g con vertible boasted m an y attractiv e “ u p -to-d ate” features. maintain a light plant in the city. The first plant was near the stockyards and utilized the boiler of the flour mill which had burned down shortly before. 1 9 0 7 . . . property owners were required to replace wooden sidewalks with cement construction. 1 9 0 7 . . . a new bank was organized by Harold Thorson of St. Paul and known as the Citizens State Bank. Harold Thorson was president; John 23 Thorson, cashier; W. W. Shaw, W allace Galbreath, John Gruye, Emil Bruhn, Eberhart Faucett, and Frank Foster, members of the board. 1 9 0 9 . . . Edward Pierce donated five blocks of land for Enderlin’s first park. 1 9 1 1 . . . the Soo Line constructed the “Beanery.” With Gene Reed as manager, it became known up and down the line for excellence of its food and was for many years the town’s favorite eating spot. 1 9 1 1 . . . The Clio Club, organized in 1909, decided to forego a spring banquet and use the money to buy books— this was the beginning of the City Library, which they ran for 50 years until it became a Municipal Library in 1963. 1 9 1 2 . . . construction was begun on a city sewer system. 1 9 1 2 . . . Enderlin was chosen as the first small town in North Dakota to have city mail delivery, a pilot project. The automobile began to make its appearance and a few brave souls were trying them out, on what the Sheldon Progress boasted were “the best dirt roads in the country.” The W right Brothers Squadron put on an airplane show at Wahpeton and many citizens attended it. The 20th Century Dance Club entertained at a pink and white dance with all the women gowned in pink and white, and with the men wearing “Helen” pink ties. M ay 4, 1911. the first bridge party was held in Enderlin at the Eli Powers home. The day of the pioneer was over. The late ’90’s and the first decades of the Twentieth Century were a time of frustration among the farmers, who felt that they were being exploited by the moneyed interests. This discontent was to culminate in North Dakota in the Non-Partisan League, the only successful farm er’s political movement, and in a fascinating, if stormy, era of state politics. The League’s forerunner was the Farm er’s Alliance, which had a wide membership in the Enderlin area. The first indication of their political power was in the election of 1906, when thousands deserted the traditional Republican ticket to elect John Burke, North Dakota’s first Democratic governor. Many believed that the farmers’ salvation was in owning their own business institutions and here as elsewhere there were several such ventures. While they had not yet accepted the cooperative concept, these businesses were owned by farm er stockholders. The Farm er’s Elevator was organized in 1905; by 1907 they were out of debt and paying stockholders a dividend of 100 per cent. The Farm er’s Elevator was to be the only such local venture to survive the years. Reorganized in 1949 as a cooperative, it still does business at the same stand. The Moore and Liberty Telephone Company was reputedly organized because Eberhart Faucett became annoyed at the poor service on his line and, jum ping into his buggy, started organizing among his neighbors. In 1906, they bought out the local telephone company and operated as a farmer-owned company for many years, until controlling interest was purchased by Gordon Brown in the late ’30’s. The Farmers Store operated from 1917 until 1925, when it was purchased toy Chris and M. J. Pederson, and through all the years they operated it, it was still the “Farmers Store” to many people. Even The Enderlin Independent was affected by this movement, being purchased by the Non-Partisan League in 1919, to complete a line of farm er papers in every county of the state. Edited by a gentleman named M cGillvery, the waning fortunes of the League 24 at that time forced its sale to the late J. M. “Inky” Hanson, longtime Enderlin newspaper man, after about two years of operation. A t the same time, and perhaps because they hoped to assuage the farmers discontent, there were other voices raised in advice and assistance . . . some good and some bad, some self-seeking, and some disinterested. The North Dakota Bankers Association formed a “$100 an Acre Club, ” to tout the benefits of diversion. Railroads hired agricultural agents to promote farm improvements and Saun Sanders, a local teacher, was to became the Soo Line’s first agricultural agent. “The cow, the sow, and the hen will bring us back again,” said a slogan used by those who sought to convince farmers that their problems could be solved by ceasing their dependence on wheat as a chief crop. The first corn contest was held in Ransom County in 1906 at the instigation of County Superintendent Hutchinson, and two local boys, Phillip and AIf Larson, captured first and second places. Mechanization of farms was proceeding rapidly, even at this early date. M any of the improved machines were the result of tinkering by inventive farmers and small town blacksmiths, some of whom sold their rights for a pittance to machinery companies. The first bundle carrier for a binder was invented and used on a farm near Enderlin by H. S. Chapm an, step-father of Fred Underwood, in 1883. The McCormack Harvester dealer in Sheldon reported the device to the company and several of their machinists inspected it. The next year the company brought out a carrier embodying the same principles. Whether Mr. Chapman was paid for this we do not know, but Ed Storli, an early Moore resident is said to have sold his rights to the roller twine tension device used on ail twine binders for a quart of whiskey. The crude forerunners of modern machines were often devised years ahead of acceptance. In 1909, the Marschke Brothers built a mounted plow, called the Marschke Auto Plow. This later became the Hackney Auto Plow, and while the idea was sound, its application was not entirely successful; since the plow was mounted underneath the machine and it tended to bury the entire device when it hit a wet spot. Not too many were sold. Conceived before its time, also, was a combine for harvesting standing grain, built and tested locally by C. M. Engle. Powered by a gasoline engine on the machine and pulled by a Bull tractor, it was too small for practical use and the combine as we know it had to await the day for more powerful engines. Some machines successfully marketed included the Hoiland Wild Oat Separator, invented by a Nome area man. He also devised a radiator cap used by Hudson and Cadillac. Henry W ilberg of Nome devised a trailing packer and a packer drill still manufactured. A most successful local operation was the Lowe M anufacturing Company which produced small tools, the chief of which was a superior nipper, widely used in shoeing horses, but which had innumerable other uses. For some years they did a nation-wide business and many farmers still cherish a locally made nipper as an indispensable tool. Local merchants were not standing still during this time of rural ferment and a Commercial Club was an early organization. It is enough to bring tears to the eyes of any Chamber of Commerce member to find that one of the first problems of their predecessors was to get a uniform closing hour for all retail establishments, with Mr. Harper, a man who usually went his own way, refusing to close before 10 p. m. every night. Then, as now, the 25 theme was “Trade in Enderlin,” and the mail order catalogue was viewed as the chief threat to local prosperity. The automotive age was bringing changes in the business scene. The livery barn was on the way out and the garage and fillin g station were appearing. The first automobile, a Knox air cooled, was owned by Dr. Garrish and the first auto sold locally was an E.M.F., sold by Rex Lindemann, dean of Enderlin business men, in 1909. The bewildering variety of cars made in the early years is illustrated by the makes of cars he has sold: Overland, Pullman, Stephans, Roosevelt, Cutting, Mitchell, Oldsmobile, Buick, Studebaker, Willys Knight, Pymouth and Dodge. H. F. Larson sold the first Ford in Enderlin. Fjoslien and Burtness had the first gas pumps, while Youngkin’s Standard Oil was the first to deliver fuel in bulk. T h e end of the horse and b u ggy era found E n derlin ’s streets lin ed w ith H upm obiles, O verlan d s and m an y other e a rly m odel autom obiles. T h e a b o v e photo show s a lone hitching post (about h alf w a y dow n the street) standin g guard o v er this a rra y o f e arly cars parked along F o u rth A venu e. In these busy years prior to World War I, the people of the Mid-west considered themselves far removed from the problems of Europe, particularly those who had come to America to escape those same problems. They tried to ignore the ominous developments abroad, but both British and German propaganda mills were laboring m ightily to influence American opinion. Oddly enough, the Germans found a surprising amount of support, for Americans had still an emotional distrust of England. When Germ any’s persistant refusal to respect the neutrality of our shipping fin ally brought us into the war, however, we went to war with a patriotic fervor never seen before or since. Communities like Enderlin with large groups of foreign-born citizens, particularly those of German or Austrian descent, were particularly vulnerable to the type of irrational ardor which saw sauerkraut become “Liberty Cabbage, ” 26 and rumors persisted that Enderlin harbored disloyal citizens. A report published in the Fargo News Courier that a Loyalty meeting had been disrupted by pro-German elements was indignantly denied by the local editor, who published in the next issue the retraction by the Fargo editor along with the results of his investigation. 1. The reason the band did not appear was that there had not been a local band for some time and they could not find enough instruments. . . besides this, the leader had car trouble in the country and could not get back in time. 2. The mix-up in song books was not the work of pro-Germans, but the result of sending a small boy to the school and his mistake in getting the wrong ones. 3. The scheduled soloist was not disloyal; she had only voice rooting for the home team in an afternoon ball game. lost her 4. Secretary Grey of the Commercial Club denied that he had made any remarks which could be construed to mean that he thought this was an organized effort. An Enderlin Loyal Legion was formed; “Four Minute M en” gave patriotic speeches between theater acts. A huge L oyalty meeting in January 1918 was attended by 500 people who heard an assortment of local speakers, including Paul Hanson, who declared, “We should not allow any community that is not Americanized to exist. We do not want to have in our midst communities where the people’s diet is lutefisk or sauerkraut. L e t’s Americanize them!” War bonds were purchased, sweaters knit, bandages rolled and no disloyal saboteur blew up the round house, but there was a loss in the warm and easy acceptance of each other which took some years to dispel. The year 1918 found the entire country in the grip of the influenza epidemic. With typical vigor, an emergency hospital was set up in the hotel, through the cooperation of Mr. Lasley and Superintendent Baxter. Dr. Labbitt donated his services to the Red Cross and with local nurses tended the sick. Enderlin had 400 cases and 10 deaths, a rate far lower than in many areas. A problem that caused considerable excitement during these war years was the Independent Workers of the World, one of the first radical labor groups, made up of some of the transient workers on whom the farmers depended during shocking and threshing time. Their slogan was “A full day’s pay for a full day’s work,” and to gain their demands they would sometimes strike in the middle of the day when the farmers were desperately trying to get the crop off the fields. Though they were never more than a minor problem here, Henry Boileau recalls a memorable trip from Glenwood, Minnesota, to Enderlin. The freight train of 35 cars stopped at the water tank at Hankinson and he crawled back on the tank. When he got back on the engine a man was holding a gun on Joe Hinton, the engineer, while another man with a gun checked the cars, A ny transient found without his I.W.W. card had to buy one or be put off the train. Their mission completed, they jumped off and sent the train on its way. The Roaring Twenties were marked, on a smaller scale, by the same absurdities that illuminated the national scene. . . the short skirt and shorter “bob,” the Charleston, the bootlegger, bell bottomed pants, the miniature golf craze and the resurgence of the Ku K lux Klan. Enderlin had its own local Klan, the motivation apparently being a fear that the Pope was about to take over the country. Like most such 27 anonymous groups, they also felt competent to guard the community morals as well, and one or two crosses were burned to warn local sinners to repent. When none of their fears were realized, the organization dwindled and eventually disbanded. It is reported that with great practicality the leftover robes were used to make pillow cases. The Twenties saw continued growth and improvement in the community. The Kiwanis Club was organized in June, 1924, with Dr. G. H. Nelson as the first president and that fall they inaugurated the first Corn Show, which Enthusiastic crow ds lined E nderlin’s streets and h ap p ily participated in the first ann ual C o m Sh ow , held in Enderlin in 1924. A rd ath S ch neid er and h e r trained ponies, show n above, w ere a featured a ct of the show . M en in the center o f the pictu re are A rt Ford and H en ry K raft. continues to this day with wider sponsorship and a new name— Enderlin's Harvest Holidays. A t the urging of C. G. Bangert, the businessmen of Enderlin petitioned for resurfacing of five blocks of downtown area. A new C ity Hall was built and a new Masonic Temple added to the appearance of Railway Street. The Otter Tail Power Company purchased the local light plant from the Midwest Power Company, at the same time they purchased the plants at Casselton, Oakes and Lisbon, and built a high line from Oakes to Jamestown, tying Enderlin into their distribution system. In 1928 they built the new brick building which houses the local offices. In spite of the appearance of prosperity, clouds were gathering on the North Dakota horizon, and even before the market crash of 1929, the state was seeing signs of economic trouble. The deflationary policies of the government, following the war, had hit hard at farm income. Many farmers had purchased land and machinery on credit during the flush war years and falling prices made these loans insecure. A s the central banks called for more collateral, country banks began to find themselves in trouble. 28 The impact of these conditions was felt on the Soo Line Railroad in reduced traffic and revenue. The last train men to be hired for several years started work in 1927. In 1931 they were cut off the board and not reinstated until 1937, while the first general hiring of new men did not begin again until 1941. These were the conditions that ushered in the “Dirty Thirties,” when dust storms turned day to night and a day’s threshing was all the cropon a section of land. The light soil areas of Ransom County were hard hit. Red Cross and County funds were used to help the most indigent. In 1932, a Red Cross worker estimated that for $2.47 a fam ily of four could be fed for a month if no luxuries like canned peaches were included in the diet. The county paid 75 per cent of the costs of relief and by December, 1932, its financial situation was critical. As has always been true, Enderlin rolled up its collective sleeves and pitched in. Local efforts provided 50 Christmas baskets for the needy. Community benefits were held to raise funds for local relief. A ll th at rem ained o f th e E nderlin school a fte r a fire gutted the in terior late Satu rd ay night, M arch 4, 1933, w as the som ber shell pictured above. School w as conducted in variou s buildings about tow n w h ile a n ew structure w as being erected. March 4, 1933. was a memorable day in Enderlin. Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated, the banks closed and the school house burned down. Enderlin was more fortunate than many towns for in a few days the banks were opened, making this one of the rare towns that never had a bank failure. What factors have produced this happy state of affairs it is difficult to say. Probably a combination of factors— adequate capital, the railroad pay roll and conservative banking practices— are responsible for the fact t h a t , in the most difficult days, neither the Peoples and Enderlin State Bank nor the Citizens State Bank had a run on deposits. School was held about town in every available place and the board 29 immediately started to rebuild. C. W.A. assistance was used and it furnished employment for many men who sorely needed it, for by this time men with 25 years of rights on the railroad were out of work. A C. W.A. project to provide jobs for unemployed women, or whose husbands were unable to work, was begun. They repaired clothing for the needy at a wage of 30 cents an hour for a 30-hour week. The supervisor, Mrs. Susan Vance, received $11 a week. By May of 1934 the lack of feed was so acute that, despite feed loans, the government had purchased every fifth cow in the county. Those of the best breeding were given to farmers on relief to maintain foundation herds, the usable ones were canned for use in relief programs and the balance made into fertilizer. Seed loans helped to get a crop in, only to see it blow out in another notably poor year. In 1935, a flush of hope was felt, for the crops looked better. Hopes were dashed when Ceres wheat, the predominant variety, proved vulnerable to stem rust and what promised to be a bountiful crop was light and shriveled. With 1936, Nature wound up for the final blow when the thermometer P arad e M arshall of E n derlin ’s G olden Ju b ilee in th e parade both days o f the tw o-d ay celebration. The pass a g iv e n point, w as said to h a v e been one o f th e th e state at th at tim e, other than one in one o f North 30 1941 w as F red Underwood. He led parade, w h ich took 45 m inutes to most pretentious ever presented in D akota’s larger cities. hit 117 degrees on July 4th. People slept on lawns and porches, robins and meadow larks dropped from the heat and farmers suffered heavy losses of young turkeys and chickens. “Bake” Arndt, the local baker and cafe owner tried out the old cliche about frying eggs on the sidewalk and found it only too true. The rest of the Thirties could offer no surprises. We had survived the worst and the following years were marked by improved crops and slow but perceptible economic recovery. In 1941 Enderlin celebrated its Fiftieth Anniversary with a festive two-day celebration. . . parades, a pageant, ball games, carnival. O f the approximately 200 people who worked on that celebration’s committees, 42 are still in the community and 15 are working actively on committees for the Diamond Jubilee. The coming of World War II found the country in a very different mood than in World War I. Someone has called the soldiers of World War I “the dead panned and disillusioned defenders of Democracy,” who, without the patriotic fervor that marked the last war, did the job that had to be done as bravely as any generation before them. The impact on Enderlin was immediate, for Conway Christianson and Howard Carey were at Pearl Harbor, Allen Sly on Bataan and a number of local boys were called up immediately with the National Guard Company stationed at Lisbon— a part of the notable 164th Infantry, who relieved the Marines on Guadalcanal and held the thin line in the Pacific while the country assembled reinforcements. Jobs were no longer a problem; the need was now for more workers. Townspeople were recruited to assist in the harvest after their working day ended in town. Torolf Johansen’s Soo Line roundhouse crew of 32 men shocked 2600 acres for 30 farmers during the 1943 harvest, for the all-time record in the county. L ife on the home front went on as usual, except for the nuisance of stamps for shoes, stamps for sugar, meat, butter and other short-of-supply items. People learned to roll their own cigarettes from Bull Durham or bought cigarette-making machines to produce more professional products. Before the war was over, however, the draft calls had extended to where scarcely a fam ily in the community was without personal involvement in the war. It was during this time that Enderlin inaugurated another “first” by electing Agnes Geelan as mayor— the first women to hold such an office in North Dakota. Elected with her was the first women police magistrate, Ethel Monroe, who was followed by other women, Minnie M aley and Helen Schmidt. With the full backing of the all-male City Council, a series of improvements were begun. A street improvement program resurfaced most of the city streets, and a street maintainor, a sweeper, and a tarvia spreader purchased to maintain them. With another woman— Joyce Lang of The Independent— furnishing good press coverage, a municipal softening and rust removal plant was installed and paid for out of revenue and a new and better franchise worked out with the Otter Tail Power Company, which resulted in a standby plant for the town and improved street lighting. Approval of feminine efforts was evident when, after eight years, Mrs. Geelan was not a candidate, and the men chose Doris Smith, another woman as candidate for the job, while Ransom County sent Agnes Geelan to Bismarck as the first woman member of the State Senate. The story of Enderlin since the end of World War II is the story of efforts to adjust to a new kind of world. The impact of the Agricultural revolution has been great on most small towns of the Middle West. Larger 31 and more efficient machinery demanded larger acreages to purchase and use it efficiently. The cost-price squeeze has slowly but surely eliminated the small farm. In Pontiac Township alone, 12 farms have disappeared since 1950. If this is average for the Enderlin trade area, it means that more than 50 farm families are no longer purchasing food, clothing, and the even more costly items of farm production such as machinery, seed and fertilizer from local businesses. Enderlin has had to adjust as well to the revolution in transportation Diesel engines, larger and longer trains, meant elimination of the large roundhouse crew. A gradual reduction in passenger service culminated, despite all local efforts, in the removal of the last passenger train in 1964. Aware that only those towns that are willing to fight for it deser survival, the Enderlin community has written an excellent record of effort and cooperation in community development. It is difficult to mark an exact date but the organization of the Chamber of Commerce in 1954 was begun with this need in mind. Cooperation of the Chamber, the Kiwanis Club, local business men, citizens, and city government resulted in a number of major improvements: a swimming pool, a golf course, a lagoon sewer system, further improvement in street lighting, an eight-lane bowling alley built by a group of local business men, and a successful drive to secure a new Post Office. In 1960 the city and the Kiwanis Club sponsored Enderlin’s entry into the Community Betterment Program. Dr. A. M. Olson headed the committee for the first entry and Enderlin placed third in communities of its size, winning a cash award. Succeeding chairmen have been Mrs. A. L. Tschida and Wayne Wilson, current chairman. This opened the door to many new developments. The strength of the program in Enderlin has been the total involvement of the community, and it is impossible to attempt to name all of the people who have given time and effort to Community Improvement. A n important development that resulted from this program was the formation of the Enderlin Industrial Development Corporation to promote industry, business and agriculture. First officers were V. F. Hegeholz, president; C. G. Bjerke, vice president; Wayne Wilson, secretary; and Darryl Geeslin, treasurer. First directors were George Miller, Carl Bjerke, M att Kraemer, Francis Archbold, Virgil Hegeholz, Adolph Tschida and A llan Olson. A s a result of their efforts, land was purchased for a possible new residential development. This was annexed by the city, sewer and water installed, three new homes have been built and a corporation of local people have put up the Hillcrest Manor Retirement Home. The Development Corporation purchased sunflower seed for use by local farmers for a new cash crop. Through considerable effort a birdseed plant was established at Anselm, to furnish a better market for sunflowers and millet. A by-product of the sunflower project has been the development of B ill’s Sunflower Seed Candies, now sold widely by the local bakery. Booster Enterprises, started by two local women, Bunny Tschida and Pearl Bjerke, developed a North Dakota Prairie Rose Badge. A Welcome Club established as part of the Community Betterment program by local women, now welcomes newcomers to the town. The drive to establish a Municipal Library was also a part of the community improvement story. A Junior Chamber of Commerce, established in 1963, now adds the efforts of the young people of the community to these various activities. First officers were Norman Anderson, president; Clarence Anderson, first vice 32 president; John Brackin, second vice president; John Thorson, secretary; and Duane Geske, treasurer. The past year has seen the addition of two new businesses— B Plastics, which manufactures a number of plastic items, and the Enderlin Tim ber Company which processes local timber for sale in a number of states. Both brought additional payrolls to the town. The concerted effort put forth by the people of Enderlin and the cooperation of civic groups, city government and Soo Line personnel has had the desired result. The town has gained, rather than lost, population in the last decade. The Enderlin story now pauses; it does not end. The next chapters will be written by others. In skimming briefly through the years we are aware of how many stories are untold, how many names unrecalled. No book within our means could recount all the tales, comic and tragic, or bring to memory in their unique personalities, all the characters who have played a role in this community’s growth. We trust that the reader will fill the gaps with his own memories. T w o early d ay v iew s o f E nderlin and th e M aple R iv er valley, north o f E nderlin. T h e photo ab ove show s an u n kn ow n cou ple lounging alon g the M aple R iv e r w h ile youngsters en jo y a sw im on th e fa r side. T h e pictu re below show s the M aple R iv e r v alle y im m ediately north of H igh w ay 48. 33 From yellowed records, faded photographs and keen minded “old-timers” comes the fascinating story of the “iron horse” and its impact upon, and contribution to, Enderlin and the surrounding territory. The Soo Line was born at a time when the growing city of Minneapolis was locked in bitter rivalry with St. Paul. A ll of the rail outlets to the east were controlled from Chicago or farther east, all to the west from St. Paul. The newly modernized m illing industry was over-expanded and needed access to the wheat fields of the rapidly settling west. A group of Minneapolis millers, bankers and merchants met in Minneapolis in 1883 and decided to build an independent outlet to eastern Canada by way of Sault Ste. Marie, with a feeder line into Dakota. Construction was begun in 1884, by nominally separate companies, as was common practice at that time. The Minneapolis and Pacific was the name chosen f or the subsidiary which built the line into Dakota and in April of 1886 construction westward was started, reaching Boynton in Dickey County that year, while the other companies completed construction to the Sault. As was the usual case, construction costs exceeded estimates and they were forced to float a bond issue of fourteen million dollars. When this still proved inadequate, they appealed to the Canadian Pacific for help. In 1888 the Minneapolis, Sault Ste. Marie and Atlantic, the Minneapolis and Pacific and the Aberdeen, Bismarck and Northwestern formed a single corporation known as the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste.Marie. A new bond issue was floated for twenty-one million to pay off the old loan and complete the line to Portal, N. D., where it connected with the Canadian Pacific Railway, with the CPR guaranteeing the interest. The Canadian Pacific was delighted to help, for they needed a short route from Puget Sound to Minneapolis to meet the fierce competition from Jim Hill’s Great Northern and the Northern Pacific. In return for their help, they got controlling interest in the new road, which they retain to this day, and an iron-clad traffic agreement, routing all east-bound traffic through the Sault. Enderlin became a division point on the new road and grew rapidly, keeping pace with business on this lusty brawling iron highway. Old timers who recall the construction of the road tell of pitched battles between crews of opposing railroads where tracks crossed. Because the first road to reach the crossing had right-of-way and the second was then forced to maintain the crossing, building crews were augmented with all available manpower, and pioneer railroad men recall the battle of “Fort Hankinson,” between the Soo and the Northern Pacific at that town, and the even more violent conflict at Minot. The line reached Enderlin in the fall of 1891 and the first roundhouse facilities constructed consisted of a four-stall engine house, sand house, fueling station for wood and coal and the “cinder pit,” where fires were cleaned out as the engines came in. In 1897 four stalls were added, four more in 1903 and twelve in 1907. Eventually, facilities included a locomotive overhaul shop and car repair shop where entire engines were torn down and overhauled from boiler to whistle. B y World War I, more than 200 men were employed in the Enderlin shops and 30 or more crews worked on the freights and three regular passenger runs out of Enderlin. Enderlin water was so hard that the road built a water tank at Anselm into which water was pumped from the river and engines filled there arriving and leaving Enderlin until a large treating plant was built in 1913. The Soo Line would recommend to all enginemen coming to work out of Enderlin that they take a “student trip” or ride with another engineer to learn how to handle Enderlin water which foamed so badly in the engines that boiler 34 O ne of the last steam locom otives to be retired from Soo Line service w as Engine No. 2425, a sw itch engine used in the E nderlin yards. Engine 2425 now leads a leisu rely existence on d isplay in B a x te r p a rk in Enderlin. T h e locom otive w as giv en to the city fo r d isplay purposes. A m on g th e first Soo L in e locom otives to be used in this area w as Engine No. 2, piloted b y Engineer D an W illard, pictured in the w indow . W illard later becam e president of the B altim ore and O hio R ailroad. O thers on the pictu re are unidentified. 35 Th e above photo shows a group of E nderlin enginem en w h o w ork ed out of E nderlin in 1905. In the front is T . (Tassw ell) Sm ith; second row , left to right, M ort H utchinson. E. W . K y le , B ill Cole; back row, A n d y Sundall, C ly d e H untzicker, John Bolstad and A n d y Craw ford. CO 36 compound had to be added with the water to keep it under control. It was said that you weren’t an engineer until you had worked out of Enderlin. Tom Baribeau, who started his Soo Line career as callboy in 1902, recalls the roundhouse crew of that time: Charley Robarge and a helper in the boiler house, Foreman Jack Taylor, Pete Sundby and a helper as machinists: Ed Welsh and Andy Anderson, boilermakers; Charley Robarge (in addition to his other duties) B ill Lindemann and a man named Kane, boiler washers; and two T h e w re ck of 1906, said to be the w orst to occu r in the Enderlin vicin ity, le ft eigh t dead and in ju red 35. T h e passenger car pictu red at the le ft in the above photo w as n early sliced in h alf in th e m ishap. engine wipers. A t the peak of a c tiv ity in later years, the facilities could handle four or five engines at a time. A fter the coming of the diesel, the roundhouse crew dwindled, the water tank, coal shed and treating plant all disappeared. Those who watched the steam locomotive go— men, management and the public— did so with regret. Breathing fire, belching smoke, and hissing steam, it was a picture that thrilled young and old. The diesel electric, though more efficient, w ill never possess the appeal of the old steam locomotive. A t first, locomotives were small and so were the cars they hauled, but the creed of the men who operated the railroad was power— to move tonnage faster, better and cheaper. This creed created progress, from the little diamond-stacked “Rhode Island” wood burners on the first trains to the huge “4000’s,” on to the highly-efficient power unit of today, the Diesel-electric. The first diesel locomotive which came through Enderlin consisted of two units of 1500 horsepower each. Present Soo fast freights are powered by the latest units, of 2500 horsepower each. Up to the time that the 16-hour-of-service law went into effect in 1916, for engine service and train service employees, they could be held on duty for any length of time, between any terminals, and were frequently away from home for weeks, especially during the winters. “Old timers” recall the 37 1910 wages for a month’s work on the way freight between Harvey or Glenwood was $60 for conductors or engineers, and they would put in 16 hours going between these points. Passenger crews going to Portal were required to make 10 trips per month, for which the pay was about $58 per month and they paid their own expenses. Regular engineers were assigned their own engines and took great pride in keeping them looking their best. Cabooses were “home away from home” for the train crews. The era of the “Boomers” or drifting railroad workers of all crafts, especially brakemen, switchmen, operators and dispatchers was from 1906 to 1915, with the heaviest turnover coming in 1906-07-08-09. These men were frequently “artists” in their trade; would work long enough to get enough money together to move one, when they would leave for another railroad or part of the country, or until they were fired and had to leave for a rule’s violation. In the early 1900’s, during the severe winters, it was not uncommon for trains to become snowbound and be out of reach for two or three days. M any times, they would have to help themselves by getting provisions from farmhouses along the line until help could get to them. Snowplow trains carried 40 to 50 shovellers, usually sectionmen or local employees who could be hired and would open the line after the shovellers had dug out the engine and plow for another run at the drifts after they had tried to “ buck through” it. This resulted in a song sung to the tune of "Wait ’til the Sun Shines N elly, ” by traveling salesmen, or sample peddlers, during the especially severe winter of 1905-1906. “Wait ’til the Soo Line’s open, and the trains go rushing by, “We will be happy, chappy, you and I. Up and down the line we’ll wander, “Peddlers, you and I. Wait ’til the Soo Line’s open, bye and bye. ” In the present, powerful, radio-equipped plows and engines keep the lines clear of snow so there w ill be no interruption of service. The original depot at Enderlin, located very near the present one, was destroyed by fire in early 1905. Construction of the present depot was completed in July of that same year. The need for a good eating house, close to the depot, to handle the increasing volume of passengers, saw the “Beanery” come into being in August 1911. The Lasley Company took over the running of it for the Soo Line and Gene Reed, who was then working at the hotel, became its first manager. The establishment was later to sold to Mr. Reed who in turn ran a high class cafe for the railroad trade and townspeople alike for many years until his retirement. A t that time, the beanery reverted back to the Soo Line and Addison M iller Company handled it for them until declining passenger business made it impractical to keep it in operation and the building was put to other uses. The Lasley Company issued books of scrip, or coupons, in $5 size, which could be obtained by signing up for them to be deducted from your next check. A favorite practice of “Boomers” or those who needed cash was to sell their “Bean Books” to tide them over until the next pay day. Railroading was an exciting way of life, but also a dangerous one. There were few safety rules or devices and the early papers record frequent injuries to men working on the division. The most notable wreck which occurred on the division took place just outside of Enderlin on a stormy, foggy night, Decem ber 23, 1906. Engineer Ginther and Fireman Collier failed to see the flagm an in the gloom and the passenger train plowed into the switch engine just outside of the yards. Eight people were killed and 35 injured. The hotel and bank were turned into emergency wards to care for the injured. 38 Among its other facilities, Enderlin had a large stock yard and in the peak years used to unload 150 cars of cattle here on Saturday for feed and rest. In 1936, when there was no water in the Sheyenne river except for potholes, the Soo Line ran solid trains of stock and was often unable to get feed and water for them. Government inspectors gave stock away to anyone who would take them so they would not have to be shot because they were too weak to ship further. The railroad unions played a large role in the life of the community, with eight organizations active at one period. The first to be organized in Enderlin was Division 671 of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, organized in February, 1905. Other groups were the Order of Railway Conductors, Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen (later merged with the engineers) the Machinists, Boilermakers, Carmen, Maintenance of Way, and it may be possible that in the early days there were other craft unions. With the removal of the shops, many of these are no longer active locally. In spite of the large number of labor organizations, Enderlin has had only one strike of any great duration. This occurred in 1922, when all of the roundhouse crews went out for higher wages. Since the strikers could not touch men on railroad property, the men hired to replace the strikers were safe as long as they were in the shops or on the right of way. Some stayed in the roundhouse and had their fam ilies bring food to them. One man had his wife escort him to the tracks and he walked to work down the tracks. A t night she met him again and escorted him home. Rocks were thrown through windows of homes and some families kept loaded guns at hand at night. The strike lasted for four months and none of the leaders were ever re-hired. An aftermath of bitterness took several years to dispell. In addition to their role as representatives of the workers , the Brotherhoods played a social role in the early days. Their annual balls were complete in ever detail of decoration and formal wear was required. For the most important affairs Malchow’s orchestra was imported from Minneapolis. The division superintendent was a man of great importance in the early days of railroading, and the greatest visible evidence locally was Car 51. Originally built for the president of the road, it was used by the superintendent for his travels, for entertaining visiting officials and dignitaries, and for his personal entertaining. Complete with fine linen, china and glassware, and a private chef, the cuisine was exceptional. George Yoshi, a Japanese chef, who worked for Superintendent Baxter, was often hired by local women when he was in town, to cater parties for them. A fter Mr. Baxter’s death, George Jankowski acted as chef for the next five men who held the position: Corbett, Mann, Sparks, Branley and Cross. The coming of the motor rail car, with greater mobility, spelled the end of the plush era and Car 51 was retired in April, 1939. During the years following World War I, a great number of passenger trains, including extras, or tourist trains, ran through Enderlin. The passengers got off to eat during the crew change and a good share of the local populace made it a practice to meet the specials and get a glimpse of the great and near-great who passed through, including the K in g of Siam, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor and Bing Crosby. Am ong the long time Soo Line employees still living in Enderlin are Tom Baribeau, “Sm iley” Congdon, Fred Deike, “Frenchy” Baribeau, Otto Reick, Earl Olmstead, Fred Maley, A l Fuller, Henry Boileau, Louis Larson and B illy Metro. 39 The present official personnel includes Superintendent J. A. Welton, Trainmaster Walt Knutson, Chief Dispatcher C. D. Brazel, Chief Clerk C. C. Rust, A gent Wayne Wilson, Division Engineer G. A. Nilsen, Mechanical Foreman F. F. Conklin, Locomotive and Car Foreman W. I. Pearthree. In A pril of 1946, construction was completed on the brick office building which now houses the Superintendent’s general office, the dispatcher’s office, and telegraph office. Up to this time they had been quartered upstairs in the depot building. The space released was used to bring Division offices for the engineering department of the railroad to Enderlin, and add to the convenience and efficiency of handling the division. With the perfection of the modern motor car and truck, many changes have come to the Soo Line. Passenger service has been discontinued on the Western Division, as well as in many other places throughout the nation, because of lack of patronage and loss of revenue to the particular railroad, brought about by the flexibility of the fam ily car. The last run of the Minneapolis to Enderlin locals, Numbers 5 and 6, was made M ay 2, 1959. Trains 13 and 14, through passenger trains at that time, took over the local work, until these trains were also discontinued December 8 and 9, 1963. Over the years, the Soo Line has proven a faithful transportation agency in the country it opened for settlement and the towns that were established along its lines of railroad. When the territory was new, the railroad was the major developer of the areas it served, running special emigrant trains with low rates and doing everything possible to encourage people to settle and build up the country. In addition, it added immeasurably to the general T h is Soo L in e crew , pictured in 1905, show s one o f th e early steam locom otives used in this area. Pictu red are B rakem an C lark , Conductor “ H am ” Sm ith, B rakem an “ Ollie ” Croonquist, F irem an “ Ju m bo” G riffin and Engineer John Sanvold. 40 growth and prosperity of the entire Northwest. Second and third generation Soo Liners will set the pace with the most modern equipment and methods, including train-to-train, and train-to-station radio for faster and more efficient operation, and better service to the shipping public. It is impossible, due to lack of space in this book, to pay homage to the hundreds of men and women of the Soo Line in Enderlin who have, over the years, added to the betterment of the city and the railroad. They will be enshrined in the hearts and minds of all of us and will be remembered, as each generation makes its contribution, then steps aside for the next to take over. G eorge Jan kow ski, one o f the last Soo L ine chefs to retire, is p ictu red at right w ith C ar 51 in the background. T h e car w as used b y the local superintendent for en tertain in g visitin g officials and dignitaries. Jan kow ski, a long-tim e E n derlin resident, w as ch ef for fiv e superintendents— Corbett, Mann, B ra n le y , S parks and Cross. N early unnoticed, railroad m en in th e perform an ce of th eir routine w o rk ren d er support essen tially necessary to im portant v ita l functions. Thus, cooperation in W orld W ar II betw een Canada and the h avin g United S tates w as prom oted by the Dionne quints christen fiv e freig h ters in D u lu th in M ay 1943. T he cook on this car, and ch ief chef fo r the special quint train and entourage travellin g b y Soo L in e R ailw ay, w as G eorge Jan kow ski. T h is round house crew held a record fo r shocking grain durin g W orld W ar II. In th e front row , left to right, are D ick Portiss, Gene Dehn, W alt F ritz, Otto R eick, B illy Metro. B a ck, H erschel Dillon, P ete N ygaard , Ed Jerdee, Red Neros, Ed Bearm an, John Johanneson, R obert Janz, T o rolf Johansen. 41 A v ie w o f B a x te r P a rk w h en it w as used as a skatin g rin k about 1920. T h is v ie w o f B a x te r P a rk , taken about 1930, show s h ow the id le area w as beautified. Am ong the more pleasant features of m odem Enderlin are the tree-lined streets and beautiful parks. This was not always true, for the Maple River valley at Enderlin was not naturally forested. The first trees w e r e native trees, dug along the Sheyenne River, with which the early residents tried to beautify their streets and yards. Early newspapers mention a Park Board, but the first records of the board have been lost or mislaid. In 1908 mention is made in city records of the need for land for a park. present Patrick which were campaign to Pierce available Park. In 1909, Ed Pierce donated the land for the About 1911, the to anyone who would city plant fathers them, in purchased trees, an Arbor Day beautify the city. The real genesis of the Enderlin park system came in 1925, when George Flynn, a Soo Line dispatcher by vocation and a gardener and landscaper by avocation, was elected to the Park Board. He planned the planting, gave of his time and effort for many years, and furnished many of the flowers and shrubs now growing there, out of his own funds. Through the cooperation of Superintendent Baxter, the city obtained a lease on the property now known as Baxter Park and this, too, became a beauty spot. Over the years, many people have given generously of time and effort to the park system, but one more individual should be mentioned for the contribution he has made. He is Earl Sanness, who has served for 27 years on the Park Board and donated uncounted hours of labor to maintaining the park system. The city has also an undeveloped tract on the water tower hill, which was donated to the city by Albert Kaber and is used largely for sports and recreational purposes. B a x te r P a rk , freq u en tly called Soo L in e P ark , is a liv in g m onum ent to the untold nu m b er o f e a rly d ay residents w h o con verted a w aste block into a th in g of beauty. T h e park p ro vid es a q u iet setting for ann ual M em orial D a y program s, and fo r sum m ertim e concerts. 43 P a tric k P ie rc e P a rk , located on the northeast edge of Enderlin, along H ighw ay 46, o ffers am ple picnic space in a serene atm osphere. M any fam ily, church and social functions are staged here d urin g th e sum m er m onths. A special feature of P a tric k P ierce P a rk is th e m onum ent seen at the le ft in the photograph above. The m onum ent contains a list of E nderlin servicem en w ho served durin g W orld W ar I. 44 The success of its Junior Legion and Independent baseball teams has made Enderlin widely known throughout the state as a baseball town, but the national pastime was Enderlin’s favorite sport long before these teams appeared on the scene. The main requisite for a ball team is that the town must have at least one genuine baseball “nut” and over the years they have appeared on the scene periodically. Apparently the first on record was W alter Loomis, player-manager for many early day teams. The first recorded baseball tournament in Enderlin was played on the lots where Helena Westphal’s house and the Buckthorn apartments now stand, June 18 and 19, 1837, with Enderlin defeating Valley C ity 13 to 8. A n early picture, probably about 1902, shows a local crowd proudly displaying a banner proclaiming “We haven’t lost a game this year. ” One early ball player destined to prove an inspiration to local youngsters was Johnny “C y ” Pieh, son of a local butcher. A t one time, when Enderlin had a celebration scheduled, C y pitched three games in one day. A fter leaving Enderlin, he pitched with a minor league in Canada, and in the Illinois-Ohio league for the Dayton “Vets, ” before being signed in 1912 by the New Y ork Yankees. Playing for four and a half years with the Yankees, he holds a rather nerve-shattering world record. In a game played at Detroit, he passed seventeen men and still won the game 5 to 2. Depending on their generation, at least some of these names will sound fam iliar to baseball fans: Shaw, Strand, Gullickson, Harper, Olmstead, Keene, Brazel, Tripp, Nygaard, Swap, Oeder, Wilkins— there are many more that can be added by the old timers. The real success story started with the Junior Legion program and “Doc” Hendrickson, long-time local doctor, whose dedication, time and money all helped to build the program in Enderlin. Perry Sandell, former Junior Legion and school coach recalls those days and the good doctor thus: “I believe the first year of any kind of organized team was in 1928. Doc picked up a few lopsided baseballs, some cracked bats and we actually played a few games. Dungarees were the uniforms of the day. “The following year, money was raised to buy some uniforms. I can recall the day the uniforms arrived— was it from Sears Roebuck, or some other such reputable sporting goods outfit? A ll the boys came up to the waiting room adjoining Doc’s office and the suspense was horrifying. There were only twelve suits. Who wouldn’t be getting one? Believe it or not, I think the uniforms improved the skills of quite a number of those players. “I can also recall quite vividly the washing instructions the boys got for the uniforms. Even though most of the suits were on the large side, we couldn’t have them shrink because they had to be worn next year too. “Well, as you know, as support for the team grew, better equipment came too. The kids got bigger, better and tougher. When someone broke a bat, we could afford a whole roll of friction tape for the handle. Doc became quite proficient at driving small nails and putting screws in the handle without cracking the wood, which was quite a trick. “A s the teams grew better, it also became more expedient for young married females to plan their fam ilies so that no birth would occur on a Sunday afternoon from M ay 20th to Sept 1. I suspect if the “pill” had been available, every budding female would have been prescribed in advance. “One of the most difficult decisions Doc had to make a couple of times each week during the summer was whether managing a ball team or practicing medicine was more important. He had to see about getting change, ticket sellers, putting up posters, dragging the ball diamond, putting in the baselines and a hundred other things. He didn’t have to do those things but, by gosh, he 45 knew it wouldn’t be done unless it had his personal attention. Too bad there was no television back then— “I’d rather do it myself.” “I will never know where Doc got this almost maniacal interest in baseball. He got a lot of satisfaction out of seeing kids perform well. Perhaps it was because he was never much of an athlete himself; I suppose one can get satisfaction vicariously. Also, I think it took his mind off of the worries over his patients. When Doc was sitting in the dugout, nothing could get his mind off of the game— Oh, yes, just one thing— a foul ball hit over the weeds. “I do know that literally hundreds of kids from Enderlin and the vicinity owe a great deal to the opportunities Doc made available to them. A t the same time, I think that he would have been the first to admit that baseball and the boys playing it made it possible for him to go on year after year in what would otherwise have been a pretty drab life. ” The first fruit of the program came in 1930 when Enderlin defeated M cClusky 18-8 in a game called after five innings to win the state Junior Legion title. They went on to take the regional title at Sioux Falls, defeating Neenah, One of E n derlin ’s early baseball team s. From le ft to right th ey are, b ack row , Lauren z Lindem ann, unkn ow n , O scar Severson, Coach (? ), P au l S ew ry, H arry Lindem ann, Glen E n gle and T . O. S w eetland, School Superintendent; front row, W ayn e Underwood, H ow ard Pow ers, Carl A ustad, Sw ap (? ), Rudolph Lindem ann and H arry Roberts. M ascot is thought to be Ju n ie B a xte r. Wis. and Minneapolis. Elroy Hendrickson, Enderlin’s “iron man” pitcher, Fritz Petrich and Hollis Johanneson were named to the All-Tournament team. A t Colorado Springs, in the western Divisional tournament, they defeated favored Denver, 5-3 before finally bowing to Long Beach, California, when the strain of the long campaign and lack of bench strength finally caught up with them. In 1931 they were defeated by Cooperstown in the state finals. 1932 46 In 1924 these m en represented Enderlin on the baseball diam ond. From le ft to right th ey are, b ack row, C. D. B razel, coach and pitcher, R ich ard Portiss, K en n eth Leidall, P e te r N ygaard, Don Siegel; second row , H ow ard Sw app, E ddie Siegel, W illis W iper, B ert Tripp, M an ager Ole N ygaard, and G len Siegel. M ascots seated in front are Harold Sly, left, and P ete M oeller. saw them defeat Cooperstown in a spectacular fourteen-inning game, with a slight scared, thirteen-year old pitcher called in to hold the opposition off in the last of the inning, when the other pitchers were exhausted. His name was Kay Henkel and he managed to do it. It was something of anti-climax to lose the title they had won on a protest concerning the eligibility of an Enderlin player. Throughout the entire decade, Enderlin was to be in the thick of the fight for the state crown. In 1940, Enderlin won the second of its state titles by defeating Grand Forks, who had held the title for four years, 5-4. The regional meet was at York, Nebraska and Enderlin was very much the under-dog to the highly favored Lincoln, Nebraska entry; so much so, that the committee in charge had ordered the trophy engraved for Lincoln. To their embarrassment Enderlin defeated the Nebraska team in a brilliantly played game, winning 4-3. T hey went on to the Western Division tournament at Trenton, Missouri, where they were defeated by San Diego. The trophy they had won at York was not forthcoming. Some years later, A. L. Tschida happened to meet a representative of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce at a meeting. In the course of the conversation, the gentleman mentioned that he had been active in Legion Baseball when Enderlin played at York. When he heard the story of the lost trophy, he went into action and the result was the final presentation to members of that 1940 team still in Enderlin about 15 years late. 4-3. 1941 saw Enderlin win its third state title, defeating Fargo in the finals Once again they went to York, Nebraska, only to lose to Pierre, S. D., in a twelve inning, 2-1 game. The Junior Legion program was firm ly established, with summer play for the different age groups providing a pool of playing talent. When the North Dakota High School League was established in 1950, Enderlin became the first team to win the state High School title, when a one-hit pitching job was turned in by Harley Kaspari to defeat Arthur in the finals 12-3. Dr. Hendrickson died in 1948 but another baseball enthusiast was waiting in the wings, ready to utilize the reserves of local talent available. He was the late Pete Redmond, first manager of the Enderlin Indies, who were destined to become the first team to win three state titles. With the support of local fans and businessmen, the grandstands were rebuilt, lighting installed and the newly renovated field dedicated to the memory of Dr. Hendrickson on A ugust 4th, 1949. Though the Indies won the League title in their first season, they had to wait until 1952 for their first state championship. That year they defeated Abercrombie, 10-0, playing errorless ball behind the pitching of Ralph Graalum. John Janz was named the tournament’s Most Valuable Player. They repeated in 1953, defeating G ilby 5-1 in the finals. Jonnard Utke received the Most Valuable Player award that year. In 1954, dissension arose in the ranks of the N D A A B L and two separate tournaments were held, Enderlin losing in the state finals of their tournament to Mandan. The breach was healed in 1955 and the Indies swept the tournament for a precedent-breaking third title. The final game with M cVille, won by a score of 5-2, with Owen W allace pitching, was almost anti-climatic, for in an earlier game against Tuttle, John Janz had turned in a perfect no-hit game, with not a single opposing runner reaching first base. Jonnard Utke was named Most Valuable Player for the second year and when, for the first time, an all- 48 tournament team was named, three Enderlin players were chosen: John Janz, Jonnard Utke and Dan Kittelson. Baseball has not been the only sport played in Enderlin— it just seems that way. Back in 1906, the first football team took the field garbed in makeshift uniforms and home made helmets. Three years later the group had attained enough skill to reach the state championship game against Minot, losing, it is true, but making a creditable performance. Local teams are still turning in good records with Enderlin claiming the title, or a piece of it. E nderlin’s first foo tb all team is pictu red above, follow in g a gam e at Lisbon. In the front row a re Tom Dole, P h illip A k re , H erb N ohr, E a rl Sanness, M erlin Engle, K n u te G u llickson and Hom er Sandberg. B ackfield m en w e re Ed H arper, F red Harper, Red L o n g ley and John L u k e r. T h e boys in th e backgroun d are R alph M unt and H en ry A m eson . N ote hand-sew n helm ets w orn b y the squad. Though the town has never had a state basketball title, Enderlin has had several entries in the state tournament. The Enderlin “Red Devils, ” however, under the management of Carl Newgard, were runners-up to Cando for the 1929 state independent title, and champions in 1930. Players of that era were: Eddie Siegel, Burt Hutchinson, Ray Siegel, Lloyd O ’Neill, Eddy Jerdee, Roy Oeder and Bernard Skow. Enderlin has even had a state championship bowling team, with the C ity Bakery team of Norma Golkowski, Mertice Johanneson, Edna Keene, Jerry Sorenson and Mae Berglund winning the state women’s crown in 1959 while Norma Golkowski was the B PA Women’s Singles winner in 1964. No chronicle of Enderlin sports would be complete without mention of J. C. Harper, local merchant, who made his mark in his youth as a track star. Never content to rest on his laurels, he kept up his walking and sprinting over the years and in 1924 set a world record time for the 100-yard dash for men over 50. His time was 12.1 at the age of 69 years, which feat was to draw national publicity, including mention in Bob R ipley’s “Believe It or Not.” The course was laid out on Highway 46, then a dirt road, with Thomas Pierce, Clifford Danielson and Mayor Harper, his son, as official judges. Frank Pierce was starter, A. B. Overstreet and P. M. Peterson, timekeepers, Lauritson the official photographer and M cGilvery, press representative. A long-time tradition in the town is the Mother’s Day Smorgasbord, by which The American Legion and Auxiliary partially finance the baseball program in Enderlin. Another baseball enthusiast has appeared on the scene, in the person of V. F. Hegeholz, current manager and booster of the Indies. 49 Enderlin Church Histories A potent force in the growth of any community is its churches. It is fitting that we recognize that their history is an important part of the community story. It was perhaps prophetic that the first group to hold religious services in the city was called the Enderlin Christian Association, for to a marked degree, Enderlin has been free of any bitter denominational rivalries and the ministry of its churches has been marked by tolerance and cordiality. The following are the histories of the various local congregations as submitted. T R IN IT Y LU TH E R A N CH URCH The Trinity congregation was the first church to be established by mission pastors of the Iowa Synod in what is now North Dakota. Pastor Fredrich Holter organized the congregation in 1884, with eighteen families as charter members: Albert Fraedrich, Wm. Fraedrich Sr., Wm. Fraedrich Jr., Theodore Petrich, A ugust Schroeder, August Westphal, Adolph Walter, Herman Bohm, Ferdinand Lindemann, August Neuman, Wm. Froemke, Herman Froemke, M ichael Schmidtke, Carl Kaatz, A ugust Buss, Jacob Schmidtke, Carl Krueger and Ferdinand Oehlke. The Congregation was organized in two sections, North and South, each with its own officers. A parsonage was purchased in Sheldon and both sections of the church used rural schools and other meeting places for worship in the early years. Pastor Holter rode or walked from farm to farm, holding services in various places to build the membership. He also rode horseback to Watson to serve that parish from time to time until ill health forced him to resign after six years in North Dakota. For almost two years there was no regular pastor although Pastor Andreas Biemueller came from Davenport to hold services when possible. Pastor E. M elchert was called in 1891 and served until 1894, when ill health caused his resignation also. In 1895, Pastor H. Dieter took over the leadership of the congregation. With the coming of the new town of Enderlin, Trinity North was rapidly growing in membership and began to feel capable of building and maintaining a church. Land was purchased from Carl Lindemann for a cemetery and church site and the building was dedicated in 1895. A t this time the two groups became separate congregations, selling the parsonage in Sheldon and dividing the money. Trinity South built a two story parish building with space on the first floor for worship and the second floor providing quarters for the pastor. In 1900, Trinity North built a parsonage beside the church. The south congregation then sold their building and in 1905 built the present Anselm church. Pastor Dieter resigned in 1901, but not before he had laid the foundation for another congregation at Lucca. He was replaced by Pastor Henry Elster, who organized the Immanuel Lutheran church at Lucca in the same year. In 1905 they built their own church in Lucca. He later organized the St. Luke’s congregation in Enderlin, which purchased the old Presbyterian church for its use. For a few years during the time Pastor Elster served as district president the load of work became too heavy and the Lucca and Anselm churches formed a separate parish and called a pastor of. their own. Pastors C. Haferman, Donald 50 M eyer and Walter Hummel served them until 1938, when the four churches once again became the Trinity parish. There are a number of interesting features in the history of Trinity. In the 82 years since its founding, only five pastors have served the main congregation and it has had an influence, out of proportion to its size, in the American Lutheran Church in the Dakotas. In a sense, the history of the congregation is the history of two men, Pastor Elster who headed it for 37 years and Pastor Schaible, now in his 28th year. Both able men, though of very different personality, they provided strong leadership at home and service outside of the parish at a conference and district level. Pastor Elster served as president of the old Dakota District, comprising North and South Dakota and eastern Montana, for several years. During his tenure, the Red River V alley conference of the Luther League was organized under the sponsorship of the Trinity and Arthur congregations. Pastor Schaible served as vice-president of both the old Dakota District of the A L C , and of the Eastern Dakota district of the new American Lutheran Church. His particular interest has been working with youth. He served as District Youth Chairman of the former A L C , managed its Leadership Training program for five years, served on the Concordia College board, the Home Mission Board, and did survey work toward establishing mission congregations in the Rapid C ity air base area. His interest and influence in turn helped produce leadership among the young people of his parish. Together with the Leonard church, the Trinity Luther League organized the Red River Bible Camp which operated from 1939 until after the merger. Pastor Schaible served on the board for several years and Elmer Utke managed the camp for three years, while Arlen Bunn managed it for four. Four young people of the parish have served as Dakota District Luther League presidents: Elmer Utke, Arlen Bunn, Jean Hill and Emilie Trapp. Five have acted as Red River Conference president: Elmer Utke, Arlen Bunn, Emilie Trapp, John Trapp and Helen Geske. Mrs. Martin Utke also served as Conference president for the WMF, and the congregation takes pride in two sons of the parish in the ministry of the American Lutheran Church; Rev. August Geske and Rev. Wayne Bunn. Also interesting is the fact that the Trinity parish was one of the first to sense the changing nature of the agricultural scene. In 1946, Trinity North, or the Pontiac congregation, as it was known, St. L uke’s and Lucca voted to merge into a single congregation and build a new church on the property owned by St. Luke’s in Enderlin. The merger and building was accomplished smoothly and successfully and the new church dedicated in 1949. First officers of the merged congregation were: Pres., Fred Oehlke, Vice-Pres., Otto Trapp, Sec., Herbert Lindemann, Treas., Edwin Fernow, and board members, August Geske, M artin Utke and W alter Janz. The entire indebtedness of about $175,000 for church and furnishings was retired in 1960. The steady growth of the congregation soon strained the parish education facilities of the church and in 1964 work was started on an education unit. The new addition was dedicated in 1965, adding 16 new class rooms, council room, office space, lounge and kitchenette. The old partnership between Trinity North and South still continues. Trinity at Anselm, with a baptized membership of 128 and a confirmed membership of 102 maintains it’s own church, served by Pastor Schaible, while activities such as confirmation are carried on jointly. With a present membership of 886 baptized and 603 confirmed members, and modern and complete facilities, the present congregation seems far removed from the days when the struggling congregation asked its few members to pay 51 $2 a family, or two sacks of oats and a half ton of hay, to meet the deficit in the pastor’s salary. Yet, the prospering modern congregation w ill be hard put to equal the faith and devotion of those pioneers who nursed it through its infant days in the newly settled state of North Dakota. E V A N G E L IC A L L U TH E R A N PA R ISH Some Norwegian families settled along the Maple River near what is Enderlin in the year 1878. The Rev. Forde of the Norwegian Synod came out from Moorhead and gave them as much service as his time would permit. Later Rev. Bale of Kindred took up this work. The Maple River Congregation was organized on the 8th of October, 1879 with a membership of 28 souls. This name was changed to the St. Olaf Lutheran Church in 1882. Rev. Bale evidently organized this congregation, and served until 1882, when a resident pastor was applied for, and Rev. G. A. Larson accepted the Call in 1883. In this early period of the settlement, the services were conducted in the homes of the homesteaders. Before long, school houses were built and offered better facilities for worship services. The people were glad to have the Word of God proclaimed and the Sacraments administered by a servant of God. Rev. Larson served the parish until 1887, The congregation decided in 1899 to join the newly formed Synod known as the United Lutheran Church. During the year of 1895 the congregation took first steps toward the building of a church. Two locations were proposed— cne in the town of Enderlin and the other in the country. A fter a number of meetings, it was finally decided to build two churches. The congregation was divided November 30, 1898. During this year both churches were built, and were known as East St. Olaf Lutheran Church and West St. Olaf Lutheran Church. The St. Olaf Lutheran Ladies A id was organized in 1885, with five members; they paid 50 ¢ dues at the beginning of each year, and 10 ¢ at each meeting. In 1898 the Aid was made into two groups, the Eastern and the Western districts. The organization meeting of East St. Olaf Lutheran congregation was held January 12, 1899. The church building was occupied in 1899. A parochial school was established for the summer months, and the Ladies Aid and the Girls Aid gave much financial help to the congregation. A Church bell was acquired in 1903, and the Young People’s League gave the chandelier to the church the same year. This is the church now known as First Lutheran. The Rev. J. H. Jahren served from 1887 to 1906, when the Rev. T. K. Gaustad accepted the Call. Soon after his arrival, the church was dedicated. A t the annual meeting it was decided to take an offering at each service. In 1907 electric lights were installed in the church and in 1909 the Board of Deacons was established. Pastor Gaustad left in 1908. When the Rev. C. B. Runsvold (1918-1924) came, First Lutheran and West St. Olaf congregations took action to provide a parsonage. This was accomplished in 1919, and the present parsonage was built. The services were now conducted in English, and Sunday School attendance increased. The congregation and the auxiliaries, particularly the Young Peoples Luther League, joined in financing a new basement for the church. The Rev. O. J. Lutness accepted the Call in 1924. Fillmore Church which had been independent, joined the parish in 1927. In 1931 E. St. O laf congregation changed its name to First Lutheran, and in 1938 the constitution was changed to provide that women could become voting members. A building 52 committee was formed which began a drive for funds along with auxiliaries. Pastor Lutness served until 1949, having served 25 years. Upon retirement, he continued to live in Enderlin until his death. Pastor A. L. Selid came in 1949, serving until 1956. In 1951, it was decided to remodel and enlarge the church building, adding Sunday School rooms, etc. This was completed in 1952 and dedicated in 1953. The new building has enlarged seating capacity, good kitchen and dining room space, adequate Sunday School rooms, and is a beautiful House of Worship. Pastor Joel Pederson served the parish from 1956 to the summer of 1958, then the present pastor, C. A. Tollefson, was installed. In the winter of 1958, a new M oller Pipe Organ was installed and used for the first time for the Christmas service. The W. St. Olaf congregation used their church building for the first time on Christmas Day in 1898, A bell was secured in 1902, and altar and pulpit in 1904. The cemetery across the road from the church is still in use. There no longer is an active Sunday School nor Luther League. The Ladies Aid, now known as the American Lutheran Church Women, is very active, and the men participate in the Parish Brotherhood, now American Lutheran Church Men, along with First and Fillmore men. Looking back over the church histories, we find the names of many pioneers whose descendants are still members of the parish. Earliest names mentioned were Thor Mostul, G. Nystul, and Eilef Nordhagen. When Pastor Larson came in 1883, he and his wife were given living quarters in the home of Peter Austad at what is now known as the “Center Farm ” since there was neither church nor parsonage. One of the first children baptized was Edward Gullickson, son of Ever and Agnes; other early baptisms were Severt Bennie Gullickson, Lars Oscar Frohling, and John Oscar Austad, son of Peter Austad. The first child to be baptized in the second year, 1884, was Bernhard Trangsrud. Henry Julius Shelver, (Dr. Shelver of Ortonville) was christened the same year. Henry Hanson gave a parcel of ground to be used for the church, and his brother, Sten, gave a plot of land nearby for a cemetery. The Bible says a little child shall lead them. By a coincidence the first funerals mentioned were of children, Henrietta Ogidia Dole or Doeley, and the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Am eson. Later we hear the names of Erik Gunderson, Eberhard Fausett, Ole Christianson, O le Smedstad, Hans Olson, John Strand, Lars Lokken, Ole Pederson, Nils Anderson, Ole Moo and Jens Wold. Some early congregation records were lost, so not too much authentic infor mation was available from this time. Martha Am eson, now Mrs. Bjork, and Clara Nord, (Mrs. Edgar Henderson) were christened about the same time. Jacob Shelver and Nels Shelver and Andrew Austad were on early committees. James Wold, N. H. Johnson, S. E. Loney, M artin Austad, P. P. Burtness, Steen Hanson and Ole Wold were present when E. St. Olaf was organized along with others. H. Rustad and Ever Gullickson and Nils Fosse were on the building fund committee. O. O. Golberg (a relative of the present pastor, C. A. Tollefson) was on an early committee. A lfred Aasheim, Chris Wold and John Austad were on an early committee to plan a special festival. Hans Halvorson and Charles Urrhammer were on an early call committee, besides others already mentioned. Later officers of the church which is now First, are listed as W. T. Johnson, Oscar Sundby, George Newgard, Nels Erie, Fred Maley, Peter Sundby, T. S. Bjork, A. N. Hofland, M. J. Danielson, E. R. Gullickson, Roy Rasmussen, C. A. Pederson, Arthur Graalum, Henry Severson. A t the time of the dedication of the newly remodeled building in 1953, officers and committee members were, besides the above named, O. A. Onstad, 53 E. N. Kittelson, I. N. Jones, Hjalmer Nygaard, A. F. Fir, Henry Erickson, Sig Hagen, Norris Jordheim, Frank Helmer, Norman Narum, J. T. Swenson. These men and in many cases, their good wives, and also their fam ily members were instrumental in the successful building program and financing of it. M. C. Olufson as choir director and Mrs. Frank Helmer and Mrs. Ralph Graalum are mentioned as organists. Mrs. LeClaire was a faithful organist at an earlier time. This doesn’t begin to list all those who have been faithful workers in the First Lutheran, West St. O laf Lutheran, and Fillmore Lutheran Congregations; there have been many more, whose names are known to God if not appearing here in these pages, who have worshipped and served God in and through these churches. E V A N G E L IC A L FR E E CH URCH In the early days, Scandanavian immigrants who were interested in the work of the Lord gathered in various homes or a school house to have services in their native language. Itinerant preachers visited them from time to time. In the fall of 1940, the Rev. George Anderson, then of Alexandria, Minnesota, visited this group of believers. He is counted the first of this particular church group. Feeling the need of establishing a church home where the Word of God would be presented to their families, as well as a means of reaching the community for Christ, three individuals, S. P. Benson, John Dagman, and Rheinhold Wallin purchased the original church building of the Methodist Church, in 1905. The method of moving this structure was interesting. It was done with the church on planks, moved by a windlass drawn by one horse. The distance was about five blocks, from the site of the present Methodist Church to the site of the Evangelical Church on Cleveland St. The move took two weeks and the first services were held while the church was sitting in the street, en route to its present site. Soon after the church building was completed, the group organized as the “Scandinavian Sallskapet of the United States.” Rev. John Thompson, father of Mrs. Paul Dagman, came regularly once a month. Other early visiting pastors were Rev. John A. Johnson, Rev. Louis Olson, Rev. P. Berglov, Rev. John Moline and Rev. Wm. Milon. As the third generation grew up, the change to the English language was needed. For a time, Rev. L. S. Eberley of V alley C ity visited us once a month and occasionally the Rev. Carl Lindberg of Buffalo, Minn. Regular Sunday School was begun about this time. In 1938-1949 the pastors of the Moorhead Free Church brought a service two afternoons a month. In the summer of 1949, Rev. and Mrs. Leroy Christianson spent three months here in the interest of the Free Church work. The present parsonage was purchased at this time. Rev. John Goodrich and fam ily came in April of 1949 as our first full time pastor, remaining until 1951. During this time the Young Peoples group was formed as well as the Women’s Missionary Society. Rev. Glen Jensen pastored the church from 1951 until June, 1953. He was followed by Rev. Paul Nelson, who took up the work in May, 1954 and remained until 1959. It was during his ministry that the group affiliated with the Evangelical Free Church of America and the name was changed to the Evangelical Free Church. Rev. and Mrs. Earl Miller, who now are missionaries in the Philippines, 54 were here for a year, and in 1960, the present pastor, Rev. Clarence Johnson came to take over the work of the parish. Mrs. Roger Defenbough, the former Alice Mae Bergman, is a daughter of this congregation who has gone out to serve the church at large. She is a graduate of the Free Church Bible Institute and has spent five years as a missionary in Venezuela, South America. F IR S T M ETH O D IST CH URCH The first church in Enderlin dates back to 1891, the year Enderlin was founded. A small group organized as The Enderlin Christian Association with Rev. Wood and the Rev. Bell holding services in the Soo Line depot, the only place available. Arrangements were made with Methodist pastor of Sheldon, Rev. J. A. Strachan, to hold Sunday afternoon services starting in M ay 1892. A t the same time a Sunday School was formed with C. C. Chamberlain as its first superintendent. The next fall the hotel dining room was used as a place of worship. Following this a bank building was erected and this was used until the public hall was erected, where services were held until the first church building was made possible in the spring of 1895. In the fall of 1894 the group decided to incorporate as a Methodist church and on December 24, 1894 the First Methodist Church of Enderlin was incorporated. The incorporators were John W. Crandall, Milton C. Engle and C. C. Chamberlain. The charter members were John W. Crandall, M ilton C. Engle, C. C. Chamberlain, Julius Klingbeil, Mrs. Belle Crandall, Mrs. C. C. Chamberlain, Mrs. Amelia Klingbeil, Hattie Klingbeil, Mrs. M. C. Engle, Mrs. K ate Horton and Mrs. K. Harell. In the spring of 1895 under the leadership of Rev. L. E. Resseger a new parsonage was built and later in the same year a small church was built on the present site, which adjoined the parsonage, at a cost of $2600. The town kept growing and the people attending church also increased in numbers and the church was no longer able to hold the people attending the services. So a new building was planned for, under the leadership of Rev. F. H. Harron. The old church was sold to the Swedish Mission— now the Evangelical Free Church of Enderlin— and a new building, which is the present church building, was erected on the same site in the year 1905 at a cost of $10,000. The present parsonage was purchased in 1919 when Rev. R. H. Craig was pastor. The Rev. Craig is remembered as a powerful preacher and evangelist and was most interesting. The church was always filled to overflowing at both the morning and evening Sunday services. He was a large man, six feet six inches tall, and broad, and when the church windows were open as they usually were in warm weather he could be heard a block away. He had been a missionary to India and his experiences were many. He passed away suddenly in June of 1919 following a heart attack. A t the General Conference in 1938 the three Methodist churches— the Methodist Episcopal Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church South, and the Methodist Protestant Church, came under the name of the Methodist Church. So the Enderlin Methodist has since been known as the First Methodist Church. In 1939, the year Rev. Lewis E. Dickinson came here as pastor, the Enderlin, Sheldon and Leonard churches were joined as one charge. In all these years the Ladies Aid has been a very faithful group and has helped the church through many difficult problems and needs. While Mrs. Hattie LaGrone was pastor this society was reorganized into three divisions, thus working in smaller groups and with new zeal and fervor. In the year 1940 the 55 name of the women’s work all over Methodism was changed to the Women’s Society of Christian Service. This group now has a membership of 65. As before it has three divisions known as Circles 1, 2 and 3 which carry on the work in smaller groups. The 25th anniversary of the W SC S was observed with a program and tea and honoring of charter members at the church October 8, 1965. Mrs. Jerry Schons is the present president of this society. M any children and young people have been influenced to make the start into the Christian life by the faithful and devoted work of the Sunday School, now called the Church School. The school is carrying on with an enrollment of 95 with Mrs. Wayne Wilson as its present superintendent. The M Y F — Methodist Youth Fellowship— which until the year 1940 was known as the Epworth League— brings out leadership abilities and social contacts that are very worth while to the group of high school age. There are thirty young people that are being served by this society. Mark Wilson is the present president. Mrs. A llan Olson and Mrs. Vernon Johnson are the advisors for the Jr. high M YF. Rev. Dwight M eier is Sr. advisor. The choir has been a very active organization in the church through the years contributing its part in the music of the services. Many of the young people, and we depend on the older members too, find a real place of service to their church this way. Mrs. A. L. Tschida is the able and dependable director and has been faithfully serving for the past number of years. Mrs. Elwood Anderson is the present organist. The congregation celebrated its 50th anniversary October 26, Bishop Ralph S. Cushman of St. Paul, Minn., the guest speaker. anniversary was observed on December 5, 1954 with Bishop Voight of South Dakota the guest speaker. A t that time a new church organ, by Dr. A llan M. Olson, was dedicated. 1944 with The 60th Aberdeen, presented Recent major improvements include a new entrance to the church in 1959, a complete remodeling of the church basement in 1963 and remodeling of the parsonage in 1965. Annual bazaars in the fall of the year have been a big help financially and all the congregation takes interest in it. The Men’s club meets once are held monthly. a month and church fellowship suppers In the 72 years since the founding of this church there have been and are many who have given long and faithful service but space does not permit a detailed account. The list of the pastors of this church is as follows: J. A. Strachan, C. A. Routzan, L. E. Resseger, Mac McColn, T. A. Olson, F. H. Harron, Chas F. Sewry, E. G. Price, J. G. Dingle, J. W. Walker, E. J. Schtjen, W. H. Norton, R. H. Craig, 1919, W. R. Thatcher 1919, R. H. Hedtke 1920, O. L. Anthony 1921-1922, G. H. Nelson 1922-1925, H. P. Cooper 1925-1935, Hattie La Grone 1935-1939, Lewis E. Dickinson 1939-1943, B. B. Curtis 1943-1949, O. E. Kinzler 1949-1960, Rev. Kinzler retired here and we are happy that he and Mrs. Kinzler chose to continue making Enderlin their home, Richard R. Teichmann 1960 summer appointment, W. R. Harris 1960-1963 Ralph Rowe 1963-1965, Dwight L. Meier our present pastor since 1965. The church has a membership of 210. Its present officers are: chairman of the O fficial Board, Dr. A llan M. Olson; secretary, Torolf Johansen, treasurer, John Kunz; lay leader, A. P. Ziegenhagen. 56 ST. P A T R IC K ’S C A T H O L IC CH URCH Catholicism came to Ransom County from the east. Informally it was represented here by the Catholic layman. The Goodman brothers who worked for Randolph M. Probstfield, managing the Hudson Bay Company establishment at Georgetown, Minnesota, were also brothers of his wife. One of the brothers, probably Peter, is said to have been a student at Notre Dame University, Indiana, before coming to Dakota Territory on trips to the Sheyenne River in Ransom County to trade for furs with the Indians as early as 1866. The Goodmans constitute a link with the formal organization of the Catholic Church in the County. For having taken up land in later settlement days, they are listed in 1884 as members of the Catholic mission at Sheldon, North Dakota. It was this congregation that flowered into a parish, i.e., having a resident pastor, after another score of years, and fostered Enderlin as its mission through four more years. Then in the year 1908, the priest came to reside at Enderlin; and Saint Patrick’s has continued as a full-fledged parish up to this date of writing. A more colorful sequence of organizational events proceeding with the development of the country raised aloft this cross on the green-roofed spire in its placid existence of today. Form ally the Catholic Church does not arise in a new territory except by legal mission, or, one might say, by an authorized “sending” that emanates from the very See of Peter at Rome. Historically this mission proceeded from Rome through France, the mouth of the St. Lawrence River on the Atlantic by way of the great Voyageurs canoe route. The first Christian missionary in Ransom County was still one of those who traveled by canoe habitually, though one of the lesser individuals in that great company. The era of fur traders and Indians in Dakota Territory was fast fading into the day of military expeditions and wagon trails when Father J. B. M. Genin, O.M.I., dated a letter: “Sheyenne River, Jan. 1st, 1868.” In it he stated that he had arrived at David Fairbault’s who had established himself on this River because of the enormous quantity of cartage that finds it’s way through here, and because of the Government, and because of deserters. (Cfr. P ig e o n Point, in general history of this Jubilee Book.) In a letter dated October 6, the following year, from “Headquarters Fort Ransom D. T. ”, Captain O. H. Crossman also writing to Bishop Tache at St. Boniface (Winnipeg) says in part: “During a recent visit to this post of the Rev. Father G enin ” Therefore sometime between January 1, 1868 and October 6, 1869, Father Genin made one or more visits, proceeding from Fort Abercrombie via the Sheyenne River to Fort Ransom, which lay within the legitimate sphere of his mission. Father Genin is an interesting frontier personality, and he played a minor part in spurring on several key developments in North Dakota. Thus Captain Crossman wrote Bishop Tache that Father Genin had assured him that the Oblate Fathers might be instrumental in inducing Standing Buffalo, Chief of the Sisseton band of Sioux to come from the Turtle Mountain region to Fort Ransom to give his allegiance to the United States government. Father Andre had been especially recommended; Father Andre indeed eventually helped obtain the signing of the treaty terms under which the C ut Head Sioux accepted the newly established Fort Totten reservation as their place of residence. Father Genin himself extended one of his visits to Fort Ransom on up the Sheyenne to the Devils Lake Area, where he was clearly out of bounds as to mission, since this was within the sphere of pastoral concern of his confreres at Walhalla (St. Joe’s and Pembina. Actions of this sort eventually made him a controversial figure; Linda B. Slaughter and Bishop Shanley came 57 to disagree publicly on his merits. He died as pastor of Bathgate, North Dakota several years after Enderlin had already been founded. How had he come to Fort Abercrombie in the first place? Briefly, after the suppression of the Jesuits in the eighteenth century, another religious Order, The Oblates of Mary Immaculate took over the Manitoba end of their missions. Coming by the ancient canoe route from eastern Canada to St. Boniface, newly ordained Father Genin, an Oblate in 1865, served a few months in internship there; and in 1866 accompanied Bishop Grandin and canoes to Lake Athabaska mission. Coming back to St. Boniface in 1867, he proceeded alone up the Red River apparently with approval of his Superiors, to Pembina, to Georgetown, and then to center his mission work at a spot on Whiskey Creek near M cCauleyville, Minnesota. This was near Fort Abercrombie, where he probably first met the Commandant of Fort Ransom. Easily inspired by inauthentic information furnished by men like Fisk, Father Genin was convinced in 1867 that the next spring a stage line would be routed from Fort Abercrombie to Pembina, and at the same time a stage line would be routed from Abercrombie to Montana “. . . by way of Fort Ransom on the Sheyenne River. ” And he hoped to collect enough money from the soldiers and Metis at the three forts, and the Metis and Indians in the Coteaux, to build a chapel at Fort Abercrombie. Aside from his shortcomings, he was a young priest with good intentions. He said Mass and administered the Sacraments for Indian, Metis, and Soldier. Early in spring of 1868 a child was born to the Crossmans at Fort Ransom; it was Father Genin’s duty to see to the Baptism of this child. A monument today that ties in with Father Genin and his work may be seen in a field cross west of highway 81 and about six miles south of highway 94 interchange. This is the third such cross, the first having been erected by Father Jean Baptiste Marie Genin, though he was not the first missionary to Wild Rice parish. A diocesan, or secular, priest became the next one to do mission work in what is now the trading area of Enderlin. Not so controversial a figure as his French-born predecessor, the life record of this native Bavarian in many parishes he successively served indicates he pushed activities and projects to the point of controversy. The extensive scope of his work, like that of Father Genin’s, required courageous zeal and great physical endurance. The Frenchman came west to convert Indians, and after his arrival retrenched to serve mainly the Metis, soldiers and pioneers; the Bavarian came with the purpose of mission work in the Wild West, but settled for a type of circuit riding a-la-carte just beyond the end of railroad spurs. Both accepted a field of work where a greater need had arisen by their time, than existed in their first purposes. By comparison only, Father Lorenz Spitzelberger as any other clergymen who pressed forward with the extension of the railways from the Twin Cities, belongs to the “featherbed stage” of mission work. It was not really soft. He had been born before Father Genin, and outlived him, dying in Kingston, Wisconsin. Our famous Bishop Baraga ordained him in 1858. By the time the Frenchman dated a letter from Sheyenne River Country, Father S. had been a pastor of parishes in Clamp Springs, Kentucky; Pittsburg, Pennsylvania; New Orleans, Louisiana, and Galveston, Texas. Through the next ten years he served four different towns in Wisconsin, a state by 30 years. Then,coming to Perham, Minnesota he broke out into Dakota Territory. With Perham as home base for a while, then Moorhead, on Sundays, he set out by train on week-days, continuing from station or siding by means of horse and buggy, borrowed or hired, to outlying settlements and farm neighbors. His field of missions apostolate measured a 100-mile radius. From his notes he later counted up 114 trips. “In many places I said the first Mass 58 where no priest ever was before. I made thousands of miles in Dakota and Minnesota. . . baptisms, marriages, and places which may not be in existence anymore, but they had been once.” Under the heading of Watson Post Office, with his characteristically German sentence construction, he writes: “Hoffman — Healey — Watson — O ’Leary — Curran had been all neighbors and lived S. W. of Casselton and I seen them all at once, and went to New Buffalo and Tower C ity home.” Between M ay 19, 1881 and January 25 of the following year, he records eight visits to this neighborhood, including additional names. Mass was said in the house of J. M. Keenan for Watson P. O. “On Oct. 12 Mass and baptism of Mary, daughter of Mathew Shea and Catherine Scanan, born Aug. 26, 1881, sponsor Julia Healy. Baptism of Edward, son of Cornel Healy and Margaret Scanan, born Aug. 13, 1881; sponsors Mathew and Catherine Shea.” Had the town of Enderlin been in existence those years, some of these families of the Maple River District as it was called, or Watson P. O., would have become members of St. Patrick parish. A Mathew, son of the elder Mathew Shea mentioned above, with his son Roger lives on the same farm today (See also, Ancient Site in general history), but belong to the Sheldon parish, though members of Enderlin school district. Father Tierney’s list of 33 donors at Sheldon in 1884, includes Math Shea, John Curran and Pat Pierce. Verbal testimony has been recorded which would have Father Joseph Andreas Stephan visiting the Pierce home in the Maple River District one year before that well known personality came to Fargo. Whether that prominent Indian missioner, in his sixties when pastor of Fargo, had time to venture beyond Sheldon town on his visits there, remains to be proven. Since his name became involved in the politics of a national election, while Spitzelberger is a difficult name to recall, it is possible that memory over the years attributed to Stephan what had really been Spitzelberger’s work. When priest and people got together, the Catholic Church was in action. From the predominance of Irish names among those recorded by the buckboard pastors 1880-1884, the observation can be drawn, that the Irish settling in groups, made it a point to have a priest come to say Mass and administer their Sacraments from the earliest years in Ransom County. Thus church organization was hastened by several years. A fter the branch line of the Northern Pacific railroad had caused the founding of Sheldon and Lisbon in 1879, the next directional impetus in Catholic Church organization emanated from Lisbon. Father M. M. Tierney became the first resident priest at Lisbon in 1884. A native of Ireland, ordained ten years earlier, he had been loaned to Dakota Territory by the Bishop of Dubuque. He served Lisbon, LaMoure, Englevale, Oakes, Verona, Plymouth, Sheldon, Leonard, and visited Casselton, Tower City, Buffalo, Fort Ransom, and Kibbey. In Binghampton (Kibbey) he records baptizing Elizabeth, daughter of George Gangel and Catherine Webber, and Joseph, son of John Wercer and Clara Puhr, on two successive monthly visits in 1887. P. H. Callaghan and James L. Coleman are mentioned as contributors to the church at Sheldon in Father Tierney’s account book for the year 1887. Returning to Iowa before the Soo Line penetrated Dakota, Father Tierney’s records make no mention of Enderlin. His was the great work of building a house for the Lord in the Mass and the Sacraments. Father J. O. Barette, residing at Lisbon, was the first priest to visit the new village of Enderlin, in 1892 according to a statement by a successor twelve years later. The first baptism recorded as having been administered “A t Enderlin” is that of Helen M ay Sullivan, daughter of John Sullivan and Julia. . . , by 59 Father Aloysius Godfrey sponsors being Thomas and Charlotte Pierce, M ay 3, 1894. Two weeks later Helen, daughter of Nicolas Schwartz and M argaret Ganken was christened by Father Godfrey of Lisbon, Dionysius Cullen and Mary Callaghan being sponsors. Evidently Catholics in Enderlin were having a regular schedule of services by this time. The first entry by Father J. B. McDonald, pastor of Lisbon, records the baptism of Joseph Sherman, son of Charles Aubert and M alvina Babavn, on July 12, 1898. The second is that of Rosann, daughter of Patrick Gardner and Teresa Carey, sponsors being Mr. and Mrs. Walsh. The only child still living in Enderlin, baptized by Father J. B. McDonald before 1904, is Melvin W alsh, born to James Walsh and Margaret Cooney, A ugust 20, 1899. In 1904 Father J. B. McDonald moved from Lisbon to Sheldon and its missions, inserting this interesting comment on the flyleaves of a Record book:“Sheldon, N. D. Jan. 1, 1904 and Leonard had been attached to Lisbon till the — when they were organized into a separate mission at Sheldon. families attending Sheldon church, 22 at Enderlin “Sheldon, Enderlin beginning of this year 1904. with the priest’s residence “There are just 36 and 15 at Leonard. “The trustees of Sheldon church are Frank Mougey Jr., John Balizeh and Henry Boyle. The missions are in a fair and prosperous condition, the parishioners are faithful in attending their duties, all are considered respectable people, and drunkenness is unknown. “J. B. McDonald “ 1st Resident Pastor.” This insert is followed by a list of 23 names for the 22 Catholic families of the parish: Thomas Pierce, James Walsh, Mrs. M cKay, Mrs. John Gruye, Jerry O ’ Sullivan, William Martin, William Walsh, John Munt, James Faresce, P. Pierce, Jacob Leist, George Weisbrod, Mrs. Robarge, Dan Murphy, Tom Corcoran, Mrs. Guilder, Wm. Rigger, Daniel Hackenberg, Mrs. Kuesler, Jack O ’ Sullivan, Mrs. Opitz, Charles Conlon, who with the Manns, Silks and Hollanitsch families, sometimes attended Mass at Alice and sometimes here. These are the people who built the basic unit of St. Patrick’s church structure, in a style probably imported from Prince Edward’s Island. It is evident that Father M cDonald’s list did not include all and the number was increasing. His brother and once assistant, Father Alexander McDonald, wrote that the parish grew from 30 families in 1906 to 57 in 1908. The thinking of Father Alexander McDonald under whom the present rectory was built in Enderlin in 1908, is reflected in an observation he penned that year: “The parish (Sheldon) had a good growth in early days and prospered in accordance with the good prosperity of the town, until Enderlin began to grow and draw the commerce of the surrounding country. The parish had about 40 families in 1903 but has dwindled down to about 23 families.” Father A lex “M ac” McDonald had been born on Prince Edward Island, where his father was a carpenter; he had been ordained in St. Paul Seminary. A fter serving two months as assistant at Langdon, and one month at the Cathedral, he had become pastor of Sheldon with Leonard and Enderlin as missions in July 1906. That Enderlin was becoming more conscious of itself as one community affected the parish. Once upon a time Catholics here feared the Lutherans would not allow them to buy lots to build a church; and Edmund Pierce pleaded this as a reason why the Soo Line should grant them lots, as was done. The Catholic church was constructed on the corner where now stands the Episcopal church, 60 but their rectory now was built where it is. given to East St. O laf’s church of Enderlin. This location had been land once Other roots of ecumenism have survived the acids of antagonisms, aided especially by acts of personal charity. The Walshes, for example, were happy to learn from Rev. Elster that he had forbidden members of his congregation to join the K lu K lu x Klan when it was striving to organize in this area. Mrs. Charles Best was one of the first organists in Saint Patrick’s church and was not a Catholic. A succeeding organist, Clara McDonald, cousin to pleasant Father Mac used mainly just hymns in the choir, and on the side gave lessons to Isabelle Walsh now Mrs. A lfred Nord Sr. Isabelle and church music became synonymous over a span of the next fifty years as choir member, organist and director. She recalls the strategy of a guest of Father M ac’s who took over the organ himself after preaching the sermon, and played a glorified version of the “Irish Washerwoman” while the collection was taken up. Another favorite recollection of the music graduate of St. John’s Academy (Jamestown), goes back to the time when Dr. Zettle, chiropractor, took a turn as choir director. To beef up the Midnight Mass at Christmas, always a packed occasion until the recent revival of ancient and more authentic liturgies, Dr. Zettle brought over one of the Lutheran choirs which he also directed. So they celebrated that Christmas Eve in Saint Patrick’s with more Lutherans in the choir than Catholics. This last incident runs ahead of our chronology. Father Patrick Long, in physique more broad than long, a priest whose sermons were salty and replete with Irish saints, became pastor of Enderlin in 1915. Three years later Bishop O ’Reilly saw fit to have him exchange places with Father Charles Fay at Page. Father Long came up to Page on the morning train from Fargo with his suitcase full of his worldly belongings, looked around, and took the next train back out. He finished his priestly career in good standing in another Diocese, in South Dakota. It was in the cards probably that rectory and church should be located on the same side of the street. Father Fay undertook to move the church building to its present place. While no fight arose over incorporation papers as was the case in many parishes in the Diocese during these several years, rhubarbs were occasioned by the moving of the church; and the event is too recent to venture placing this into historical perspective. In earlier years Father McDonald had stabled his horses in a livery barn across from the church, but now a garage was needed and was built. For Father Fay and Father M at Hart, bosom buddies, traveled many a dusty trail in their Ford roadster in North Dakota, Hart buying the breakfast and Fay being stuck with dinner usually, while at least once a day they found a friend to visit. A talented man in several departments, one who played tennis before breakfast, who put on plays that people still remember, he had his mother as housekeeper. Father Henry William Corcoran, pastor during six years of creeping depression and four years of deep depression, remembered especially for his sociability and humor, was succeeded in 1934 by Father Bernard Higgins. A fter all these Irishmen, as was the case in the majority of parishes of Fargo Diocese and south of Highway 10 (94), a Frenchman came into Sheyenne Country again; Father J. Pacaud became pastor of Enderlin. 1938-42. Father George Ernest LaFramboise, former professor in eastern Canada, and piano player succeeded Pacaud. He was himself something of an ecumenical movement in the community, but he died in 1943, and lies buried in the Catholic cemetery. A Benedictine monk from the Richardton monastery, today pastor of Selfridge, N. D., filled in the interim months until Father P. M cGee could be sent to Enderlin. Father McGee, with his accomodating temper, remained until 1948. His successor, Father Albert LaFreniere recorded the longest pastorate, over 61 ten years, also a period of greatest consolidation in Saint Patrick parish. Father Cleophas Jaillet came in 1958, and elected to leave in 1960 in favor of Edgeley, N. D. His successor and present pastor, is the second non-French and non-Irish priest, being of German and Bohemian extraction, though born in Wisconsin; and his name will probably go down in anonymity with Spitzelberger’s. ST. A N D R E W ’S E P IS C O P A L CH U R CH The congregation was unable to furnish information for a church history to be included in this book. Enderlin School System One of the first concerns of the pioneer residents of the Enderlin community was the education of their children; thus the first schools were established on the initiative of small groups of families to serve their immediate neighborhoods. The first school in Liberty Township, or Maple River, as it was then known, was in the S. E. ¼ of Sec. 16. Johannes Fosse was the first teacher but the exact date is uncertain. Similarly, the first school in Pontiac Township was established on what is now the Dehn farm, just north of town, but we are unsure of the date— probably about 1880 or 1881. Formal organization of the area schools in Cass County began in January, 1881 when District 47 was organized to include all of Highland and Pontiac Townships. In July of 1881, smaller districts were set up: District 69 in Highland; District 70, which included land in both townships. District 115 in Pontiac was organized in 1882 and District 100 in 1884. A fter a few years the school in this district was moved from the Dehn farm location to Section 28. Ransom County school districts were established formally in 1883, when the Legislature passed a law requiring uniform districts. Four districts were established in Maple R iver Township and for the next ten years, all pupils attended these rural schools. Early teachers included Anna Dersheimer, Jennie Brooks, Clara Danford, Helen Ringheim, Miss E. H. Littel, O. O. Golberg and Fred Underwood. These rural schools had two terms of two or three months— a spring and fall term. Salaries were $35 to $40 a month and few formal educational requirements were demanded. Anyone who could pass the teacher’s examination could be certified. M any found that knowing was easier than doing under difficult and primitive conditions, and the teacher turnover was great. A t first, the children living in the new town of Enderlin attended the rural school near the town but in 1893, District 5 was organized, under the supervision of the township board. The first term ran from January 2 to March 31 with Hannah Jarland as teacher. Shortly after the school opened, in a building known as Oeder Hall, the building burned. Mr. W. A. Thompson, the round house foreman, offered his basement for quarters. He made no charge for its use, even though at one time he was forced to board and room fifteen students during a severe blizzard. Parents made free will offerings to replace the burned equipment. For the next few years, school was held about town wherever space could be found— in Powers Hall above the Burtness store, over the Rustad 62 Hardware on Third Avenue and other nooks and crannies. In 1897 the first local board was elected for Enderlin District 22 and a four room school completed that fall. Three teachers were employed: F. H. Loucks, Principal; Elvina Rae and Olive Golberg. Funds were scarce to supply necessary equipment but a fortunate inspiration of Fred Underwood, one of the board members was to provide a most adequate library. He composed a form letter, telling of the frontier T h e above pictu re show s the first school in E nderlin— a fo u r room a ffa ir com pleted in th e fa ll of 1897. Q u ick ly o u t-d ated , E nderlin’s edu cation al n eed s increased so rapid ly that b y 1904 a fo u r-year high school course being offered. town of Enderlin, without adequate funds to equip a school for its rapidly growing school population. He asked that any books they might have which were suitable and might otherwise be discarded should be autographed by the donor and forwarded to the school. He mailed the letter to members of Congress, the Supreme Court, the President, Vice-President and to persons prominent in the business world. So persuasive was his appeal that an avalanche of books followed, including autographed volumes from Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison, finally totaling 5500 books. This collection, some of which would be most valuable today, were lost when the school burned in 1933. In a matter of only a year or two the new school was full to overflowing and buildings about town had to be utilized again. In 1904, two more years of high school were added to the curriculum, bringing it to a four year high school course. In 1905 a new brick school was built and in 1906 the first class graduated from the Enderlin High School: Rena Austad, still living in the state of Washington, Anna Austad Robinson, Ida Fretland Larson and Lillian Pieh,all deceased. Superintendent Hutchinson was the county school superintendent at this time and was a man with far-seeing ideas about education. He urged 63 the consolidation of small rural schools and in 1904 Liberty Township moved the two rural schools it now operated to the location of the Liberty School, now unused, and became the first consolidated school in the county. A new modern school was built in 1917 which was used for 40 years. Moore township, too, decided that consolidation was necessary and built a large school which was used for many years until it burned in 1931. Rebuilt, it continued to offer two years of high school until 1948, and at times during the years offered three years when the number of pupils warranted. The people of this area have always given strong support to their schools and over the years, the Enderlin school has developed and improved, adding departments to meet changing educational demands and standards. The first vocational department, then known as Manual Training, was started by a woman, Mary Byrne, now Mrs. Tom Baribeau. Complete laboratory facilities for Home Economics were installed in 1938 and the school serves as a student teacher training school for the N D SU Home Economics department. The music program of the school as we now know it had its inception in 1921, when the first band was organized. The first orchestra was started Th e Enderlin h igh school student body in 1908 w as. bottom row , left to right, Leo K e e sle r, Isaac Anderson, N els John, Ed H arper, Ph ilip A k e r, A d olph Lindem ann; m iddle row , (? ) Co llier, P au lin e B est, M abel G ullickson , Bessie M cK eelar, R u b y Burtness, Jesse L u k e r, M eta Engle, Edith Cham berlain, M iss W ade, teacher, M r. B rockm ann, Principal; b a c k row , A lv in a K lin g b eil, Rosalie Lindem ann, (? ) Torbenson, Ida F retland, B arbara Thom pson, L illy Pieh, u nknow n, B u rr E ngle, B erth a G ullickson , A d a Sanness, Rena A ustad, A n n a A u stad, M erlin Engle and John L u k e r. in 1923. The a cappella choir which came to be the school’s trademark was first organized by Mr. M. C. Olufson in 1931. In 1918 the Enderlin High School was accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Universities and has been accredited continuously since that time. 64 Increasing costs and demand for improved schools led to a general agreement that reorganization of the many small districts into larger units was inevitable. As early as 1952, exploratory meetings were held, but the Enderlin board and the boards of the rural schools involved, wisely declined to rush into any hasty reorganization plan. A s a result, when the newly reorganized district B ottom row , le ft to right, D a vid Dagm an, M eta Engle, Rosalie Lindem ann, A . E. B a ri beau, M erlin Engle, B u rr Engle, Thom as B arib eau , H arry R atchje, Adolph Lindem ann, Jam es G albreath , P hidim e B arib eau . Second row , B lan che B eatty, A lv in a K lingbeil, A da F e rnow , E dwin E geberg, 5 u nknow n, Sadie Callahan, E thel Rosbeck, R u b y Burtness, 9 unknow n, B a r bara Thom pson. T h ird row , H arry Dizzard, M adge B eatty, A d olph Johnson, H arry Blish, Sadie Nord, Josie N ord, L ittle, E thel R atch je, F loren ce Oeder, No. 10 unknow n. Fourth row , Ida Fretland, N ora F retland, Ph ilip A k re , A d a Sanness, B ertha G ullickson, F lora Crandal, No. 7 unknow n. F ifth row , John L u k er, M ary K lin g b eil, V ern a Blish, Jessie L u k er, L u lu G inther, B eta G inther, C larence Nord, A d d er Hagen, F red K lin g b eil. Sixth row , P rincipal Loucks, H en ry H agen, L illian Pieh, No. 4 and 5 unknow n, G eorge G olberg, P a u lin e Thom as, M abel Thom pson, A nna Dagm an, M am ie Callahan, B elle L u k er, Tim C allahan„ No. 13 unknow n, O live G olberg, teacher, Emm a Dagm an, Jam es Porter. came into being in 1957 it was accomplished with little of the friction and bitter ness that has marked reorganization in some communities. The size of the school district changed from 12 sections in 1956 to more than 180 sections in 1966 extending into the three counties of Barnes, Cass and Ransom. Most of this growth occurred in 1957 when the district was reorganized, with additional territory being added through annexation during the past few years. Former school districts, familiar to early Enderlin community residents, 65 coming into the enlarged Enderlin district include Moore No. 4, Liberty No. 3, Pontiac 100, Highland-Pontiac 70, Highland 115, Highland 69, and parts of Casey. Clifton, Raritan, Watson, Preston, and Eldred 83. The change in district size brought with it another change— pupil transportation. Enderlin Public School District No. 22 now operates eight bus routes which transport more than one-third of the district’s total enrollment of 625 pupils. Enrollment in from the early forties when the district was 135 in the early forties the elementary school has almost doubled in the period to the mid-sixties. H alf of this increase occurred in 1957 reorganized. The high school enrollment increased from to the all time high of 228 in 1965-66. The 1966 graduating class of more than 60 is the largest class of graduates in the school’s history. The school faculty has increased from a staff of 14 or 15 in the early forties to the present staff of 29. The basic part of the school plant was constructed in 1933, following the fire which destroyed the old school. A gymnasium and shower rooms were added in 1939. In 1959 two classrooms, a science laboratory, a vocational agriculture department, and a music wing were added to the building. The Enderlin school was one of the first in North Dakota to offer behind-the-wheel driver education to its students. This program has been in operation since 1948. In 1951 our school was one of the first in the state to inaugurate the Parent-Teacher Conference method of reporting pupil progress in the elementary school. Both the driver education and parent-teacher M em bers of the first E nderlin H igh School orchestra w ere, fron t row , left to right, Curt Shaw , To ny Robertson, Ross B ru ce, Miss Knutson, Corrine N ix, F ran k lin Stow ell, V ern on M elin, G u y Perkin s; back row , G en evieve Roberts, W alt Petrich , Otto Trapp, A rn old Petrich , K e rm it B leese, Orton Bolstad and Earl Olson. conference programs have operated continuously to the present time. The lunch program has grown from an operation involving but a few pupils bringing sandwiches, which were supplemented by a hot dish or soup skillfully prepared by Mrs. Susan Vance, to the present program which feeds up to 400 daily with 66 Type A meals. Lydia Geske has been the head cook and manager of the Enderlin school lunch program for the past 16 years. In 1960 vocational agriculture was added to the program of studies, offering four years of agriculture to high school boys. Welding and other farm courses have been offered to adults and young farmers in the Enderlin community. More recently a course in agriculture mechanics has been made available to Enderlin high school students. Now, in 1965-66 we find our teachers talking about flexible scheduling to better meet the needs of individual students, team teaching, programmed learning, and educational TV. As we look into the next few years we see Enderlin school district faced with the necessity of building a new elementary building as recommended by the Bureau of Field Studies of the University of Minnesota, which proposes enlargement of districts and corresponding larger tax bases to meet changing population patterns and changing educational demands. The entire present plant will be required to house the expanded junior-senior high school program of the seventies. Greater changes will occur in education in the next decade than have taken place in the past century. Two names, long associated with the Enderlin schools, left the school scene during the fifties. M. C. Olufson, high school principal for thirty years, retired from teaching in 1953. To thousands of students who passed through Enderlin High School, Ole will never be forgotten. His wise counsel and his outstanding work with the Enderlin High School choir from 1931 to 1953 will long be remembered. Effie Selvig retired in 1954 after more than thirty years of service to the Enderlin Junior and Senior High School. Her dedication to young people, her unmatched teaching skill, and her kindly interest in her students will ever be gratefully remembered by thousands of students who were privileged to have had her as their teacher. E nderlin w on the first N orth D akota state high school baseball tournam ent title, defeatin g A rth u r 12-3 in the final tournam ent gam e. T h e Enderlin team , le ft to right, front, are J e rry W avra, M orry W avra, K en n y Jacobs, B u dd y F ritz, bat boy, V ernon K u h n , Dennis Larson, Dan Kittelson; b ack row , H arley K aspari, D arrell Redm ond, Ronnie Oliiphant, B ru ce Johnson, John Foss, M yron Sim onson, Coach Lu tgen . 67 T h e P olitica l S cen e In the days when North Dakota and Enderlin were first being settled, Washington and Bismarck were far removed from average citizen. the daily concern of Only a few families received the metropolitan papers. the News traveled more slowly and, on the sparsely settled prairies, it often took days for the results of national elections to become known. Thus, local politics were of much more interest and concern than today, when communications reach into every world capital and news reaches the most isolated community even as it is happening. hotly contested. School board, city and township meetings and elections were During the formative years it was not difficult to secure candidates for any local office, for such offices conferred more distinction then than now. Like every small town, Enderlin had its leaders; men who made an avocation of politics at the local level. They loved the game and if there were no red hot issues, they invented some. Practical jokes were part of the game and friendship did not interfere. Shirley’s Drug Store was the local political headquarters, where everyone stopped to see what the word was for the day. L egal technicalities did not always bother men who were building a new town. They did what they thought should be done. James Walsh, in later years, told the story of the building of the new brick school in 1905. With him on the board were C. C. Chamberlain, Col. M cIlvain, Fred Underwood and James Cruff. A n election was held for a bond issue to finance the new school. In a familiar gesture, voters rejected the bond issue. Com pletely unperturbed, the board went ahead and built it anyway, issuing warrants for $18,000 to finance it. Apparently pleased with the school, the voters relented the following year and approved bonds to cover the cost. There was only one brand of politics for the most part— Republican. For many years, Mr. Chamberlain and Ole Culbertson were reputed to be the only Democrats in town. When the Non-Partisan League entered the picture, the battles were f o u g h t in the primary, between the League and the Independent Voters Alliance, or IVA, rather than leave the Republican column. Except for the brief defection to John Burke, the strong Democratic vote in Enderlin did not evince itself at all until the late twenties, when a few “A l Sm ith” Democrats appeared. The real switch came with Franklin Roosevelt and their ranks were finally augmented by the merger with the N P L in recent years. As mentioned elsewhere in these pages, the Farmers Alliance and it’s successor, the Non-Partisan League, generated a good deal of support in the Enderlin area and inaugurated a lively political period. John Grey, an Enderlin man, was a longtime State Tax Commissioner, running on the League ticket. Charles Bangert was also an active force in the N P L faction during the days of B ill Langer and was a candidate for the Supreme court on that ticket. There was a period of quiet after the Langer days but, in later years, some of the fervor which was evident in local political action has been transferred to state and national politics. Enderlin has become something of a center of political activity by both parties; a result, many believe, of the evolution of two relatively evenly matched parties. 68 The Democratic-NPL group in Enderlin and Ransom County has attained considerable statew ide influence. Prior to the Democrat-NPL merger, two Enderlin women Mary Baribeau and Doris Smith, had held the post of Democratic Vice-Chairman, which at that time was the equivalent of Women’s Chairman. More recently, one Enderlin woman succeeded another as Florence Olson replaced Florence Swenson as Vice-President of the Democrat-NPL Women. Agnes Geelan, elected to the North Dakota Senate, was chosen to run for Congress and later served as a member of the Workmen’s Compensation Bureau. Art Ford, a moving force in the merger, was the 1958 N PL nominee for governor. The most notable success story in the history of local politics was that of the late Hjalmar Nygaard. He came to Ender lin in 1944, where he opened a hardware business with his brother-in-law, Carl Bjerke. Four years later, over his protests, he was endorsed by the Republican Organ izing Committee for the North Dakota House of Representatives. He won this election and represented Ransom County in Bismarck for six consecutive terms. A former teacher, his great interest was education. He served on the Education Committee for four sessions, acting as vicechairman for the 1955 session. Among other duties, he served on the Legislative Research Committee, acted as ROC Floor Leader and as Speaker of the House. In 1960, he was endorsed for the U. S. House of Representatives and with Don Short as a running mate, defeated the Democratic slate of Ray Vendsel, and A n son Anderson, also a Ransom County na tive. HJALMAR NYGAARD In Washington, his first committee assignment was on the House Interior and Insular Affairs Committee. In 1962, he won re-election to Congress and had served only about six months when a notable career was cut short by a heart attack. State and national notables converged on Enderlin July 22, 1963, when services were conducted from the white frame First Lutheran Church where he had been a member since coming to Enderlin. Mrs. Nygaard returned to Enderlin after his death, and continues make her home here. to The history of political action in Enderlin would seem to illustrate that whenever there is political interest and activity in a community, leadership is developed which inevitably extends its influence beyond local boundaries. The local scene might be termed a case history of the effectiveness of “grass roots” action in a democracy. 69 M ilita ry S ervice Since our country was founded, we have taken pride in our citizen soldiers, who have laid down their work when the need arose to fight the country’s battles. Few communities, however, including our own, have kept a full record of those of its sons who have served their country. It has proved literally impossible to compile an accurate listing of the men from the Enderlin area who have served in the armed forces. When North Dakota was settled, many of its pioneers were men who had served on the frontier or in the Civil War, and who came to claim their rights to land in the newly opened west. The last Civil War veteran in Enderlin and Ransom County was Reuben Beard, grandfather of Mrs. Arnold Fraase, who served in the 16th Massachusetts Regiment which was decimated in the Battle of the Wilderness. He then joined the 11th Massachusetts and at the Spotsylvania Courthouse was wounded severely and narrowly escaped being buried in a common grave with other casualties. He recovered and lived to homestead in Clifton Township; later moved to Enderlin where he died in 1932 at the age of ninety one. Some of the E nderlin m en on th eir return from W orld W ar I. Those id entified are: first row , le ft to right, Dr. O vergard, B ill Young, Earl O lm stead, unknow n, Russell M arlow and E verett Nye. 70 T h e 1 9 3 0 team , first of En derlin ’s Ju n io r Legion Cham pions. L e ft to right, front row: M ercer Sly, L ester Knight, Harvey Peterson, Hollis Johanneson, Elroy H en drickson, Lloyd Bergstrom , Jack Jorgenson, Abbie P eterson, M ascot. Back row: Perry San dell, C oach ; W esley K nadel, Duggan H addican, Harold K raft, Ray Roessler, Fritz Petrich, H ilary Klonecky, D r. G ilb ert H endrickson, M anager. T h e 1 9 5 2 En derlin Indies — the first Enderlin team to win the S tate Am ateur crown. L e ft to Right, front row: Jonnard U tke, Ralph G raalum , Bob W en tlan d , Lloyd Redm ond, m ascot, John Foss, W es Peterson, Jim Peterson, Bob King Back row: Jim C lark, D an Kittelson, Kenny Jacobs, Ray Bartholom ay, D arrell Redm ond, Johnny Janz, Kenneth Kaspari, Pete Redm ond, M anager E arly road work in L iberty Tow nship. This picture, taken about 1½ miles south o f the W est St. O laf church shows Philip Larson on the engine and Pete H ill, long-tim e County Com missioner standing behind. O ther men are unidentified. 70a A B O V E : V iew o f Enderlin looking E a st about 1 9 0 0 -1 9 0 1 B E L O W : V iew o f En derlin looking W est about 1 9 0 0 -1 9 0 1 70b F arm in g in our parents’ day took horse power. T h ese four horse-draw n hinders were photographed on the Herman Utke farm , north-east o f E n d erlin , in 1 9 1 4 . G rain was hauled by horse and wagon for long distances. One load a day, or two, were the most that could be hauled. Seated on this wagon are Henry T rapp and Fred Lindem ann. G ang plows pulled by five horses readied the ground for another crop on the U fer farm . 70c When World American Legion. War I ended, the soldiers of that war organized The The Enderlin post was chartered February 3, 1922, with the following members: W. H. Nollman, A. R. Martin, Roy Rasmusson, John L. Roth, Tony Schoedl, F. E. Mau, S. J. Hagen, E. W. Sannes, Alan A. Keene, E. J. Boehnke, Gordon O.Sundby, F. W. Harper, R. J. Simonet, Claude B. Phillips, and Dr. Gilbert Hendrickson. The post was named for Arthur B. Marschke, a local boy who lost his life near Verdun, late in October, 1918. His wife, the former Esther Robertson, had been notified only that he was missing in action. In September of 1922, Mrs. Marschke received a photograph of herself and her infant son from a former German soldier, Herman Sult. In an accompanying letter, he told her that her husband, dying from a wound received in that battle, had given the picture to a German soldier w ith the request that it should be sent to his wife. M arschke’s name and organization, gun company of the 101st Infantry, was written on the folder the photograph, together with his w ife’s name and address. a machine containing The German soldier was severely wounded and passed the photograph to Mr. Sul t, with the request that he return it. For some time after the war, German soldiers were forbidden to correspond with foreigners and thus Mrs. Marschke didn’t learn where her husband lost his life until four years later. The story had a tragic sequel. Mrs. Marschke moved to Webb, Saskatchewan, with her son. In 1933 she went to G ull Lake for dental work. She arrived at the station for the return trip as the train was starting to move, and pulled herself onto the steps just as the crew, unaware that she was there, shut the door. Clinging to the outside of the train in bitterly cold weather, she managed to hang on for about nine miles, when she finally lost her grasp. Her body was found beside the tracks. Her son Leroy, the child Arthur Marschke never saw, is now an engineer with the Boeing Aircraft Company in Seattle, Wash. The Schwandt-Goodman Post 9050 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars was established January 30, 1947, by veterans of the Enderlin-Sheldon area and named for the late G. R. Schwandt of Enderlin, a veteran of World War I, and Robert Goodman of Sheldon, killed in Korea. Charter members of the post are Morris Anderson, Vernon Anderson, Clarence Bearman, John Berglund, Russell Berggren, Noble Doeling, Ralph Ernst, Walter Geyer, Millard Gray, Richard Johanneson, Robert Kaber, Jerome Klonecky, Alvin Peterson, William Salzwedel, Cyrus Schultz, Garfield Severson, Wallace Titus, Wilbert Wallner, Robert Wentland, Lester Zittelman, Roy Zittelman, Arthur Spitzer, Donald Aspelund, LeRoy Balow, Carleton Donovan, Stephen Groth, George James, Harold Kraft, Rex McGregor, Delvin Muth, Allan M. Olson, Art Ford Jr., Gerald Gec k, Clifford Johanneson, Sieghard Lindemann, John Martin, Joseph McGrath, Ralph Myhre, Willis Nohr, James Nord, Ralph Oehlke, Vernon H. Olson, Merlin Skramstad, Carroll Steedsman and Kenneth Wallner. Both The American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars have active women’s auxiliaries who contribute greatly to community activities and the welfare of the town. The following men, now living in Enderlin, served in the armed forces during the First World War: 71 W o rld W a r I V etera n s George Aspelund A. E. Baribeau Henry J. Boileau John A. Brun Sam Grant Richard T. Oehlke D. B. Grice Earl E. Olmstead Harold T. Olson S. J. Hagen William Jaster Fred Carter Earl M. Sanness Erick Schimming Torolf Johansen George Geyer E. N. Kittelson A l Gilbertson Otto F. Glaesemann A lf B. F. Gram Everett IN Larson Herman Scheel Thorval Shelver Theo. Ulmer V. Nye Walter F. Westphal MEMORIUM Listed below are the men of the Enderlin community who have given their lives in the service of their country. World War I Arthur B. Marschke Son of Mr. and Mrs. A ugust Marschke Arthur Glaesemann Son of Mr. and Mrs. Fredrich Glaesemann Phillip O. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Larson Larson World War II and Later Norman S. Anderson Son of Mr. and Mrs. Jens Anderson Ford H. Browne Son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Browne Milton Son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Graalum Martin M. M iller Son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M iller A llen L . Morsch Son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Morsch Maurice A. Strand Son of Mr. and Mrs. Hans Strand Gordon Utke Son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Utke Vernon A. Salzwedel Son of Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Salzwedel Sanford Son of Mr. and Mrs. Sverre Gyldenvand Jerome 72 L. Graalum Gyldenvand Erbstoesser Son of Mr. and Mrs. August Erbstoesser Family Histories Jacob W olters Jacob W olters w as the th ird child of Joseph and Cornelia W olters, born in W autfleught, G erm any, in M ay, 1870. H is m other died w h en he w as nine and h er death strengthened the fa th e r’s w ish to bring his fa m ily to A m erica. A b ach elor friend w ho had gone to A le x andria, M inn., w rote Jacob ’s fa th e r of the free land lakes, forest and gam e. W ith only a b are liv in g from his fou r acres in G erm an y and w ith his oldest son alm ost old enough fo r m ilitary service, th e father, one of only 12 su rvivors of the battle of M etz to return to W autfleught, decided th at the n ew w orld offered the o n ly opportunity fo r them and em barked on th e long trip to A lexan d ria. D uring the voyage, w h en their food w as dark bread and cheese, he read the children the letters w ritten b y his friend to keep their spirits high. T he first y e a r th ey lived w ith the frien d in his crow ded cabin. T h e d aughter cooked and the fath er and sons cleared fiv e acres of land in return fo r th eir keep. T h e n ext y ear th ey saw ed lum ber for a m odest hom e of th eir ow n, and broke land to plant corn and sm all grain. Jacob w as “ farm ed out” to a childless N orw egian couple in return fo r board, room , u n derw ear, m ittens, and a p a ir of shoes w h ich w ere too sm all and ga ve him a perm an en tly crippled toe. A t 17 he w en t to St. Pau l, w h ere he found w o rk in the w in ters d riv in g a b re w e ry wagon and a c o a l d e liv e ry wagon. H e used to tell that he d elivered th e first load of coal to Jim H ill’s home. A coal d ealer w h o failed gave him a start in business, fo r he received a team and w agon as paym en t fo r w ages he w as owed. Jacob th en w e n t to D uluth w here, fo r $65 a month plu s board fo r him self and his team , h e did d ray in g in the sum m er and w ork ed in the w oods in th e w inter. B y ca refu lly savin g o v er the n ext fiv e years, he am assed $1,000. He decided he could now m ake a start tow ard a farm of his own. In 1893, he shipped his team to G rand F o rk s and w orked in the th reshing field s in D akota, running separators and renting out his team . He w o rk ed fo r B ill M anning and Julius B enson at Sheldon and decided to m ake his home in this area. In 1896 he b ou gh t his first h alf section in Ransom co u n ty on a h alf-crop paym en t plan. H e broke the land in 1897, retu rn ed to M innesota for the w inter, and seeded his first crop in 1898. He shipped tw o carloads of wood he had cut th e y e a r before to b u ild the first home. T h at w in ter he m arried M ary Hermes at B elle R iver and b rought h er to the three-room house w h ere their first fou r daughters w ere bom . His first h alf section w as paid fo r in tw o y ears. A s his fa m ily increased, he purchased m ore land each tw o years, until h e ow ned 4600 acres in Ransom county. A new home w as b uilt in 1904 to house the ra p id ly gro w in g fa m ily w hich w as to num ber 14. Jacob d eveloped his own strain of H ereford cattle and the herd grew to 500 head. T he needs of his business led him to becom e in volved in grain dealing and banking, but he a lw a y s fe lt him self to be p rim arily a farm er. He b elieved in hard w ork, reasonable hours o f labor, and good food for fa m ily and help alike. D u rin g the y ears w hen all th e children w e re at hom e and several m en w ere em ployed on the farm , 100 pounds of flo ur w as used in a w eek. A s his boys grew older, th e land and equipm ent w e re d ivided am ong them , and th ey shared labor and equipm ent. T h e p rac tice is continued to this day. Jacob died in 1945, and Mrs. W olters lived until 1964. A ll but one of his children live in this area, proof that N orth D akota fu l filled his expectations of opp ortu nity and a good life. T h e children are: Mrs. Joe D w orshak, Sheldon; M rs. V ern e Stock, Fargo; Mrs. F ran ces H adley, Lisbon; Mrs. Harold Alison, Lisbon; F rank, Lisbon; Ida, Fargo; Mrs. John B e au cage, Lisbon; Mrs. G eorge C o ffey, F lo ri da; John, Lisbon; Edw ard, Enderlin; M arvin, deceased; Mrs. B . A. Cruden, Lisbon; V ernon, Enderlin; and How ard, deceased. A m em ber of the Cath olic church at Sh el don, he w as m uch interested in sponsoring the St. A loysiou s School in Lisbon w h ere all his children attended school. Johannes Trangsrud Johannes Hanson T ran sgrud cam e here from N orw ay in 1874, w ith b is w ife B erth a M aria Christianson and three sm all children— one girl, B erth a and tw o boys, H arold and Jacob. One little b oy died w h ile on the boat, so he w as buried in the ocean, and the second b oy died right a fter th ey landed T h e y liv e d n ear K in d red until 1881 w h en Johannes w en t out seeking land, and took a hom estead w h ich w as in L ib erty Township, S E ¼ Section 28-136-55. T h e only p roperty and m eans o f farm ing consisted of a yok e of oxen, a w a lk in g plow and a seeder, 5 or 6 feet w ide, w h ich broadcasted the grain. W hen h arvest tim e cam e, the grain w as cut w ith a scyth e and tied w ith straw . T h ere w ere eight m ore ch ild ren bom to this union. T h e y w ere H arold, Josie (Mrs. A lfre d Sjorbotten ), Jacob, B ern h ard , A nna (Mrs. C h arles Christianson), Hans, Clara (Mrs. H en ry Severson), and Eddie w h o died w hen only nine months old. (Note th a t H arold and Jacob w ere nam ed a fter the boys that d ied). W ith the excep tion of H arold and Josie, w ho w ere born at K indred, the rest o f th e ch il dren w ere born on the hom estead. O f the 73 eleven children, only three are still liv in g: Hans, w ho lives in M inneapolis and B ern h ard and Anna, both livin g in Enderlin. M rs. Johannes T ran gsrud died at a v e ry young age of 47. H er husband n e ve r rem arried bu t lived w ith his children on the farm u n til he died M ay 17, 1911. It w as at this tim e that B ern h ard bought the farm . In spite of hard times, raising a fam ily of eight children, losing the farm , etc., he bought it back and it still rem ains in the Trangsrud name, in the third generation, w ith B u rn ell T ran gsrud as ow ner. B ern h ard re tired w ith his w ife and M yron w ho w as still at home in 1952. B ern h ard m arried C lara Gunderson, A pril 10, 1912. T h ey w ere blessed w ith eight ch il dren: M yrtle, (Mrs. H arold Iverson), E velyn (Mrs. A rn old S ved jan ), Cora (Mrs. H arold V ee), G lad ys (Mrs. W allace H am re), Edna (Mrs. R ay M arkel), M arlys (Mrs. W ayn e Muhlenberg ) and two sons, B u rn ell and M yron. Johannes Transgrud w as one of the fa ith fu l ones who helped build St. O laf Church and records show th at B ern h ard w as the second child to be b aptized there. T h e w hole fa m ily has at one tim e belonged to W est St. O laf L u th eran Church. G eorge Card G eorge W. Card, born in London, England, on A p ril 5, 1850, origin ally im m igrated to Kippen, Ontario, w h ere he w as an em ployee on the railroad b efore he cam e to the States. He m arried Sarah Iveson O ctober 23, 1879, in Kippen, and th ey w ere among the early pioneers of H ill Tow nship, com ing in 1880. T h e y had nine ch ildren : W illiam , John, A l b ert and Charles, all deceased; Jam es of Compton, Calif.; Robert of Fargo; Mrs. Oscar (Fannie) Dagm an; M rs. Jam es (M ary) Wold; and Mrs. G eorge (Ruth) W adeson. George and Sarah w ere m em bers of the E piscopal Church in K ip pen , and attended the M oravian Ch u rch of A lice w h en th ey set tled here. T h ree of the C ard children have m ade th eir hom es in E nderlin: Charles, who is now livin g in Montana; Mrs. O scar (Fannie) Dagm an; and Mrs. Jam es (M ary) W old. A grandson, J a ck Card, still lives on the original homestead. K n u t G reen In the y e ar 1886, at the age of nine years, K n u t Green came w ith his parents, Ole and Ingeborg Gronna, to M oore Tow nship, where th ey hom esteaded on the NW qu arter of Section 15. T h e y cam e from Nas, H aalingdar, N orw ay, to Iowa and then to M oore T o w n ship. Ole G or r na had three brother, Ole K ., Asle, and Elling, and fou r sisters, Mrs. M artinson, M rs. A n d rew Fryd enlun d , Mrs. Ole Am undson, and Mrs. P eter Solom. Some came to the new land before Ole and In g e borg, some later, but all settled in the nearby com m unity. On this hom estead q u arter the Ole Gronna 74 fa m ily bu ilt a sod house and barn. They join ed Fillm ore Church w h ich w as already founded. K nut, at an early age, helped to b reak the sod w ith oxen and a w alkin g plow. His education consisted of attending the one room school house in the w in ter and N or w egian parochial school in the sum m er w hen he w as not needed to help w ith the farm w ork. A fte r some years K n u t’s fath er bought the q u arter of land ju st north of the present Moore school site and the fa m ily m oved into m ore m odern w ooden buildings. A lon g in the years the nam e “ G ronna’ ’ w as changed to the m ore A m erican name of Green. K n u t and fiv e brothers and tw o sisters grew up h erdin g cows, sacking grain, and doing other farm w ork . The grain w as h auled to B u ttzv ille. O f his brothers and sisters, John, E n gval, and Christie have passed aw ay. K asper is livin g in Lethbridge, Canada; G ust in Enderlin; Oscar in W ashington state; and G ertru d e in Texas. W hen he w as a you n g man, K n u t w ent to Iow a to seek livelihood. H ere he m et Am anda Hove, a farm girl. T h ey w ere m arried at N orthwood, Iow a, on D ecem ber 17, 1902. T h ey returned to M oore Tow nship w h ere th ey set tled on a farm one m ile north of the M oore school. Here th ey raised a fam ily of nine children. Freem an, Ernest, and M arvie are still farm ing in the tow nship. Mrs. B a rn ey B e rg is livin g on a farm in the N ome com m unity. T h eir other children, M orris and M errell (twins) live in F argo, N. D.; G la d ys in Santa A na, Calif.; Stella in A n a h eim, Calif.; and K enneth in Enchant, A lb erta, Canada. K n u t served as trustee of Fillm ore Church; as township treasurer for tw en ty years, and as tow nship supervisor for nine years. A fte r the fa m ily was grow n, K n u t and A m anda m oved b ack to the farm , w h ich is presently farm ed b y Freem an. T h e y lived here u n til K n u t died D ecem ber 15, 1949, and Am anda Jan uary 26, 1962. Th e Pierce F am ily P a trick and M ary Cronin Pierce and th eir fam ily of fiv e children w ere among the first residents of Enderlin. Both parents w ere bom in Ireland, P atrick at Craig, County K e rry, in 1836, and M ary at Tallow in County Cork, in 1834. A s youn g people th ey em igrated to Canada, and th ey w ere m arried at S ilver Creek, O n tario, * about 1860. Soon afterw ard they came to the United States w h ere th ey lived first at Ishpem ing and later at M ichigam m ee, M ich. P a trick found w o rk w ith a m ining com pany, but he loved the land and w as not h appy in his occupation. So in 1878, w hen their second son, Thom as, w as tw elve, the fam ily m oved w estw ard. T h ey liv e d for a time in B arn esville, Minn., w here P atrick and Thom as w orked w ith the crew s building the G reat Northern R ailw ay. Thom as rem em bered that, as w aterboy, he once brought a drink to Jim Hill, visitin g on an inspection tour, and that q uarter, a m un ificen t rew ard he received in the 70’s a E arly in 1879 P a tric k cam e to D akota T e r ritory and hom esteaded near the M aple R iver in Cass County, on the S E 1/4 of Section 10 in H ighland Tow nship. He prepared livin g q u arters and the fa m ily cam e to th eir new home in O ctober. T h e y traveled b y land to Pem bina, then up the Red R iv er by steam er, and to Casselton b y rail. Thom as started w alkin g in the general direction of the farm , a sk in g directions along the w a y and som etim es getting a lift. He found his fath er bu sy w ith preparations for w inter, and th ey w en t to m eet the rest of the fam ily. F o r the n ext tw e lve years the fa m ily shared the bu sy life of the pioneer com m unity. A school w as established n earb y in 1881. Edm und earned m oney b y w o rk in g on a farm not far a w a y . Thom as helped b re ak prairie land, using a team of oxen. W hen asked later about hardships of the early days, Thom as said th ey had “ su ffered no h ard ships. ” T h eir house, b y pioneer standards, w as room y and com fortable. T h ere w as al w ays plen ty to eat, and there w ere neighbors w ithin a fe w m iles w ith w hom th ey exchanged visits and shared r eligious and social affairs. (Som e of th eir n eighbors w ere the H ealys, the Keenans, the Cosgroves— o b vio u sly the Irish had foregath ered ! ) Thom as rem em bered takin g a loaf of bread of his m other’s b ak in g as a gift to a band of Indians travelin g along the riv er, and b ein g told b y the squaw w h o accep ted it, “ Y o u m other good w om an ! ” He also told of going along in the o x -d ra w n w agon on a trip to Casselton to b u y supplies, and tryin g to m ake the storekeeper’s gift of a soda cra cker last all the w a y hom e b y takin g v ery sm all bites— quite a feat w h en the trip of some tw e n ty m iles m ust have taken several hours. T h e eldest son, Edm und, settled in Sheldon w h ere he read law in the office of an attorney. He passed the bar exam inations, and as a you n g attorn ey he acted for the Soo L ine in the purchase of land for rig h t-o f-w ay. He b ecam e interested in the developm ent of the n ew tow n, and at his urgin g the eld er P ierces and the four ch ild ren still at hom e m oved to the new settlem ent. T h e house w hich th ey built, n ow at 124 D ew ey Street, w as the first d w ellin g con structed in the tow nsite. Later th ey m oved to the house at 138 D e w e y Street, and th ey lived there until Mrs. P ie rc e ’s death in 1901. T h eir youn gest child, F ra n k , had died in M inneapolis w h ere h e w as attending school in 1896. T h eir old er daughter, Charlotte, m ar ried B. I. K ea tin g and soon afterw ard m oved to F argo. Th e yo u n ger daughter, Johanna, m arried S. T. W olfe and a fter liv in g fo r some years in Kansas, spent the rest of h er life in St. Paul. C harlotte died in 1952 and Johanna in 1960. E dm und becam e a prom inent attorney of the Sheldon com m un ity and w as a ctive in state and local politics, servin g for several years in the state legislature. He m arried M argaret Doran, w ho w as post m istress at Sheldon, and th ey m aintained a home there until his death in 1927. Thom as P ierce rem ained a resident of E n derlin the rest of his life. He first operated an elevator, and in 1897 becam e cashier of the Enderlin State B ank. He rem ained w ith the b an k u ntil his retirem ent. He had an interesting sideline, the m anagem ent of the W agner and L o w e M anufacturing Com pany, m aker of L o w e hoof nippers, w hich had a w orld -w id e reputation. He died in 1955, aged 89 years. Mr. P ie rc e ’s w ife, Trena Selvig, whom he m arried in 1900, cam e to Enderlin from her hom e in P rairie F arm , Wis., in 1899, and for a tim e m ade her hom e w ith her sister, Mrs. Ed F alkenborg, the w ife of one of the early Soo Line roadm asters. Trena Pierce w as interested in the religious, civ ic and social life of E nderlin until her death in 1935. Besides being a b u sy m other £nd hostess, she w as an active m em ber of the Catholic Church and the A lta r Society, and a m em ber of the Clio C lub to w hich she contributed m uch tim e and effort in the C lu b ’s project, the P u b lic L ibrary. T w o of the P ie rc e ’s fou r children now live in E nderlin: T hom as Jr., and his w ife Edna W ahl P ierce and th eir tw o sons, Thom as W il liam and P a trick Jam es; and M arie Pierce. F rancis Pierce, th eir oldest child, lives in W inter H aven, F la. T h eir tw o sons, F rank and Jerry Pierce, are practicing la w in O r lando, Fla. K atherin e Pierce m arried Jerry E rickson in 1935 and th ey now live in Fargo, as does th eir son, Peter, sports reporter for The F argo Forum . * T his inform ation is from the fa m ily record in a B ible. The Trapp F am ily In 1881, at the age of 17, H enry T rapp , his brother, Paul, and sister, Johanna, le ft th eir home in Stolp, Pom erania, G erm any, for the United States, com ing to C haffee, N orth Dakota, w h ere th ey had acquaintances. Jo hanna m arried C arl Dehn at C h affee that year. P au l and H enry found w ork ; P au l in F argo in a harness m a k er’s shop, H enry on th e L u th e r farm at C h affee. T h ey saved m oney and w ere soon able to b rin g their parents, Mr. and M rs. K a rl T rapp and their tw o you n ger sisters, Ida (Mrs. B iem ueller) and Em m a (Mrs. F red rich Holter) to this country. Pau l set up his ow n harness shop in B ig Stone C ity, South Dakota, and in 1885, when he reached legal age, H enry filed on a hom estead in Section 30, Pontiac Tow nship, w h ere his parents lived w ith him fo r the rest of th eir lives. K a rl Trapp died in 1905 but Mrs. Trapp lived until ju st short of her hundredth b irth day. In 1891, H en ry ma rried Emma Pett, w ho had com e to A m erica w ith her parents, M r. and Mrs. A u gu st Pett. in 1889. Their story 75 is th at of the usual struggle of the pioneers to establish them selves on the D akota prairies. This th ey did su ccessfu lly, establishing a com fortable and m eticulously cared -fo r farm home. The saddest ch apter of the story w as the death of th eir tw o oldest children. C lara and Siegfried, in the scarlet fe v e r epidem ic of 1903. Mr. and Mrs. T rapp lived to celebrate 66 y ears of m arriage on that hom estead, their deaths com ing only three m onths apart in 1957. W hile Mr. Trapp took part in com m un ity affairs in his earlier years, holding tow nship and school offices, th eir greatest interest w as th eir church, and M r. Trapp served as secretary of the T rin ity con grega tion fo r 44 years. O f th eir six su rv ivin g children. Em m a (Mrs. A . W. Ringw ald) lives in Fargo. A m an da (Mrs. F red H artson) in Norco, Calif., and M artha in Chicago. Th ree sons, W illiam , F red and Otto, farm in the Enderlin com m unity. A d o lp h Ihm e H enry Ihm e, Sr., cam e to the U nited S tates in 1832 w ith his parents and settled in Scott C oun ty, M innesota. He w as one of the troops sent to D akota to subdue the Indians at the tim e of the S iou x rebellion, and served in the 4th R egim ent, Co. F d urin g the C ivil War. In 1871 he m arried Jeanette Engel and in 1878 th ey cam e to N orth D akota and hom e steaded on Section 8 in W atson Township. M r. Ihm e often told his children that the reason he settled in N orth D akota w as that the prairies w ere alive w ith birds, ducks, geese, and prairie chickens, as the troops m arch ed across this area, and the green grass and fragran t flo w ers m ade it the most b eau tifu l cou n try he had e v e r seen. O nly one of th eir eight ch ild ren survives. He is Adolph Ihm e, now retired and livin g in Enderlin. Mr. Ihm e recalls v iv id ly the w in ter of 1887-88. T he snow started early in the w in ter and accum ulated to a great depth. W hen spring cam e his fa th er started out to see if the neighbors had su rvived the w inter. A t the nearest neighbor, the fath er had died during the w in ter. Since there w as no w ay of gettin g out, his body had been w rapped in a b lanket and placed in a snow bank b y the house. A t the n ext farm , th ey had all com e through the w inter, but had burned the fu rn itu re and partitions of the house to k eep w arm . T he Ihm e’s had no kerosene and no coffee. His m other m ade candles, roasted b arley for coffee and brew ed oat-straw tea. T h e y had m ilk so th ey cam e through the w in ter fa irly w ell. Mr. Ihm e recalls several severe storms, in clu d in g the tornado of 1886 that took the C obu rn elevator. T he w in d w as so strong that it tw isted the steel rails of the tracks. He also rem em bers seeing an artesian w e ll 76 northeast of A lice w h ich w en t “ w ild ” th row ing up m ud, rocks, and w ater that buried trees and form ed a lake w here the farm stead had been. Mr. Ihm e m arried Elizabeth K a lles in 1914 and has had a varied career w h ich included farm ing, coun ty treasurer, gen eral store m an ager, grain buyer, county auditor, and m an ager of an Old People’s Home. T h e y raised th eir fa m ily of ten children in m any towns in N orth D akota and M innesota, retu rn in g to E nderlin in 1959 w hen M r. Ihme retired. T h ey are m em bers of the T rin ity L u th eran congre gation. E ric Gunderson E ric Gunderson w as bom at Solar, N or w a y in 1844. He cam e to A m erica at the age of 17 w ith his parents and lived in Wisconsin, Iow a and C h ipp ew a Coun ty, M inn., before com ing to N orth D akota. He becam e d iscouraged w ith farm ing pros pects in the w ooded lands of M innesota and, in 1878, took a tree claim near B u ffalo, N. D. He returned to M innesota and, sellin g his tree claim right, he cam e to L ib e rty T o w n ship in 1880 w ith $33 as capital. He b u ilt a sod shanty and b a m and, in 1881, his fa m ily joined him. W orkin g for others and im proving his own place, he acquired m ore land. He built a com fortable farm hom e w h ere he and his w ife, the form er Sarah Everson, raised nine children. He served in the N orth D akota Legislatu re and w as an early m em ber of W est St. O laf Church. T h ree of his children still live in this area: M rs. E arl H itchcock, Lisbon; M rs. B . J. Tran gsrud, Enderlin; and Ed Gunderson, L is bon. A grandson, E lm er Gunderson, also farm s in Moore Tow nship. George, Charles, A lfred , Lida, Emm a, and Ida are deceased. The Ross W arner F am ily Ross W arner w as born in Ontario, Canara in 1869. W hen he was seven his m other died and his father em igrated to the United States, lea vin g Ross and his sister w ith their grandparents. A fte r some years his fath er purchased a farm east of Sheldon and in 1888, h avin g re m arried, brought his son to live with him. Ross w orked fo r other farm ers, and w h en his fath er’s health failed, farm ed w ith his father. In M arch of 1896 th ey m oved to a farm north east of Lucca in Clifton Township. Tw o years later his father died and his step-m other and sister kept house for him. The N orthern P a cific R ailroad branch line cam e through in 1900, cu tting through his land and for a tim e it looked as if th ey w ou ld b e livin g near a m etropolis, for the tow nsite of Elizabeth w as laid out ju st a h a lf m ile aw ay. F o r a fe w years there w as a post office, store and e le vator on the site. He helped organize and build the Clifton School, D istrict 85, and w as its first clerk. In 1903 he sold his farm and w ent to Cana- da, bringing his sister b ack w ith him. A year later she m arried M r. B ayliss and lived in this com m unity m any years. Mr. W arner w as a carpenter as w ell as a farm er and w orked about the area for some years u n til he m arried M abel B ayliss in 1913, w hen he again purchased a farm n ear Lucca. S even children w ere born to them ; V iolet (Mrs. H alvor Larson) St. A nsgar, Io w a ; V era (Mrs. C u rtis Stoddord) Flasher, N orth Dakota; V ern a (Mrs. Ernest Johnson) Lucca, North Dakota; V irgil, Lucca, N orth Dakota; John, Sheldon, N orth Dakota; Deloris, M idland, M ichigan and Ilene, now in the Philippines. A fte r Mr. W arners death in 1947 M rs. W ar n er m oved to Enderlin, w ith her youngest children. Since th ey are grow n she has acted as h ousekeeper fo r M rs. R oy Rasmussen. The Fern ow F am ily Herm an J. F ern ow w as born in G erm any in 1847. A stone mason b y trade, he served in the G erm an A rm y durin g the FrancoPrussian W ar. In 1874 he m arried M athilda T rapp and in 1887 th ey em igrated to D akota T errito ry w ith their fiv e children, w h ere Mrs. F ern o w ’s brothers and parents w ere already settled in this area. T h ey lived first on a farm n ear Sheldon. A fe w years later th ey m oved to the farm in Pon tiac Tow nship w hich was th eir home for the rest of their lives. F iv e m ore children w ere born here and most of them have farm ed or w ork ed in the E n d er lin com m unity at some time. Th ere w ere f ive sons; V ern er, w ho died in infancy, Ernest, Carl, Paul, all n ow dead and A rth u r still livin g north of Enderlin; fiv e daughters; B e r tha (Mrs. W illiam Cole) n ow deceased; M ary (Mrs. M ark B a y) and A nnie (Mrs. Charles Cole) of Seattle, W ashington; Louise (Mrs. Ed Sullivan ) Redding, California, and L yd ia (Mrs. Leonard Anderson) of E nderlin. M an y grandchildren still live in the com m un ity also. Mr. F ern ow m et his death acciden tally in 1912, w hen he w as throw n from a horse. M rs. F ern o w died in 1918. W illiam Fernow , a b roth er of H erm an, cam e from G erm an y in 1892, w ith his w ife and four ch ild ren . His parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Fernow , accom panied them . T h e y came d ir e ctly to Enderlin, liv in g both in town and on a farm north of the city. A tailor by trade, Mr. F ern ow did tailoring for n eigh bors, w h o often bought lengths of goods from travelin g p a ck p ed dlers. He also m ade o v er alls for Soo Line w orkers and for a tim e w as em ployed on the railroad. A fe w years later he bought a farm b e tw een E nderlin and Lucca. Th ree m ore c h il dren w ere added to the fam ily, brin gin g the total to seven. Mrs. F ern o w died in 1908 and Mr. F ern ow in 1929. T w o of th eir children are still livin g in E n derlin w ith their fam ilies; M argaret G race (Mrs. Hanson) and E dw in. T h e y are active in com m unity affairs and the w o rk of the T rin ity Lu th eran congregation. Th e others are; M ary (Mrs. Charles Hall), H attie (Mrs. Gust Janz), Ernest (Lew) all deceased, Ida (Mrs. Z u m ach) and G ertru d e (Mrs. M cCorm ick). Th e Anderson F am ily A b ou t 1885, John Anderson and his w ife Jessie settled on the SE'/4 of Section 10, P o n tiac Township, four m iles north of Enderlin. Th eir first concern w as to plant 10 acres of trees, for this w as a tree claim . Here th ey raised a fa m ily of eight children, e x periencing the jo y s and hardships of pioneer life, w hen Sheldon and B u ffalo w ere the n ear est m arkets, gra d u a lly im proving their farm and fin d in g life a little easier. In 1920 M rs. A nderson died. Mr. Anderson re-m arried and m oved to Spring V alley, W is consin, selling the farm to F red Tim m . He died in 1931. His w ife still lives in Spring V a lley and a d augh ter of the second m arriage lives in St. Paul, Minnesota. Of th eir children, two are still livin g in this area, W ilson and V io let w en t to Bow m an, N orth D akota, G erald and Isaac m oved to O regon, M ilton to Spring V alley , W isconsin, w h ere he still farm s. Russell ran a variety store in E nderlin b efore m oving to Brem erton, W ashington. T w o sons, Ernest of Nome and John, n ear Sheldon , are still farm ing in this com m unity. G austad F am ily H istory Th e R ev. G austad fa m ily m oved to E nderlin in the fa ll of 1906. A rrivin g in Enderlin, the fa m ily w ere guests in the farm hom e of Mr. and M rs. E ver G ullickson, w ho lived on top of the h ill northw est of Enderlin. Mr. G austad had purchased the house oc cupied b y the form er pastor, the R ev. Jahren. In a fe w days the fam ily m oved into this house and liv e d there during the lives of the pastor and his w ife. In this fa m ily w ere tw o daughters and one son, w ho passed a w a y two years a fter com ing to Enderlin. A n other son, V ictor, w as bom a y e ar later. The three children entered grade school here and the two girls and V ictor finished high school. B efore com ing to Enderlin, Rev. Gaustad w as a pioneer pastor in the w estern part of the state. He traveled exten sively from B is m arck as far w est as M iles C ity, Mont., doing pastoral w ork . Com ing to Enderlin, Mr. G austad’s parish consisted of fou r congregations. O ftentim es he w ould also conduct services for con grega tions in O w ego and another south of E n der lin, called the M aple R iver congregation. Sundays w ould find him cruising over the snow in a cutter d raw n b y tw o beautiful b lack horses, at tim es in v e ry cold w eath er and over trails m arked on ly b y bob sled tracks; there w as no b la ck top nor ca refu lly laid out roads in those days. E ven w alk in g in E nderlin in the early days w as follow in g a w ell trod path, since there w ere no sidew alks excep t a fe w high wooden 77 ones around the business places, but soon a cre w of m asons cam e to tow n and began w ork. Th e m inister w as alw ays interested in im provem ent and m ade friends w ith the m em bers of the crew , m ore especially since Mr. Standal, w ho w as the forem an, w as a m em ber of Ms ch urch. He show ed his interest and hospitality b y in vitin g the w h ole cre w in for coffee w h ile th ey w ere w o rk in g nearby, or also anyone else w ho m ight be dow n the street at the tim e. Th e parsonage w as also a h o m e-aw ay-from hom e fo r several you n g people w ho had come to Enderlin to w o rk and often for several who cam e to entertain, such as a Miss O livia Dahl, a concert singer; a prom inent attorney from G rand F orks w ho had com e to speak at a “ S even teenth of M ay ” celebration; another singer, a M r. R eim stadt who ga ve a concert here. M rs. G austad w as asked if she could entertain these people, since other accom oda tions in tow n w ere ra th er scarce. H ospitality in those days w as practiced m ore gen erally. Life becam e a little easier as this pastor g re w older; his house w as the first in E n d er lin to be w ired for electricity, then cam e cars and better roads. He served one con grega tion here for thirteen years, others for nine teen years. He and his w ife, together w ith the tw o sons, are buried in the W est St. Olaf Cem etery. One daughter still lives in E n der lin, and the other in D elray B each, Flordia. — M rs. Edw in M atthes Th e B an gert F am ily W hen Charles B angert cam e to Sheldon in 1904 at the insistence of Ed P ierce to do some abstracting w ork , he intended to stay two w eeks. Mr. B angert, w ho w as born at Sabula, Iow a in 1879, had com pleted a business a d m inistration course at W estm ar College, and w o rk ed as a law clerk and abstractor. Th e tw o w eeks stretched to six years, during w h ich tim e he continued reading la w and stu dying through correspondence. In 1906 he passed his b ar exam inations and w as a d m itted to practice la w in N orth Dakota. Jan u ary 1, 1910, Mr. B angert opened his own law practice in E nderlin w h ich he continued un til retirem ent in 1962. A lon g the w a y he has been in volved in num berless other v en tures. He m aintained offices in Fargo, in partnership w ith his son H arold. He helped organize the Peoples B an k , w hich later m erg ed w ith the Enderlin State B an k , to form the Peoples and E nderlin State B ank, he w as the first president. He served in the L e g islature and as A ssistan t A ttorn ey G eneral, as w ell as takin g an active role in N . P . L. P a r ty affairs in the 30’s. He served as C ity A t torn ey fo r m any years and w as one of the group w ho organized farm er-ow n ed business es in Enderlin, such as the F arm ers Elevator, of w hich he w as S ecretary for 5 years. Mrs. B angert, the form er Sarah W allace, w hom he m arried in 1903, has been eq u ally active. A form er teacher, she served 12 years on the E nderlin School Board, w as one of 78 the group of w om en w ho organized E n derlin ’s first lib ra ry and still m aintains a keen in terest in both local and national affairs. T h eir children are, Harold, a F argo at torney, Constance, n ow M rs. C. E. Cam pbell, a teacher in M cA llen, T ex as, and, still livin g in Enderlin, D orothy, Mrs. S. C. Bacheller, w ife of the local doctor. The Opheim F am ily M rs. N ick Opheim (Constance Skog) w as born at Ibestad, N orw ay, A p ril 10, 1883. W hen she w as seventeen she w ent into N urses train ing at the Deaconess Hospital in Oslo. M any people w ere seeking m ore opportunity in the United States and the adventu re ap pealed to her. She first cam e to L a k e G a r vin, M innesota in 1903, w here an aunt w as livin g. In the fall of that year she w ent to M inneapolis, w h ere she w orked in the C ity Hospital, now G en eral Hospital. In A u gu st 1907, she came to Lisbon w here she m arried N ick Opheim , w ho had come from N orw ay at the same tim e she did. Mr. Opheim had started w o rk in g for the Soo Line and th ey settled here and raised a fam ily of nine ch ildren. Seven are livin g in Flint, M ichi gan; M abel, (Mrs. G. Johnson) H enry, E dw in, John, K eneth, H elena (Mrs. Hugh W il son) and B etti (Mrs. E. Hazzard). A lm a (Mrs. F red Bohm) lives in Seattle, W ashington. Olaf, the oldest son, is m arried to the form er M ary E llen Lincoln and m akes his home in E n d er lin. Carin g fo r the sick has alw ays been her greatest enjoym en t and the doctors of the area relied on her for assistance w hen the stork w as im minent. A fte r M r. O pheim ’s death in 1947 she ran a m aternity home for eigh t years and included in her adventures a trip b y plane w ith Dr. H endrickson, w hen roads w ere im passable. She counts as “ h e r” babies, 117 b oys and girls now scattered all over the country. Mrs. Opheim says, “ There are m any changes in Enderlin— all for the best for town and com m unity. I h ave m any good friends and neighbors and m any now h ave gone to their rest. Enderlin has a lw ay s been a good home to m e. ” The Robertson F am ily Robert Robertson, a native of N orw ay and Ms w ife M ary A n n e (Houson), born in D en m ark, w ere m arried at LaCrosse, W isconsin. A b ou t 1883 th ey m igrated to N orth Dakota, settling on a claim in Raritan Township. T h ey lived the first years in a sod shanty, as did m any of their neighbors. A fte r a tim e th ey com m enced w o rk on a n ew fram e house, liv in g in the gran ary that sum m er w hile they w ere building. Before it w as com pletely done, the n ew house burned dow n and th ey w ere com pelled to start all over again. The farm house w here th ey raised th eir fa m ily of fo u r teen children now stands em pty on the Roy G illund farm . In 1916 M r. Robertson retired and m oved to Enderlin, where he b u ilt the house now occupied b y Mrs. H elena W estphal. He died in 1922, w h ile Mrs. Robertson lived until 1941. O f th eir children, Robert, Sam, A lfred , H en ry, B etsy (Mrs. Oscar Anderson) and M innie (Mrs. P ete Sonsteby) all lived in the E n d er lin area before m oving to Saskatchew an. A n drew , M yrtle (Mrs. Ja k e G arvin) and To ny live in Portland, Oregon and H enry in Ogden, Utah. Robert and A n d rew M elvin died in infancy, the latter b elieved to be the first child buried in the E nderlin Cem etery, w hile M ary and Esther are both deceased. Lynn, the only m em ber of the fa m ily still livin g in E nderlin, is m arried to the form er Lena Lew and oski and th ey have tw o sons, C arroll and L arry. Hans Skramstad Hans Skram stad w as born in H arm ony, M in nesota in 1864. His first trip to North D akota w as in 1886, w hen he and his b rother accom panied a w agon train to M oorhead, M innesota, and thence w est to the Sh eyen n e. His brother took a claim but Hans retu rn ed to Minnesota. T w o years later he cam e b ack to N. D. by train, w alkin g from railroad at G w in n er to his broth er’s home. He took a hom estead and built a sod house where, the n ext y ear he b rought his bride, Lena Christiandotter, to live. T he Skram stads w ere charter m em bers of St. P etri Lutheran Church and he w as one of the original organ izers of Raritan Tow nship. T h e y had fou r daughters: M innie, Hanna, Alm a, and Helen; and three sons: Palm er, M elford, and Oscar. A ll three sons farm ed west of Enderlin. M elford, now liv in g in V alley City, had one son, C arlyle. Oscar, w ho still farm s near Nome, had six daughters and one son, L eR oy Skram stad, of En derlin. C. P a l m er Skram stad, n ow retired, liv es in E n der lin. He farm ed n orthw est of E nderlin for m any years. A son, A rn e, owns the original S kram stad hom estead and the sod house is part of their home. A n other son, Lester, ow ns the farm next door. T he third son, M erlin, is in business in Enderlin. There are also tw o daughters in the com m unity: C larice (Mrs. W illiam Schlecht) and V ivian (Mrs. Sim on B je rk e ). Fredrich J. Glaesemann F red rich Ju liu s G laesem ann w as b om in G erm an y in 1857, com ing to Enderlin in 1882, w here he took a hom estead on the SE q u ar ter of Sec. 20. A few years later he acquired the farm now owned b y G ordon Lund, w hich w as the fam ily home u n til 1961. In 1887 he m arried H ulda Balau. The G laesem ann’s w ere charter m em bers of the T rin ity N orth Congregation. T h e y raised a fa m ily of three sons: C a rl and A rth u r, both deceased, and Otto. A fte r the death of his w ife, he m ade his home in E nderlin w ith a d augh ter-in -law , Mrs. H ulda Glaesem ann, and his son Otto farm ed the fam ily farm . A lm ost until the time of his death in 1948, he continued to spend m uch of his tim e at the farm in the summ er, helping to keep every th in g hoed and trim m ed and w eeded. Otto Glaesem ann served in W orld W ar I and on his return, m arried D aisy B artel at A lice in 1919. In 1961, th ey retired in E n derlin. T h ey are the parents of fiv e ch il dren: June; deceased, Joyce, and F rances (Mrs. M ark Burton) G rafton, G ilford, G reat Falls, Mont; and W ilbur, Enderlin. Gordon W. Mason Gordon W. M ason w as born in W auke, Iow a in 1883. His father w as a contractor, b u ild ing homes and elevators at G len w ood and K enm are. W hile G ordon w as w ork in g for his fa th er at K enm are, the late H arry Rice, a Soo Line Conductor, persuaded him to go to w ork for the Soo Line. He started ru n ning out of Enderlin as a brakem an in 1909 and rem ained in the Soo Line service as a conductor until his death in 1947. He m arried Ethel Parsons in 1912 at San born, Minnesota. T h e y have one daughter, M axine (Mrs. K en n eth Peterson) of Tucson, A rizon a and Garrison, Minnesota. Mrs. Mason, who still m akes her hom e in Enderlin, is an avid h orticulturist and a v e t eran m em ber of the E nderlin P a rk Board. Mrs. Jacob (Martha) Kurtz Mrs. Jacob (M artha) K u rtz is the only su r vivin g child of the A lb ert Salzw edel fa m ily w ho homestead northeast of E nderlin in the early 80’s. Three brothers, Robert, F rank, and G u stave, w ho lived all of their lives in the area, are now deceased. M artha rem em bers, as a child, that when th ey w en t to E nderlin, the road ran across the section from the Em il G esk e farm to the present E rw in U tke farm . She rem em bers too, a cle rk at the Burtness store, Otto Redetzke, w ho w as alw ays kind to them and gave them candy. He w as the father of Judge Roy Redetzke. M artha m arried Jacob K u rtz in 1919 and th ey farm ed until their retirem ent in 1953, w hen th ey m oved to Enderlin, w here Mr. K u rtz died. Th e home farm is now owned b y th eir son A lvin . T h eir other children are A lfred, Fargo; H ow ard, E nderlin; Leona (Mrs. Law ren ce Fern ow ), A lexan d ria; and Lu cille (Mrs. L a rry E lrite) Coon Rapids, M innesota. William Froemke W illiam F roem ke and his w ife, the form er Elena Schm idtke, hom estead in Shenford T ow nship in 1880 w here th ey raised a fam ily of ten children, several of whom live in this com m unity. T h ey w ere ch arter m em bers of the T rin ity Lutheran Church. T h eir children w ere Am elia (Jaster), B e r tha (Seelig), Pauline (Curtis), M athilda (K ru eger), Em m a (Callahan), Ellen (M ona han), Elsie (E ldridge), Lou, Paul, and A lfred . Th e later tw o farm in L ib erty Township. 79 The Galbreath Family In 1882, W allace G albreath shipped horses and equipm ent to D akota T erritory, w here he took a hom estead 4 ½ m iles w est of the present town of E nderlin. T h at fall he sold his horses and returned to Chatfield, M in nesota fo r the w in ter. In the sprin g he returned to Ransom Coun ty, accom panied b y three brothers and three sisters. T h e y unloaded at B row n s V alley, M innesota, driving for m iles along the Red R iver and then strikin g w est. T h e y forded the S h eyenne n ear the present site of L is bon, an ordeal w h ich frigh ten ed the sisters. W ill and Sam Galbreath settled near Lucca, L izzie m arried Dan Conan, w ho settled near Nome, w h ile her sisters F lo ra and K ate taught in the rural schools of the area. A n oth er sis ter, Jane, m arried Lu te Stew art, w ho was an early d ay depot agent at Enderlin. B e n ton took a claim w est of his b rother Wallace, W ith so m an y of the fa m ily livin g in the area, fa m ily gatherings did m u ch to re lieve the rigors of pioneer life. H ow ever, only two of the fam ily w ere destined to leave de scendants in this com m unity. B enton G albreath m arried Lottie T u rn er at B u ttzville, then the n earest town. T h eir ch il dren w ere: A rchie, B eatrice, (Mrs. Wm. Cald w ell) H oward, Mae, (Mrs. J. W arren) Sacram ento , Calif., and H elen, (Mrs. A lb ert Gust) Leonard. T he last tw o are the only children living. W allace G albreath m arried Ruth Labaree in 1884. A daughter, Ruth, m arried Hans A n derson, of B uffalo, N. D. T w o sons, W ard and Clarence, spent th eir liv es on farm s in the E nderlin com m unity and have several children still livin g here. W ard and L izzie B reu m G albreath raised seven children: M arjorie (N eff), B ism arck; V ivia n (B o xru d ), W allace, and W ym an, all of Enderlin; Lois, (H artigan) W atertow n, S. D.; G en eva (M attox), Massillon Ohio; and Ward, W est Fargo, N. D. The fam ily homestead is farm ed b y W allace, his gran d fath er’s n am e sake. C larence G albreath and Nera A gn es H an son G alb reath had tw o daughters; B e tty (B artz) of E. A m h e r s t , N. Y . and Clarice (W eber) of B ism arck, w ith w hom Mrs. G a l breath now m akes her home. The Gram Family B . F. and A lta G ram settled in the S h el don area in 1883, w h ere his father, H enry G ram , w as an early day M ethodist M inister. A lta G ram tau gh t in the old O wego school. In 1899, M r. G ram w ent to w o rk on the Soo Line. He w orked as an E ngineer for m an y years, out of both H arvey and E nderlin. He died in E nderlin, in 1950, at the age of 86. M rs. G ram now 96,m akes her hom e here w ith her son Fred. F red G ram started as a Soo Line firem an a fter a y e a r of teaching school. He had serv ed w ith the 1st N orth Dakota Infan try on the M exican border and fo r 18 m onths in the 80 A m erican E xpedition ary F orces during W orld W ar I. He m arried Alm a Jones at Enderlin in 1917. T h ey are m em bers of St. A n d re w ’s Episcopal Church and h ave one daughter, M arjorie (Mrs. R. L B at tleson) B u ffalo, N ew Y ork . F red Gram is a past m aster of the M asonic Lodge in Enderlin, and a m em ber of the B roth erhood of Locom otive Firem en and Engineers. He retired from the railroad in 1962, after 43 years of service. Jens Anderson Jens Anderson w as born Jan. 15, 1881, in Sogn, N orw ay, com ing to this country as a you n g m an to find w ork . He cam e to E n derlin in 1903 to w ork on the Soo Line. In 1914, he m arried Ragna Husemoen, w ho w as b o m on a homestead in Ransom C oun ty in 1888, and whose m other died w hen she w as nine, leavin g three you n g children. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson lived all their m ar ried life in Enderlin, raising a fam ily of fiv e sons and one daughter. One of th eir sons, Norm an, died in W orld W ar T w o M argaret (Mrs. R euben B oxru d) lives in Fargo; Elm er, in St. Paul and H enry, Vernon and Elwood in Enderlin. The Foss Family G ust J. Foss w as born in Bran dvol, Solar, N orw ay in 1863. W hen he w as seven, his fa th er brou gh t the fa m ily to A m erica b y sailing boat, the trip takin g thirteen w eeks. The fam ily settled in London, M innesota, w h ere G ust grew up. In 1887, he cam e to the Enderlin area, w o rk ing for Ole Christianson and M ajor Bu ttz for a time. He homesteaded in M oore Tow nship, later trading th at land for a farm fou r m iles w est of E nderlin w here he spent the rest of his life. In 1900, he m arried Emm a Carlson, w ho had em igrated from Sw eden to T exas in 1884. She had w ork ed in M ankato and St. Paul, M innes ota before com ing to w o rk at the new Hilton Hotel in E nderlin. T h eir only child, Edwin Foss w as raised on the farm in Moore T o w n ship. Edw in m arried G lad ys Cam pbell of E n der lin in 1926. He w orked b riefly on the w est coast and th ey lived for some years at Tappan, N orth Dakota, before co m ing back to the farm near Enderlin. T h ey m oved into Enderlin in 1944, w h ere E d w in w orked fo r the Soo Line until retirem ent. The Fosses h ave fou r children; John, M erle, M ary Lou and N an cy (Mrs. Douglas L in d e m ann). Frank Kellerman F rank K ellerm an w as born in Highland Tow nship in 1884, one of the sons of a pioneer fam ily. A n oth er brother, Emil, still lives at Leonard and a brother W illiam , now deceased, w as also a long-tim e resident of the com m unity. F ran k K ellerm an m arried Emma M anske in 1911. T h ey raised a fa m ily of nine children: L aw ren ce, Clarence, and Robert, A lice (T org e so n ), E sther (A rntson), V iolet (Erbstoesser), L o rraine (Hanson), Iren e (Luther), and Eloise (B aarstad), m ost of w hom liv e in the Enderlin-Sheldon area. A life-lo n g m em ber of the T rin ity Lutheran C h u rc h, M r. K ellerm an died in M ay, 1960. His w ife m akes her home in Enderlin. The Benson Family Ju liu s Benson w as born in Sw eden in 1848. He had w o rk ed as a forem an on a farm in G erm an y and as a railroad m an in N orw ay before com ing to the United States. In 1885 he c ame to Sheldon, w ork in g at various jobs until 1891 w h en he return ed to Sw eden for a visit. On h is return, he purchased the first railroad tick et from M inneapolis to Enderlin, tellin g the agent he w an ted to go as far w est as the Soo Line ran. H e w o rk ed around Enderlin and in Fargo until 1896, w hen he bought the T aylor farm in L ib e rty Tow nship w h ere he lived u ntil his death. In 1889 he m arried Caroline A nderson and their fa m ily num bered tw o sons; W illiam and Carl (deceased) and tw o daughters; Vendla (Mrs. Lee) and A lm a (Mrs. L. C. Sorlien). Mr. Benson w as an organizer and V iceP resident of the Sheldon State B a n k and P res ident of the Sheldon Farm ers E levator fo r some years. T he fa m ily w ere m em bers of the F irst Lutheran Church. M rs. Sorlien and M rs. L ee both live in E n d erlin and a grandson Robert Lee, and his w ife, the form er Janice F raedrich, still live on the fa m ily farm . H. A. Johnson H. A . Johnson cam e from N orw ay in 1905, com ing first to Fillm ore County and then to E nderlin, in 1907, w h ere he w ork ed on the E dw ard Storli farm . He m arried Hanna B aardson in 1910. H anna’s fa th er had com e from N orw ay in the hope of earning enough to b rin g his fam ily over, one-by-one. He lived on oatm eal and v e g e ta b le s , savin g eve ry th in g he could m ake as a laborer on the Soo Line tracks. Hanna a rrived in 1906 and before his death he b rou gh t tw o m ore daughters to this country, but his w ife and tw o sons rem ained in N orw ay. His only recreation w as the “ Sons of N o rw ay Lodge, ” and all his m oney w en t to support his fa m ily in N orw ay. Hans and Hanna farm ed for a fe w years before m ovin g to E n derlin w ith three teams of horses w hich he used to haul m ail to Sheldon, transport doctors to farm s, haul coal, and plow gardens; fin ally purchasing a tru ck in 1929. In la ter years he w ork ed for the Soo Line. Mr. Johnson low lives at H illcrest Manor. T h ree children grew up in E nderlin: L es lie, an attorney in Logan, Ohio; G ladys (Mrs. Ralph W avra) Rolla, N. D.; and Ida (Mrs. H en ry Freitag) Enderlin. Gus Luther G ust L u th er w as born in G erm an y in 1876, com ing to A m erica w hen a young boy. He came to the Casselton area and then to E ldred Tow nship, northeast of E nderlin, in 1892. In N ovem ber 1901, he m arried A ugusta E ck elburg. T h e y had tw in daughters w ho died in in fancy and tw o sons, E dw in and Harold, w ho took over their fa th er’s farm ing interests on his retirem ent. Mrs. L u th er died in 1919. A form er m em b er of St. Joh n ’s Lutheran C hurch, he tran s ferred m em bership to T rin ity L u th eran in E n derlin in his later years. His death oc cu rred in 1965 at the age of 89 years. John Johnson M r. and Mrs. M artinus Johnson and son, John, cam e from Taten, N orw ay, to Fillm ore County in 1879. T he follow in g year, Mr. Johnson came to V alley C ity in charge of a car of cattle. He found w o rk n ear Hastings and w alked each w eeken d to the home of relatives n ear Nome, w h ere he filed for a hom estead. H avin g bu ilt a sod house, he sent fo r his w ife and son in 1881. Both Mr. and Mrs. Johnson w ork ed out on farm s the first sum m ers and lived on th eir own farm in w inter. T h e y lost a son, Peter, in infancy and later adopted a daughter, Dena. E a rly church services w ere held in the homes. Confirm ation instructions w ere given at D aly, a settlem ent north of the present site of K athryn, and John w alked the eight m iles to attend. The first Ladies A id was organized at the Johnson home. A fe w years later the St. P e te r’s Lu th eran Church was built. John m arried Hansine L ib ak in June, 1911, and th ey celebrated their golden w ed ding ann iversary in 1961. Dena m arried H er man Johnson and now lives in Fargo. T h e Johnsons got their m ail at H ackett, a post office south of the presen t town of Nome, but in the early days, V alley C ity w as the nearest town and m any times in the w in ter th ey m ade the trip on foot. One time Mr. Johnson bought 100 pounds of potatoes and carried it home, not daring to set it down to rest fo r fear he couldn't lift it to his shoulders again. John Johnsons h ave fiv e ch ildren : M artin, w ho farm s the home farm ; H elen (Mrs. A lvin Johnson) V a lle y C ity; Hope (Mrs. Don K ock ) Scapposse, Ore.; Jeanette (Mrs. M aynard Lindem ann) Enderlin; and Pearl (Mrs. Ralph O ehlke), both of Enderlin. The Oehlke Family Freidrich and A u gu sta O ehlke lived in F erstenau, G erm any, w h ere he w as a carpen ter and contractor. Though th ey w ere fa irly com fortable fin ancially, among their friends and neighbors there w as m uch talk of the free land in Am erica. E arly in 1881, th ey offered th eir hom e fo r sale and sailed up the Elbe to Ham burg, w here th ey w aited fo r the n ec essary papers and the boat th at w ould take them to Am erica, hoping fo r opportunities for their children. It w as sad-hearted jou r- 81 ney, fo r the Utkes and Sch atzkes had not yet sold their farm s and m ust follow later. R eachin g Fargo, th ey filed for a hom estead in the area north w est of Sheldon, and, p u r chasing a cow, a yo k e of oxen, a w agon and some lum ber, set out fo r Casselton and b e yond. A 14 x 16 shanty w as built on their claim and plastered w ith cla y to house them and their three ch ild ren : Herman, G ustav and Anna. In 1892, Mrs. O ehlke becam e ill and diagnos ing it as cancer, an early Sheldon doctor, Dr. A ylen , undertook to operate. T h is n ew v e n ture was perform ed w ith the assistance of tw o m ale nurses, on the dining room table in the home of her d aughter Anna, M rs. Wm. Fraedrich. Th e operation proved to have com e too late, but Mrs. O ehlke read of some plasters, su p posed to cure cancer. T hese w ere applied fo r nine days, eating into the flesh so that w hen rem oved, the cancerous flesh w as p u l led a w a y w ith them . In spite of the pain, she continued tryin g to destroy the cancer. In the fall, when it becam e obvious that she w as not getting better, the fam ily, as a last resort, sent her, w ith her young son G ustav, to Chicago. A t times the pain w as so severe she could not talk, and G u stav w as an in ex perienced boy. T h ey fe ll into the hands of a rapacious landlady and a quack doctor until R ev. M elchert, their local pastor, heard of their situation and w rote to frien ds w ho se cured a m ore reputable doctor. He told her the truth— th at she could not be cured and th ey took the n e x t train home. In an im provised am bulance— a lum ber w ag on tank, saw ed in h alf and filled w ith straw and blankets, th ey took her to the hom e of her daughter w here she died in 1906. A fte r her death, her husband w as n ever w ell. T h e hardship of life on the prairie and the m an y tim es his feet had been frozen took th eir toll. He w as bedridden m uch of the tim e and died in 1906. H erm an O ehlke w orked as a farm hand about Casselton a fter com ing from G erm any w ith his parents. Th e first year he lost three days because of illness and had to m ake them up out of his y e a r’s w ages of $120. He hom esteaded across the road from the present tow n of E nderlin, w o rk in g on the grade as the Soo Line w as built into E n der lin to earn extra cash. A t one tim e he w as forced to b orrow $300 and it w as predicted that he w ould n ever be able to p ay it off. Since little land w as available for expansion in his neighborhood, he traded his farm for that of his father, northeast of Enderlin. Y ear by year, he added to his holdings until, at the tim e of his death, he owned over seven sections of land. Mr. O eh lk e m arried Hulda U tke in 1888. E ight ch ild ren w ere born to them, only three of w hom su rvived to adulthood. T w o sons, E rw in and Reinhard, died in a scarlet fever epidem ic; Em ilie died at birth, Clara at the age of fiv e and D orothy at sixteen. Three 82 sons grew to m anhood in the Enderlin com m un ity: Fred, of Enderlin; F rank, Minneapolis; and Herm an Jr., w ho lived at D evils L ak e and died in 1964. F red G. O ehlke attended the N DSU and took over m anagem ent of the fam ily estate on the death of his father. His share of the p roperty w as the home farm and he operated it until 1921, when a serious illness caused him to qu it farm ing. He w ent to w ork in the Peoples and E n der lin State Bank, and rem ained there for 33 years, as cashier and president, until retire m ent in 1954. F red has been active in all phases of com m un ity life, servin g as the treasurer of T rin i ty Church for 35 years, as a council m em ber for 27 years. He was a charter m em ber of the K iw a n is Club, Corn Show chairm an for ten years, President and Secretary of the Farm ers E levator for a com bined total of 46 years, a m em ber of the city council and a m em ber of the E nderlin School board for 37 years. He m arried M argaret Sm ith in 1913. Th ey raised a fam ily of three: L yn n and Lucille, (Mrs. M elford Tyssland) both deceased, and Ralph of Enderlin, the fourth generation to farm the O ehlke hom estead. G ustav Oehlke, the other son of Fraedrich O e h lk e , lived for m any years on the farm just across the road from the city. He m ar ried H attie W alters of Lucca and this m ar riage ended in divorce. T he son, Richard, farm s in the E nderlin com m unity. Som e years later he m arried Anna O ’Leary, a w id ow w ith one son, A rth u r. W hen her sister died, the O ehlkes took her three ch il dren, Jess, Jeanette (Mrs. W ade B ailey) Washington, and Clara (Mrs. Enockson) E n derlin, into th eir home and raised them as their own. The Fraedrich Family W illiam F raed rich Sr. w as born in M adi son, W isconsin, and although he was a fa rm er w ith a large fam ily, he served in the C ivil W ar. Sh ortly a fter he cam e back to the farm from the w ar, his w ife died, leavin g him w ith eleven children. In 1880, his son, W illiam Jr., cam e to North Dakota w ith some neighbors. The n ext year, his father loaded his children and all his possessions into three covered w agons and set out from W ausau for D akota Territory. T he trip took six w eeks and because of high w ater that spring, m any bridges w ere w ashed out, one collapsing as the last w agon passed over it. He took a hom estead fo u r m iles east and two m iles north of Enderlin. F our of his children m oved to Canada; A u gust, Emil, Herm an and A nna (M iller). G a r ret and A lv in a (Behnke) settled at H arvey, N orth Dakota; M arie (Retzlaf) at Cooperstown and A ugusta (Frohm ) at Salem , Oregon. Three sons W illiam , Julius and Albert, rem ained in this com m unity. W illiam Fraedrich homesteaded five miles east of Enderlin, on the farm now ow ned by L eon H euer. He w as active in m any com m un ity affairs, servin g as director of the State B a n k of Sheldon, of the Peoples B ank of E n derlin and as President of the Peoples and Enderlin State B ank; served on the board of the A n selm Farm ers E levator, the Sheldon F arm ers E levator and w as a charted m em ber of T rin ity Lutheran Church. He m arried Ana O ehlke in 1882 and their three daughters w ere; A lv in a Lindem ann, Ida K aatz and Pauline H euer, all of w hom live in E nderlin. A lb ert Fraedrich m arried M artha Lonz. He rem ained on the hom e farm and of their nine children, some still live in this com m unity. T he children w ere Irvin, Theodore and Anna (M ichalski) all deceased; L yd ia jRife) in Oregon, A m elia (Ulness); Tacom a Wash.; Orien, w ho recen tly m oved to the w est coast, Loren and M arvin, of Enderlin. Julius F raed rich m arried B arth a Danelt. T h e y had fo u r children; A lb ert and E m il, who m oved to the w e st coast; Emm a (Mrs. P eter B u ttke) who spent m uch of her life here and now lives in G rove City, Minnesota, and Em ilie (Mrs. R. T. Petrich ) now deceased. The Shelver Family T h e first of the Sh elvers to come to North D akota w as P eter S h elver, w ho filed a hom e stead in Section 34, L iberty Tow nship, in 1880. His gran dparen ts had come to N orw ay from G erm an y and had accum ulated large holdings of tim berlands, but hard tim es and bad investm ents had dissipated the fam ily holdings and the fu tu re looked v e ry b leak. He set out for A m erica and the prom ise it held, n ever to look b ack w ith regret. P eter first found w ork on the railroads in W isconsin, liv in g fru g a lly and saving all his m oney. In 1881, he b rought his parents, Mr. and M rs. John Sh elver, to this country. T h ey filed on the qu arter adjoining his and bu ilt a house on the line b etw een the quarters so that each had a room on his land, thus fu l fillin g the hom estead law. T w o oth er sons, M artin and Jacob, w h o had em igrated to W isconsin in 1879, n o w join ed them and filed on the rem aining quarters of the section. Eventually, tw o more of Johan S h elve r’s sons, Iv e r and Nils, took farm s in the com m unity. Thorval, the rem aining son settled at D evils Lake. PE T E R SH E LV E R m arried M artha G u llic k son and they raised a fam ily of ten children. His e arly years m ade a m ark on him and he alw ays paid cash and avoided bills. He was handy at fix in g things and careful in his care of livestock. He prided him self that his was one of the rare farm s that had never had a m ortgage. W hen the Soo Line cam e through, it cut across his original hom estead. The paym ent for the right of w ay w as $100 an acre, a generous sum for those days. O f their ten children, only one son, Oscar, still lives in E nderlin. M arried to the form er Dorothy Cam pbell, he farm ed, w as a grain b u yer and has w orked for a succession of hardw are stores: B jo rk and Standal, B orstad’s, L u id ah l’s and H ong’s. T he other of P eter S h elve r’s children are Jean, M inneapolis; Ida (Mrs. L. Schneider) W interhaven, Fla.; Helen (Mrs. A. Swanson), M oorhead; F lorence (Mrs. K . Cunningham ), Cam arilla, Calif.; Edna (Mrs. B. Landsem ), K etch ikan , A laska; M ildred (Mrs. Earl G or don) Moorhead; E dw ard, V an cou ver, W ash.; and Milton, Chicago. One son died in infancy. J A C O B SH E L V E R m arried Hulda Olson, daughter of Hans Olson, another early settler in L ib erty Township. T h ey raised a fam ily of thirteen children on the homestead w here th ey lived until their deaths. A ll the Sh elver fa m ily w ere loyal m em bers of the W est St. O laf C h u rch and Jacob built the original church. S ix of th eir children still live in the E nderlin area: John and T h o rv al on the fa m ily homestead; N evelle; Minnie( Mrs. F. Anderson): A lm a (Mrs. Ingvold Moe)- and Ina. W illiam is at Staples, M inn.; G len is at Dunseith, N. D; Ruth, H enry, Louis, and P h ilip are now deceased. N ILS SH ELV ER m arried O live Anderson. He had attended L u th er College but cam e b ack to Ransom Coun ty to farm . He re tained his interest in education and w as v e ry active in school and civ ic affairs. O f their nine children: Norton, L aw ren ce, R ay, Ernest, Sidney, Lester. Pearl, E thel and Ruby, only one daughter, Ethel (Mrs. N. H. Severson) still lives in the E nderlin areas. M A R T IN SH E LV E R m arried Anna H an son. T h ey lived on the hom estead in L iberty Tow nship until he retired, m oving into E n derlin w h ere he died in 1927. O f their fiv e children, W alter and Esther are deceased; A gnes, M yrtle, and A lice no longer live in the area. IV E R SH E LV E R m arried Berth a C h ristian son, d aughter of another L ib erty pioneer, Ole Christianson. T h eir ch ild ren are no longer livin g in the E nderlin area. D orothy is deceased, G lad ys (Mrs. M orris Aasheim ) in Iowa; Clifford, Billings, Mont.; and M erlin, M inneapolis, Minn. Ole Christianson Ole Christianson w as born Jan uary 20, 1848, near K on gsvin ger N orw ay. He cam e to A m e r ica and settled n ear Mona, M itchell County, Iow a. There in 1878, he m arried B elle T h o r son, w ho died in 1884. Three children w ere born to them : Charles B., Bertha (Shelver) and Josephine C. (Mrs. O. C. O lson). A ll are now deceased. In the fall of 1881 he and his fa m ily m oved to Ransom County, Dakota. He pu rch ased a h alf section of land in L iberty T ow n sh ip and the follow ing spring m oved onto the place for perm anent residence. He had ten head of cattle and six horses, but b y 1900 he owned 1600 acres of land; 1400 acres he cropped, and raised stock on the rest. On Decem ber 9, 1886 Ole m arried Miss Christina G olberg and to this union A lfred , 83 W illie, and Claren ce w ere born. W illie, E n derlin, is the only one surviving. W est St. O laf congregation w as organized on D ecem ber 12, 1898 and services held in the new church on Christm as D ay 1898. Ole w as one of the building com m ittee. A ction w as tak en to secure a bell for the church on O ctober 12, 1902. It w as decided to purchase one w eighin g 1200 lb s and costing $295. R ev. Jahren and Ole w ere to act as a com m ittee to secure finances. A special m eetin g had to be held later to decide how the bell w as to be used at funerals. Th e ru le was m ade as follow s: The rin gin g w as to begin w hen the funeral procession w as about h alf a m ile from the church, and to continue until the coffin w as carried into the church. A fte r the ser vices the ham m er w as to be tolled w hen the coffin w as borne to the grave. A fte r the com m itm ent the bell w as to be rung again w hile the grave was filled in. To com plete the story of the bell, an attem pt to steal it w as m ade during the w ar. T he bell w as taken out of the ch urch and hidden w ith a fe w chosen to know w h ere it w as. A fte r peace was established and the price of m etal d rop ped to a point w h ere all tem ptation to steal it w as rem oved, the bell was again replaced w h ere it belonged. T he organization m eeting of W est St. O laf Ladies A id w as held at the home of Mrs. Christianson on Jan uary 13, 1898. A ll of his fam ily lived in this com m unity. Charles, m arried Anna Trangsrud. T h eir children are: Orlando, A lice (Mrs. A . D. N el son), A rd elle (Mrs. Clarence Paulson), and Esther (Mrs. L a rry T hilm ony). A lfred m arried Am anda Disdahl. T h ey had tw o children: Ralph of Grafton, and V ivian (Mrs. R obert B aribeau) Lusk, W yom ing. W illie m arried Lena Fosse, and th eir ch il dren are: Leslie, Donald, G race Mrs. Jim H e n d ric k so n , all of Minneapolis, and W ilm a (Mrs. Pu rl Larson) of Jam estow n. Clarence m arried Emma A asheim . Th ey h ave one son, Conway, of R ockville, M a ry land. Th e fam ilies of Josie (Olson) and B ertha (Shelver) are listed elsew here in these pages. an artificial lim b. T h ey attended church services in the R ailroad depot, not having the churches built at th at time. In 1915 he took over the farm ing operations from his father, M r. S. P. Benson, w ho re tired then m oved to E nderlin. On June 24, 1916 he m arried Miss Lillian W iden at M in neapolis, M innesota. M rs. Benson taught school for a w hile in R aritan School. M r. Benson w ork ed for Charles N ewton, a bu ild ing contractor in Sheldon. He continued to farm until 1957, w h en ill-health forced him to retire. H is son K en eth is still a ctively engaged in farm ing. Mr. and Mrs. Benson brought 2 sons and 5 daughters into the w orld. K en n eth and E verett, Joyce, Marion, Crystal, Mrs. L. D. (Bernice) Rood, and Mrs. D. (Betty) K orstad. T he Bensons are m em bers of the E van gelical F ree C hurch in Enderlin and he has been a trustee in the same church. Hjalmer Benson The A m eson Family H jalm er Benson w as born M arch 6, 1880, in Skane, Sw eden. He came to the United States about in 1882 w ith his parents and an older sister, Dena. T h ey first settled n ear W heat land and about fiv e years later th ey m oved to w h ere Mr. Benson, his w ife, and son K e n neth n ow live. T h e y brought a 14 foot by 2 0 foot building to use as a house w ith them. T h ey b rought their possessions and belongings in ox d raw n wagons. His father, a form er sailor in Sw eden, bought 80 acres from a Miss Lundahl, who had hom esteaded the land. Mr. Benson first attended school at a little school about h alf a m ile east of tow n and finished in Pontiac. His teacher w as a Mr. D avis w ho w as teaching to b u y M artin A m eson cam e to L ib erty Tow nship in 1882, having m igrated from N orw ay the y e ar before and spent the first m onths in W isconsin. He w as a charter m em ber of the W est St. O laf C hurch. A carpenter and ca binet m aker, he helped Jacob S h elve r to build the church and enclosed the cem etery at his ow n expense. His daughter, M artha, later Mrs. Theodore B jo rk , w as the first child b ap tised in the church. His w ife died in 1895, and M artha took over the care of the household. In 1901, he m oved to Enderlin and follow ed his trade until his health failed. He spent the last years of his life in the B jo rk home. In addition to Mrs. B jo rk , there w ere fiv e children. H arold and C lara died as sm all children. H enry is a dentist in L a k e City, 84 The Wold Family Jam es O. W old w as b om in B ergen , N or w ay, in 1842. He w ork ed out b y the year in N orw ay until h e w as of age and then set out for A m erica and the opportunities it offered, com ing first to Dane County, W is consin, w here a cousin w as livin g. He m oved to M innesota, Where he farm ed until the spring of 1882, when he sold out and came to Dakota territory. He spent a month in Cass County and then filed on a homestead in L ib e rty Tow nship. His assets consisted of seven head of cat tle and three horses but no cash, so he and his tw o sons w orked out b y the day to get started on their claim. He m arried Orine Anderson in 1863 and th ey w ere the parents of eight children: A n d rew , Maria, John, Annie, Christian and James. Jam es J. W old m arried M ary Card, of Alice, N. D. in 1910. T h ey h ave one son Iveson, w ho now lives in Compton, California. Jim W old farm ed for m an y years and w orked for H arper’s G rocery departm ent and for Pete B erg. He sold his farm to the Dagm an fa m ily, w ho farm the original W old homestead. His w ife, M ary, still lives in Enderlin. Minnesota, Ella (Dawson) lives in Chicago and M inie (Allison) in Sturgis, S. D. Theodore B jo rk w as born in Mona, Iowa and clerked in a store before com ing to E n d erlin in 1903. He w as em ployed by the C ham berlain -W allace com pany w hen he first arrive, the firm at that tim e operating a hardw are store as w ell as a lum ber yard. He m arried M artha A m eson in 1905 and the n ext year, he and Mr. Standal bought the hardw are store and the business operated in the same spot until his death in 1944. The B jo rk children w ere: Arnold, w ho died in 1926, M argaret (Vieg), Clarem ont, Califo rnia; K en eth of Northfield, Minn., now on s a b b a t ic a l leave in N airobi, K en ya, A frica; Harold, Kenosha, W isconsin. M rs. B jo rk con tinues to m ake her home in Enderlin. Iver Neros Ive r Neros w as bom in Romsdalen, N orw ay and cam e to E nderlin w ith his w ife, the fo rm er S yn o ve Strand, whom he m arried in M in neapolis in 1903. A tailor b y trade, he w ent into business w ith Ed O yaen. W hen their shop burned, each opened his own shop, since they were busy m aking suits for conductors and b rake men on the th rivin g Soo Line. Mr. Neros used to tell that as he w alked home along the tracks to his house on the outskirts of town, he carried a club, because the w olves w ere so tam e and fearless that th ey w ould w alk along beside him. He w as a m em ber of the Zion Lutheran Church and the Sons of N orw ay Lodge. He died a fte r a long illness in 1931. M rs. Neros died in 1924. Th ere w ere fiv e children in their fam ily: K laire, now of M inneapolis and fou r sons: I r w in and A llen of Enderlin, Jerom e, M innea polis, and Berdon, Glenw ood, Minnesota. Herman Bohm H erm an Bohm w as born in G erm an y in 1852 and cam e to this country at the age of about 18. He settled at St. Charles, Minnesota, com ing to the Enderlin area about 1880, w here he settled in H ighland Township. He m arried Ida Lindem ann at F argo in 1884. T h ey raised a fam ily of two sons and fo u r daughters, most of w hom spent m ost of th eir lives in the E nderlin com m unity. T h ey are: M ax, A lm a, and Cecelia (Mrs. H enkel), all deceased. M argaret (Mrs. B ra d y), Fred, in W ashington and Hartha (Mrs. F ra n k Sallen) of E nderlin. Carl Dehn Carl Reinhard Dehn w as born in G rum kow , Stolp, G erm an y in 1851. In 1878, he cam e to A m erica w ith a brother, Frank. He w orked at the D alrym ple and Cass farm s at Cassel ton and then filed on a hom estead half a m ile w est of Chaffee. In 1881 he m arried M athilda Trapp, w ho had com e from G erm an y with her brothers, P au l and H enry Trapp. In 1898, the Dehn fam ily m oved to E n d er lin w here th ey bought the M alette farm , north of Enderlin, from A . R. Smith. Mr. Sm ith, who lived at Springfield, N ew Y ork , often stayed w ith the fa m ily on his y early trip to N orth Dakota. Th e old Pontiac 100 School stood w here the present house now stands, the school being m oved north and w est of the farm a few years a fter th ey bough t it. Th e Dehn fam ily grew to tw elve. T h ey w ere m em bers of the Salem Evangelical C hurch north of Enderlin. Mr. Dehn w as active in tow nship and school affairs, se rv ing as treasurer and clerk. Of their children, W illiam , Charles, A lfred, Lily, and Emma, (Mrs. Otto Oeder) are d e ceased. The su rvivin g children are Fred, G rand Forks; A d elaid e (Mrs. K ron k ), B la ck R iver F alls Wis.; Paul, A rthur, Eugene, and W alter, all of Enderlin. Ed Fraase Ed Fraase w as born A pril 23, 1877 in G e r m any and came to A m erica at 16 years of age w hen his uncle, H enry Fraase sent him a pass. A fte r livin g for several years w ith his uncle at B u ffalo, he w orked for Wm. F raed rich for some time and then started farm ing for him self. In 1902, he m arried Augusta K u n st in the Pontiac Church, the first couple m arried in the church by R everend Elster. T h ey lived on the old L iest farm for a few years, then bought the N. W. quarter of Section 24 in L ib e rty Tow nship w here they lived for fortyseven years, adding to their holdings from time to time. Mrs. Fraase w as born in Malin, Russia and cam e w ith her parents to this area when she w as 11 years old. W hen they first arrived in the Dakotas, the children w ere farm ed out to w ork for their room and board. Mrs. Fraase stayed w ith the Adolph K u rtz fam ily at L u cca and often felt lonely so far from her fam ily. She later w orked at Sheldon, nearer her home. W hile w ork in g for W illiam Fraedrich, Ed Fraase experienced a h a p p y m oment w hich affected his entire life. He and W illiam Schm idt w ere friends and schoolm ates in G erm an y. M rs. Schm idt em igrated w ith her fa m ily to live w ith a brother at S tew art, M in nesota w hen her husband died. The boys wept at parting and vow ed that one day they would be re-united. Ten years later, Schm idt and his uncle cam e to D akota to find w ork. B y some coincidence th ey stopped at the F raed rich farm , and after ten years separation, the boys m et at the breakfast table on Su n day m orning. The friendship lasted through out their lives. Mr. Schm idt m arried Anna Schm idt, daugh ter of A u gu st Schm idt, in 1902 and began farm ing on the farm n ow ow ned b y K enneth Kellerm a. Th e tw o m en bought th eir first threshing m achine, a straw fed steam er, to gether and their w ives helped each other 85 during the busy seasons. O ccasionally the two friends w ould tak e tim e from th eir chores and m ake a fishin g trip to Minnesota. E d Fraase passed a w a y in 1947 w h ile his w ife lived u n til 1963. T h ere are fiv e su rv iv ing ch ildren : A lm a, (Mrs. P e te r B u n n ), S h el don; E rw in , and A rnold, Enderlin; Elm er, Sheldon; and Reuben, F argo. W illiam Schm idt died in 1956. His w ife m akes her home w ith her daughter, Mrs. E vely n K ru e ge r, at Venlo. F ou r other c h il dren su rv ive : Mrs. Julius Bunn, Sheldon; A l vin, California; B ert, Idaho; and M elvin, L a M oure. A son, V ictor, of Enderlin, is d e ceased. His w ife Lila and her fa m ily live in Enderlin. Ole Nygaard O le P. N ygaard w as born in N orw ay and came to A m erica through the aid of uncle, K . J. Taralseth, a pioneer m erchant of the W arren, Minn., com m unity In 1893, he m arried Tilda M yrom at W ar ren. T h e y m oved to T h ie f R iv er Falls, w here th ey m ade th eir home u n til com ing to E n derlin in 1909. Mr. N ygaard w as a b lacksm ith on the Soo Line in the days w hen all the w eld in g w as done b y hand. The repair track w h ere box cars w ere fix ed had a crew of about ten men. The N ygaards raised a fa m ily of ten ch il dren; three sons and seven daughters. T w o of the sons, Ole and P eter still liv e in E n derlin. B oth w ere baseball p layers and en thusiasts. B oth w o rk ed fo r the Soo Line. P eter N ygaard has also served as M ayor of the tow n and is cu rren tly an alderm an. The Cavett Family John Dean C a vett w as born in Ohio in 1845. A s a you n g man he served on the frontier in the arm y and k n ew B ill Cody and other pioneer figures. In 1872, his p a r ents settled in M itchell C oun ty Iow a, w here he m arried Sarah Sherm an, and farm ed u n til 1904, w hen the fa m ily m oved to Moore T ow nship w here he lived until his death in 1928. T w o of his sons, C h aun cy and Charles tau gh t in Ransom County, C hauncy serving as Ransom C o un ty Superintendent fo r some tim e. H arriette, the only daughter, taught all of her life, as w ell. A ll three sons farm ed in Moore Tow nship, F re d farm in g the home farm and Charles settling across the road. This farm is now ow ned b y his son, A lden C avett. John, Ed and Peter; and the girls’ names w ere Julia (Mrs. Leist, n ow livin g in L is bon and w ho is 93 years old),H enrietta, Rose, M adge (Mrs. Joe W aldhalm of Enderlin), M ary and K a ty . M ary and K a ty died b e fore th ey grew to w om anhood. Mr. and Mrs. S u llivan also raised tw o grandchildren, Leo Anderson and P earl R igger. T h at fall, F red w ho was 14, and Leo, who w as 19, w ere sent ahead of the fam ily to do the fall plow ing. T h ey left home in a box car w ith ten horses and some of their farm m achinery w ith strict instructions not to get out of the rail car until they reached Enderlin. The trip proved to be a three-day jou rn ey, so th ey w ere forced to disobey their fa th e r’s orders. On arrivin g in Enderlin, th ey had to seek directions to the farm , w hich w ould be the fa m ily ’s fu tu re home. East of their farm , a w id o w er b y the name of O eder and his three sons lived in a sod house. Leo and Fred spent the entire fall plowing the ground, getting it ready fo r the n ext year's crop. T h ey slept in the gran ary until the rest of the fa m ily arrived two days b e fore Christm as. The fam ily had plen ty of help w ith their ow n six boys, so even tu ally two of the sons w ent to Minot to hom estead. B y this time, E nderlin w as fa irly w ell settled. Fred re m em bers b reak in g lots of sod, including that w h ere M iller’s S ervice Station now stands, and on the H erm an O ehlke farm near Lucca. B ein g one of the few Irishm en in a strong G erm an com m unity, the question w as raised if the fam ily felt out-of-place. T he answ er w as a firm “n o” w ith one exception— “ at tow n ship m eetings Germ an w as the language of the day, and so the Irishm an felt “ on the outside. ” F red rem em bers voting in the T aft-B ryan election of 1908 as it w as his first tim e to exercise that privilege. A t that time, you placed an “ X ” at the top of the ballot and that indicated your choice for the entire ticket. In 1917, J e rry Sullivan sold out and m oved to E nderlin. He died at the age of 88 in 1935. His w ife, nee Rosean M eighan, w as born in Yellow stone, Wis., in 1851. She passed aw ay at 91 y ears of age in 1942. F red left the farm in 1908 to w ork for the Joe W iper D ra y Line. He also w orked a short tim e for the Soo Line. In 1913, he m arried Ethel M artin and th ey m oved north w est of Lisbon, w here th ey spent their m ar ried life farm ing, until retiring in 1958, w hen they m oved to Lisbon. Jerem iah O. Sullivan In the spring of 1902, J e rry Sullivan, bom in Castle Tow n C o u n try C ork, Ireland, and now of Edgerton, Minn., bought a farm in P on tiac T o w n sh ip from M atilda H aynes and M ary R. Vance. H is fam ily consisted of six boys and six girls. Therefore, he w as interested in m oving to the w ide open spaces w h ere land w as still a bargain. The b oys w ere Leo, Jerry, Fred, 86 Gerald B uss F am ily M y father, Herm an Buss, lived in Germ any during his childhood until he grew to m an hood (age 21) com ing to A m erica from Berlin, G erm an y, in 1884. My grand father and grandm other and m y mother, A n nie M oldenhoer, came to this country from Germ any in the y ear 1872. M y m other w as tw o years of age w hen she cam e across. In 1889 m y m other and fa th er w ere m arried and shortly th erea fter started a farm of th eir ow n near Leonard, N. D. From this m arriage there w e re born seven children, of w h ich only fiv e are now living. In 1900 m y Dad sold the farm near Leon ard and bought an other farm south of Sheldon. T h e first y e ar m y dad had the farm n ear Sheldon w as a d ry y e ar and no crop at all w as had. In the fa ll of 1900 I started school at age nine in a little one-room school house. Of course there w ere no school busses at th at time, so I w as forced to w a lk tw o m iles to school e v e ry d ay along w ith m y sister. School w as d ifficu lt fo r m e fo r the only lan guage I spo ke w as G erm an and I had to learn English during the first year of school. T he n ext spring (age 10) I did all of the h arrow ing w ith two horses on a three-section drag and w alked all day, part of the tim e barefooted. T h at y e a r w as a p len tifu l year fo r m y fam ily. In the fall I b ucked straw fo r B ill F rid ay. Dan Froem ke and I threshed for about tw e n ty -fiv e days rid in g horses and bu ckin g straw . W e w orked from six in the m orning u ntil eight in the even in g for w hat w ould seem lik e ch icken feed to the young generation of tod ay— 13 hours at $1.50. I w ork ed on m y fa th e r’s farm u n til I w as 23. M y w ife (T illie Ihm e) and I w ere m ar ried N ovem ber 4, 1914. D urin g the w in ter m onths w e lived w ith m y folks and in the spring of 1915 w e rented a farm . In the fa ll w e w e re able to b u y some farm land. The agreem ent w as that I p u t up all the buildings, w ith a crop paym ent com ing due e v e ry fall. Th e valu e of land at that tim e w as $30 an acre. Th e first year w e lived on that farm a son, C lifford, w as born. In 1919, a daughter, Inez (Mrs. M erle Schm idt) w as born. E v e r y thing w as going fine until 1926 w hen our house and all of our belongings w e re lost in a fire w hen our cook stove exploded. T h en cam e the 30’s w h en fo r fo u r years straight there w as no crop at all. I sold m y spring pigs one fa ll for 50 cents apiece and sold some stock cow s and some m ilk cow s ranging from $10-$20 apiece. D uring this time, w h en F ra n k lin D. R oosevelt w as President, I w ork ed for the W P A building dam s and b rid ges in Shen ford T ow nship I w o rk ed on tw o d ifferen t shifts, m aking $80. H ow w ere w e to know that a cold freezin g w in ter w as ahead of us. T h at w in ter w e cut green wood to k eep from freezing. From the y e ar 1937 to 1960 w e had some good years. In 1958 I rented m y farm out fo r tw o years and in 1960 I sold it to m y son, C lifford Buss. Thus ends m y story of h o w life w as in general fo r m e and m y fam ily. W e now live in E nderlin in a hom e of our own (purchased from J. G . (Buster) M artin). My w ife and I are proud of our home and of the frien d ly com m unity of E nderlin. The Severson Family T h e Hans Severson fam ily w as another of the fam ilies com ing to this area from N orth ern Iow a in the early 1900’s, to settle in L ib erty Tow n sh ip. He and his w ife, the form er Gena Knutson, raised fou r children; a son N ehm ie, and daughters Hilda, W ilm a and N or ma. Th e Seversons w e re m em bers of the W est St. O laf Ch u rch and Mr. Severson w as a m em ber of the L ib e rty School Board, and the Farm ers E levator B oard. M r. Severson died O ctober 24, 1954. Hilda (Mrs. R. F. Sh elver) now lives in A uburn, W ashington and N orm a (Mrs. Elvin Barreson) in Fargo, N orth D akota. N ehm ie and W ilm a (Mrs. N evelle Sh elver) still live in the Enderlin com m unity. The Hoffman Family E rnest H offm an, one of E n derlin ’s early bu tch ers w as apprenticed to a b u tch er in H am burg, G erm an y as a young boy, w h ere his first job w as d eliverin g m eat w ith a dog d raw n cart. A fte r learning his trade he w en t to sea to see the w orld. A fte r m aking fifty three trips and n ever getting off the A tla n tic, he ju m p ed ship in N ew Y o rk and ap plied fo r citizenship. D eciding it w as safer to go to sea in the P acific, w h ere G erm an ships w ere few er, he began w ork in g his w ay w estw ard. A t W ycoff, M inn, fate in terven ed and he acquired a w ife. In 1909 the fam ily cam e to Enderlin, w h ere he purchased a b utcher shop from Jam es W alsh. He operated the shop until 1919, w hen he sold out, deciding to m ove to M ontana. Som eh ow th ey found it im possible to leave, and discarded the w estern plains for a farm ju st north of E nderlin w h ere the fa m ily of fiv e children grew up; Theodore E r n a M arguerite, Helen, and Ernest Jr. T he second son, Richard, died at the age of six. In 1942, the fam ily sold the farm and m oved to R ich ville, Minn., w h ere Mr. Hoffm an died in 1950, at the age of 81. His w ife is still liv ing and active, k eep in g house fo r her son Theodore. His daughter, Mrs. N oble D oeling (Helen) in another section has contributed a w ord pictu re of an early day G erm an-trained b u tch er and his shop. The Pribbenow Family John P ribb en ow and his w ife, the form er Ida Iverson, w ere another of the fam ilies to com e to this area through the m eans of the Ransom County Im m igration Association, purchasing a h alf section of land in L iberty Township, all virgin prairie, from them in 1905. Mr. P ribb en ow arranged fo r C h arlie Ch rist ianson to b reak som e of the sod that year and in 1906 they and th eir sons, Harold and L loyd started for North D akota. He loaded tw o em igrant cars at th eir hom e in N ora Springs, Minnesota, w ith household goods m achinery, livestock and supplies and billed them to B u ttzville, N orth Dakota. Good neighbors m et them w ith team s and w agons and assisted in building a 16x24 foot 87 tar sh ack to house the fam ily. In this sm all house a third son, Rollo, w as born. T h e first year the crop w as good and John P ribbenow , Hans Severson, G ilbert Halstad and Ole M oe bought a threshing outfit to gether. H alstad q u it farm ing, but the other three partners threshed together for m any years. T h e y w ere soon able to en large the house and build a barn and other buildings. A daughter, Lorna, w as added to the fam ily. T h e fam ily w ere all active m em bers of the M ethodist Church in Enderlin. M r. P ribben ow died in 1925, w h ile his w ife lived until 1951. One son, Lloyd, died in 1920. H arold P ribb en o w and his w ife (Carletta Lohr) live on the home farm . Rollo in E n derlin, and Lorn a (Mrs. V ernon Johnson) lives northw est of Enderlin. The Erbstoesser Family T h e farm in W atson T o w n sh ip w h ere E d w ard Erbstoesser lives w as the fam ily hom e stead, settled about 1879. T he hollow w h ere the first sod shanty stood is still visible. A f ter some years, the fa m ily m oved to W is consin, w h ere th ey operated a m eat m arket. About 1895, th ey m oved b ack and bought the farm again. T h ree sons; Theodore, A u gust and C harlie bought farm s in the n eigh borhood. A u gust Erbstoesser m arried Ida M olden hauer in 1895 and brought her to his parents farm , w here she still lives w ith her son E dw ard. T h ey had tw elve children, fiv e of w hom died in infancy. T w o sons: E d w ard and Frank, farm in Wa tson Tow n sh ip. A nother son, Gus, w as a contractor in E nderlin until his death. M rs. Erbstoesser is a m em ber of St. P e te r’s Lutheran Church. She rem em bers that it w as built in 1887 by Adolph Massani, a local carpenter. W hen the ch urch w as dedicated he stood at the door w ith the k ey in his hand, handed it to the deacons and told them it w as all paid for. E veryth in g in the church w as handm ade-altar, pulpit, etc. A lth ou gh it has b een rem odeled, the handm ade parts w ere left undisturbed. M rs. Erbstoesser’s parents homesteaded near C h affee in 1879. She recalls, “ M y m other and older sister w ould w o rk in the fields and I would take care of the y o u n ger children. M other w ould peel potatoes and I w ould put them on the stove before noon. W hen they cam e from the field the potatoes w ould be done and she w ould go to the cellar and get a crock of m ilk, skim off the cream, and put it on the table. W e w ould have our potatoes and sour cream and w e w ere h appy w ith it. ” Theodore Erbstoesser m arried M innie G ersonde in 1895, the same y ear his b rother A u gust w as m arried. He bought a farm across the M aple R iver from his parents farm and here th ey raised th eir fam ily of ten children, one b ab y dying in infancy. Th ere w ere six daughters; Ella, A nn, Selm a, M argaret, L il lian and M arie; and three sons, W alter, T h eo dore and John. 88 In 1930 the farm w as sold and the family m oved to E nderlin. O nly one m em ber still lives in Enderlin, John Erbstoesser has been Police C h ief for the past tw enty years. M ar ried to the form er A lice Groth, th ey have tw o daughters, Carol and Connie (Mrs. B artholo m ay). Eberhart Fausett A sm all area on the M innesota-Iow a border, including the towns of Mona and St. Ansgar in Iowa, and L y le in M innesota, furnished a large num ber of the early settlers of L ib erty and M oore Townships. A m ong these settlers w ere E berhart F au s ett and his w ife, the form er O line G olberg, who hom esteaded in L ib e rty Township in 1882 and lived there until death. Mr. Fau sett w as particu larly interested in the w elfare of the com m unity and in civ ic affairs and served in several school and tow n ship offices, helped organize the M oore and L ib erty Telephone Com pany, the W est St. Olaf church and the Citizens State Bank. He took particu lar pride in being the first president of the Ransom Coun ty F arm er's A lliance. The Fausetts had three ch ild ren : Rosine, Olaf (A n dy) and Nora, w ho now lives in San Diego, Calif. Joseph Kapaun Joseph K apaun w as born in Portage, W is consin, in 1883. A s a young man, he farm ed w ith his fath er in an area w here all the farm land had to be cleared from tim ber and m uch of the h ayin g w as done b y hand, w ith scythes, and cocked in piles w hich w ere ca r ried on poles to the stack. In 1903, he m oved to the A lice vicin ity and purchased a half section of land in Clifton Tow nship, livin g the first years in one-room cabin. He m arried Ida W avra in 1916, at Alice. T h ey are m em bers of St. H en ry’s Catholic Ch u rch and Mr. K apaun has served on the school and township boards. The K apaun s h ave three daughters: M il dred K in zler, Lisbon; Lorraine M cKinnon, Colorado and F loren ce McMahon, A lice. The Roe Family Mr. Paul Roe, w ho now lives in Enderlin, was born in 1886 in a log house w h ich still stands on section eight of Preston Tow nship. He w as one of six ch ild ren born to P e te r J. and B ertha Roe who cam e from N orw ay to Fillm ore County M innesota in the 1870’s. T h ey stayed there over the w in ter and then came to the V alley C ity area because th ey knew fam ilies w ho had settled there. The jou rn ey from M innesota took about tw o w eeks b y covered w agon because there w ere so fe w bridges for crossing. Th e Roe fam ily cam e through St. Paul w h ich w as called Seven Corners and then crossed the Red R iver at M oorhead. The fam ily consisted of the m oth er and father and tw o v e ry sm all children w ho had been born in N orw ay. A son, T h e o dore, was b om in the A u s hom e in 1880 but the rest of the ch ild ren w ere born in the log house w h ere the fam ily lived until 1900. Paul Roe w as m arried to T h eresa Nielson, w ho w as born in Redsbyn, Sw eden. She came to A m erica in 1914 and they w ere m arried in 1924. T h ey had one daughter, Phyliss, who is now Mrs. M aurice Langland. She Still lives in the home built by her father. P au l Roe farm ed from 1906 until 1957. In 1902, he pitched h ay during all the daylight hours for seventy fiv e cents a day. In 1903, he earned fifty cents a day w ork in g for his uncle. Paul Roe built his home com pletely b y him self and w hen he w as digging the foundation, he un earthed th iriy fou r Indian skeletons w hich he v ery ca refu lly re-b u ried in another area on his farm . Mr. Roe has m any v ivid m em ories of life in the early days of D akota Territo ry. He rem em bers w hen S tanding R ock w as eight fe e t high. He says that about the year 1900, a road crew of Italians w as helping to build a spur on the railroad from F argo to M arion and th ey dynam ited the rock to see w hat was beneath it. T he sm all stone w hich stands today is all that rem ains. The Shaw’s W hen Mr. Sh aw 's parents came to Canada from Scotland in the e arly eighteen six ty ’s, th ey had three children and thirteen cents. In the early days, Canada, as w ell as the United States, raised reven ue fo r road m ain tenance c h iefly by the collection of tolls. The fa th er w as soon em ployed as a toll-gate op erator in Fergus, O ntario, and it w as there that W illiam Shaw w as bom . He attended school there, learned telegraphy and then w as em ployed by the Canadian P a cific R ailw ay as an operator and agent. W hen the Soo Line extended its line to H arvey, N orth D akota in 1892, he w o rk ed as an operator. B usiness w as dull and u n in ter esting and not v ery lu crative so this en ter prising Scot sought other means of acquiring revenue. F o r a tim e he operated a restau r ant at H arvey and also did sign painting. F ollow in g the w re ck at H arvey in 1894, Mr. S haw w ent to the scene to v iew the situa tion. Mr. B atch eler, Soo Line Su perin ten dent, a rrived with a w reck er to clear the tracks but with an in su fficien t crew . H aving training in telegra p h y and railroad experience, Mr. S haw offered his service and as a result he w as offered a jo b w o rk in g for the Soo Line R ailroad. He w orked first as a fire m an betw een E nderlin and H arvey and then as a freight b rakem an for fou r years. In 1894 a passenger brakem an received a fifty dollars a m onth and served as brakem an, operator, coach cleaner, baggagem an and as sisted in coaling the engine en route. F ew trainmen have lived through eight w reck s but such Was the exp erien ce of Mr. Shaw . His life w as spared even in the w re ck of D ecem ber 23, 1906 w hen nine people w ere killed and tw enty seven w ere injured. He w orked as a passenger conductor from 1894 until 1937 when he retired. M r. S haw w as an avid gam e hunter and baseball player. H ere he displayed m any of the sterling traits w hich characterized the people of the land of hills and heather. Steady nerves, and physical agility developed the lea d -o ff b atter who u su ally played left field. B ill Shaw, with Eli P ow er, W alt Loomis, H ar ry Gibson, P e rry Spellm an and Cook com prised the first baseball team in Enderlin. W illiam S haw w as a m em ber of the E n derlin school board and the city council for m any years. He was also a past W orthy G rand Patron of the O rder of Eastern Star and a past G ran d H igh Priest of the Royal A rch Masons. Mrs. W. W. S h aw (Beat Austad) is the first born d au gh ter of Ingri Holien A u stad and P eter A u stad w ho w ere early pioneers in this area. She cam e with her fa m ily from Cresco, Iowa, to Dakota T e rritory in 1882. H er father P eter homesteaded land over w hich the new railroad w as being b u ilt and she, w ith her brother and sister, sat on the banks of the hill and w atch ed as the railroad was being constructed past th eir land. In 1892 the fam ily disposed of the farm and m oved to Enderlin w h ere her father bu ilt and oper ated a general store. S h e attended public school here and then Concordia College w hen there w as but one building on the cam pus. G irls w ho attended Concordia lived upstairs in the building and the classes w ere held downstairs. She taught school in Liberty Tow nship and the Preston school in Ran som County in 1899. She and Mr. Shaw w ere m arried in 1901. She has lived in the E n d er lin com m unity for 84 years. She is the only livin g charter m em ber of the O. E. S. and served as its secretary fo r forty tw o consecu tive years. T h eir fam ily includes: Russell Shaw (d e ceased); Lt. Col. L. D. Sh aw , U SAR , Tam pa, w ho served th irty years in the United States A rm y; Lt. j. g. Curtis J. S haw who served tw en ty years in the United States N av y and Helen Jean Shaw. The Darelius Family A u gu st and Johanna Staffnel D arelius w ere farm ers in Sw eden. T h ey had three children, Jennie, C arl and Anna. In 1887, the D ar elius fa m ily cam e d irectly to Ransom County w h ere Mrs. D arelius had a brother. The fam ily lived on th e farm of Mr. G u staf Staffnel in L ib e rty Tow nship w hile Mr. D arelius w ork ed on the section gang for the N orthern P a cific railroad at B u ttzville. He was em ployed during the sum m er months and earned a $1.15 p er d ay. In 1893, the fa m ily m oved to E nderlin. Mr. D arelius w as then em ployed b y the Soo Line railroad for several years and also w orked for the city of E n derlin for m any years. T h eir three children w ere Jennie (deceas ed); Carl, Enderlin; and Annie (Mrs. LeR oy S. Crane, M inneapolis, M inn. ). 89 M r. C arl D arelius attended school in E n derlin w h en th ere w ere ju st fo u r room s in the w hole school. He has cle rk e d in m any of the stores in our c ity and has also w o rk ed as a carpenter. He w en t to w o rk w h en he w as fourteen; delivering, splitting w ood and doing chores for people. W hen he w as c le rk ing, he w o rk ed tw e lve hours a d ay and re ceived fo r ty or fifty dollars a month. C arl has lived in the same home in E n derlin since 1893. In 1903, he attended A k e rs B u sin ess C ollege in F argo and fo r m any years w as em ployed by Cham berlain-W allace L u m b er Com pany in A lice. He is n ow retired. The Torbenson Family John Torbenson cam e w ith his parents to the U nited States in 1847, from Lillerm askene, N orw ay. T h e fa m ily settled in M uskegon, W isconsin. In 1856 h e m oved to M innesota, taking a claim in M cLeod County, liv in g on this farm until 1864, w hen he enlisted in C o m pan y C. H atch ’s Independent B attalion of M innesota C a v alry . T h e y w ere q uartered at P om m e d eT erre until 1865, then m oved to F ort A b ercrom b ie, and to F ort W adsw orth, w h ere he w as m ustered out June 22, 1866. He m arried C a rrie Enerson in 1868 and th ey raised a fa m ily of nine children. In 1696, th ey m oved to N orth Dakota, liv ing first south of V a lley C ity and then com ing to M oore Tow nship in 1900. T h e ir son, Oscar, m arried M ary Syverson . On th eir farm in M oore Tow nship th ey ra is ed fiv e children: Richard, w ho has farm ed the fa m ily farm since his parents retired; Donovan, of P ayn esville, M innesota; Cora (Mrs. A rn o ld P etrich ), of G ran d Forks; M il dred, Spokane, and Osman of Renton, W ash ington. Mr. Torbenson died in 1965. His w ife m akes h er hom e w ith her daughter, Cora. Fred Maley It w as a hot J u ly day in 1898 w h en F red M aley arrived in Enderlin. He w as tw enty tw o and eager to learn a new language and trade. W hen he left K ristain sun d, N orw ay, his trip cost $58 and took eleven days, b y w a y of E ngland, to M ontreal. D urin g his first years, h e w orked on a farm for $2 a day, and did carpen ter w o rk . In 1904, he w ent to w o rk for the Soo Line as a m a chinist, a job he held u n til his retirem ent in 1945. In 1904 he m arried Sena Olson, w ho had com e h ere from Egersund, N orw ay. T h ey had th ree ch ildren : O laf, Enderlin; B eatrice (Mrs. F lo y d Lu d tke) of E nderlin; and Glen, Long Island, N. Y . B oth M r. and Mrs. M aley w ere able to re visit th eir n ative land, M rs. M aley m aking the trip w ith O laf and B eatrice in 1908 and M r. M aley in 1947. Mr. M aley is a m em ber of F irst Lu th eran C h u rch and has been a w o rk er in other com m un ity activities, servin g on the c ity council d urin g the tim e th at the E nderlin city h all w as built. 90 The George Nelson Family. Doctor G eorge A . N elson, a w ell know n E n derlin dentist, practiced d en tistry in E nderlin fo r fo rty one years. He w as born at Kasson, M innesota, and w as graduated from the U ni v ersity of M innesota C ollege of D entistry. He cam e to Enderlin in 1906 and m arried the form er M ary K lin g b e il in 1909. T h ere w ere fiv e sons born to this fam ily: L aw ren ce, Enderlin; George, J „ Enderlin; Paul, F ort Lauderdale, Fla.; Robert, V a n couver, W ash.; and Ross, H arleyville, S. C. D r. Nelson served the com m unity in various official capacities. He w as m ayor from 1911 to 1914, and it w as during this adm inistration that the present w ater and sew age system w as installed. He w as also an alderm an for several term s and a m em ber of the school board for a num ber of years. Dr. N elson w as a m em ber of L ib e rty Lodge No. 49 A F . & A . M., of w h ich h e w as a past W orship M aster, and of Chapter 19, Royal A rch M asons, of Which he w as High Priest. He had been a W orthy Patron of the O rder of E astern Star and w as Associate Patron at the tim e of his death in F eb ru ary, 1947. He w as also the first president of the local K i w anis club. D uring the Golden Ju b ilee Celebration, Dr. Nelson served on the pageant com m ittee and the program com m ittee. The Scheie Family Nels A n d erson w as born in F jaerlan d, Sogn, N orw ay in 1883. He cam e to A m erica in 1903, at the sam e tim e as his brother, Jens A n derson. L ik e so m any Scandinavians, he w as bothered b y duplication of nam es. B ecause th ere w as another Nels Anderson livin g in Enderlin, he changed his nam e, in 1922, to Nels Scheie. In 1907, A nna B erge cam e from his home tow n in N orw ay and th ey w ere m arried. T h ey raised a fam ily of seven children: A n d rew , B ernard and O rrin, all of Enderlin; Sigrid, (B lan ch ard), M abel (W alters), Helen (H ill), and N orm a (Olson). T h e Scheies w ere m em bers of Zion L u th eran C h u rch u n til its disbanding, and now attend F irst Luth eran . He is a long-tim e Soo Line em p loyee. John Carlson J ohn Carlson w as born at F ergu s Falls and cam e to Enderlin in 1905 from G lenw ood, as a Soo Line engineer. In 1908, he m arried M aude F u rtn ey, daugh ter of Joe F u rtn ey, w ho w as an engineer on the Soo L in e w hen the railroad w as built into E nderlin and w ho w ork ed on trains 107 and 108 u n til his retirem ent. John Carlson w as a m em ber of the B roth er hood of Locom otive Engineers, of the M asonic Lodge in Enderlin and of E l Z agel Tem ple and Scottish Rites M asons in Fargo. He lost his life in a w reck at Venlo, N ovem ber 4. 1943. His Wife now lives at W hite B ear L a k e, M innesota. Th e Carlsons had four children; L loyd , a Soo Line engineer at Enderlin, John Jr., of Los Angeles; M arjorie (Jaeger), W estchester, Pa.; and F lorence (R arick) of Enderlin. The Henderson Family Ch arles and L u c y B e n w a y Henderson m i grated from N ew ark, N ew Y ork , to Fargo, in 1887. In 1889, th ey hom esteaded the farm now occupied b y Jam es N ord. Charles often recalled p u llin g a hand sled to B ingham ton for supplies b efore the tow n of E nderlin w as built. T h e y lived on this farm until 1928. Th e Hendersons w ere the parents of three sons. E d gar m arried C lara Nord. T h ey farm ed on the place now ow ned b y Leo F ern ow un til his death in 1941. T h e y had fou r children, tw o of w hom died in infancy; Loren, who farm s south of Enderlin, and L u cille (Red mond) of Enderlin, w ith whom Mrs. H ender son m ade h er hom e until her death. P e rry m arried R ik k a Helgeson. B oth are now deceased. T h e y had tw o ch ildren : H el en, of A uburn, W ashington; and Robert, w ho lives in E nderlin. Th e third son, Ernest, died w h ile he w as a student at NDSU. Martin and Matia Thoreson (Parents of Goldie Olson) G oldie Thoreson, her m other, M atia and her two sisters, R agn hild and Cam illa, a rrived in the U nited States in 1907 after a storm y overseas crossing. H er father, M artin T h o re son, arrived in 1906, intrigued b y the tales of a great and w on derfu l A m erica, as related b y his tw o brothers, Pete and C arl S u n by, w ho had m ade the v o ya g e prior to Mr. T h o m son's great adventure. The Thoreson's first hom e in E nderlin w as in the residence now occupied b y L y d ia Geske. M artin started to w o rk for the Soo L in e at their treating plant in 1906. E ve n tu a lly he w ork ed into the m achin ist’s trade and in tim e becam e a skilled w ork er in that craft. M artin obtained his citizen’s papers in 1910. He passed a w ay in 1928. G oldie Olson, the eldest daughter, w as 21 y ears of age at h er tim e of a rriv al in N orth Dakota. S h e had p reviou sly had tw o years of n u rse’s trainin g in N orw ay, and at the time of her dep artu re from the “ old C o u n try” w as engaged to a ship’s captain. G oldie rem ained in E nderlin for a tim e and e ven tu ally w ent to Chicago w h ere she w as em ployed as a seam stress w ith Hart, Sch affner and M arx. She returned to E nderlin in 1909 and w as m arried to E m an u el Engstrom P eterson that same year. Mr. Peterson w as em p loyed in the Soo Dine roundhouse at E nderlin. He passed a w ay in 1918. T h ree children w ere born to this union, Edith, E rvin and G ladys. In 1922, G oldie rem arried, to G eorge Olson, an d th ey m oved to L ib e rty Tow nship. Mr. Olson died in M ay, 1935. G oldie continued to resid e on the farm u n til 1944, w h en she m oved to E nderlin since h er son E rvin entered m ilitary service at that time. Mr. Olson and Goldie w ere the parents of one child, Ramona. D urin g the first year of their m arriage, Mr. Olson w as a represen ta tive in the N orth D akota state legislature, representing the 14th legislative d istrict. He w as a m em ber of the N onpartisan League. In later years G oldie w as v e ry active in politics. She w as instrum ental in helping to organize the “ Inger B ronson, ” an Inner M ission church organization, affiliated w ith the F irst Lutheran church. In rem iniscing, G oldie recalls that the fa m i ly savings w ere allotted to the tender care of the “ T h orson ’’ Bank. She also notes that “ b ack in those d a y s” the more afflu en t and im portant m ales in the com m unity w ere M ayor Ole G olberg, B an k er Thorson, Doctor O vergard, the S torekeeper Harper, and a T h ird W ard A ld erm an — B e rt E pker. F. P. Stowell M y father and m other (Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Stow ell) and three children, Rachel, Susan and E dythe, arrived in T o w er C ity on M arch 12, 1883, from C onw ay, Iowa. T h e y cam e on the N orthern P acific. T h e train w as two days late because of bad storms. T h ey w ere d is appointed to see snow three or four feet deep on the prairie, as th ey had le ft the green fields of e arly spring in Iowa. M y fa ther hired a liv e ry m an w ith a sleigh to take the fam ily to J. P. Lidd le farm , tw enty m iles to the southwest. T h e y stayed there a fe w w eeks u n til th ey could get into their own house. T h is fiv e room house had been bu ilt on the northeast co m er of Section 9, T ow n sh ip 137 (Raritan) in the fa ll of 1882. It w as our home for tw e n ty years. Section 9 w as know n as “ ra il road ” land. It belonged to m y fa th e r’s aunt, R achel Stow ell Sm ith, (Mrs. P orter Sm ith) of Springfield , N ew Y ork . M y fath er broke the sod of about 25 acres that sum m er, and sow ed it to w h eat and barley. A gard en w as planted. T h ey w ere w ell pleased w ith the w on derful grow th of vegetab les on the n ew soil. A sm all b am and granary w ere built. D uring the next seven years, three d au gh ters w ere born in this hom e: Bessie, Helen and Ruth. A ll six daughters attended school No. 1, D istrict No. 83. T h ey later attended the State N orm al School at V alley C ity and fou r graduated. T h e six sisters all becam e teachers. M y m other w as one of the charter m em bers of the Bingham ton P resbyterian church started Jun e 16, 1883. M y father w as an officer in the school district and a m em ber of the township board fo r n early tw e n ty years. H ow happ y e v e r y one w as in 1891 w hen the Soo L ine railroad w as com pleted to Enderlin. L u cca w as start ed. E n derlin becam e the big tow n w here people could go to trade. M y fath er rented the farm in 1903, and w e m oved to V a lle y C ity. He died in M ay, 1911. M y m other died in 1940. A ll six daughters are still living. 91 T w o of the S to w ell d augh ters have lived in E nderlin. E d yth e taught here and M rs. Susan V an ce is a long tim e resident. A n early day teach er in the schools of the area, Susan V an ce w as supervisor of C . W.A . w o rk during the depression years, w o rk ed in th e Red Cross d urin g W orld W ar I, and in iti ated the hot lunch program in the Enderlin schools. In addition to this she has done and still continues to do uph olstery and tailoring. H er son, C yril, now lives in M ilw au kee. H er daughter, H arriet (K apaun) lives at P illsbu ry, N. D. Som e years ago, Mrs. Vance, h er d au gh ter and h er granddaughter, Susan, w ere recognized as the first three generation fa m ily at V a lley C ity State College. The Loomis Family W a lte r Loom is cam e to B uffalo, N. D., in 1891 from P rairie du Chien, W is. He estab lished E n derlin ’s first harness shop in the spring of 1892. In 1901 he sold the harness shop and b ecam e a grain dealer, owning elevators here until he retired in 1931. In 1898 he m arried Hattie K lin gbiel and to their fam ily three d augh ters w ere b o rn : Mrs. M artin (W ilma) Peterson, Chicago; M rs. A rnold (Esther) G ilm er, B em idji, M inn., and Ruth, Escondido, Calif. Th rou gh the years, Mr. Loom is w as in v o lve d in e v e ry facet of com m unity life, fill ing c ity offices from villa ge m arshall to m ayor. A n avid baseball player, he m anaged several early ball team s and, in la ter years, insisted that th ey n e ve r lost a gam e w h ile he w as at the helm . Mrs. Loom is w as a charter m em ber of the M ethodist Church and w as an a ctive m em ber of the Eastern Star, and Mr. Loom is w as also active in the M asonic Lodge. Mr. Loom is died in 1960 and M rs. Loom is rem ained in her hom e here un til 1963 w hen she m oved to B em id ji, passing aw ay there in 1965. E nderlin. E xcep t fo r short residences in M in neapolis and W ashington, M r. and Mrs. P ett m ade their home here until th eir death. Mr. P ett died sh ortly after their 50th w edding anniversary in 1961 and M rs. P ett died in 1963. Matthes Family A u gu st M atthes, Sr., and his brother, W il liam first came to W isconsin from G erm any, but lured b y the prospect of free hom esteads m oved on w est to D akota. T h ey cam e to L a M oure county w h ere W illiam took up a hom estead, but A u gu st w as not im pressed w ith the area and fin a lly settled in Pontiac Township. He m arried a girl from the L ebus fam ily and a son, Edwin, w as two w hen his m other died. M r. M atthes later m arried A u gu sta Stange, a w id ow w ith fou r children. To the second m arriage, eight children w ere born. D uring their years on the farm th ey acq u ir ed th ree sections of land as w ell as property in Enderlin. Mr. M atthes w as active in the T rin ity C hurch and served in Tow nship and school board offices. School board m eetings w ere a must, regardless of the w eath er. The m eetings had a social side too, for m em bers of the fam ily often w ent along. He purchased one of the first autom obiles in the township, but on his first tim e at the w h eel, found it did not respond to “ W hoa” , as the horses did. It kept on going until it hit a large wood pile w h ich fin ally stopped it. Though he ow ned several cars after that, he never again took the w h eel him self. W hen his sons w ere old enough to take over the farm he and his w ife retired to E n derlin, w h ere Mrs. M atthes died in 1926. Mr. M atthes died in the farm home of his son W illiam in 1937. O f th eir children, A u gu st is still liv in g in Fargo, a daughter in Seattle, W ashington and Edw ard lives in E nderlin. Nels Olson A u gu st P ett M r. and M rs. A u gu st P ett cam e to North D akota in 1899 w h en their fa m ily w as par tia lly grow n. A son, Otto, had preceded them and w as w orkin g as a mission pastor of the Iow a Synod in this area, organizing ch urches at L itch v ille, A sh ley, Fessenden, and other N orth D akota com m unities. T h ey bou gh t a farm in Pontiac Tow nship w hich is now owned b y a grandson, Otto Trapp. M ost of th eir children soon m arried and le ft the area. Ernest served various pastor ates in Kansas; A nn m arried R ev. B ru n and follow ed him to Colorado; A ugusta, m arried A u gu st K ottke and th ey farm ed in Pontiac Tow nship b e fo re m ovin g to St. Paul. Only Em m a (Mrs. H enry Trapp) and Richard, the youngest son, rem ained in the E nderlin com m unity. M r. P ett died in 1905 and R ichard took over the farm . He m arried M atilda A sh brenner and th eir children, Em m a (Mrs. Selm er Larson), E sther (Mrs. Sherw ood B rady), and A rn old w ere all raised and educated in 92 Nels Olson and his w ife, Banta Tykanson and son, Richard, cam e from M alm o, Sw eden, w here he was assistant to the veterinarian to the king, to Dakota T erritory in the spring of 1880. T h e y had to fe rry across a flooded Red R iver at Fargo to homestead on w hat is now the Eldon P ip er farm , east of E n derlin. Nels w alk e d to Casselton and w ork ed in a feed m ill fo r a time. On this farm w ere born Emma (died in in fancy), Hannah, Nels, Anna and O scar C. A ll these children attended En derlin school, Nels renting a house in Enderlin during the cold w eath er w here the children “ batched. ” B an ta passed a w a y and N els m et Ingred Nelson w ho w as here from Sw ed en visitin g her brother. T h e y m arried and Adolph and Tena w ere born. A b ou t 1898 Nels m oved his fam ily to a farm n ear the Sheyenne R iv er south and a little east of Lisbon. There a son, Johnnie, w as born. W hile farm ing along the Sheyenne R iver, Nels cased a spring, w h ich w as rather am using to the Indians because the river w as rig h t there, but on seeing the w ater com e from the w e ll they, too, began using it. F or this fa vo r the Indians began b ringing food to the Olson fam ily. O f Nels Olson’s children, only three are still livin g: Nels, and Tena Olson E lijah, of Lisbon and Anna Olson A bbott in Oregon. A grandson, Raym ond, is sh eriff of Ransom C ounty. One son, Oscar, w as a long time resident of the E nderlin com m unity. Oscar C. Olson and Josephine C. Christian son w ere m arried in E nderlin A pril, 1912, the w edd in g takin g place at the old S tow ell house, now occupied b y Mr. and Mrs. Tom B aribeau. T h e y settled in M oore Township, SE 1/4¼ Section 12-136-56, and liv ed in w hat is now a gran ary until th eir hom e w as com pleted. O scar w as active in com m unity affairs, servin g on the tow nship board for several years. T h e y retired from Farm ing in 1944 and m oved to E n derlin at w hich tim e th eir son, Dale, bought the farm . Oscar served on the city council for a fe w years. Josephine passed a w a y M ay 24, 1965, and O scar on F e b ru a ry 14, 1966. To this union w as born a son, Dale C., N ovem ber 11, 1919. He m arried Florence Sveum and th ey have tw o sons, T e rry Dale, Fargo, and K u rt D avid, E nderlin, w ho farm s w ith his father. The Beard Family Reuben B eard w as born in Castle D ow nington, England in 1841. O rphaned at an early age, he w as cared fo r b y an older sister and apprenticed to a shoem aker as a v e r y young boy. W hen he w as 12 he came to the United States, liv in g in N ew Y o rk , Portland, M aine and M assachusetts. D urin g the C ivil W ar he served in the 16th and 18th M assa ch u setts Regim ents, and w as seriously w ounded d u r ing one of the last battles of the w ar. He m arried Jennie B ra tt and w ith their son, A d elbert, th ey cam e to Clifton T o w n ship in 1881 and filed on a hom estead in the ¼ of Section 29 and the N W ¼ of Section 32. His w ife died in 1886 and in 1899 he m ar ried A lic e W arner, a w idow w ith one d au gh ter, Nellie, w h ose form er husband, John W ar ner had settled n ear Sheldon in 1888 and later m oved to C lifton Tow nship. In 1904 the B eards m oved to Enderlin, w here he built h o u s e s in B eards addition and sold them . S evera l of these are still occupied. A t the tim e of his death in 1932, he w as the only rem aining C iv il W ar V eteran in Ransom County. M rs. B eards d aughter N ellie m arried George Co w an and th eir daughter Inez (Mrs. Arnold Fraase) still lives in Enderlin. T h ey farm ed in L iberty Tow nship u n til Mr. S ve d ja n ’s death in 1935. M rs. Sved jan m oved to E nderlin and lived here until h er death in 1962. B oth w ere active m em bers of the W est St. O laf Congregation. T h ere are fou r children, three liv in g in the Enderlin com m unity; A rnold, G je rdi s (Mrs. E rnest Green) H azel (Mrs. F. W . P etrich) and Ralph, of Fargo. The Gullickson Family E ver G u llickson cam e to D akota T erritory, from M ona, Iowa, in a caravan of covered wagons. A t B uffalo, N orth Dakota he located on a q u arte r south of the village and built a sm all house and barn and broke some sod. He returned hom e that fall and in F eb ru ary, 1880 brought his bride A gn es to North D akota, livin g w ith friends u n til spring, w hen th ey m oved to their claim . His m other Ranvei, brothers and sisters join ed him and filed on adjoin in g land. Used to the hills and shrubs of Iowa, E ver looked for another hom estead, a w ay from the flat p ra irie , and in that sam e sum m er he took a claim on the h ill overlookin g the present site of Enderlin. His m other and fam ily follow ed and filed on adjoining land in cludin g the present w a te r tow er hill, w h ere th ey first discovered the spring w ith its generous w ater su pply which the town w as to utilize. W hen the Soo Line cam e through, R an vei’s sons, G ust and G u llik, w anted to m ove on, and she sold her property, w hich becam e p art of the E nderlin tow nsite. Her son E ver, h ow ever, continued to m ake his home here. He helped organize L ib erty Tow nship and served on its board and on the school board. T h eir six children w ere raised and educated here. T h ey w ere Edw ard, K nut, Severt, Otto, B erth a and M abel. A ll are now dead, but a grandson, Edw ard is still livin g in the vicin ity, pastor of a rural Lutheran Parish n ear Leonard. A most in terestin g story is told of h ow E ver G ullickson, before his m arriage, w o rk ed on the construction of the N orthern P a cific R a il road in w estern D akota. T h ere he m et a young m an w ith thick-len sed glasses w ho w as ran chin g in the territory. M any years later, the young m an now the nationally know n T e d dy Roosevelt cam e through Enderlin on a special train. Secret S ervice m en q u ietly lo cated E ver G ullickson and after the crow ds had heard him , G u llickson w as in vited aboard, to dine w ith T ed d y and give him first hand inform ation about conditions in N orth D akota. Fred Kelm The Anton Svedjan Fam ily A n ton Sved jan w as born in Lavan ger, N or w a y in 1872 and cam e to E nderlin in 1901. He w o rk ed for Charles U rham m er, in L ib e rty Tow nship and for oth er farm ers in the area until 1909, w hen he m arried Jennie Iverson. R ex Lindem ann d rove them across the prairie to Lisbon, in his first autom obile, w h ere the cerem ony took place. F red K elm w as b om to parents of G erm an descent in a covered w agon som ew here in Cass County. T he fam ily w as en route to the E nderlin v icin ity to homestead. The year was 1882. T h e y settled on land located two m iles east and fiv e and a h alf m iles south of Enderlin. W hile he w as a v ery young boy his father died, leavin g a youn g w id ow w ith fiv e sm all 93 children. F red w as raised b y some other old settlers, Mr. and Mrs. Schellberg. T h ey lived in the same v icin ity. In 1903 E lise Lade of G erm any came to live w ith her aunt and uncle, the Schellbergs. She cam e alone and w as the only from her fa m ily ever to com e to Am erica. Elise and F red w ere m arried this tim e he purchased the tract of land w h ich becam e home to the fa m ily fo r 58 years, until the land was bought b y th eir son, E rich, and th ey m oved into E nderlin. T he first hom e the K e lm ’s had w as a tw oroom house w h ich is still on the farm site. It becam e a garage w hen the present home w as built in 1918. E ight children w ere born to this couple. T h ey, as m any of the pioneer fam ilies at that time, shared sorrow w ith jo y in raising their fam ily. T h eir first child, a little girl nam ed Irma, died from the dread killer, polio, on her third birthday. She w as ill three days. The doctor w as called and cam e w ith horse and b u ggy, but at that tim e there w as nothing th ey could do for that disease. Emma, Mrs. P a u l B ord t of Enderlin, w as second, then a set of twins. T h e girl, Mrs. A rth u r (Irene) Johnson, liv es in P a lm er, A la sk a , the little boy died at birth. T he first son born w as Erich, w ho n ow lives in Fargo, then Ernest of M ilnor, N. D., E rvin , who died at the age of tw elve years from diabetes and com plications, and Leslie of A nchorage, A laska. Th e K e lm ’s w ere ch arter m em bers of the A n selm Lu th eran church of w h ich R ev. O. H. Schaible is present pastor. T h e y celebrated their fiftieth w eddin g an n ive rsary in 1955 and had Fred lived until January, 1965, th ey w ould h ave had their sixtieth an n iversary. He passed a w a y N o vem ber 7, 1964. Mrs. K elm is still livin g in Enderlin w ith a daughter, M rs. Bordt. Mrs Hilda Larson The daughter of M ary H agen and John Lee, she c ame to N orth D akota in a covered wagon train from F illm ore County, M innesota. Nine fam ilies cam e together. T h e y w ere a fa irly prosperous group, fo r all of them had horses. Som e fam ilies had a fe w chickens, some a pig or two. Th e L ees had tw o sheep, and from them h er m other got w ool w h ich she corded, spun and knit into stockings, w hich she sold in V a lle y C ity. T h e y brought little furn iture; just a trunk, kettles, pans, tools and a sm all camp stove. T h ey settled in Nelson Tow nship, Barnes Counity. T h e y stayed at O pperuds until th ey had sodded up a stable. A lon g side of it th ey bu ilt a sm all shanty to cook in but the first w in ter th ey slept in the stable w ith the liv e stock. T h e ir chairs w ere tree Stumps, a slab from a big log m ade a table top and the bed fram es w ere m ade of the same construction, covered w ith tick s filled w ith hay. T h ey bu ilt a two story sod house. In w in ters th ey often had parties, w ith dancing 94 dow nstairs and cards upstairs. T h e y had a plank floor. In the houses w ith dirt floors, w et sacks w ere placed on the floor to keep dow n the dust. One night a t the height o f the m errim ent, the ceiling cam e down. No one w as seriously h urt except the fid d ler, w hose bow w as broken. in The 1904. first A t tim e she cam e to E nderlin w as w ith her first b oy frien d. T h ey both w ork ed fo r G u llick Strand n ear Lucca. His nam e w as N els Rud and he had ju st come over from N orw ay. He a sked countless questions, fo r he w as tryin g to learn English. Th e first thing he had to learn w as to talk to the horses, for in the old country th ey had d if ferent sounds for “ giddap” and “ w hoa” , and these horses paid no attention to him. T h e y w orked from 4 a. m. to 10 p. m. in sum m er. A man got $10.00 a m onth and a girl $1.00 per w eek. On Sunday, he hitched up a horse to the su lk y and th ey drove to Ender lin, w h ere th ey had ice cream in a little re s taurant w h ere G eeslin ’s bookkeeping service is now. H er first teacher was Clara B u tterfield , an aunt of Mrs. G eorge Adam s. Th ere w ere about ten pupils and they had tw o term s a year of about three m onth s. In the spring th ey used to go to the Sheyenne R iv er to w ad e at recess. O nce she w as standing on a rock w h en she noticed the other children w ere gettin g farth er and fa rth er aw ay. H er rock was a huge turtle, w h ich w ere num erous along the rivers. In the w in ter of 1884 a terrib le diphtheria epidem ic cam e. Th e Stonhoffs lost tw o ch il dren; the B arstads lost three. Three of the L ee children had it. There w as no doctor near, b u t her m other saw a w agon passing fa r off on the prairie. She jum ped on a horse and rode to intercept him , asking that he bring m edicine. He brought cranberries and brandy. The cranberries w ere cooked and the tart ju ice w as one thing th ey could get down. She dipped a stick w rapped w ith cloth into the b rand y and used it to swab out their throats. A ll of them recovered. In 1901, she m arried Em il Everson. Their three children w ere; Joe, of St. Paul, M in nesota, Ernest of Carson C ity, N evada and M abel. Mrs. C arl Hulet, w ho lived in E n der lin until Mr. Hulet retired a fe w years ago. A ll of the H ulet children, C harlotte (Mrs. V e r non Shorter, F ergu s Falls, Minnesota) A rd ell (Mrs. Holte, Seattle, W ashington) Howard, Charles and Robert w ere raised in Enderlin. H ilda’s husband died w h ile her children w ere sm all and in 1919 she m arried Leonard Larson. D uring the thirties, Mr. Larson, who was a Soo Line em ployee, becam e m uch w o r ried about b an k closings. He determ ined to tak e his savings to M inneapolis, w h ere he thought the banks w ere safe. He drew out his m oney b u t n ever reached a M inneapolis bank. Despite efforts of the Soo Line and law enforcem ent officials to find him, no trace w as e v e r found, and she believes he w as robbed and disposed of in some w ay. M rs. Larson for m an y years operated a room ing house and is still active and alert. She w as 88 on N ovem ber 4, 1965. Saunder J. Saunders S aun der J. Saunders w as born O ctober 9, 1886, in V a lley C ity, N. D., the son of A . M. Saunders and C harlotte Johansen Saunders, w ho came to V a lle y C ity in 1884. T h ey came from N o rw ay in 1882 to M ills City, Iowa. A . M. Saunders w as the first photographer in V a lley City. S au n w as a graduate of V a lle y C ity high school and graduated from V alley C ity State T eachers Co llege in 1906. A fte r graduation he taught in Lidgerw ood. On June 16, 1908, he m arried Clara Pierce of V a lley C ity, and in Septem ber of that y e a r th ey cam e to E n derlin w h ere he taught seventh and eighth grades and athletics in the c ity schools until the end of the school year in 1916. In the fa ll of 1916, Mr. Saunders becam e p rincipal of M oore Consolidated School lo cated in M oore tow nship w est of Enderlin. In June of 1917 the Saunders fam ily re tu rn ed to Enderlin w here Mr. Saunders entered the service of the Soo L in e railroad, w orkin g as cle rk in the o ffice of G. S. B axter, su p e r intendent of this division of the Soo Line, u n til his death in D ecem ber of 1934. W hen the railroads organized an a g ric u ltu r al departm ent, Mr. Saunders w as one of the first m em bers chosen for the agricu ltu ral departm ent of the Soo Line. T his d ep art m ent w as established to interest farm ers in p urebred stock and better seed grains, p ota toes, and oth er agricu ltu ral products. T his com m ittee traveled over the state in special trains and w ith the help of local com m ittees h eld m eetings in the towns to show w h at could be done to raise the standards of fa rm ing. M r. Saunders w as interested in young people. He w as a Scoutmaster, taught Sunday school, and w as a leader in organizations to b enefit youth. He w as a m em ber of the B oard of Education, the K iw a n is Club, M a sonic Lo dge and the M ethodist Church T h e re w ere fo u r children in the Saunders fam ily, F ran k , Robert, M ildred and John. M rs. Saunders m oved to F argo, N. D „ in Ju ly, 1938. M rs. Saunders, w h o is a form er N orth D akota “ M other of the Y e a r, ” n ow lives in Fargo. The Fetcher Family E. A . F etch er spent his boyhood on an 80 a cre “Stump" farm near Owatonna, M innesota. W ith three boys and a girl in th eir fa m ily his parents realized th at there w as not enough w o rk or incom e to raise them there, So, in 1880, th ey loaded th eir possessions into a covered w agon d raw n b y tw o yo k e of oxen, and leavin g Edw ard and his brother to put in the crop in Minnesota, Started the long trip to D akota T errito ry w h ere a frien d, the R e v erend Joseph Zim m erm an, had taken a claim in E ldred Township, Cass County. T h e jo u rn e y took the entire m onth of A pril, but th ey w ere fortunate to secure a claim in Section 28, E ldred Tow nship, ju st a m ile from their friends. T h ey put up a claim shanty and broke six ty acres of sod that first sum m er. Th e father return ed to M innesota for the h arvest and then, loading an em igrant car, m oved the rest of th eir pos sessions to B uffalo. E dw ard F etch er lived on this farm until his m arriage to A nna K ra ft in 1891, w h en th ey m oved to a n earb y farm . During this time, the people petitioned for a post office and one w as established near the site of the present tow n of A lice. It w as nam ed “ P e t erson” after a local man and Mr. Fetcher w as the first postm aster. Th e only pay w as the fees received fo r m oney orders and such services. In 1898 the fa m ily m oved to Enderlin, where Mr. F e tch e r ran a d ray and liv e ry barn. T h ree daughters w ere raised in this home; Rose (Mrs. H arry Paulson) Ella, and V iolet (Mrs. Reuben T eichm an). A fou rth d au gh ter, Sadie, died at the age of six months. Mrs. F etcher died in 1947 and Mr. Fetcher lived in his home here until 1955, w hen he w ent to liv e w ith his dau gh ter Rose. His death cam e in 1956. The Olous Austad Family Olous Austad, the son of Lars and Ranghilde Austad, w as b om on a farm n ear H ylla, N or w ay. He m arried M artha K je rsta n Hellem and th ey e m i g r a t e d to A m erica in 1880, com ing first to Jackson, M innesota and then to Enderlin, w h ere th ey took a homestead. Tim es w ere d ifficu lt and th ey had to borrow m oney from the bank at Lisbon, but im p ro v e m ent of the hom estead slow ly progressed. Then, one night, tragedy struck, in the form of horses thieves, w ho stole th eir horses. This w as the end of farm in g for them . The fam ily m oved into E nderlin. M r. A u s tad started an ice business and continued this w o rk until his death about 1817. T h e A u stads had seven children: M rs E. W. Landt, Pasco, W ashington; Leo, deceased; A n n a (South) Lee, S. D.; Chris, Los Angeles; Carl, N am pa, Idaho; Ralph, Boise, Idaho; and M aude (Christianson) Spokane, W ashington. Rena A u stad Landt, w ho is retired from the Red Cross, entered the prim ary departm ent of the E nderlin school in its first y ear and w as one of the fou r first graduates. She is the on ly liv in g m em ber of the class of 1906, of w hich she w as Senior class president. Emil Utke Em il U tk e farm ed n ear A lice fo r som e years; later purchasing a farm n ear F argo w h ere the fam ily liv e d fo r some tim e. Their fa m ily consisted of eight ch ildren : P a u l and Arnold, Fargo; A gnes, (Mrs. A . J. K apaun) and Edith, (Mrs. R obert Card), both form erly of A lice and now livin g in Fargo; Howard, who form erly lived at E n derlin and w ho died this spring; Hans and an infant, both deceas ed; and V iolet, (Mrs. R a y F ritz) of E nderlin. 95 The Dagman Family The first of the Dagm an fam ily to com e to the United States w ere John and Christine Dagm an, w ho sailed from Sw eden in 1881, bringing w ith them th eir ch ildren : Carl, G u stav and E rich Oscar. T h ey cam e first to Casselton, w h ere th ey had friends; then purchasing horses, a w agon and lum ber, set out for their hom estead in L ib erty Township, located w h ere the Richard W olfs now live. T hat first night they slept on the open prairie, then proceeded to build a sm all shanty and started b reak in g the sod. On this hom estead th ey raised eleven sons and three daughters. Th e first school w as built on the corner of their land w here the golf course now stands. T h ey w ere d eep ly concerned that th eir children should have religious training as w ell and w ere among the group who organized w h at is now the E vangelical F ree Church. One of these e arly pastors w as the R e v erend John Thom pson, whose daughter Ella w as to becom e the b rid e of their son, Paul, the only su rv ivin g child of the fam ily. A long time street and w ater superintendent for Enderlin, Paul, and his w ife celebrated their golden w edd in g the past year. Mr. and Mrs. Dagm an both died in the 1920’s. T h ree grandsons still farm in the Enderlin com m unity: W esley, V ern on and Harold. G u sta v Dagm an had graduated from the U n iversity of Upsala, and the N aval A cadem y and served as a captain in the Sw edish M er chant M arines before he succum bed to the “ A m erica” fever and follow ed his brother, Johan, to D akota Territory in 1882. His first em ploym ent w as w ork in g tor the Olson sisters, w here he herded sheep on the E nderlin townsite. T h at fa ll he w ork ed on the D alrym ple farm for 75 cents a day until freeze-up. He selected a claim in Section 32 in Raritan Tow nship and in 1883 brought his w ife W ilhelm ina and dau gh ter (Mrs. V icto r Peterson) to the sod shanty he had built. He w as one of the group of pioneers w ho m et at the Stow ell hom e to organize the tow nship g o v ernment. T h ree m ore children w e re born in A m e ri ca; Linnea (Mrs. O le O urenhagen) deceased, A x e l, w ho farm s w est of Enderlin, and A m an da (Mrs. A d olph Skram stad). B oth A x e l Dagm an and his cousin, Oscar, son of John operated threshing rigs fo r m any years, and boh m ade a hobby of photography. A s a result, the fam ilies h ave m any interest ing pictures of the old tim e rigs and thresh ing crew s. Karl Ufer K a rl U fer and his w ife, Ernestine Wendt, both em igrated from G erm an y. T h ey w ere m arried at B a rrett Junction, Wis., and cam e w ith th eir fa m ily to W alburg Tow nship w h ere they hom esteaded on Section,4 in 1879. In 1890 th ey m oved to W atson T ow nship where th ey spent the rest of th eir lives. 96 The Ufers had 11 ch ild ren : Emm a, Robert, Ernest Paul, M ary, Lena and Annie. Four of these children rem ained in the Enderlin a re a : R O B E R T UFER farm ed n ear Sheldon and in W atson T ow nship most of his life. A s a you n g man he w orked on the L an ger farm at Casselton and rem em bers cutting bands on the early steam pow ered threshing rigs and the first self-feed in g m achines. His w ife, the form er M yrtle Forrest, died in 1951. Robert lived in Enderlin fo r some tim e be fore m oving to the Sheyenne M anor in V alley City. His daughter, H azel (Mrs. C. E. Omdahl) lives at Sheldon and a grandson, Harold Froem ke is in business in Enderlin. C H A R L E S UFER m arried C arrie Rischow and th ey farm ed in W atson Tow nship for m any years. Charles and his w ife had no children of th eir own, but raised several foster children. A n adopted daughter, L u cille, lives in M inot and tw o foster daugh ters live in the com m unity: Mrs. Ralph Schatzke and M rs. Eldon Sch atzke. Am ong the v ivid m em ories of the early days, he rem em bers the w in ter of 1896-97 w h en the snow w as so h eavy that m any barns and lean-tos w ere broken b y the w eight of the snow. B etw een Christm as and N ew Y e a r a h eavy rainstorm m ade a crust of ice o v er the snow. Th e Maple R iver was com pletely covered and you could w a lk or d rive anyw here, looking down on houses from the high drifts. Mrs. U fer died in 1948 and he has m ade his home in E nderlin since then. A lw a ys in ter ested in com m unity affairs, he served as S ecretary of th e W atson School and Tow n Boards for 46 years and as the Secretary of the St. P e te r’s Congregation for 28 years. A fter m ovin g to Enderlin he served two term s as Ransom County Commissioner. L E N A U FE R m arried Ernest Fern ow and th ey farm ed w est of E nderlin for m any years. A lte r his death she m oved to Las Cruces, N ew M exico, w h ere a d aughter lives. Of the fiv e Fern ow children, Alm a, Laura, C e cilia and Leo, tw o rem ained in the Enderlin area. Cecelia (Mrs. Sterlin g Oliphant) lived in Sheldon and Enderlin and now lives in W est Fargo. Leo farm s w est of Enderlin. AN N IE UFER m arried M anfred Ham re and th ey farm ed in W atson Township. A fte r his death she taught school fo r several years. N ow retired, she still lives on the farm , near h er son, Glennis. A daughter, Mrs. M arvin U tke, also lives north and east o f Enderlin. Hans L ibak Mr. and Mrs. Hans L ib a k cam e to this area from Ham ar, H edm arken, N orw ay, w ith their three daughters, Anna, Laura and Hansine. T h ey hom esteaded in Preston Tow nship, liv ing w ith neighbors until th eir sod house was built. Mr. L ib a k w as a carpen ter b y trade and did m uch w o rk fo r neighbors. He helped m ove a building in for a school and helped to build the Preston Church. He also acted as the song leader until th ey w ere able to purchase an organ. M rs. L ib a k w as also a ctive in the w o rk of the ch urch as w ell as caring for h er fam ily and h elpin g w ith field w o rk w hen needed. Tw o m ore d augh ters w ere b o m to them, L illie and H ilda w ho died in infancy. In the early years Lisbon and F ort R an som w ere the tradin g centers. W ith the com ing of the railroad Lucca, E nderlin and Nome w ere closer. T h eir d au gh ters w e re all educated at Con cordia College, e x cep t A nna w h o w as not w ell enough to stay a w a y from home. Mr. and Mrs. L ib a k are now deceased as are th eir daughters, Anna and L au ra (Mrs. P. J. M yklan d). L illia (Mrs. Jam es M eeker) lives at Aberdeen, S. D „ and Hansine (Mrs. John Johnson) is at Nome. The Jaster Family F erd in an d Jaster cam e to the U nited States som etim e b etw een 1865 and 1870 from H am m er, S an d kru g, G erm any, crossing the ocean in a sailboat. D urin g the v o yage th ey w ere becalm ed fo r m an y d ays w ith the hot sun beating dow n on them . T h ey took the sails down and m ade a shelter o ver the boat. The w ind fin a lly began to blow again and they w ere able to land in the southern part of the United States, m an y m iles o ff course. T h ey w ere then transported to a port of en try in N ew Y o rk . He found w o rk in Rochester, M innesota, sa v ing m oney to bring his w ife and children tc the U. S. F in ally, h avin g earned the amount needed, he sent fo r his fa m ily in 1870. His em ployer w as to send m oney to E llis Island so th ey w ou ld h ave it on arrival. T he fam ily arrived to find there w as no m oney for them . Louise Jaster w rote h er husband, but w hen the letter arrived, the em ployer tore it up and Ferdin an d did no receiv e it. W eeks passed and Louise Jaster w as stranded on Ellis Island w ith h er fam ily of three g ir ls : Sophia, P a u l ine and A lvin a, and three boys: Ferdinand, A u gu st and G ustave. She fin a lly asked som e one h ow she could be sure her letter w ould reach her husband and w as told to send a special d e liv e ry letter. Ferdinand received the letter and w as fin ally able to get his em p lo yer to send the m oney to his fam ily. T h e fa m ily liv e d at Rochester for nine years before m ovin g to N orth D akota. T h e y came in w agons w ith all of th eir possessions. It w as the job of the boys to d riv e the livestock behind the w agons. W hen th ey reached W ahpeton the riv e r w as flooding and horses and livestock w ere w ad in g in deep w ater. T h e w agons w ere too h e a v y to pu ll through the m ud so th ey unloaded bags of feed at the railroad station to be shipped to a tow n n ear w h ere th ey intended to hom estead. B efore it w as shipped, m ules found it and ate some. T h e rest got w et in the rain and b y the time the Jasters p ick ed up the feed at K indred it w as ruined. Ferd in an d and Louise Jaster bought 160 acres of land in Shenford Tow nship from the governm ent for $377 on Septem ber 16, 1881 and built a sod house and barn ju st north of the present bu ild ing site. In 1885, G u stave Jaster, w ho w as then 21, bought the land from his parents for $625. In 1888, he m arried E liza Nohr. She had come to the A nselm com m unity from G reen leaf W isconsin to stay w ith h er brothers, who had hom esteaded land n ear the Jaster farm . G u st and E liza had fiv e b oys and a girl, W illiam and W alter of E nderlin and L evi, of Sheldon. T w o boys died at birth and a d augh ter died w hen she w as four. T h ey adopted a b ab y girl who died tw o w eeks a fter th ey brou gh t her home and also raised a you n g girl, M ary F eldm an. G ust farm ed until 1923, w hen he retired and died in 1935. His sons, W alter and L ev i farm ed the land until 1945, w h en L e v i bought the farm . A ll of the Jaster sons liv e in this com m unity. W illiam Jaster, a retired rural m ail carrier, m arried M innie Doeling. T h eir two daughters are: Sharon (Mrs. K e n Urbach) W est Fargo and Coral (Mrs. Francis Gibson) T w in V alley, Minn. W alter m arried Anna F r y denlund and now is retired in Enderlin. L evi m arried F rances L u d tk e and still farm s the home farm . T h eir three children are Gene, of G reensboro, Pa.; LaR ayne (Mrs. Robert R eim er) C arrington and P riscilla (Mrs. Ste phan Groth) of Enderlin. LeClaire Family B enjam in L e C laire w as b o m in L a k e C ry s tal, M innesota, in 1884. He cam e to Enderlin in 1905 and has m aintained his home here e v e r since, although as a Soo L ine conductor, he has w orked on m any divisions of the ra il road. He is a life m em ber of the M asonic Lodge in Enderlin, a m em ber of the K . T. No. 8 at Lisbon and Ell Z agel Tem ple of Fargo. An a vid sportsman, he is a long-tim e m em ber of the N. D. W ild L ife Federation. In 1910, he m arried Jennie H ughes of M an kato. Jane, as she is m ore fam iliarly know n , w as the d au gh ter of a W elsh Presbyterian m usic director and had studied voice under her father, u n der M rs. F raed rich Sn yder and O scar Siegel. She had tau gh t voice and p u b lic school m usic at L ak e Crystal, in the Jam es town schools and Jam estow n A cadem y. D urin g her years in Enderlin, she has given m uch tim e and talent to m usical activities of the com m unity, teaching voice and con d ucting choruses in the public schools, d ir ecting choirs in the M ethodist, Presbyterian and Luth eran churches. A m em b er of F irst L u th eran church, she served as organist for tw en ty years and w as aw ard ed a L ife M em bership in the Am erican L u th eran Church W omen. She has been a m em ber of H arm ony C h a p ter of the O rder of Eastern Star for 55 years and its organist for 30 years, receiv in g a L ife M em bership pin and guard in 1961. A m em ber of the Clio Club since com ing to Enderlin, she w as one of the w om en who 97 organized the first lib rary and w orked d ili g en tly in its support over the years. She w as N orth D ak ota’s d elegate-at-large to the G en eral F ederation ofW omens Clubs 1939 convention in A tla n tic City. A c tiv e in Red Cross and other com m unity activities, her talent has enriched the cultural life of the tow n. A t the M ankato Centennial and the Centennial of the W elsh P resb y te r ian ch urch she w as cited for givin g so gen erou sly of her talent in the service of her ch urch and com m unity. N ow retired, Mr. and M rs. L eC laire m ain tain th eir hom e in Enderlin. T h e y h av e two children : B en jam in Jr. of M inneapolis and Jean (Mrs. D. J. A une) of B rain ard. A daugh ter, Lorraine, died in 1919. L e w is Larson W hen L ew is Larson got off the train at E nderlin A p ril 14th, 1904, he found a ten foot snow bank in front of the depot. If he had had enough m oney to bu y a ticket back to southern Minnesota he probab ly w ouldn ’t be here today. Born in St. An sgar, Iowa in 1883, he lived at L y le M innesota before com ing to Enderlin, seeking w o rk in an area w h ere m any acqu ain tances had settled. In 1910 he w en t to w o rk fo r the Soo L ine and w orked as a brakem an and conductor until a broken hip forced his retirem ent in 1952. D u rin g his y ears in Enderlin he has been active in the Brotherhood of R ailw ay T ra in men, the O rd er of R ailw ay Conductors and the F irst Lu th eran C hurch. He served as E n derlin ’s m ayor from 1938 to 1942. M rs. Larson, the form er Selm a Nottestad, m arried him in 1916 and their two daughters w ere raised and educated here and at Con cordia College. T h e y are Doris, (K aushagen) of B u ffalo, N ew Y o rk , and M arlys, (U nkenholz) of W ashington, D. C. The Utke Fam ily A u gu st U tke w as a tailor by trade in his n ative G erm an y. M an y of his friends and relatives had left for A m erica and, in 1881, he and his w ife, the form er A ugusta S alzw edel, joined the em igration. T h ey had tick ets to som ew here in Pen n sylvan ia, w here he p la n ned to w o rk as a tailor. Th rou gh some e r ror, th ey w ere landed at B u ffalo , then sent to D uluth. H ere th ey d ecided to b u y tickets to Casselton, w h ere th ey k n ew th ey w ould fin d some of th eir relatives and acqu aintan c es. W ith th eir fiv e b oys and two girls, th ey stayed fo r a short tim e at the W m. K ru e g e r farm near C haffee, then filed on a claim north east of the present site of Enderlin. T h e y dug a ca ve into a side h ill for sh elter until a house could be bu ilt and broke a fe w acres to raise food for the w in ter. In 1883, tw o m arried children, Wiilhelmina (Mrs. H. Golz) and H erm an, cam e to the area. T h eir oth er children w ere Lu d w ig, Frank, Emil, F red and W illiam , H ulda (Mrs. H er man O ehlke) and M ary. A ll of them except 98 L u d w ig rem ained in the com m unity, takin g farm s and raising fam ilies near their parents’ farm Mr. U tke w as noted for his en ergy. He w ould start for Casselton at 4 a. m. and re turn at 10 p. m „ carryin g fifty pounds of flour, coverin g the distance in a fa st w a lk in g trot. Fred Utke F red U tke w as nine years old w hen his parents cam e from G erm any. In 1896, he bu ilt a house and b arn on the land now fa rm ed by his son Elm er, since he w as to be m ar ried to Susanna W olsky. Th e crop w as good that year, so the new house was filled w ith oats, and the n ew bride could not m ove into her home until N ovem ber w h en the oats w ere sold. F red and Susanna raised a fa m ily of 11 ch il dren: fiv e sons; Otto, A rizona; M artin, (de ceased); H erbert, O riska; E rvin and Elm er, E nderlin; and six daughters; A lm a and Olga, (Mrs. S. Joachim ) both now dead; Emma, (Mrs. W alter Fraase) Buffalo; Caroline, (Mrs. T. K . H erbener) W isconsin; Ella, (Mrs. Elm er Geske) Enderlin, and Leona, (Mrs. L ero y B u t tke) Lucca. F red and his fa m ily w ere all faithful m em bers of the Pontiac congregation of T rin ity L utheran, w h ere he served on the council for more than fo rty years. William Utke W illiam Utke m arried M innie F ritz on Jan. 31, 1907. T h ey farm ed in Pontiac Tow nship all of their lives, w h ere th ey raised a fam ily of ten children. L ik e his brother F red , the W illiam U tke fam ily w e re active m em bers of the T rin ity congregation. He also served on school and tow nship boards. T h eir children w ere: sons A lb ert, M arvin, Law rence, Reinhold, E lroy and Dallas; daugh ters, Palm a, M artha, Louise, M yrtle and L u ella. O nly M arvin now lives in the Enderlin area and still farm s his parents’ land. Rein hold operated a business in E nderlin for sev eral years and now teaches in the M oorhead, M innesota schools. Frank Utke F ra n k U tke m arried Anna W estphal, daugh ter of a pioneer H ighland tow nship fam ily. Mr. and Mrs. U tke farm ed in E ldred Township as long as th ey lived. Three children still live in the E nderlin area: Reuben, Clara, (Mrs. V ern er Lindem ann) and Lillian, (Mrs. Edw in L u th er). T h e F ran k U tke fam ily w ere m em bers of the Salem E van gelical Church w h ich later m erged w ith the EU B Church. Herman Utke Herm an U tke m arried M athilda Burrow . T h eir farm north east of Enderlin is owned by one of the tw o livin g sons of the fam ily: Fred W. U tke. A n oth er son, Ernest, also farm s north of Enderlin. T h eir other children w ere Anna, Emil, Hulda, (Mrs. Otto Hanson) and Elizabeth, (Mrs. Jess Cam pbell). L ik e the F ran k Salem U tk e fam ily, th ey w ere E van gelical church. m em bers of Nora Huseby N ora H useby w as born in Oslo, N orw ay, Jan uary 6, 1879 and cam e to A m erica with her parents, Elof and Inger Anderson and Andrew Jerdee her sister. T h ey arrived in B u ttzv ille in A n d rew Jerd ee and his w ife Ingeborg LeiM ay, 1892, w h ere th ey m et two brothers who dal cam e to E nderlin in 1907 from M adison, had com e a few years earlier. W isconsin. He had lived there since coming H er father w as a carpenter and interior from N orw ay. He found w o rk on the Soo decorator and her m other w as a dress m aker. L ine at a tim e w h en the w o rk in g d ay w as 10 The couple had decided to try farm ing in hours, and the w o rk in g w eek w as six and this country. T h e y settled on the SE quarter som etim es seven, days. His starting w ages of Section 11 in Preston Tow nship. w e re 14 cents an hour. In the fall of 1893 she m oved to E nderlin M r. Jerdee loved gardening, often propow ith the P ete Burtness fam ily, w here Mr. gating and crossing fruit trees and w on a Burtness started a store. She did the house num ber of aw ards from the A gricu ltu ral C o l w o rk for them and her brother, A u gu st E loflege for his w ork w ith fru it trees. son, w ho w orked in the store. T he Jerd ees w ere m em bers of the F irst Christm as E ve in 1893 h er brother and Lu th eran C h u rch and he w as an active m em she borrow ed a cu tter from Mr. Burtness b er of the Sons of N orw ay Lodge. Mr. Jerdee and started for home, about ten m iles w est w as proficient on the accordion and violin. of E nderlin. It had snowed all day and about His children and grandchildren inherited his fiv e o’clock, w hen th ey got up on the prairie, interest in m usic. it started to storm. T h e storm intensified His w ife died in 1927 and he in 1940. The and darkness cam e and th ey got lost. There Jerdees had fiv e children. Engel, now of A n w as nothing to do but k eep on d riving, h op nandale, M inn., and E dw ard, (deceased), Mrs. ing to fin d some farm stead. A fte r some time W illiam F ischer, M adison, W isconsin; Mrs. th ey saw a light and cam e to a farm . She Peter N ygaard and Mrs. G eorge Jan kow ski, doesn’t rem em ber the nam e of the people, both in Enderlin. but it w as the farm w here Lorne Lund is now livin g. T h e y had about fou r m iles left Fred Carter to go and got hom e about 1 o’clock in the F red C a rte r’s parents cam e to this country m orning. A fte r being in a storm for eight from London, England, in 1895 w ith tw o sons hours, w alkin g m uch of the time to keep and settled in O w ego Tow nship. S ix m ore warm, th ey w ere v e ry glad to get home sons w ere born in this country. M arch 17, 1899, she m arried Ole H useby. T h e first job Mr. C arter had w as w ork in g He w as born in N orw ay in 1862 and cam e on the section crew for $1.00 a day. He w a lk to this cou n try in 1869 w ith his parents. T h ey ed six m iles to w o rk each m orning and home cam e b y sail boat and w ere at sea six w eeks again at night. and landed at Quebec, Canada. A fte r livin g A son, P e rc y C arter, lost his life inin W orld F illm ore County, Minn., he cam e to P res W ar I and fo r him the Sheldon A m erican L e ton Township, D akota T erritory in the 1880’s. gion P ost is named. H is m other w as Ransom He passed aw ay in 1939.He w as a great C o u n ty ’s first G old Star m other. nature lover and planted m an y fruit trees Mr. Carter died in 1924 and his w ife in 1956. and he lived to en joy the fruit. F red Carter m arried H attie Zittelm an and T ogeth er th ey raised a fam ily of ten ch il th ey h av e m ade th eir hom e in E n derlin since dren, the oldest of w hom passed aw ay at 1923. He ow ned a b arber shop and is now the age of eight It w as in F eb ru ary and sem i-retired. it w as b itterly cold. He becam e v e ry sick and they took him to Enderlin with horses George Solom and sled. T h ey heated stones to take along George Solom is one of the m em bers of the to keep him w arm . He w as operated on for com m unity who helped to put on the 1941 F if appendicitis im m ediately, but died the next tieth A n n ive rsa ry celebration. Th e son of day. P eter Solom and his w ife, w ho cam e to Moore T h e ir daughter, E velyn (Mrs. W alter Zaeske) Tow nship in 1881 from F illm ore County, M in died in 1958. The rem aining children are: nesota, he still farm s the original homestead Inez (Mrs. A u gust Z aeske), Leonard; Helene in addition to other holdings. He credits his (Mrs. Lars B irk lid ), W est Fargo; W alter, F a r go; A lfred , Jam es, Edgar, M arvin and Vernon, good health and long life to good fortune and the bracing N orth D akota clim ate. all in the Nome v icin ity Th e Solorns lost tw o of th eir children in Mrs. H useby has lived in the Enderlin v i cin ity for seven ty-fou r years and on her farm the diphtheria epidem ic of 1884. O nly G eorge fo r six ty-seven years. She has seen hail and a sister, Mrs. S. W . Thorpe, form er E n derlin resident, su rvived . storm s, tornadoes, blizzard s and d roughts (who can forget the 30’s?). T h e y h ave seen Mr. Solom w as a Federal M arshall during good days and bad, she says, but the good W orld W ar I, and served in m an y church outnum ber the bad, and she can look b ack and township positions. He rem em bers h elp on m an y good years in this good land, and ing to la y out the p a rk in E nderlin. He is has m any fond m em ories from over the years a m em ber of the Ransom County W elfare of the w onderful friends and neighbors who B oard and still operates his own farm . 99 h ave m ade livin g here so pleasant. She thanks God for all the years let her live in this vicin ity. He has Je rry M artin In the early 1880’s a group of of French Canadians, from G oderich, Ontario, left their birth place and cam e w est to the Dakotas. J e rry M artin hom esteaded tw o and one-half m iles n orthw est of E nderlin-to-be in Pontiac Tow nship. Som e of the others in the group settled around Casselton, am ong them an Irish girl nam ed N ellie O ’N eill. In 1884 Jerry and N ellie w ere m arried and m oved to his farm To this couple three children w ere b om : W illiam in 1886, Ethel in 1889, and M organ in 1891. N ine days after M organ’s birth, N ellie O ’N eill M artin passed a w a y , and w as buried in Casselton. A k in d ly neighbor wom an, who had a b ab y at this time, took little M organ and nursed him. A lte r his w ife ’s death, Jerry M artin solicited the aid of his sister, M ary, w ho later becam e M rs. M ike M otschenbacker. M ary cam e to the prairie farm home and w as housekeeper for the fa m ily fo r several years. T he fam ily w as C atholic and w hen the children w ent fo r religious instruction, it was concentrated for one w e e k during the sum m er m onths. M rs. John M unt in E nderlin w ould teach this class and the M artin ch il dren w ou ld w alk the distance from th eir farm home each day Th e w e e k ly mass w as held at the P a trick Pierce home and, at tim es, the fam ily w ould venture to Sheldon, the nearest Catholic C hurch. A s long as A un t M ary lived w ith the fa m i ly, the school m arm boarded and room ed at th eir home. J e rry M artin served his turn as president of the school board. In 1902, the farm w as sold to a Mr. G arsc ke from D evils Lake and the fam ily m oved to E n derlin into one of the Harper houses (w here P au l B ice n ow lives). B y this tim e A u n t M ary had left the fam ily, so Mr. M ar tin w as the ch ief cook and housekeeper. E v id e n tly he w as most adept, as he baked the d aily bread and also did the fam ily laundering. A fte r m oving to town, he did carpenter w o rk fo r a living. G eorge W alker, “ B la c k G eo rge” (a w ellkno w n local character) had w orked fo r Jerry M artin. In 1904 “B la c k G eorg e” becam e ill, and w as quaran tined in the city jail. His sickness had not been clearly diagnosed, so J e rry M artin w ent to visit his one-tim e fellow w o rk er. N ot long after that, J e rry contracted the same disease and died. B y this time, it w as p roved that both had su ffered from the fearsom e b la ck sm all pox. “ B la c k G eorge, ” h ow ever, recovered from his bout w ith the disease. W hen the illness w as diagnosed as small pox, the b od y w as taken to the Catholic cem etery at Sheldon during the night and in terred at once. B ein g d evout Catholics, the fa m ily w as heartsick to th in k th eir father was buried in 100 the m iddle of the night w ithout receivin g the last rites of the church. A fte r the father's death, the children stayed together in the Enderlin home and B ill went to w ork fo r W heeler and M eisenberg. M organ and E thel continued in school. E thel’s fo r m al education cam e to an abrupt end, w hen one d ay she w as given a tongue-lashing due to a m isunderstanding betw een the teacher and herself. She w as d eep ly hurt, and re fused to back to school. Sh e then took up the duties of hom em aker on a fu ll-tim e basis. W illiam John M artin m arried Ida Ziegler, a cle rk in Pennington’s D epartm ent Store, in 1914, and th ey had six children: John, Steilacoom , W ash.; Jerom e, Enderlin; W il liam J., Fargo, N. D.; Helen (Mrs. John Nolan) W estover A F B , Mass.; Lois (Mrs. George Stockert) G ardena, Calif.; and Cathryn (Mrs. Bern ard Trask) R iverside, Calif. Ethel (Mrs. Fred S u llivan of Lisbon, N. D . ) had tw o children: F red S u llivan , Jr., Enderlin, and M ary (Mrs. Tom C avan au gh ) Lisbon, N. D. M organ M artin w as m arried to Em eline B ran sack and th ey had one son, Vernon. A xel Johnson A x e l Johnson w as b om in Langeland, D en m ark in 1885. F eelin g that there was no fu ture in Denm ark, w ith w ages 1 krone, or 25 cents a day, he cam e to this cou n try at the age of 15, to St. Ansgar, Iowa, w h ere an uncle, Hans Godfredson, w as farm ing and w ork ed there several years. W hen his uncle, Mr. Godfredson, m oved to L ucca in 1903, he cam e w ith him and in 1908 bought a farm in Pontiac Township. He m arried M artha Hanson at L yle, Minn., in 1912. T he Johnsons had fou r daughters: E velyn (W olters), Lisbon; M arion (W adeson), A lice; B ern ice (G riffen ), Long Beach, Calif.; C arol (Ness) M oorhead; and three sons, Alton and Vernon, w ho farm north of Enderlin, and H ow ard of K in d red . T he Johnsons retired in 1944, m oving to F argo for ten years and then returning to E nderlin w h ere th ey now live. Long time m em bers of the Congregational Church at Lucca, th ey are now m em bers of the M ethodist C hurch in Enderlin. A ugust Freitag A u gu st F reitag cam e to Sheldon in the sum m er of 1892, from Brandenburg, G erm an y. He w as accom panied b y his m other, Ernes tine, his w ife, Anna, her mother, G randm a Splatzstasser and three children, Elizabeth, Ernest and G ustave. T h ey w orked for the Erbstoesser fam ily in W atson Tow nship. Here G randm a S platz stasser died. T h ere w ere 32 steps over the snow bank to the gran ary w h ere she laid until they could get to the cem etery to d ig a grave. M artha and Clara w ere born here. The fam ily then m oved to the D orrance farm north of Sheldon w h ere three m ore children w ere born: Emma, E dw ard and A gn es. Mrs. F rei- tag used to tell that she w alked to Sheldon w ith bu tter and eggs fo r groceries. She also reca lled th at her frien ds in G erm an y quit w ritin g to her because th ey thought she w as ly in g about th eir success in the new land— no one could acquire livestock in such a short time. T h e y lived on a farm north of Enderlin, w h ere H en ry w as born, before b u yin g the farm fou r m iles east of tow n w h ich rem ained in the fa m ily until 1965. F ou r of the children rem ained in the Enderlin com m unity. Elizabeth (Mrs. Q uast), M artha (Mrs. L an gland ), Em m a (Mrs. Ted F raed rich ), and G u stav are now deceased. H enry, Soo L in e engineer, is m arried to the form er Ida Johnson. T h e y have four sons: M aynard, and Dale, M alta, Mont.; K a rroll, P ort H ueneme, Calif.; and Dennis, at home. Hans T. Olson Hans T. Olson and his w ife K a ren came to Mona, Iowa, from N orw ay before m oving to D akota T e rrito ry in 1881. T h e y hom esteaded in Section 20 o f L ib e rty Tow nship on the farm now ow ned b y a great grandson, Milton Sh elver. H ere th ey lived most of their lives, m ovin g to E nderlin in 1922 upon retire ment. A ll of th eir six children are now deceased, but m an y of their grandchildren and grea t gran dch ild ren are in the com m unity. Tw o d au gh ters-in-law , Inga Olson, w ife of th eir son Oscar, and Goldie Olson, w ife of their son G eorge, also m ake th eir hom es here. Th e other children w ere Fred, Hulda (Mrs. Jacob Sh elver), Jennie (Mrs. John K a b er), and A n n ie (Mrs. A le c k Olson). A ugust Trapp In 1882, ju st a y e ar after his brothers, H en ry and Paul, im m igrated to N orth Dakota, A u gu st Trapp , his w ife and tw o small sons, Em il and Hugo, d ecided to try th eir fortune in the n ew land also. W hen th ey landed in N ew Y o rk , a frien d ly stran ger offered to h elp them find th eir w ay and get them started to N orth Dakota. In a short tim e the frien d ly stranger disappeared and w ith him all their spare cash. T h ey had no m oney for food for the long trip, and had to re ly on the kin dn ess of fellow tra v e l ers, w ho ga ve ch ild ren an occasional sand w ich , u n til their brothers m et them at Fargo. A u gu st found w o rk as a gardener and chorem an on the W atson bonanza farm near C h affee. In 1890 th ey m oved to a farm in P on tiac Tow nship w h ere th ey lived four years before b u yin g a farm northw est of L u cca w h ere th ey spent the rest of their lives, A u gu st livin g to the age of 93. S ix m ore children w ere born to them in this cou n try: tw o infants w ho died at birth, Otto, B ertha, Em m a, and M artha. Em il, deceased, w as a long tim e N.P. em plo yee at L u cc a. H is w ife, A u gu sta, (Janz) lives at L u cca w ith a son, H erbert Trapp. Hugo, deceased, w orked fo r the Soo Line in Enderlin. His daughters, Emma (C resw ell), and W ilm a (M uth), liv e in E nderlin; Dorothy (M yhre) in Superior, Wis.; a son, Lorenz, and a daughter E leanor (Boeder) in G reat Falls, Mont. Otto, now deceased, w as an Enderlin city em ployee. A daughter, Delores lives in M oorhead, Minn. M artha (Mrs. Rudolph K oslofsy) died this spring in V alley City. Em m a (Mrs. A lb ert Janz) lives at Fingal. A son, W erner, operates his gran d fath er’s farm . B erth a (Mrs. H erm an Janz) lives in P on tiac Tow nship w ith her sons, G len and Arnold and daughter, Am anda. A lm a (Mrs. Clarence Gross) and a son, W alter, also farm north of Enderlin. The Golz Family H erm an M. Golz, born in 1848, and his w ife, the form er W ilhelm ina Utke, born in 1853, w ere m arried in G erm an y and cam e w ith their fam ily to Pontiac Tow nship in D akota T e rrito ry in 1882. The Golz fa m ily had ten children, tw o of whom died in infancy. T w o sons, O tto and H elm uth and a d aughter Olga are also d e ceased. A daughter, L yd ia (Nohr), lives in M inneapolis. The rem aining children live in the Enderlin com m unity. T h e fam ily w ere m em bers of the Salem E van gelical Church. M rs. Golz died in 1941 and Mr. G olz in 1941, at the age of 93. Th e only rem aining son, W alter, farm s w ith his fam ily northeast of Enderlin. Anna m arried Charles H eacox in 1909. Mr. H eacox w as a farm er and carpenter and th ey liv ed tw o m iles south of Enderlin. She re calls that for tw o years, from 1946 to 1948, she w alk e d to the M ethodist Church e ve ry Sunday and did not miss a w orship service for tw enty months, w h en illness forced her to miss. Since her husband’s death, she has lived in Enderlin. She has tw o sons: Gordon, of Lisbon an d Lloyd, of Brem erton, W ashington. M artha Golz W endlandt, lives on a farm in Pontiac Tow nship w ith her son, Vernon, Helena Golz m arried H erm an W estphal in 1905 and th ey farm ed in H ighland Tow nship un til his death in 1926. She and her sons, M erlin and Edwin, operated the farm until 1935, w hen M erlin w as killed in an accident. She m oved to Enderlin and in partnership w ith a broth er-in -law , A rth u r W estphal, open ed the E nderlin Im plem ent shop. T he bus iness w as sold after his death in 1957. S h e is a m em b er of the EU B church and served as a d elegate to their annual con fer ence fiv e times. She is also a past president of the Business and Professional W om en’s Club. The Johnson Family Lew is (Lars) Johnson w as born in N orw ay in 1853 and hom esteaded in M oore Tow nship in 1885, a h alf m ile south of the present Dale Olson farm . A fe w years later, he purchased 101 the farm now ow ned b y his grandson, James Johnson. In 1892, he m arried Oline Svensdahl. To them w ere born six sons and tw o daughters: Palm er, Eddie, Charles and Gerhard, now dead; Theodore and R aym ond, both of Enderlin ; A lm a (Mrs. A rth u r F ern ow ), E n der lin; and M abel (Moll), B arn esville, Minn. T h ey w ere long-tim e m em bers of the West St. O laf Church. M rs. Johnson died in 1930 and Mr. Johnson about ten years later. T h ey spent th eir last years w ith their dau gh ter M abel and son Palm er. Erick Rognaldson E rick R ognaldson w as born in Fillm ore County, M innesota, in 1859. He m arried C h ris tine H elgeson at Lanesboro, M innesota in 1882 and that spring th ey cam e to a homestead in M oore Tow nship. T h is w as to be their home for the rest of th eir lives. T h e Rognaldsons w ere ch arter m em bers of the F illm ore Ch u rch and she w as the first president of its Ladies A id. T h eir children num bered nine: M artin, E nderlin; H arley, G reat Falls, Montana; E lder, Fargo; C lara R osberg), Seattle, W ashington; R ik k a (C a vett), deceased; Ida (M atthew s), M inneapolis; E lla (F ryd en lu n d ), Enderlin; G ertrude, d e ceased; and A lic e (G iedt) of Seattle. M r. Rognaldson died in 1922 and his w ife in 1937. T he hom estead is now ow ned and farm ed b y th eir son, M artin. Ole Moe O le I. M oe w as born in Ringebue, G u lb ran d sdalen, N orw ay, in 1872. He first cam e to the E n derlin area in 1891 to w o rk on the W allace G albreath farm . He m arried Inanda N ord at the old L u th eran parsonage south of E nderlin in 1897, the cerem ony being perform ed b y R ev. Jahren. T he M oes w ere m em bers of the W est S. O laf C h u rch and fa r m e d in L ib e rty Tow nship un til re tirin g to Enderlin, w h ere th ey w ere oared fo r b y their daughter, M athilda (Mrs. O rrin Knutson) u n til th eir deaths. M r. Moe died in 1946 and M rs. M oe in 1952. T h eir only son, In gvald Moe, still farm s in L ib e rty Tow nship. The Flatt Family Johnathan L lo y d (M ike) F latt w as born on the farm he still operates fiv e m iles east of Enderlin. His parents cam e to the area b e fo re 1880, from Canada, as did those of his w ife, the form er Reo L illecrop, w hose parents settled in the Jen k sville settlement. The Flatts purchased a hom esteader’s pre-em ption rights to the F latt farm in 1882. M ike attended N DSU, served in the arm y d urin g W orld W ar I and w orked in the F arm e r’s State B an k in Sheldon fo r fou r years b efo re takin g o ver the farm in 1924. He has farm ed continuously since then. D uring these years he served tw elve years in the North D akota Senate, from 1939 to 1951. T h e location of the farm has insured a w e alth of exp erien ce w ith m otorists in the 102 ditch, out of gas, inebriated or lost. T h e Flat ts h ave fiv e children. John Roger, D ouglas W illard, B e tty (Mrs. Charles Corw in), N ancy and W illiam Jam es, w ho farm s in part nership w ith his father. The Klingbeil Family Ju liu s K lin g b e il and A m elia K ru eger came to A m erica w ith a group of relatives from G erm an y in 1882. Th e Petrichs, K rafts. Ut kes and B leeses came on to D akota T erritory w hile the K lin g eils stopped in Detroit, M ich igan until 1893. He w as trained as a carpenter and carriage m aker and bu ilt m an y early hom es and b u s iness places about the town. A fte r some years, he w ent to w o rk for the Soo Line, w here an accident in the yard s cost him his life. His w id ow helped to support h er fam ily b y takin g in boarders and doing practical nursing, and becam e som ething of a local in stitution. She w as alw ays available w hen help w as needed. There w ere six K lin g b eil children: Hattie, M ary, Anna, Ida, A lvin a and Fredl. Two daughters, H attie (Mrs. W alter Loomis) now deceased, and M ary (Mrs. G. A . Nelson), who lives w ith a son, George, have spent their entire liv es in this com m unity. The Munt Family John M unt w as born in England, in 1857, and, in 1875, em igrated to A m erica w h ere he w as em ployed b y the P illsb u ry m ills in M inneapolis. T h e dem and of the n e w l y set tled coun try fo r m ills to grind its w heat lured him w estw ard; first to Litch field, Minnesota, Where h e m arried M argaret M eisenberg, then to F ort Ransom and later Lisbon, w h ere he ow ned a fe e d m ill. In 1901, h e purchased the W isner m ill, lo cated near the stockyards in Enderlin. T h is m ill w as destroyed b y fire in 1906, but Mr. M unt established a n ew m ill, located in the block w h ere the F red M enge now stands. He operated this until his death in 1923. M rs. M unt continued to m ake Enderlin h er home, liv in g w ith a daughter, Angeline, until her death in 1946. A t that tim e, A n g e line m oved to Los A n geles. T h ree sons are also dead: R aym ond, Ralph, and V ernon, who died in F eb ru ary of this year. The only m em b er of the fam ily n ow livin g in E nderlin is M ary (Mrs. B. H. Lindem an). The Nord Family Charles A . N ord w as born in 1850 in B randvoid, Solar, N orw ay. He m arried Berth a Engen in M ay, 1887 and m igrated to A m erica to settle on a farm in Moore Tow nship. W ith them cam e th ree children: A rne, Jennie and Charles. T h ree m ore children, Calm er, B e r tha and A lfred , w ere born in A m erica. T h e y experien ced all the trials common to those pioneers w ho cam e w ith little m oney or property to establish them selves in a new cou n try. T h e y helped organize and build the present W est St. O laf Church, of w h ich Mr. Nord se rv ed as a trustee fo r a num ber of years. The N ord home w as a center of com m unity a ct iv ity ; the first L u th e r Leagu e w as organized in this hom e as w as the first com m unity base ball team. A n other com m unity contribution w as a y e arly J u ly 4th celebration at the Nord farm . T h e y lived to celebrate th eir G olden W ed d in g on M arch 13, 1923, at w hich all of their fa m ily w ere present. Mrs. N ord died or. Dec. 14, 1927, and M r. Nord on M ay 27, 1940. O f the children of the fam ily, Jennie (Mrs. G eorge Peterson ), B erth a (Mrs. N orm an P e t erson), C alm er and A rn e are deceased. A rn e N ord m arried R uth B e c k and spent his life in the E n derlin com m unity, m oving into Enderlin upon retirem ent. His son L y le, is the third generation to farm the Nord hom estead. T h e ir tw o d augh ters are: DeLois (Mrs. Wm. Carlson), F ort Collins, Colorado; and Thelm a (Mrs. D arrell Dow dell) of Sau k Centre, M innesota. M rs.Nord is still livin g in E nderlin. C h arles N ord m arried E lla G reen and they still m ake their home on a farm in M oore T ow nship. A lfre d Nord m arried Isabel W alsh. T h ey farm ed fo r m an y years in Moore Tow nship b efore retirin g to E nderlin. T h e ir children are: B ly th e (Mrs. V ic H anson), Carrington; M avis (Mrs. P h il H ager) W ilm ar, M innesota; A lfre d Jr., and Jam es, both of Enderlin; J e r ome, D ilw orth, Minn.; and K en t, W ahpeton, N. D. The Dvergsten Family P eter D vergsten w as born in N orw ay in 1866. H e cam e first to K in d red and then m oved to M cLeod, w h ere he m arried M agda Sagvo ld in 1907. T h e y m oved to E nderlin in 1910, w h ere he w ork ed for the Soo Line as a car inspector until retirem ent. B o th are now deceased. T he D vergstens raised tw o children, Arnold, w ho died M ay 20, 1966, and H ilm a (H ill), both of Enderlin, and an adopted daughter, M arie, (Mrs. Jam es Su llivan ), Redding, California. T h ey w ere m em bers of the old Zion Lutheran Church. (Mrs. E lm er Lan gland), Detroit Lakes, M in nesota; L u ella (Mrs. G len Cole), deceased; Em ilie (Mrs. B e rt Steeland) Eugene, Oregon; and Hilm a (Mrs. F ra n k Helmer) of F argo. T he Larsons w e re m em bers of the W est St. O laf Ch u rch and Mr. Larson served on school and tow nship boards during his d ays on the farm . T h ey retired to E nderlin in 1932, w h ere th ey spent the rest of their lives. A lf Larson operated the fam ily farm after his fa th e r’s retirem ent. He now lives in Enderlin, and his sons John and Chester oper ate the farm . A lf has served as Ransom Coun ty Com m issioner and has been active in the Soil Conservation activities in N orth Dakota. The Engen Family A rn e Engen and his w ife, M aria Sm estad, both born in N orw ay, came to this area, w h ere th ey w ere pioneer farm ers, in 1887. M r. Engen and Ole Christianson w ere brothers. Ole added “son to his fa th e r’s name; A rn e took the nam e of the farm in N orw ay from w h ich he came. Both Mr. and M rs. Engen are deceased. T h ey had three daughters: M ollie (Mrs. Ed Gunderson) and Inga (Mrs. P eter R isdahl), both of Lisbon and A lm a (Mrs. Leslie Legg) w ho m akes h er hom e in Enderlin. The Syverson Family T hore and K a rin a Syverson w ere m arried at Lanesboro, M innesota in 1879. Th e fo llow ing spring, th ey cam e to D akota Territory, ar riv in g in M oore Tow nship in June 12, 1880, to take the first claim in the township. Some rem in iscen ces of those first days m ay be found elsew here in these pages. T he Syverson s had three c h ild re n : A lbert, M ary (Torbenson) and M illie (Nelson) B re c k enridge, Minn., T ore Syverson died in 1941 and K arin a in 1949. T h e y m ade th eir home in E nderlin in their later years. T h e ir son A lb ert m arried Inga B raaten and farm ed in M oore T ow n sh ip all of his life. T h eir sons, A lfre d and Claren ce still farm the Syverson land. T h e ir daughters are B e r tha (Berger) o f F ort Ransom and Lillian (H ackney) of B reckenridge, w ith w hom Mrs. S yverson m akes h er home since the death of her husband in 1944. The Albert Larson Family A lb e rt E. Larson w as born in 1866, in A l am akee County, Iow a. H e spent some time as a young m an w o rk in g in a logging camp, but a fte r his m arriage to K aren Monserud, in 1891, he started to farm . In 1903, the Larsons purchased a farm from the Ransom C o u n ty Im m igration Association. This w as the old P e te r A u stad hom estead, w h ich he nam ed “ Center F arm ” in m em ory of h is hom e township in Iow a, and because it w as h alfw a y betw een Sheldon and E nder lin. H ere th ey raised their fa m ily of three sons and fo u r daughters. T h e y are: A lf N ., of Enderlin; Philip, w h o died in W orld W ar I, Sedm er, of V an cou ver, W ashington; A lice The John Larson Family John Larson and his w ife, Anna, cam e to this area in 1903. Has brother, Joseph and fa m ily cam e at the same tim e and bought the adjoining farm , both brothers having form erly lived at F airfield, Iowa. A s a form er Iow an, Mr. Larson grew lots of corn in w h ich the w hole fam ily turned out to pull, b y hand, the m ustard and w ild oats left b etw een the row s. A skilled corn husker, he p ick ed h is com b y hand. He died in 1923, but his w ife, now 88, is still livin g on the farm . Mrs. Larson recalls the days of the horse thief, w hen, h avin g purchased groceries in Sheldon one Saturday night, th ey cam e out to fin d th eir horse and 103 bu ggy m issing. N early a m onth later, the sh eriff called from N ortonville to say that a horse had been found that fitted the descrip tion of their anim al. W hen Mr. Larson w alked into the barn, she recognized his voice and w hinned, p ro vin g the gu ilt of the couple who had taken her. T h e y had used the rig to p ick up sacks of seed grain laid along the edge of the fields b y farm ers w h ile seeding, and sold them to the e leva to r there. T he Larsons had tw o children: Clarence, and E thel (Mrs. A lfred Froem ke) w ith whom M rs. Larson m akes h er home. The Kraft Family A u gu sta and F erdinand K r a ft cam e to A m erica at the u rgin g of h er brother, W il helm K ru e ge r. T his one m an w as respon sible for populating m uch of the area north of Enderlin. He settled at C h affee in the late ‘70’s and w rote such glow ing letters of the prom ise of A m erica that his relatives, friends and neighbors packed up and started fo r the prom ised land. M rs. B leese and Mrs. P etrich w ere also his sisters; M rs. Lindem ann w as a sister of M r. P etrich ; Mrs. K lingbeil, a cousin of H enry Bleese. M ost of them stayed at the K ru e g e r farm at C h a ffee— cam ping out and sleepin g in the gran ary— until th ey could locate claim s fa r th er west, fo r the land near C h affee w as a l ready settled. Th e K rafts had fo u r children w h en th ey arrived in A m erica in 1882; Anna (Fetcher) H enry, M illie (K ru eger), and M innie (Ernst). T h e y stayed at the K ru e g e r home u n til they could m ove to th eir claim north o f Enderlin. S even m ore children w ere born on this fa rm : F ran k , Ida (G ardner), Ferdinand, Em il, Carl, F red and Em m a (Mrs. H erschel D illon). M rs. Dillon, w idow of a long-tim e Soo Line em ployee, is the only one of the children still living. O rigin ally m em bers of the Salem E van geli cal C hurch, north of Enderlin, the K ra fts later join ed the M ethodist Ch u rch in E n der lin. Mr. K ra ft died in 1894 w h ile his w ife lived u n til 1930. H en ry K raft, the oldest son, took o ver the hom e farm . In 1903, h e m arried A nna D en nison and th ey liv e d on the hom estead until th ey retired in 1941. H enry served as Su n day School Su p erin tendent of the M ethodist Ch u rch fo r 25 years, as a cle rk of Pontiac T ow n sh ip and school board director. A m em ber of the I.O.O.F. L o d ge fo r 35 years, he h eld all offices. Mr. K r a ft died in 1961 and Mrs. K r a ft in 1962. A son, E dw ard, still farm s the homestead. T h eir three daughters are: A lv ira (Mrs. E r nest K op p), M ichigan; A lice (Mrs. Ross Phipps), F argo and Edna (Mrs. O rville D ou g las) Fargo. The Bleese Fam ily Mr. and M rs. H en ry B leese w ith three sons and two daughters: Fred, Frank, F e r dinand, Gusta (Mrs. Gross) and M athilda (Mrs. S ch atzk e ), cam e to A m erica in M ay of 104 1882. The first y ear th ey lived at the W m. K ru e g e r farm , the home of her brother. T he first w in ter th ey spent on their homestead, ju st a short distance northeast of the present site of Enderlin, the P etrich s and B leeses lived togeth er— tw elve people in a claim shanty. T h eir other children w ere born in this cou n try: M illie, Rosa (Mrs. M ettler) G eorge, A d olph and H erbert. A ll of the children are dead except H erbert, w ho is now at Lisbon, and A dolph , of Enderlin. A d olph m arried Ella S an d vig and th ey rais ed two children: B e rnice (W illiam s) H artford, Illinois, and Hubert, who now farm s the hom estead settled b y his grandfather. The Petrich Family F reid rich P etrich and his w ife, the form er Anna K u eger, cam e from Zotten, Prussia to C h affee, to the home of h er brother, W illiam , in 1882. T he P etrich s had fiv e children, two of w hom had died in G erm any. A ccom pan y ing them w ere a daughter, later to becom e Mrs. M otschenbacher, and two sons, Herm an and Reinhold. T h e y filed on the hom estead a m ile north of the present site of Enderlin, am ong others from th eir hom e com m un ity w ho had settled here. M rs. P etrich died in 1915 and Mr. P e t rich in 1921. Th eir two sons continued to farm in the Enderlin com m unity as long as th ey lived. Herm an P etrich served as the treasurer of Pontiac T ow nship fo r fifty years. T h e H er m an P etrich farm is now ow ned by Eldon S ch atzke. His children w ere: Otto and Hugo, now dead; G ertru d e (Mrs. M att Elsenpeter), Enderlin; Theodore, Onamia, M innesota; M argu rite (Mrs. R em an Stangler), A lice; Freda (Mrs. F ra n k Elsenpeter), M inneapolis; Mrs. Casper Peterson, M cLeod, N. D.; and K u rt, in California. Reinhold Petrich m arried A m elia F raedrich. T h ey farm ed the Petrich hom estead until his death in 1934. It is now operated b y his son F red rich (F ritz). O ther children are: V era (K ersten), Anaheim , Calif.; A rnold, G ran d Forks, N. D.; W alter, Fullerton, Calif.; and Em ilie (Sinclair) Puyallup, W ash. The Wadeson Family John W adeson w as born in Engleton, Y o rk shire, England in 1837. There he m arried A n e M etcalfe in 1841. T h ey came w ith their fa m ily to the U nited States in 1880, settling in Eldred Tow nship, n ear the present town of A lice. T h e ir youngest child, L illie w as the first w hite child b o m in the township. A fe w years later, th ey bought land h alf a m ile w est of the site of A lice, in Clifton T ow nship. Th e Peterson post office w as lo cated on their farm . T h e W adesons raised a fa m ily of nine: H arry, John, W illiam , James, Ben, Robert, Jane A nn, M argaret and L illie. F our of their sons took hom esteads in the com m unity and established fam ilies Whose descendants are still liv in g in this com m unity. Mrs. W adeson died in 1908 and Mr. W adeson in 1912. Jam es W adeson, born in 1896, m arried A u gu s ta Johnson, w ho had com e to Casselton from her n ative Sw eden. T h e y hom esteaded in C lifton Tow nship on the farm now operated b y a grandson, J e w ell Wadeson. T h ere th ey raised a fam ily of seven ch il dren: W alter, form erly of L u cca but now re tired and livin g in Fargo; H arry, a long-tim e legislator from Cass C o un ty’s 11th D istrict and a Clifton T o w n sh ip farm er; Francis, w ho also farm s near A lice, M am ie (Pom m erer), V a lley C ity; M arjorie (M ercer), Seattle; Oscar, now retired and livin g in Enderlin, w ho during his years of farm ing had a long record of service on A A A , A S C and other farm com m unity program s. Robert W adeson had two sons: G eorge, who w as killed in a tragic acciden t at the cross ing of the N orthern P a cific railroad and U. S. 10 near Casselton, and W illiam (Booster) w h o farmed near A lice until h is death in 1955. B en W adeson’s on ly son W esley, w ho oper ated his fa th e r’s farm , lost his life in an auto m obile accident in 1963. None of his four daughters: Hazel. Della, D aisy and R hoda now live in this area. W illiam W adeson w o rk ed as a you n g m an as a cook on the D alrym ple farm at Cassel ton. In 1893, he b ought the farm in Clifton T ow nship kno w n as G rove H ill farm , now ow ned b y his son John Charles. He m arried Em m a Johnson at Casselton in 1901. To them w ere b o m eight children, fou r of whom died in in fancy. Three daughters; A nne, Carrie, and L o uise have left the area. His son, John C h arles and his w ife, Rhea, still live on the fa m ily farm . Petri and Ingri Austad In order to earn h is passage from N orw ay to A m erica, M r. A u stad repaired and m ain tain ed the sailing m asts on the ship on w hich he cam e. H e w as sixteen. T h e jou rn ey took over three m onths and the y e a r w as 1865. He came to Cresco, Iowa, w h ere he w orked as a cabinet m ak er and carpen ter and w h ere he m et and married Ingri H olien w ho had also com e from N orw ay. In 1882, th ey left Iow a and cam e to D akota T e rrito ry w h ere th ey filed fo r a hom estead on land three m iles w est of Sheldon. A fte r ten years of farm ing, M r. A ustad sold his land and m oved to E nderlin w h ere he opened a gen eral store in 1892. Th e store building w h ich he erected is now Kabers restaurant. A d ep t at most any kind of w ork, he spent m an y years at carpentering and b rick and cem ent w ork. M any of the dw ellin gs in the city today w ere erected b y him. In 1902, Mr. Austad returned to N orw ay w ith his d au gh ter A n n a and her frien d Rena Austad for a visit. He saw the people he knew and after h alf a d ay he was ready to re tu rn to A m erica. T he tw o girls persuaded him to stay longer, how ever. Mr. A u stad w as prom inent in civic affairs and served a num ber of years as a m em ber of the c ity council and as a director in the Lu th eran Church. There w ere three children born: Beata (Mrs. W. W. Sh aw ), Enderlin; A na, (Mrs. W . R. Robinson), and John. Espen P. Groth Espen P. G roth w as a n ative of N orw ay and b om N ovem ber 30, 1868. He came to Am erica as a you n g ch ild . B ertha R evelin g had come from Sw eden during her e a rly years. Espen of Mona, Iowa and B ertha of Adam s, Minn., w ere m arried on Th anksgivin g D ay N ovem ber and 27, 1887 in Mona, Iow a. Espen w ork ed as a blacksm ith and a bu tch er at L yle, Minn. D urin g the spring of 1898 th ey m oved to the farm home fou r m iles w est, three m iles south and one m ile w est of Enderlin. The farm is now ow ned b y Mr. and Mrs. G ilm ar Rotvoid. Upon arriving, the fam ily, w hich in cluded fiv e children at that time, join ed the F illcore L u th eran C hurch in Moore Township. Espen w as active on the telephone board, F arm ers E levator and farm ers store. F o u r teen ch ild ren w ere born to them and nine grew to adulthood in this com m unity. T h ey w ould be rem em bered as A rchie, Perrie, E arnie, Abbie, Orrie, H arvie, Rubie, En die and Bessie. F iv e of the sons at one tim e farm ed in the area. Those su rvivin g at this tim e are Perrie at Fairbault, Minn., Earnie at Lisbon, N. D „ O rlie of Tacom a, W ashington, A bbie of St. Paul, Minn., and Endie at Brainerd, M inn. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. G roth spent their rem aining years in the E nderlin area until th eir deaths. M rs. Groth passed aw ay in 1942 and Mr. G roth in 1950. The Frank Hartl Family F ra n k H artl is the oldest son of Julius and A m elia Hartl, w ho em igrated from M ichaelsdorf, C z e c h o s lo v a k ia , and w ere m arried at Casselton in 1887. T h ey took a homestead the same year in Clifton Tow nship, w here th ey lived until th ey retired to the village of A lice. F iv e other of their eight children live in the com m unity— Joe, Gus, Julius, M ary (Mrs. Joe Schm idt), and Selm a (Mrs. Fred M ikula). F ra n k H artl was born in 1888, and m arried Christine Schm idt at W aterville, Minnesota, in 1915. He brought her to the fam ily farm in Clifton T ow n sh ip w h ere th eir seven childdren w ere raised. T h ey w ere a ctive m em bers of St H en ry’s Catholic Church and M r Hartl served as clerk of the Clifton School district for 40 years. Mrs. H artl died in 1964, and M r. Hartl still resides on the home farm . Three sons, Harold, F rancis and Clarence, Still liv e in the A lice com m unity. Their daughters are Loretta (Mrs. Jim P feiffe r), B u ffalo; D orothy (Mrs. F ranklin Liebenow ), Chaffee; B eneta (Mrs. Leonard K irch off), V alley C ity; and M arlene (Mrs. A lv e rt Schlagel), Lucca. Albert Leidahl A lb e rt L. L eid ahl w as born at A lb ert Lea, M inn., in 1881 and lived in M ilbank and Lyle, Minn., w hile grow in g up. T h is is his account: 105 “ In 1902, an old frien d , O. O. G olberg, cam e b ack from Enderlin. He w as an agent fo r the Ransom County Im m igration Association, and he sold m e 280 acres of land ju st northeast of E nderlin fo r $16 an acre. “ In the spring of 1903, I brought an im m i grant car w ith horses, seed, and m ach in ery to Enderlin, the trip tak in g three days. I first stayed at the Hans Fretland hom e for $3 a w e e k board and room. Th ere w ere three y o u n g w om en livin g there also. T w o had ju st come from N orw ay. One w as nam ed Sena and she did h ou sew ork for M rs. F re t land until F red M aley cam e along and m ar ried her. “ T h e n ext year I batched in a sm all house w here D. B . G rice now has his home. In 1905 I w en t b ack to L y le and w as m arried, b rin gin g m y w ife to live in a house southeast of tow n ow n ed b y Don M urphy. In 1910 I bu ilt a n ew hom e on the farm — w e w ere so close to town w e w ere soon able to have electric lights. “ I w as a m em ber of the Sons o f N o rw ay Lodge. W e used to hold m eetings above the old Sathers Harness Shop. “ M y w ife died in 1952— our tw o sons both liv e in E nderlin w h ere Kenneth still farm s the hom e farm , and E m m itt w o rk s fo r the Soo L in e . ” The Geske Family G ottlieb and C aroline G eske im m igrated to M arathon County, W isconsin, from G erm an y in 1867. T h eir sons w ere to look w estw ard w h en th ey gre w old enough to start out on th eir own. A u gu st G eske, Sr., w as the first to come to N orth D akota. In 1898, in the Pontiac Church, he m arried P aulin e Kunst, daughter of a fa m ily w ho had m igrated from Lu tsk, Russia. T h eir funds depleted, th ey stopped in St. Louis, w h ere she and her sisters, Louise (Mrs. Christian W olsky), Caroline (Mrs. G ot tlieb Spitzer), and A u gu sta (Mrs. E w ard F raase), first found w o rk in a factory, m ak ing cigars. B y n ext year the fa m ily had accum ulated enough to com plete the trip to Dakota, settling n ear Sheldon. Mr. G eske bought the farm in Pontiac Tow nship w h ere his son Em il still lives, and there th ey raised t h e ir fam ily. T h e children are Otto, deceased; Em il, E nderlin; A ugust, a Lutheran pastor in Iow a; F rieda (Mrs. B orch ert), Streeter, N. D.; A lm a (Mrs. Otto F ritz), A nnandale, M inn.; Em m a (Mrs. John W egner), W ym ore, Neb.; and M artha (Mrs. W hitak er), Atascadero, Calif. Mr. G eske died in 1930 and his w ife in 1958. Gottlieb G eske follow ed his brother, A ugust, to N orth D akota in 1899, b ringing w ith him his bride, the form er M athilda Dehnl. The first sum m er h e farm ed w ith his brother, then rented the G ust Oehlke* farm adjoining E nderlin, w h ich he farm ed for fiv e years. He purchased several farm s in the E n d er lin com m unity, the one w here the fam ily liv e d fo r most of their years being the p res ent Clinton Leib en ow farm . He retired in 106 1946 and m oved to Enderlin. A m em ber of T rin ity Lutheran C hurch, he acted as custodian fo r m any years. A fter his death, his w ife continued to m ake h er home in Enderlin w ith a daughter, L yd ia. O ther children include A rth u r, M inneapolis, Minn.; Elm er, Enderlin; Edna (Mrs. F in g e r); and V iola (Mrs. B ielk e), St. Paul, Minn. T he last of tire G eske brothers to come to Enderlin w as Em il, w ho arrived in 1901 w ith his w ife, the form er Hanna Bade, and th eir fa m ily T h ey purchased a farm in Pontiac Tow nship w h ich he farm ed u n til retirin g to E nderlin, w h en his son A u gu st took over the farm . It is now operated b y his grandson, Robert G eske. M rs. G esk e died in 1944 and Mr. G eske in 1955. T h eir children are F rancis (Mrs. Stelter), W ise.; A d a, E nderlin; Mollie, a form er E nderlin teacher, deceased; and August, of Enderlin. The Torfin Family Dan T o rfin w as born in Wauk on, Iow a in 1859. He w as orphaned at tw e lve and cam e to D akota T e rrito ry w hen he w as tw e n ty in a covered w agon train w ith a group of re la tives who settled near the present site of S h el don. Too young to file for a hom estead, he w orked the first sum m er on the D alrym ple farm n ear Casselton. That w in ter he lived w ith K n u te Grusland on Sec. 12, L ib erty Tow nship. T h eir diet w as m ainly bread, salt p o rk and rabbits. During the severe w in ter, th ey ran out of flour and ft took fou r men and three team s to reach the settlem ent of Jen ksville, six m iles aw ay. W hen th ey got there, there w ere ten ahead of them and only fifty pounds of flo u r in stock, so th ey w ere forced to go on to B u ffalo for supplies. W hen he reached 21, he took a preem ption claim in G reen Tow nship w h ere he lived u n til he retired from farm ing. He m arried Julia M ickels at Casselton in 1884 and brought her to the claim shanty. Mr. Torfin served on the township and school boards, as a director of the M oore and L ib e rty Telephone Com pany and one term in the N orth D akota Legislatu re. He died in 1931. Dan and Julia Torfin had a fam ily of ten children: Edwin, A n n a A lb ert, Dora, Clara Julia, Alm a, H enry Roy, M abel and W alter. T w o of the children still m ake their home in the area. T h ey are M abel (Mrs. C. C. Howell) of Sheldon and Roy, w ho farm s the fam ily hom estead. R oy m arried Eldred G aarder, w ho w as raised and educated in Enderlin. T h ey have one daughter, Mrs. P au l Spiekerm eier. Thomas Baribeau Thom as B arib eau started his Soo L ine career as a call boy in 1904. It w as durin g this time that, com ing through the alley w h ere the G rand T h eater now stands, in the e arly m orn ing, he heard an explosion in the Post O f fice, and saw two m asked m en leap on hors- es and rid e out of town, n ever to be a ppre hended. In 1906, he started w orkin g as a brakem an and w orked for the Soo Line fo r 54 years as a brakem an and conductor. In the first years, there w ere no w o rk law s and men often w ork ed 30 hours at a stretch. In 1913, h e m arried M ary B yrn es, a native of P rince E d w a rd ’s Island, Canada, w ho had com e to E nderlin to teach . She recalls that in these days, the B rotherhood dances w ere gala affairs, w ith form al dress and m en were not allow ed to attend w ith o u t a girl. G irls w e re sometimes in short supply and a girl w ould be lifted out of a w in d o w to bring another fellow in. Since M ary w as small, this adven tu re freq u en tly fe ll to her. M ary B arib eau w as an active D em ocratic p a rty w o rk e r fo r m an y years, serving as N. D. W om en’s Chairm an durin g the tim e of G overn or John Moses. She served on the Ransom County W elfare B oard for m any years also. Th e B arib eau s have tw o sons: W illiam , of V a lley C ity and Robert, of Lusk, W yom ing. T h e y are m em bers of the Catholic Church and continue to m ake their home in Enderlin since his retirem ent. T he B arib eau — R obarge fam ily cam e to N orth D akota from Connecticut, in 1891, w h ere Mr. B arib eau w as a w atchm aker. T h e y took a hom estead at Bottineau. F iv e m onths later, the father died of a ru ptu red appendix. The widow , M alvina, m arried C h arles Robarge, a pioneer en gin eer and thresherm an in this area, and in 1894 th ey es tablished a perm anent hom e here, w h ere he operated threshing rigs f or m any years. He also ran a garage, served on the city council and as m ayor of the city. His fa m ily consisted o f three step-sons; Thom as, P. J. and A . E. B arib eau and a son, Sherm an Robarge, w ho operated the C h evrolet garage h ere fo r num ber of years and now lives in M ahnomen, M innesota. A . E. B arib eau m arried C lara Torfin, who died w h en th eir tw in daughters w ere born. One of the tw in s also died. The other, June (Sackett) died in 1965. He later m arried Dora O ’Neil. A fte r his retirem ent as a conductor on the Soo Line, Dora and F ren chy, as th ey w e re know to everyo n e in the com m unity, continued to m ake th eir hom e in Enderlin. He died M ay 20, 1966. He w as a veteran of W orld W ar I, a m em ber of the A m e rica n Legion post in E n derlin and of St. P a trick ’s Catholic Church. The Shunk Family G eorge and Louise F reitag Shunk settled near A nselm in 1889. A lth o u gh this w ould norm ally be outside of the E nderlin com m un ity, th eir fa m ily w as deep ly concerned w ith the education of the children. W ith a fam ily of eigh t on a 200 acre farm , this w as no sm all problem . T he solution th ey reached w as to build a house in Enderlin, w h ere seven of the eight ch ild ren graduated from high school, the old est son attending school in W isconsin. The children w ere George, Reynold, A lb ert, Ed, Will, Elsie, E lla and P eter. The house was built in 1906 and is now the Leonard Peterson home. Here th ey spent th eir w inters, going home each w eeken d to replenish their su p plies, som etim es b y buggy, som etim es b y b i cycle and som etim es via Soo Line. Most of the children w ere also able to fin ish college. Th e fam ily produced three doc tors, a pharm acist, a geologist and a teacher. A lb ert Shunk, w ho w o rk ed for the United States Geological S u rv ey and w as la ter head of the United States Land O ffice in Billings, w rote a delightful h istory of his fam ily and neighborhood, w h ich gives a w ealth of detail about pioneer life in the area. It has been a valu able referen ce w h ile w ork in g on this history. Elsie Sh un k (Mrs. H erm an Scheel) taught ru ral school before her m arriage, going back to teachin g for some years during W orld W ar II. She and h er husband are now retired and m ake th eir home in Enderlin. The Kaber Family A lb ert and John K a b er and th eir sister Susan (Brandthover) cam e to D akota T e rri to ry from Oil C ity, Pennsylvania, in 1881, and took claim s in M oore Tow nship. Susan later m oved to Lisbon. D urin g those first years, w h en equipm ent w as scanty and grain had to be hauled to T ow er C ity to m arket, m ore incom e w as m ade from trapping the m ink and m uskrat that abounded in the sloughs than from farm ing. W hen the tow n of E nderlin w as built, A l b ert K a b er traded part of his land for the land w h ich n ow m akes up K a b er’s Addition to the city. He operated an early d ay re s taurant for a time, return in g to the farm w hen it w as destroyed b y fire. He m oved b ack into tow n in 1900 and served as an alderm an for m any years. He also donated to the city the land on the w ate r-to w e r h ill w hich is used for recreational purposes. A lb ert K a b er m arried Em m a W ick and th ey raised a fa m ily of fou r sons: Ellis, W alter, H ow ard and Lew is. O nly Elis, of Enderlin, is now livin g. Ellis K a b er m arried Theresa Jacobs, whose parents came to Enderlin from C lara C ity, Minnesota. T h e y farm ed in M oore Tow nship before m ovin g to Enderlin. T h eir children are: M ae (Mrs. L ester Langland) and Robert, of E n derlin ; D orothy (Mrs. L loyd Brow n), of F argo; Jean (Mrs. R ichard Loom er), L a M oure; Charles, N ew Y o rk C ity; and G eorge who ow ns a restaurant in Enderlin. John K a b e r and his w ife the form er Jen nie Olson farm ed in M oore Tow nship until 1930 w hen th ey m oved into Enderlin. B oth are n ow dead. T h e y had one adopted son, Russell, w h o liv es in W adena, M innesota. The Zittelm an Family F red Zittelm an and h is w ife, the form er A lb ertin a Repp w e re m arried in Berlin, G e r m any, and cam e to this com m unity in 1892. 107 T h ey settled in C asey Tow nship w h ere th ey farm ed fo r the rest of th eir lives. Am ong the most v iv id m em ories th ey had of the pioneer d ays w ere tw o em ergency opera tions perform ed on the kitch en table b y Dr. W yrens, of Sheldon. B oth occurred at a time w h en the roads w ere blocked so bad ly with snow that the farm could not be reached by team and he had to m ak e part of the jo u r n ey on foo t. The Zittelm ans had fo u r children : Fred, de ceased; A lv in a (Mrs. L ew F roem ke), of G len dale, Cal.; A lb ert, w ho farm ed the fam ily land until his retirem ent and w ho now lives in Fargo, and H attie (Mrs. F red Carter) of Enderlin. Mrs. Zittelm an died in 1930 and her h us band in 1936. T h ey w ere m em bers of the T rin ity Lutheran congregation at Anselm . The Sanness Family Tom Sanness w as born in N orw ay. B efore com ing to Sheldon, in 1884, h e had been, among other things, an agent for the W hite S tar Steam ship Line, m aking several cross ings w ith them and visitin g a num ber of European capitals as th eir representative. W hen the urge to travel b rought him to D a kota Territory, he found w o rk in the Good man store in Sheldon and there m et Annie M cLean, of N ova Scotian ancestry, who m ade her home w ith them . T h ey m arried and m oved to Enderlin w hen Goodm an and S an ness opened the first store in the town. T h e y had three ch ildren : Homer, who died in 1908; A d a and Earl, who m ight be term ed E n derlin ’s first citizens, for th ey still own and live above that original store building on R a ilw ay Street. M rs. Sanness died w hen her children w ere sm all. Mr. Sanness purchased the Goodm an interest in the store and operated it fo r som e tim e, later selling it to his brother, Leif, w ho in turn sold it to E. H. B ruhn. E arl and A d a Sanness h av e been part of th e E nderlin scene for its entire history. E arl w as the first city m ail carrier, resigning to serve in the arm y during W orld W ar I. A fte r the w ar he w ork ed for a tim e as a clerk at the depot, then w en t into the post office. He w as appointed Postm aster w hen C. C. Cham berlain resigned and held that position fo r 12 years. A d a also w orked for m an y years in the post office. Earl is a ch arter m em ber of the Enderlin L egion post and has served on the Enderlin P a rk B oard since 1939. The Underwood Family F red U nderw ood w as b om on a farm in Cass Co un ty, M ichigan, the area from w h ere so m any o f the early Sheldon pioneers came. He c am e to Sheldon in 1883. T h at spring he helped to b reak sod near the present site of Enderlin, w h ere great accum ulations of b u f falo bones had to first be rem oved. He turned his hand to m any activities, as a h ardw are clerk, a store owner, an im plem ent 108 dealer, a ru ral school teacher, and in 1896, m oved from Sheldon to E nderlin to become cashier of the En derlin State B ank. The n ext year he opened a real estate and bu s iness service office w h ich he owned for the rest of his life. He w as an intensely political and civ icm inded m an, who is credited w ith initiating the organization of the city and of the E nder lin Special School D istrict 22. He served on the school board, the p a rk board, in the North D akota Legislature, and a record 42 years as Police M agistrate of the city. In later years, he recalled that he and his w ife-to-b e, M arie Shurlock, sat in a buggy near the south edge of town and w atched the rails being laid dow n the hill into E n derlin, one fa ll day in 1891. Mr. and Mrs. U nderw ood w ere the parents of fou r children: Lt. Col. Joe Underw ood, Veon, W ayne, and W anda, w ho w as the only m em ber of the fa m ily to rem ain in E n der lin. W anda Underw ood and Charles Cable, a ra ilw ay m ail clerk, w ere m arried in 1918. T h ey m ade th eir home in Enderlin until her death in 1957. T he Cables w ere v ery active in the M ethodist Church and a fellow m em ber rem arked, in speaking of him, that he had n ever heard him say a m ean w ord or lose his tem per over anything. He spent his last years at the Odd F ellow s Home at D evils L ak e. He died in 1964. Th ere are three Cable children: Ruth (Mrs. M aynard K lie r), Bisbee, N. D.; Dean, of Phoenix, Arizona, and Kent, w ho is the local editor. COL. W. F. McIL V A IN w as a C iv il W ar veteran who cam e to Enderlin from Cassopolis, M ichigan. He farm ed in L ib erty T o w n ship v e r y su ccessfu lly and w as a fed eral in spector of homestead land. He becam e the first Com m andant of the Old Soldier’s Home at Lisbon w hen it w as established. He returned to E nderlin in 1904 and lived here until his death; alw ays active in public affairs, and w ith a particu lar interest in the school system . He served as a m em ber of the E nderlin school board for a num ber of years. The M cIlvain home is now the J. Roy P e te r son Funeral Home. C. H. PO TT E R , founder of the Ransom C oun ty Independent, in 1895, w as in vo lved in most civ ic affairs during his days in E n der lin and a num ber of business ventures. He sold his paper, operated a laundry, served as Postm aster, took over the paper again and m erged it w ith the Enderlin H eadlight, to b e com e the Enderlin Independent. His w as a v e r y personal style of journalism and there w as n ever any doubt as to w here the editor stood. He left Enderlin to establish a n ew s paper at M akoti, N orth D akota, w here he died. Several pion eer fam ilies w ho no longer have d e s c e n d a n ts livin g in the com m u n ity m ust be b riefly m entioned in these pages fo r the p a rt th ey had in its developm ent. C. C. C H A M B E R L A IN , a n ative of M aine and a graduate of M aine State College, cam e to E n derlin in the spring of 1892, as a m an a ger of the first lum ber yard. He later b e cam e a partner in the Cham berlain-W allace yard, w ith w hich he w as connected u n til his death. He w as the first president of the c ity coun cil, a m em ber of the first school board and an E nderlin postm aster. H is nam e w as con n ected w ith alm ost e v e ry m ovem ent to im prove conditions in the com m unity. Both he and his w ife w ere fa ith fu l and d evout m em bers of the M ethodist C hurch. It is n ot able that e v e ry recollection of them , b y people still liv in g in the tow n w ho know them, recalls them in the sam e term s of affection and respect fo r their kindness, courtesy and character. DR. O L A F SH E R PIN G , a pioneer physician and surgeon, who w as educated in N orw ay, also found tim e to participate in the affairs of the com m unity. H e w as a councilm an in the first c ity governm ent, although he m in istered to a w ide area d urin g the form ative years of the town. He b u ilt the first hospital on the site of the T rin ity Lutheran parking lot. He left E nderlin to m ove to F ergu s Falls. H E RM AN S H IR L E Y , E n derlin ’s pioneer druggist, cam e here from Sheldon w h ere he had been em ployed at H iff’s D rug Store. He "R em em b ra n ce o f T h in g s P a st Snow Plowing on the Soo Line (The Soo L in e story m entions the problem s of keep ing the line open in the severe w in ters. E ven after the b ig rota ry plow s cam e into use there w ere y ears w h en the N orth D akota w eath er m ade operation of the trains a constant battle, E rw in Fraase has given a graphic account of the w eath er of 1949.) M y m ost e xcitin g w o rk on the Soo Line started in 1946 w h en I w as pick ed to fire the rotary snow plow . Th e hardest trip w e m ade w as in 1949 w hen all of the road from D rak e and w est to Sanish, M ax and B ism arck w as blocked, som e cuts h avin g as m uch as 30 fe e t of snow . W e le ft Enderlin on the 14th of Jan uary and D rake on the 15th. W e w ere six days m akin g the trip from D rake to M ax because of the storm y w eather. W e w ere forced to stay n ear the w ater tan k at Russo, N. D. W e w ould plo w for one or tw o hours, then go b ack to keep the road open to the tank. In F e b ru a ry w e had w arm w eather w h ich resulted in a h e av y la y e r of ice on all the cuts w ith 8 to 12 feet of snow underneath. Then m ore snow drifted in on top of the ice. had also served as R egister of D eeds fo r Ransom County. In 1898, he opened a store in Enderlin, in partnership w ith Mr. Hoff, later buying him out and operatin g the store fo r m ore than fifty years. He w as a vocal and loyal R e publican and a lw ays in volved in local polit ical m an euverin gs. H e w as deep ly interested in M asonr y ; a charter m em ber of the local chapter, of the Eastern Star and the K n igh ts T em plar at Lisbon. M rs. Sh irley was a form er teach er in the E n derlin schools. T h e y had tw o children, one of w hom died as a you n g child. A son, K eith, su rvives them . * * * T he fa m ily histories in the foregoing pages have, of necessity, been kept v e ry brief. The com m ittee is aw are that not all the pioneer fam ilies are represented in these pages. Some have not responded to the invitation or sub m itted inform ation and tim e has not perm itted contacting everyone. T he decision to set 1910 as a cu t-o ff date for pioneer histories has m eant also that m any fam ilies and businesses w hich h ave played a part in the developm ent of the town are not included. N am es like Theodore P e t erson, O. A . Onstad, F ritz T ru ck Line, Helen Lehm an are only a few . It is not a m atter of w ish in g to exclu d e anyone, b u t rather a problem of com pressing into a fe w pages, seven ty fiv e years of his tory. W e ask forgiveness for our sins of omission. . . . Our w orst cu t w as at B utte, N. D. w h ere it w as from 18 to 24 feet deep. A ton and a qu arter of dynam ite w as used to b re ak up the ice and snow . Th en you could plow about ten feet, and then the sec tion men w ould b reak down snow from the top so the plo w could reach it. It took seven d ays to com e through this cut. On this trip the boiler started to leak so b ad ly you could not keep a fire going in the front end o f the fire b ox. W e had to k n o ck the fire out of the plow and go into the box and co rk the stay bolts to stop the leaking. T h e w eath er w as so bad w e could not get a boiler m ak er to come out so Rip D ablow , the travelin g engineer, and I craw led in the fire b ox and did the job. Th e first tim e for both of us. A t one tim e w e ran out of food. A ll of the sm all tow ns along the w a y w ere out of food also. L u ck ily , w e had som e w a y cars w ith us. W hen th ey w ere opened one had bread and w ieners so w e lived on bread and w ie n ers for fiv e d ays until Mr. Toy, the road m as ter at D rak e h ad a farm er butcher a Steer so w e could get some m eat. On one trip on the F laxton line, the cuts 109 w e re fu ll of snow w h ile the hillsides w e re d ry. S parks from the ro ta ry set the grass on fire, and it burned as if it had oil on it. W e had fifty m en figh tin g the fire w h ile w e plow ed snow below . A fte r 1950 the Soo Line started to b ack slope the cuts. T h is has red u ced the drifting and the w in ters h av e not, as a rule, been so severe. — E rw in Fraase An Early Butcher Shop T h e sound of his colorful language and h e a rty la u g h ter becam e as fam iliar as the h e a v y m eat w agon and the shod hooves of the m atched b ays as th ey m ade th eir nu m b er less trips from the farm s to the old slaughter house, located on the riv e r b y the gravel pit. R em em ber the old b u tch er shops? Th e floors w e re covered w ith fresh saw dust eve ry m orning. T h e re w ere big barrels and tubs of h errin g and sauerkrau t and huge dill pick les w h ich could be speared w ith a deft m ovem ent o f the b u tch er’s long cutting knife. A n d those k n iv e s ! No w arrior in those days of feudalism had a m ore varied assort m ent of keen edges. T he long cutting knife in the hands o f the oldtim e b u tch er could flash ju st as fast and cut as thin as the m odem d ay m achine. T h e h ou sew ife w ho w an ted cold cuts for a special occasion th ought nothing of b rin gin g dow n h er platters and instructing, “F ill them u p . ” A n d filled up th ey w ere, w ith an assortm ent im possible to duplicate in this d ay of packaged and cellophaned conform ity. T h e re w ere paper thin slices of dried beef and fat ch un ks of liv erw u rst; there w ere p ick led tongues and h ead cheeses, spiced and sour; there w ere slices of sum m er sausage and hard d ry goteburg; there w ere bolognas and w ieners and ham s, spices and onions and garlics and there w ere no fillers of bran and m ashes and w a te r to add e xtra w eigh t. T he tasks of m ixin g and curing w ere n ever d elegated to an assistant— so no one learned the secrets. Sausage m akin g w as a ritual. No cook had a larger assortm ent of pans, kettles, and spices. F ires w ere laid un der the huge cooking vats, tubs w e re cleaned, m eat w as ground b y hand (and w oe to him w ho paused to rest an aching back ). There w ould be no dram atic entrance for this m aster— he h ad been h ere since e a rly m orning, lifting, cutting, cleaning, bossing, boasting and cuss ing. N ow he w as ready; a clean apron on and sleeves rolled up to expose m uscles that y e ars of hard w o rk had produced. A pan of pork, a tub of beef, a v e r y little veal, perhaps. Th en cam e the onions or g a rlic so ca refu lly prepared b y a tearful boy; the spices— nothing m easured b y our standards, but be assured th at bow ls, glasses handsfuls and pinches w e re each as fam iliar as our un im agin ative standardizations. The a ir w as fu ll of panting and grunting; kneading a couple of h undred pounds of m eat is not easy, and there w ere a lw ays com plaints about 110 the poor q u ality of the spices now adays. F in ally there cam e the signal, “ D E R . ” It w as tasting tim e. L ittle pats w e re fried or cooked and e v e ry one tasted. M ore of this w as added, ju st a pinch of th at or m aybe h alf a han d fu l of the rubbed spice from the square can. N ow cam e the stuffing. C ran k s w ere tu rn ed, sausages w ere curlin g off the snouts of m achines, knots w ere ca refu lly tied w ith precise, p re-cu t strings, rings w ere plum ped into pans, rea d y to be strung from poles of the sm oke house or plum ped into vats of sim m ering (n ever boiling) w ater. Then cam e the golden hour, sam pling tim e. S om ehow e ve ry m erchant and salesm an in town (and a fe w vagran ts) found it con ven i ent to be on hand. Th e good hou sew ife saw fit to bake a batch of fresh bread on sausage m aking day. T h ick slices of fresh bread w ere cut w ith a k n ife large enough to quarter a beef, there w as a crock of cou n try fresh b u tter and yo u r choice of fresh sausages served from the fla t side of the knives. Som e m ight h ave b rou gh t a bit of the grape, or w ou ld you believe schnaps or a k eg of beer? It has been said that there w ere alw ays m ore of the b oys out in b ack sam pling than there w ere custom ers out in front! There w as, h ow ever, a pride in perfection and a love of good livin g. Life in a Parsonage in the Early 1900’s L et us tak e a glimpse into an early 20th cen tu ry parsonage. This is a place, as a rule, that has a ll the eyes of the parish fix e d upon it, since its occupants are u su ally exp e cte d to liv e the n e arly p erfect life; m any forget the fa m ily liv in g th ere are also only hum an beings. Th e pastor's fa m ily too had problem s, perhaps m ore serious than those of others b e cause the solution of these had to be so m uch m ore perfect. L ife in his hom e w as not a l w ays so p eacefu l since argum ents and b ick er ings did occur and the children, lik e others, often resorted to h air p u llin g and tugs of w ar in spite of the fact th at the d iscipline w as u su ally v e r y strict and the children w ere taught early the d ifferen ce b etw een right and w ron g. These children, too, w ere exp ected to set exam ples fo r others, and “ the poor m ini ster’s w ife had to be a paragon of greatest v irtu e and upbringing. She a lw ays had to stand ready to receive guests and w elcom e them, in spite of the fact that there w ere no m odem conveniences. In those days, all the food had to be p rep ared and cooked from n atu re’s raw state. She not only had to be the perfect hostess, but w as also exp ected to accept the p residen cy of the L ad ies A id , teach Sunday school, perhaps be its superintendent and, if she w ere m usical, w as expected to direct the choir and play the ch urch organ. T h e pastor and his w ife w ere often asked to be counselors and com forters to people w ho cam e to them w ith their problem s, and troubles. These people looked fo r help and understanding; but h ow w as one to com fort a husband w hose w ife had ju st com m itted suicide, or a fath er whose son in a drunken stupor had been killed w h ile w alkin g home on a railroad tra c k late at night. Perhaps another situation w ould be to cope w ith a d ru n k w ho com es near m idnight to lash the pastor w ith a critical tirade. A gain the pastor is hum an and a person; perhaps he is m ore than others endow ed w ith the spiritual stam ina to cope w ith problem s, b u t people m ust n e ve r forget St. P a u l’s rem inder th at he also carries “ G o d ’s treasure in an earthen vessel” T h ere are m any soul searching problem s is a parsonage. O ur b ack w o rd look w ou ld also record m any w eddings, baptism and m an y kin d of gath er ings in the parsonage. T h e m em bers of the pastor’s fam ily had to g iv e up m any pleasures and social activities for the reason th ey m ight be criticised for attending w o rldly pleasures. It seem ed to be m ore w ic k ed fo r them than fo r others. T h e parsonage w as not spared sorrow s either, since death and tragedy often stalked in as elsew here. A lth ou gh th ere w ere these scenes of deepest heartaches, there w ere also most precious blessings. T h ere w ere h o w ev er several things that m ade the parsonage a h app y place — a C h ris tian atm osphere, kin d h earted parishioners w ho w ou ld com e to share th eir products of the farm , or business, w ith the pastor’s fam ily, frien d ly people w ho cam e to call or to visit. In those d ays w hen help w as needed in sick ness, or in a n y other w ay, the pastor’s people w ere u sually v e r y helpful. In cases of sick ness, the wom en to take o ver and these w ere tru ly angels in aprons. E dgar G u est m ight be paraphrased. “ It takes a heap of livin g to live in a parson age. ’’ — R ae G austad M atthes Misao (M innie) Mitsuya A little girl, w hom m any w ill rem em ber, w as one of E n d erlin ’s most loyal citizens. B o m in E nderlin, of Japanese parents, Misao M itsuya, or “ M innie” as she w as kno w n to her friends, m ade a real place for h erself in Enderlin. H er parents operated a sm all la u n d ry here. Th rou gh ou t h er school years from first grade on, M innie developed character that m ade h er a staunch defend er of w h at she fe lt w as right. She w as a loyal Am erican and a d evout Christian. In October, 1938, w hen h er stepfather died, h e r m other decided to retu rn to Japan. M in nie w as h eartbroken to lea ve A m erica and E nderlin. Sh e w as in the eigh th grade w hen she left h er m other and tw o you n ger sisters for J a pan. T h ere w as such prom ise fo r h er to con tinue to lead h er class and to graduate w ith honors; but w ith unbelievable stoicism she accepted w hat w as to be. It w as a sad m orning for M innie as the w estbound Soo Line passenger train pulled a w ay from the station early that m orning in O ctober, 1938. Touching, indeed, w ere M innie’s letters from Japan, som e of w h ich described in detail m em ories of h er life in E nderlin such as a Christm as program in w hich she had a part at the M ethodist church, or a basketb all gam e during w h ich she w ould cheer lu stily for h er team . U nderlying all w as her longing to be b ack i n Enderlin. B y January, 1941, M innie had almost com pleted Japanese grade school and w as seeking transfer to an Am erican high school. In her letters to frien d s in Enderlin, she exp ressed her yearnin g for A m erica and indicated that, som ehow, she w ould m ake her w ay back. Some of her letters contained a w arn in g to A m erica of w h at w as to com e, w hich shows the keen insight M innie had of w hat w as going on in Japan. Enderlin, N. D ak. Dear Miss S elvig: A m erica be on the w ak e! I am v e ry alarm ed of A m erica ’s safety. P reserve, save and do not w aste products. Do not use so m uch coal, iron and such things. Y ou w ill need them later. Forest products in A m erica are scarce so you m ust save, plant and tak e care of you n g trees. Save on coal and oil. T ake good care of clothes and do not be e x tra v a gant. Run and play and build up a strong body. A re A m erica ’s boys w illin g to die for their country? W ill th ey keep true to th eir ow n d ear country? Do th ey keep faith in their own country? O ver here the soldiers are glad to g iv e th eir life for their country. A sk the boys, and if th ey say “ No” teach them that if th ey are no w illing to giv e th eir lives for their country, the coun try w ill be in ruins in 100 years or so. If this doesn’t reach you it m ay be taken b y censors and I shall be im prisoned or som ething but that is nothing to w hat m ight happen to the U. S. A . I w ould glad ly g iv e m y life fo r Am erica. Y o u r sincere pupil, M isao M itsuya A k ao, Japan January 1, 1941 (E nderlin Independent— Jan. 1, 1942) M innie d ied on F e b ru a ry 22, 1941. Her classm ates in E nderlin show ed th eir h igh re gard for her w h en th ey presented a plaq ue to the school in h er m em ory. T h e plaque reads: “ M innie M itsuya— w hose high ideals w ere an inspiration. ” M innie w ould be proud to k n o w that she is rem em bered fo r h e r loyalty to Enderlin. — E ffie S e lv ig F irst School A fringe of trees along the M aple river w ith only the e arly m orning m irage and the e v e r changing sunsets to b re ak the m onotony o f the broad prairie, w as the setting fo r the tin y fram e schoolhouse w h ere Mrs. F . E. K indred, then Miss A n n a Dershim er, taught 111 the first pupils in the com m unity now know n as E nderlin. T his w as in 1883— 48 years ago. O f the eight or ten b oys and girls w ho attended this first seat of learning, not one could speak E nglish. T h e y came from the sod shanties scattered o v er the new land. T h eir b ackgro un d w as the cu ltu re of countries beyond the sea. B u t th ey w ere brigh t stu dents, q u ic k ly learning the strange w ords taught them b y m eans o f pictures and ph on etic m ethods. One boy show ed m arked abili ty at draw in g, and M rs. K in d red still has one of his sketches— an eagle w ith a serpent in its grasp, ju st above the ground. To reach h er boarding place, the teacher had to w ad e the sh allow riv e r. H ere there w ere alw ays large flo cks of w ild ducks, m any of them rem aining through the w in ter. Th ere w ere open places for them to feed and sw im . T he bu ffalo no longer roam ed the plains feedin g on bunch grass, but their bones lay e ve ry w h e re — bleaching in the sun. Often the ch ild ren b rought buffalo horns to school, p re senting them to the teacher and the n ext y e ar the bones w ere collected and shipped east to be used for com m ercial purposes. Th e pasque flo w er, prairie rose and m any other w ild flo w ers gre w in abundance. The dandelion had not m ade its appearance. The schoolhouse w as m ade beautiful b y w ild blos soms gathered b y childish hands. Perhaps the most d readed foe in those early d ays w as the prairie fire that sw ept the land clean of e v e ry livin g thing that lay in its path. M rs. K in d red rem em bers takin g the three little children o f the fam ily w ith w hom she boarded onto a plow ed field and rem aining there w ith them through the night, w h ile others fough t the flam es that th reat ened to destroy both buildings and crops. — From “ Q u arter Sections and W ide H orizons,” 1931. H elm y Johnson T h is b rief excerpt from the M em oirs of M rs. A n ton Peterson tells b rie fly and su ccin ctly of her courtship and m arriage. M rs. Peterson is still livin g in the S heyenne M anor in V alley C ity. 1900— In Jan u ary I w en t to J e n n y ’s (Darelius) and stayed there fo r three w eeks. A n n y w as there too— so had fu n — took p ictu re of us three. T h en U ncle G ust and Anton com e to V a lle y C ity to get me, so w e n t w ith them . Then A n ton and I got engaged. T h e first of F eb ru ary, B eata Austad, (Mrs. W . W . Shaw ) a teach er com e and w anted to stay and w an t ed room and board, so, w e had room to gether. Sh e stayed four months. W e had lots of fun. W e sew ed blouses and things so w e should be dressed alike. W ent to 17th of M ay celebratio n togeth er and w as real fun. T h en th ey w e re askin g m e w h at tim e I w anted to h ave the w edd in g. I said if w e w as going to get m arried in the sum m er I w an ted it the 23rd o f June. So started to prep are fo r that. I sew ed for m yself and Mrs. Peterson. I m ade m y W edding dress— w h ite 112 organdy and lace for trim m ings— and made som ething for trim m ings in the rooms. Clara L ee com e to help us one w eek before, and Jen n y com e and helped three days before. She baked the W edding ca ke— fru it c a k e fou r of them tw e lv e inches high. C lara Lee and A n n y D arelius w as m y bridesmaids and Uncle Gust and O laf Peterson w as A n ton ’s best man. T h e W edding w as 2 o’clo ck in Fillm ore C hurch— w e w as the first couple that w as m arried in the new Church. Com e home and had dinner, — w e had two big tables, one on the porch. T h ey got a big canvas tent, south side of porch, and day before, Uncle and A n ton w ent down in the V alley and cut some sm all trees and branches for w alls around the tent— w e had one long table in there. Had good w aitresses so it w en t fine in the afternoon. W e had lem onade, w e d ding cake and cookies in the evening— we w ere up in the n ew gran ary. T h e y had d ec orated there w ith branches and leaves all, so it sm elled so fresh and nice. It was two rooms, one 18x20, and one 18x16. It was good m usic. 1 organ, 2 violins— all w as d anc ing. Then w e had m idnight lunch, sand w iches, buns, ca ke and cookies of d ifferen t kinds, and coffee. D ay after, w e w as all tired out. REX LINDEMANN This little incident that happened in about 1891 w h en Sheldon still w as our nearest tra d ing point. M y father, C arl Lindem ann, N or m an Sch oebin ger our hired hand, Leo, m y brother and m yself decided to d riv e to Sh el don. Th e time w as shortly before Christmas. W e had a w agon w ith a double box and had load of about 35 bushels of w heat, probably a dozen of dressed chickens, and also some dressed tu rk eys. Since roads w ere rath er direct, river crossings w ere m ade w h e re v e r w e fund shallow w ater w ater and low riv e r b anks leading to the river. W e found w h at we thought w as such a place. It w as that w e referred to as the b eaver dam. H ere the road follow ed along the riv e r bank, w as about 25 feet above the w ater, w hich w as frozen over. A s w e proceeded along this riv e r bank we found the road w as icy and also slanted sligh tly tow ard the riv er. This caused our w agon to start sliding and w hen it neared the riv e r b an k edge it tipped sending all of the w heat, tu rk eys, chickens, m y father, b rother and m yself down the riv e r bank onto the ice. W e w ere fortun ate that the hired hand ju m p ed o ff and k ep t the wagon box from follow ing us dow n the riv e r bank. W e also w ere fortun ate to have several bushel baskets w h ich the ch icken s and tu rk ey s w ere packed in. These baskets w e used in tryin g to recov er as m uch of the w heat as w e could, and a fter several hours of scratching and scraping, m anaged to scrape up most of the wheat. None of us w ere severely harm ed b y the incident and m an aged to m ake the trip to Sheldon to m ark e t our products and bu y such things as w e could afford return in g home, though a lot la ter than w e expected. DISTRICT 115 A s yo u d rive along the hard surface road to A lice, all that y ou pass beside some fine farm steads, are tw o cem eteries. Th ere w ere tw o churches and tw o schools along this road at one tim e. One of these w as D istrict 115. about a m ile and a h alf north of H igh w ay 46, w h ere th irty children and gro w nups used to attend at one tim e. T h ere w e re no grades in the late nineties, w hen I first attended. Y o u started on the ch art and progressed b y readers from one on up. Th e pupils included the second generation of the first settlers in this district. T h ere w ere tw o Lindem anns, fo u r Bensons, fiv e B leeses, tw o from A . Fraedrichs, fo u r from J. F raedrich, fou r Pattersons, tw o Meilis, two M arschkes, tw o Schultzes, tw o U tkes, and tw o Hohensees. Th e H oehensees w e re gro w n ups ju st over from G erm any. T h e y started in the first reader and b y the end of the term th ey w ere in the fourth reader. T h e y cam e to school to learn the E nglish language, as did m any of the early settlers. In the early 1900’s the school w as graded and after that there w as a nine m onths term of school. T he first class to finish the 8th grade w as in 1906, and the last class in 1943, w h en the school w as closed and the children sent to Enderlin. T he school served tw o gen erations, for a m em b er of the 1943 class, H u bert B leese, w as a son of a m em ber of the 1906 class, A d olph B leese. Som e of the local teachers in the district w ere Josie G eelan, Rose Fetcher, M argaret Toring, M illie M arschke, M olly G eske and P e a rl Johnson. — A dolph Bleese A Pioneer Story T h e claim shanty w h ere I w as b om w as bu ilt lik e most of them at that tim e, 83 years ago. T h e y first dug in a side h ill and put boards over the d ugout for protection w hile bu ild ing the house. It w as u su ally attached to the dugout w h ich w as later used as a root cellar. S n akes often craw led in here and hung dow n from the ceilin g (this w as te r rib le!). Th e first fe w sum m ers of m y life w ere spent running around in the tall grass and beau tifu l flo w ers. M y m other, An n a O ehlke F raed rich told m e she w ould look for a w h ite head bobbing up and dow n in the tall grass, and then she w ou ld know w h ere I w as. Th e grass w as v e ry b ou ntiful w h ere w e liv ed and m y father, W illiam Fraedrich, w ould care fo r neigh bor’s cattle in sum m er. This also m eant a little e xtra m oney. There w ere no fen ces and often at n igh t the cattle w ould start m oving against the w ind w hen the m os quitoes w ere bad. Som e cattle had bells and th ey should be easier to locate at night, but it w asn ’t easy to get up and fin d them and get them b ack home. M y fa th e r fin ally built a fence of w illo w branches to keep the cattle in. T h is w ork ed fin e until the follow in g spring w h en the fen ce took roots and began to grow . Th en the cattle ate th e fence. W e lived fiv e m iles east of Enderlin and tw o and a half m iles north of Sheldon. T he farm now belongs to m y nephew , Leon Heuer. R elatives and frien d s a lw ays stopped on their w a y to Sheldon and w hen th ey cam e back. M y fa th er had fou r brothers and tw o sisters liv in g along the M aple north of us. It seems lik e w e a lw ay s had com pany. M y fath er did threshing for m any farm ers. T h is m eant that w e needed to prep are fo r 25 to 30 m en for m eals and a place to sleep. It w as an excitin g tim e for m e for it m eant a trip to tow n fo r groceries. A pig or b eef w as butchered, lard rendered. Dishes and kettles w ere m arked. U sually a notch w as put in w ith an iron file. N eighbors b o r row ed these from one another during the tim e th ey fed the m en. E ven then you d idn ’t alw ays get you r ow n dishes back. I rem em ber one lady w ho had only one large cooking pan. She used to cook coffee in it and then clean it and use it fo r fryin g or cooking the rest of the m eal. W hen m y fath er saw this, he offered to cook fo r the m en w h ile he w as there to do the threshing, for he w anted them to have good m eals. B reakfast consisted of fried potatoes, boiled eggs, bacon, cooked cereal, cookies or coffee cake, w ith lots of coffee. Pies w ere either custard, currant, or a dried fruit grape, bu t w hich looked lik e a huge raisin. Then there w ere the dried fru its like apples and prunes. Th e farm ers had chickens, eggs, m ilk, cream, b utter and cottage cheese. W heat could be taken to a m ill and ground fo r flour, at first at Lisbon and later at Enderlin. W e never canned any vegetables. Root vegetables kept w e ll until spring in the root cellar. Sauer K rau t, dill pickles w ere pu t up in large crocks or barrels. F or meat, w e had only to go to the sm oke house, w h ere hams, bacon, sausage and sm oked fish kep t v e r y w ell. W e som etim es roasted b arley to m ix w ith the co f fee beans. Coffee w as 12 pounds for $1.00. It w as called A rb u ck le Bran d and had a pictu re of an angel floating on the paper bag it cam e in, w h ich I often w on dered about. To seat the m en in threshing tim e w e brought in saw horses and long planks for table and chairs. B oxes outside held pails of w ater and soap for the men. W e alw ays locked the door until everyth in g w as ready and the food w as on the table. T he men storm ed in lik e a mob. M any of these m en cam e b ack to w o rk each year. One of them who returned for m any ye ars w as B la ck George W alker. He used all his m oney fo r liquor and w ou ld com e b ack in the spring looking ragged and thin. M y fa ther did not p a y him one year until he w as ready to leave. He took him to Sheldon and bought a suit, shoes and other clothes and 113 W illiam Finger, Gust Hohnse, A lb ert F ra ed gave him the m oney le ft over. He w as g ra te rich, C arl Schroeder, R. T. P etrich , Emm a fu l that anyone should care to do this for him. K aatz (Finger) and Robert Lindem ann, and it He told m y fath er that he w as w ell educated w as directed b y M rs. D ieter. Th e first choir, in law , but started to d rin k and could not h ow ever w as directed b y H enry Fraase. He k eep his position. He w rote to his brother had two m ules w h ich w ere a lw ays decorated and told him he had an acciden t and could w ith red tassels on the bridles. He used to not w o rk . S in ce this w as not tru e he could start early in the even in g to gather his choir. not return to his home. Robert and I w e re m arried in 1901. L ik e M y m other m ade the lye w e used to m ake all w eddings, th ere w ere m any guests for din soap. F or this w e filled three large salt b ar n er and lunch in the evening. T he Enderlin rels w ith w ood ashes. T he tilted barrels Coronet Band played in the afternoon. R o w ere set on a container. T h e ashes w ere kept bert and I liv e d w ith his parents on the farm m oist. It took a couple of m onths. L a rd and now ow ned b y our son, K a r l Lindem ann. cracklin gs w ere m ixed w ith the lye solution R ob ert’s m other and father w ere v e ry good and cooked in huge kettles. It m ade a soft, to m e. She loved the outdoors and w as al sudsy soap that cleaned alm ost anything. w a y s planting flow ers and trees. W hen ever In the w in ter and again in the spring, the she saw som eone d rivin g dow n the road, a men in the neighborhood w ou ld go to the h alf m ile aw ay, she w ould put on the coffee S heyenne to fish. One tim e th ey got a wagon pot and have eve ryth in g ready w h en th ey b ox fu ll of fish. T h e y w ou ld sooner go fish came. Each afternoon w h en possible there ing than to a p arty. T h e y did not en joy so w as m ilk w ith coffee and sugar in it and m uch the trips to the Sheyenne to cut the sup p ly of wood fo r the year, for it w as cold hard bread and butter for the children w hen they cam e from school. w ork and often th ey did not get home until F or G randm a Lindem ann, S atu rd ay evenings long a fter dark. w as a tim e to prep are fo r the ch urch ser One storm y night w e w ere sitting around v ices on Sun day. She put on a clean apron, the stove, en joyin g the w arm th and com fort p u t a shaw l around h er shoulders and sat b y of a good fire. F ath er said that the wood the w est w indow w h ere the ra ys of the set w as v e r y good that year. Som eone looked up tin g sun m ade it easier to read her Bible. and discovered sm oke around th e stovepipe. R obert’s m ost loved pastim e, n e x t to am us W e d iscovered that the roof w as on fire. ing his children w as hunting. One afternoon, T h ere w as a storm outside and w e could not I cleaned 30 ducks. I don’t th ink anyone had locate a sh ovel or other im plem ent. M y fa m ore patience w ith his children than m y h u s th er craw led on the roof and tore the b u rn band. He had some of the children w ith him in g shingles from the roof w ith his bare alw ays, w hether going to tow n on business, hands. M other tried to help, but the w ind to the riv e r to fish or hunt, or to inspect the b le w h er o ff of the roof. He got the fire fields. One ye a r there w asn ’t m uch snow, he out before it did too m uch damage. hauled w a te r on a hill to m ake an ice slide I attended school in H ighland Tow nship fo r them and th eir homem ade sleds. w hen I could, but m y m other w as often ill R obert died M arch 31, 1933. and then it w as up to m e to do the h ouse I can ’t call any of this tim e d ifficu lt or a w ork. M y sisters, Ida (Mrs. Kaatz) and P a u l hardship. Som e evenings w e w ere v e r y tired, ine, (Mrs. H euer) and I alw ays w alked to but m any evenings Robert w ould play the school. It w as tw o and a h alf m iles. D u rin g violin and w e w ould sing and really en joy the cold w eath er the school w as closed. T h ere ourselves. A ll b u t one of our children live w ere alw ays 20 or 30 pupils. in N orth Dakota. T h ey are V erner, K a rl, W hat a joyou s tim e w as Christm as— visitin g Reuben, M aynard, Doris (Utke), Agnes (G es and h avin g com pany, candy, cookies and a p k e), Esther (Brun), all of Enderlin, W illis in ples— ju st about eve ry th in g w e could w ish for. Flordia, K en n eth in W est Fargo and A lice Th ere w as a lw a y s the tree. F ath er got a (Peterson) at A rth u r. large branch from a b oxelder and th ey w ould w ind green fringed paper around the branches. Som etim es w e found a little of this paper and that m eant that Santa w as w ork in g and w e had better not disturb him . The tree w as d ecorated w ith apples, candy and cookies. W hat a w on derfu l tim e it w as! One y ear I got tw o presents— a pair of overshoes and a religious booklet. I w as confirm ed b y Pastor D ieter w hen I w as 13. The first church I rem em ber going to w as at Sheldon. It w as w h ile singing in the ch oir th at I m et m y husband, Robert. I rem em ber the ones w ho sang in the choir. T h e y w ere P aulin e K u n st (Mrs. A u g . G eske), C arolyn K u n st (Mrs. S pitzer), A u gu sta K u n st (Mrs. Fraase), A m e lia F raed rich (Mrs. P e trich ), M innie K aatz, T illie F in ger (Kaatz) 114 MRS OSCAR TORBENSON The First Ten Years of Pioneer Life Moore Township A s I’m sitting here tonight, I’m lookin g far b ack o v er the e arly days of m y life and th in k ing h ow m uch life has changed in this, our pioneer country. M y father and m other, Thore and K a rin a Syverson, w ere the first to settle in Moore Tow nship. T h ey both come to A m erica at the age of 22, from d ifferen t parts of N orw ay in 1875 and both found w o rk in Film ore County, Lanesboro, M innesota. D uring this tim e th ey m et and w e re m arried there, Ju ly 21, 1879. Here th ey m ade their home until the spring of 1880, w h en th ey decided to go west and fin d a n ew home. T h e y put all their belongings together and started out in a covered w agon to a land of greater o p portu n ity. T h e y had three horses and two cow s w h ich w ere chased along the w ay. T h e y left Lanesboro, M innesota M ay 10, 1880, in com pany w ith three other fam ilies, H aaken Smed, M ass Oprud, and Ole Boreson. T h e y planned to go to V a lle y C ity, Dakota. It m ust h ave been a hard trip as there was ju st a rough, narrow w agon trail, and v ery fe w bridges. T h e y cam e through M oorhead and F argo w h ich w ere at th at tim e, v ery sm all. Then on June 5, 1880, th ey reached V a lle y City, th eir destination. F rom there th ey d rove south along the Sheyenne River. T h ere w e re a fe w settlers here and there along the riv e r and some on the prairies of B arn es Coun ty. M other and fath er stopped w ith folks th ey k n ew and father did some b reak in g to earn some m oney. D urin g this tim e th ey liv e d in th eir covered w agon. A f ter this, fath er w ent south to Ransom County, M oore T ow nship to look fo r land. He w anted to get a hom estead and tree claim side by side so he had to go quite a distance from the others to get this land. I rem em ber his tellin g of an exp erien ce he had at this time. W hile w alk in g around looking for land he had left his horses and w agon on top of a h ill and w as n early lost. B ecause everyth in g looked a lik e it w as v e r y hard to fin d the horses again, but all turned out w e ll and he n ow had found the land he w anted. It w as fiv e m iles to neighbors and th irty m iles from V a lley C ity. He then filed on his hom estead and tree claim June 12, 1880. T h ey now m oved to the hom e of M artim es Nilson, w ho w ere friends of theirs. T his w as near the S h eyenne R iver. Here on June 28, 1880, I, M ary Louise, th eir first daughter w as bom . I w as baptized at the hom e of Iver O lsburg b y a m issionary, R ev. B jorgo , w ho w ent through the cou n try holding m eetings in the homes. N ow m other and I continued to stay at N ilsons w h ile fath er w ent to his claim to build a home. He b ro k e up sod and bu ilt a sod house and stable. It took him the rest of the sum m er to finish building besides b re a k ing up fiv e acres fo r w heat for the n ext year. He also dug a w ell, cu t enough h ay w ith a scythe to last through the w in ter hauled wood and plo w ed a fire b re ak around the building place. F ath e r has told about the tim e one day late that fa ll as he w as eatin g lunch there suddenly cam e a big prairie fire. It cam e w ith a southeast w ind, so strong his lunch b u cket b lew aw ay and sw ept over the w hole country, b urning e veryth in g black. A tragedy, but the fire b reak had saved the buildings and life w ould go on. N ow e ve ry th in g w as ready. T h ey w ere to h ave a home of their v e r y ow n at last! It w as indeed a happy occasion w hen on Octo ber 20, 1880, th ey m oved into th eir n ew hom e— a hum ble sod house, to be sure, but it w as a hom e in a land w h ere the fu tu re looked bright. Th e house w ith only the bare n eces sities— a stove, a fe w kitchen utensils, hom e m ade table and benches and a bed w ith a straw tick in it. A ll w as w ell and happiness reigned. The first Christm as in th eir n ew home was n ever to be forgotten. On Christm as E ve, in festive mood, m other and father dressed up in th eir w edd in g clothes and everyth in g w as as cozy as it could be. D u rin g the course of the evening father took out som e papers on the land and as he w as looking at them , m ade the astounding d iscovery that th ey had m ade the m istake of b u ild ing on the tree claim instead of the hom estead. I don’t think w e can ever im agine the feelin g th ey m ust h ave had. T h ere w as nothing to do but face the facts and plan to build on the hom estead in the n ear future. A fte r Christm as there cam e a great deal of snow. I rem em ber how th ey told about one m orning th ey aw oke and w ere w aitin g for d ayb reak, b u t it never came. T h ey had no clock so th ey had no idea w hat tim e it m ight be, but th ey got up, lit the lam p and found that the w in dow s w ere e n tirely covered w ith snow. T h e y opened the door and saw before them — snow lik e a w all. T h e y took a board, pushed it up into the snow b u t found no light until standing on a bench and reachin g farther, fin ally pushed a w ay snow and saw— light. The snow had almost co v ered the house! N ow the only thing to do w as to d ig snow into the house in order to get out. F a th e r m ade a tunnel from the house to the barn . N ow the w ell w as quite a dis tance from the b uildings and w as shallow so it froze, m aking it necessary to m elt snow all w in ter for the stock. T h at all seems alm ost incredible to us now, b u t that w as all a part of pioneer lif e ! L ater in the w in ter th ey ran out of flour and groceries, so fa th er w ent on skis to V a l le y C ity takin g b utter th ey had m ade and got w h at th ey needed. He carried the sup plies on his b ack and w as gone tw o days. T he last part of M arch, th ey had run short of h ay for th eir stock. Th e snow w as so deep that the only w a y fath er could get hay w as to m ake a long n arrow sled and he, on skis, pulled it. He pulled a load of straw hom e e v e ry d ay from a neighbor, Ole B a ar stad, w ho lived ten m iles north. Once they had to em pty th eir straw tick to keep the stock alive. Th e snow laid till the seven teenth of A p ril. N ow the ground w as b lack since the fa ll fire, but soon green grass w aved o v er the prairies. W hat a w on derfu l sight it m ust h ave been to see a fter the long hard w in ter— that first lonesom e w in ter alone on the prairies— n ow th eir w orries w ere over! L ife w as g ood ! F ath er bought his first seed w h eat and po tatoes at V alley C ity at a dollar a bushel. W hen he had finished his sprin g’s w o rk he took his team and w agon and w ent to V a l le y C ity to get w ork. He hauled stone for the foundation of the F irst N ational B an k 115 w h ich is still standing. M other w as le ft at the hom estead to take care of eve ry th in g at home. That spring, the year of 1881, b rought m ore people into the country. These neighbors w e re Mr. and M rs. P e te r Solom and George, M r. and M rs. P eter V ie and fam ily, M r. and M rs. E rick Rognaldson, M r. and M rs. Edd Storlie, and W. H. M oore. Solorns stayed w ith us w h ile th eir sod house and stable w as being b u ilt on the ad join in g q u arter. How w on derfu l it w as to h ave neighbors who could share our joys and sorrow s. Mrs. V ie (M ar tha, as she w as called b y everyone) w as our pioneer nurse and doctor. She had a big fa m ily of her ow n but she w as n ever too b u sy to help a frien d in tim e of need. How m uch she m eant to everyone F a th e r’s first crop w a s cut w ith a scyth e and tied b y hand, then stacked. T he grain w as threshed b y John H alverson, who had a sm all m achine run b y horse pow er. He got over a hundred bushels th at first year, w hich he later hauled to V a lle y C ity. A branch of the N orthern P a cific cam e southwest from Fargo up through this country in 1881 so w e soon got Lisbon and B u ttzv ille N ow w e could get m ail once in aw h ile. D rivin g straight across country, Lisbon was ten m iles and B u ttzville seven. On the fou rth of July, m other and Mrs. Solom w an ted to go and celebrate. The m en w ere too bu sy w ith th eir w o rk to go, so m other and Mrs. Solom took fa th e r’s team and w agon, and w ith th eir babies, M arie and G eorge, w e re off fo r Lisbon. W hen th ey w ere on top of the h ill north of Lisbon th ey saw that it w as v e r y steep, so m other took the ch ild ren and w alked dow n the h ill w hile Mrs. Solom d rove dow n. Th ere w as no bridge across the riv e r at this tim e but th ey w ere able to d rive across safely. Lisbon had only tw elve sm all shanties. T h e y looked around aw h ile— there w as not m uch of a celebration at th at tim e— then w e n t home. T h at w as th eir first trip to Lisbon. T h e new cou n try w as changing rapidly. It w as n ow dotted w ith sod houses, log cabins, and some lum ber houses. Now w in ter w as approaching and wood and logs had to be h au led for fu el and building. So father w en t dow n b y the Sh eyen n e riv e r for w ood and on his Way b ack a snow storm broke. He got as fa r as Vanlones, neighbors w ho liv ed four m iles south of our place. T h ey lived in a dug-out in a side hill. Since the storm w as so b ad and im possible fo r father to get home, th ey ga ve him and his horses shelter. B ut it w asn ’t cozy as th ey had no room fo r his h orses in the stable. H ow ever, th ey had an extra room b ack of th eir livin g rooom— a room called a cellar. So th ey led th eir cow through th eir livin g room and put h er in the cellar, then the horses had a place in the stable. T a lk about good neighbors, w e su rely had them in the pion eer days. M other w as at hom e w orryin g about father 116 b u t the n ext day he cam e hom e safely once m ore. Th e spring of 1882 b rought n ew hope and happiness. A n oth er long w in ter had passed and all w elcom ed the b eau tifu l spring. N ow father hau led logs to b u ild a new house on the hom estead. T h is tim e th ey bu ilt on the hill. T he stable w as dug down in a hillside and finished w ith sod. T h e y m oved into the n ew house M ay 12, 1882, even though it w as not en tirely finished. There w ere only blankets fo r doors as yet so w h en a snow storm cam e up, m other took m e and w ent o v e r to Solorns and stayed until the storm w as over. Th e n ew house w as 12 x 24 and had two rooms. B e lo w the house was a buffalo ring w h ere the soil w as soft. M other had some boxelder seeds th at she planted there. T h ey grew large and gave a great deal of com fort to the fam ily. W e sat in the shade and had our lunch out th ere m an y a tim e. A fte r this, father and M r. Storelee w en t to the sand hills and got some cotton w ood and other trees. These w ere planted around the place. T rees w e re tru ly b eau tifu l and appreciated on th e bare prairie. O ur tree claim w as a ten acre piece on the other quarter. In 1883 there w ere m an y children who w ere of school age so the people decided to build a school house. It w as to be bu ilt on section 27, northw est quarter, the n orthw est corner. One night, ju st b efore it w as going to be built, all the lum ber w as h auled a h a lf m ile south b y someone, w ho know s w ho, so it w as bu ilt there. It w as called M oore school, Moore Township. W . W. M oore w as the first Clerk, P eter V ie, Treasurer, and fa th er and Joseph Sim m ons w e re tw o of the first Directors. F arm in g w as going on in good shape and m ore im provem ents w ere being m ade every year. G ranaries and other buildings w ere b u ilt and life becam e a little m ore prosperous, but everyo n e w orked hard from early m orn ing till late at night. T h e fa ll of 1884, w a s v e r y im portant to us. M y brother, S igvart A lb ert w as born. M other and fa th e r w e re so happy over their first son. He w as baptized b y Rev. Bothne in Hans M il le r’s home w h ich w as about ten m iles north. B y this tim e, m ore and m ore people had settled in the surrounding country. T h ey w ere a d evout Christian people and w anted to establish a congregation of their own. So in January, 1885, th ey organized a con grega tion. R ev. C. Hill, cam e through the country from F o rt Ransom and w as our first M inis ter. A com m ittee w as appointed consisting of P e te r Vie, P eter Solom and father. T h e first m eeting w as h eld at our home and there th ey w rote the first congregation of our church. T h ey nam ed it F illm ore Ch u rch b e cause most of the people had com e from F illm ore County, M innesota. T h ere w ere fifty m em bers to start w ith, and services w ere h eld alternately in one of two school houses, one over b y Solorns and one b y Ole P e te r sons, fa rth er west. A n d rew Nelson w as our song leader or " k lo k e r” as w e called him. T h e cem etery w as given b y K n u te Neste in 1886 and the first person buried there was M rs. A n d re w Nelson and b a b y in 1888. Th e first b ab y to be baptized w as M athilda Solom and first bom , Jenny Storelee. M y on ly sister w as born S eptem b er 4, 1888, and that w as another h ap p y occasion. She w as nam ed M illie Teoline and baptized by R ev. H ill in the Solom school house. In the w in ter of 1888 w e had that outstand ing snow storm in w h ich so m any children lost th eir liv es going to and com ing from school. T h ere w e re n ’t any tragedies in our com m unity h o w ever, b u t there w ere m any narrow escapes and h arrow in g experiences. It w as such a lo v e ly m orning and I had been ready to start for school, but I w as w atch in g m y baby sister and w aitin g for m other to com e in from the stable. A ll at once the w ind and snow seem ed to hit and it becam e so b itterly cold th at no one could go out, so I w as glad to be hom e th at day. M any of the children had arrived at school before the storm, the V ie boys, Emm a, H elm er, and G u n n er Nelson and the Hoss boys. Olovas G olberg w as our teacher and he had all he could do to keep the school house w arm as the ch ild ren had to stay all night. It w as fun at first— th ey told stories, sang songs, and told stories— but night cam e on w ith its b lack storm y darkness adding fear and h om esick ness to cold and h un ger and no food to be had. W ith the blizzard ragin g w ithout, and w ithin, only little security w e can im agine the fear and a n xiety that clutched in the hearts of all the children and parents w o rry ing at home. T h e afternoon of the n ext day the children w e re taken to V ies w ho took care of them until the storm w as over. T h at same fall diphtheria broke out in the com m unity and ten children died in our neighborhood. T h at w as the first great sorrow to com e to our com m unity. T he people d idn ’t kno w w h at sickness th eir children had and d idn ’t kno w ju st w h at to do. Solom s lost tw o children, Fryd enlun d s two, M artinsons th re e . E ven Nilsons one, A n d res B row n s one and Nils B row n s one. W hat hardship! T h e y m ade coffins out of boards fo r their children them selves. A carpenter nam ed H elm er P e te r son made m any coffin s in the early pioneer days. But, as alw ays, life then had also its great happiness. People w ere tru ly n eigh borly and people w ou ld get into th eir lum ber w agons, or w h atever th ey had to ride in, and visit each other. E veryon e w as alike then and th ey found com pany and com fort w ith each other in tim es of sorrow and joy. Can w e ever over-estim ate the valu e of true friends? It is one of the grea t beauties of life. Our first com m unity Christm as celebration w as at Solom s. T h e y had bu ilt a n ew fram e house, w hich w as one of the first to be built in our neighborhood so th ey in vited everyone over to help them celebrate Christm as. T h at w as a Christm as E ve n ever to be forgotten b y those w h o w ere there. Mrs. Solom had tak en in a d ry tree and trim m ed it so it looked ju st beautiful, especially b eau tifu l to us children. I rem em ber h ow she took all of us children in b y the tree and w e all join ed hands and w alk e d around the tree singing “ Her K om er Dine A m ie Sm aa. ” A ll m y life I w ill rem em ber the grea t th rill of that m o m ent and h ow h ap p y w e all w ere. T h e n ext spring m any people began to tear down their sod houses and build new fram e houses. Roads w ere also being laid along section lines. It seem ed hard to h av e to go on them at first because w e w ere used to travelin g straight across cou n try and it took so m uch longer to go the n ew roads. Th e Lisbon and B u ttzville roads had such deep ruts as a result of h au lin g so m any big loads of grain o v er them . A ll the w h eat w as hauled in sacks then and there rea lly w ere some h e a v y loads hauled. F ath er had a v e r y narrow escape w h ile digging a w ell on this land. E veryon e dug th eir ow n w ells w ith a spade and the dirt w as carried up b y bu ckets w h ich w ere on a pu lley. He had gotten dow n 18 fe e t w hen suddenly as he put his spade into a corner to tak e out the n ext spade fu ll of dirt, the w ater ju st spurted out w ith such force that he hard ly had tim e to get a w a y in time. If the b u cket had not reached the bottom of the w ell at ju st that m oment h e w ould su rely have drow ned, b u t he w as able to clim b the rope to safety above. T he w ate r cam e up 14 feet all at once and w e alw ays had the most abundant su pply of w ater. B esides su p p lyin g w ater for all the cattle, w ater for steam engines, for threshing rigs w as gotten from there and no m atter h ow m uch w as ta k en out, the sam e am ount seemed to be in the w ell. T h ere are so m an y other things that I re m em ber and could w rite about too, b u t the first ten y ears rea lly w ere the hardest and that is w hen the courage and determ ination of our pioneer fathers and m others w as tru ly tested, that courage and determ ination to succeed and their sincere trust and faith in G od w ithout w h ich th ey could n e ve r have accom plished w hat th ey did. — Mrs. O. Torbenson Pioneer L ife in C lifton Tow nship B efore m y m other le ft W inona, Minn., to com e to N orth D akota in the spring of 1903, h er fath er and a neighbor w ere discussing the com ing trip. Th e neighbor said, “ I w as up there 25 years ago (1878 or 1879) w ith the intention of filin g on a hom estead, and took the train to T o w er C ity in the month o f July; then a team to a point 10 m iles (more or less) due south of the town. There w ere two hills close togeth er considerably higher than the surrounding land; one hill a little larger than the other. I clim bed to the top of the tallest one and looked in all directions. It looked ju st like the surround ings w hen I stood on the deck o f the ship 117 in the m iddle of the A tla n tic w hen com ing from Europe, all green and all m oving. N ot a tree, building or a n yth in g else in sigh t! ” e v e ry tw o w eeks, if the w eath er w as good, to T o w er C ity to pick up som e needed food and the mail. Th e tw o h ills are still there, 11 m iles straight north of H igh w ay 46, on the CassBarn es C o un ty line in the NW¼ of Section 7, C lifton Township. T h is was the v iew that greeted Joseph B ayliss w hen he cam e from the east in the sum m er o f 1879. M r. B a yliss spent several days tram ping around carryin g a spade and d iggin g in here and there to test the soil on the m any qu arter sections of land up fo r hom esteads. T h e q u arter fin ally decided on w as the S W ¼ o f Section 10, Clifton Tow nship A fte r filin g on the hom estead and going b ack to Ohio to w o rk over the w inter, the spring of 1880 found Joseph B a yliss and his tw o sons, W ill and Ben, b ack in T o w er C ity , headed b a c k to the land. T h is tim e th ey bough t a team o f horses and other liv e stock, and lum ber to build a cabin w ith a lean-to on it as a tem porary shelter for the livestock. T h e cabin w as b u ilt b y A p ril 27, 1880, but the shelter fo r th e liv e sto ck w as not finished. That n igh t a te rrific late blizzard cam e up suddenly across th e prairie. The horses w ere sure to be lost if le ft out, and there w as only one thing to do— b rin g them into the shelter w ith the fa m ily fo r the night. T he storm lasted only one day, and the fam ily resum ed w o rk a fter it w as over. T he first jo b w as to pick up the buffalo bones w h ich covered the prairies as fa r as you could see. T h e ravin es leading into the M aple R iv er yield ed m an y w agon loads of them and w e re the first source of re a d y cash. Bones w ere bought at all the railroad stations and shipped E ast to be processed, the price being $8.00 p er ton. T h e incom e does not sound b ig after h au lin g them 12 m iles to the station, but at that tim e a farm hand got on ly $10.00 per m onth as w ages and the day started at fou r o’clock in the m orning and lasted u n til dark. P u rs also offered a w e l com e source of cash. Th e riv ers w ere fu ll of m uskrats and m ink. F o x and coyote also w ere plentiful. B efore plo w in g could progress, gophers b y the thousands that infested the prairies had to be trapped and poisoned. The sum m er of 1880 w as m ostly spent ge t ting rea d y fo r the fo llo w in g w in ter. H ay had to be cu t and stacked, and fire breaks had to be plo w ed around the buildings and h ay stacks. A w e ll w as dug and fu el and food provid ed. In those days the first b liz zard m eant you d idn ’t take the horses out until spring. W ith no roads, the ravines filled up and the anim als w a lk in g on the snow w ou ld b reak through and sm other. This is w h y m any ravin es w ere filled w ith b u ffalo bones, fo r th ey stam peded into them w hen th ey w ere chased b y w o lves or Indians. T ra v e l in w in ter w as done on a pair of snowshoes. T h is w inter, 1880-81, found two claim shanties in the 13 m iles betw een the B ayliss hom estead and T o w er C ity. W inter tra vel consisted of a trip on foot about once W inter passed u n even tfu lly excep t for the loss of one of the horses, lea vin g only one. M ore pow er w as needed to b re a k up the sod, so a y o k e of oxen w as purchased the n ext spring. A hundred acres of prairie sod w as brok en and w ork ed down for crop the first three years. 118 F ollow in g tw o oxen and a w alkin g breaker plow w as not easy. T h e big job w as to keep the oxen out of the riv e r in hot w eather. W hen you got close to the riv e r th ey w ould sm ell the w ater and m ake a trip into it, p lo w and all. There w as only one thing to do, that w as to go in after them . It w as not as m uch fun as it sounds. A big problem w as b reakin g sharp plo w lays in the tough prairie sod and roots, b u t M r. B ayliss, being an e xcellen t b lacksm ith, soon bought a forge and sharpened his own lays as w e ll as for m an y of the neighbors. B lacksm ith in g and horse shoeing provided extra reven u e until the tow n of A lice w as founded in 1900. In the spring of 1881 w o rk w as started on a n ew barn as M rs. B ayliss and the other three children w ere com ing to N orth D akota from Ohio. A lso com ing w ith them w as a m an nam ed H enry Toulm ine w ho had filed on the SE¼ of Section 10, join in g the B ayliss land. One day a num ber of people w ere seen com ing in that direction across the prairie. It w as decided on the spot that it w a s a band of Indians com ing to run the livestock, and w h atever else th ey could get, off the place. Im agine th e surprise in the m idst o f a defense m an euver to fin d the band of Indians w ere the Ohio neighbors and other m em bers of the B ayliss fam ily. The w in ter of 1881-82 saw the fa m ily all together under one roof, the house h avin g an upstairs reached b y a ladder for extra sleeping room. H ay fo r the liv esto ck w as stacked aw ay from the barn on a hill. A t that tim e you k ep t a ball of binder tw in e or w ashline rope in th e house so that, in case of a blizzard, you tied one end to the door knob and took th e oth er end w ith you w hen you headed fo r the b a m so if you m issed you could ju st follow the line back. W ithout a line you w ould lik e ly be found n e x t spring. A blizzard of the w e e k long v ariety m oved in once. T h e h a y in the b a m w as soon used up. A s for the stack aw ay from the b am on the hill, it m ight as w ell h av e been on the moon. It w as then rem em bered that all the bed tick s (im provised m attresses) w ere filled w ith prairie hay. T h is w as stuffed into bags and carried along the rope line to the barn to k eep the anim als alive until the stacks of h ay could be reached. A fte r that, at least one h a y stack w as built close to the barn each fall. The barn had a b u cket w e ll so that w ater could be reached. T h e spring of 1882 saw another big event on M ay 28. A son w as born at T o w er City to the Joseph B ayliss fam ily, G eorge A rth u r Bayliss, father of A rt and S id ney Bayliss. F o u r years later, in 1886, a new daughter, Edith B a yliss w as born. This com pleted Josep h ’s fam ily of nine children. In 1886 the eldest son, W illiam , started on a farm of his ow n on the NE'/4 of Section 32, Clifton Township. W illiam B a yliss lived on this place until 1934, w h en he m oved to Enderlin. One of the towns of the E ighties w as the tow n of B ailey, located on the Sheyenne R iver, about three m iles n orth w est of the present town of K ath ryn , consisting of a w ate r and stream pow ered flo u r and feed m ill and a gen eral store. T h e settlers for m any m iles around w ould bring their w heat to the m ill and h ave it ground into flour. Mr. B a yliss m ade this 20-mile trip m any times, u su ally in the fall, With both oxen and horses. It w as a b ig tw o-d ay trip w ith an overnight Stay w ith friends along the w ay. One w inter, m ice ruined a large part of the w in ter supply of flour. The prairie w as under snow so no h auling could be done b y the team. G ran dfath er got out the snow shoes, took a bushel of w h eat on his back, and m ade the tw o-d ay trip to the m ill on foot. The m ill at B a iley w as destroyed by fire about 1916. B ecause of the 10 m iles to m arket, h auling w as a big job. Th e com ing of the Soo Line to Enderlin in 1891 saw a flo ur m ill being built there. Th e foundation of the Steam engine is still there. This m ill used steam pow er entirely and w as fired w ith fla x straw bought from the farm ers. This provided the farm boys w ith w in ter incom e as quite a little fla x was raised on new land. A big change in trade cam e in 1900 w ith the Casselton B ran ch of the Northern Pacific Railroad. This brought the town of A lice fou r m iles aw ay from our farm . Th e town of A lice grew fast, at one time h avin g fou r grain elevators, three hotels, two general stores, three im plem ent houses and threshing m achine dealers. Am ong other farm items, the tow n sold fou r to six ca r loads of binder tw ine a year. F reigh t com ing into town to be unloaded w as com m only three to six cars a day. L ittle m ach in ery w as used to start with, m ostly a w a lk in g p lo w and a large wooden roller to roll dow n the new sod. This consisted of three oak rollers each about two feet in diam eter and fou r feet long. Th e first year or tw o, grain w as cu t w ith a hand cradle or scythe. Then cam e the reaper, the hand tie binder, a W oods w ire tie bin der and then the six-foot binder. Horse pu lled h ay m ow ers go b ack to the Eighties and h ay rakes dum ped b y hand. Th e big changes cam e in threshing m achinery. I h ave no account of threshing being done b y horse pow er, although it w as not uncommon. Steam threshing engines w ere in use right after the C iv il W ar. Case b u ilt them for farm engines use in 1869, so portable engines w ere here as soon as there w as any grain to thresh. In the E ighties bundles w ere shocked and then stacked. Th e stacks often as not stood ov er winter. T h resh in g at that tim e w as a ye ar around business if you had a rig. Rigs w ere few and a big investm ent. A big problem in later years w as rats getting into stacks left o ver w inter. B y the tim e the boys w ere ten years old th ey h ad threshing jobs; cutting bands and bu ckin g straw . B low ers and self-feed ers did not come into use exten sively before 1895 to 1900. T he portable engines started to be re placed w ith traction (self-propelled) around 1880. The grain stackin g w as p retty w ell out of the pictu re b y 1900. T he last grain stacked on the farm w as in 1912. Th e same year Joseph B ayliss retired from the farm . His youngest son, G eorge B ayliss, h avin g m arried Othelia Stim m of W inona, Minn., N ovem ber 1, 1905, rented the farm . Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B ayliss m oved to Fargo and retu rn ed in the fa ll of 1906. Mrs. B ayliss passed aw ay in July, 1911. Joseph B ayliss m ade his home w ith his son, W illiam , in Enderlin, u n til he passed aw ay in April, 1923, at the age of 86 years. W illiam , m arried M ary Iviason of K ipping, Ontario, in 1890. T h ey had three children; W illiam , deceased; Edwin, Roseberg, Wash.; and M abel (Mrs. Rosw ell W arner) of E n der lin. His first w ife died and in 1905, he m ar ried A lth a W arner. Their son, Ralph, m akes his home in Enderlin. Th e land first hom e steaded b y W illiam B ayliss is now farm ed b y a grandson. George B a yliss’ oldest son, A rt L. Bayliss, now lives in Enderlin and Sid ney in F argo. Mr. and Mrs. G eorge B ayliss retired to A lice w hen A rt cam e hom e from the service in the spring of 1943. T h e y m oved to E n der lin N ovem ber 21, 1946. O thelia B a yliss passed aw ay N ovem ber 3, 1953, and George B a yliss passed aw a y D ecem ber 26, 1953, both at E n derlin. T he hom estead on the farm still stands, the first bu ild ing in Clifton T o w n ship. It stood th ere alone in the spring of 1880. A rt B ayliss 119 JUBILEE COMMITTEES The following are the com m ittees who have done prelim inary work on the 75th Jubilee. Since the time that they w ere taken, m em bers may have been added or shifted to other com m ittees. Some new com m ittees may have been activated. FINANCE COMMITTEE STEERING COMMITTEE Back Row, L e ft to right: Ozzie Sveum , W ayne W ilson, Peter Nygaard F ront Row: Stephen Groth, Marge M artin, M argaret Cummings, E ffie T oralf Johansen Co-Chairm en for the Ju b ilee are Stephen Groth and T oralf Johansen Not on picture: Bernard Berglund and D aryl Geeslin Nelson, REUNION COMMITTEE Back Row, L e ft to Right: W ilson Sly, M. C. Olufson, Robert Peterson, Chairm an Front Row: Mrs. W ilson Sly, Rose F ritz, Alice Schw andt, Hazel Petrich Now on picture: Bob G eske, D arlene Kaspari, Ralph Oehlke, L aR u e Bearm an, Jam es Com bs, John Jan z, Evelyn Jordheim Back Row, L e ft to Right: Arley W atn e, E . N. Kittelson, Adolph T schida, Daryl Geeslin Front Row: Curt H aga, Henry Erickson, Chairman Not on picture: G eorge M iller BUTTON COMMITTEE Roger Schim m ing, Jerom e Klonecky and Harold Olson, Co-chairm en 120 RELIGIOUS COMMITTEE L e ft to Right: D w ight M eier, C. A. Tollefson, O. H. Sch aible, Chairm an; C. A. Johnson, F ath er A.A . A. Schm irler. Not on picture: Edward G ullickson REGISTRATION COMMITTEE Melissa D eike, chairm an; Mildred Henderson Not on picture: Doris Hanson, Mrs. O laf Maley JUBILEE BOOK COMMITTEE Back Row, L e ft to Right: E . H. K raft, Floren ce Olson, Earl Sanness F ront Row: Helen Shaw , Betty G laesem ann, Lois T rapp, co-chairm an; L illian Roehm Not on picture: Agnes G eske, Mrs. E d M atthes, V iola H agen, Kent C able, Lola Peterson, E ffie Selvig, F ath er A . A . A. Schm irler, Co-chairm an BEARD COMMITTEE B ack Row, L e ft to R ight: M arvin B artle, M erlin Skram stad, Ralph Oehlke, co-chairm an; Maynard Lindem ann Fro nt Row: L ester Skram stad, F ritz Petrich, W allace G albreath, Jerom e M artin, co-chairm an Not on picture: Bryan Thorpe, Norbert L a b er, Don Chesley 121 PA R A D E C O M M IT T E E Back Row, L e ft to Right: John Thorson, Robert Ludtke, H ubert Bleese F ro nt Row: Dr. J. Brackin, Norman Golkowski, Vivan Skram stad and Trapp, co-chairm en Otto H O U SIN G C O M M IT T E E L e ft to Right: Mrs. Jerry Johnson, Al Ziegenhagen, co-chairm an; Barbara Ronnigan, Evelyn Jordheim Not on picture: Mrs. H aarsager, co-chairm an L e ft to G lennis Not on Jordet, H arold Lenore P A G E A N T C O M M IT T E E Right: Paul Rice, D ale Streyle, Bunny T schida, chairm an; M arilyn W ilson, Thorson picture: Ralph O ehlke, Art Fin zel, Bob Gillund, G ary Haskins, Frank Don Lindem ann, Harold Kemmer, Dorothy Kunz, Lavergne Lindem ann, M iller, Mary Ellen Opheim , Alma Brown, H azel Petrich, Dawn Schlecht, Steinhaus, Myron Simonson PR O M O TIO N S AND P U B L IC IT Y B ack Row : L e ft to Right: Kent C able, Ozzie Sveum, Don Speikerm eier F ro n t Row : Bob Bayler, Pearl Bjerke, D uane Erickson, Chairm an 122 P O L IC E , PA RKIN G AND TR A N SPO R TA TIO N L e ft to Right: Duane Fin zel, Peter Nygaard, John Erbstoesser, Paul Bothw ell Erbstoesser and F in zel, co-chairm en SO O L IN E C O M M IT T E E Back Row, L e ft to Right: Jam es W elton, chairm an; D uane Steinhaus, Cal Rust Front Row: Courtney Brazel, Fred Gram F O O D C O M M IT T E E Back Row, L e ft to Right: Ruth Cox, Betty Krom, Chairm an Front Row: Jerry Schons, George K aber, Bill Golkowski Not on picture: M ike V ercheak EN T E R T A IN M E N T C O M M IT T E E Back Row, L eft to Right: Helen Lehm an, H al Kemmer, Carl Bjerke and W ayne W ilson, co-chairm en; Roger Schim m ing, Q u e n t i n Olson Front Row: Otto T rapp, Hubert Bleese, John Thorson, Chuck Lehm an, Leroy Skranstad Not on picture: G ary H askins, John Janz, Tom Pierce, Gordon Brown, M att Schlecht, D arrell Redmond 123 COMMITTEES NOT PICTURED IN V IT A T IO N S C O M M IT T E E : B ernie Berglund, chairm an; Cora Ford, V irgil H egeholz, Nygaard, Allan Olson, Helen Combs M ary H euer, Clara S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S C O M M IT T E E M r. and Mrs. E dwin Fernow , M r. and Mrs. O scar W adeson, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Oehlke, Mr. and Mrs. A lf Larson MUSEUM COMMITTEE Back Row, L e ft to Right: W alt H anson, co-chairm an; Sveum, Rev. Otto Kinzler Front Row: Ardeen Sveum , co-chairm an Not on picture: E ffie Nelson, John Kunz Ronald Knutson, Ozzie This very early threshing scene shows an Ames Portable steam engine on the Bleese farm , north-east of Enderlin in 1 8 9 0 . An early innovation this binder was drawn by a M oline Universal and steered from the binder. Note the huge wheels filled with cem ent. Taken about 1 9 1 8 , Art Dehn is pictured at the controls. 124 The following business and professional people of the Enderlin Community have contributed to the sponsorship of the 75th Anniversary Jubilee Book. We thank them for their support. Farmer’s Co-op Elevator John and Barbara Brackin Enderlin Drug—Kermit and Gladys Kaspari Citizen’s State Bank—E. N. Kittleson, Pres. Howard’s Barber Shop—Howard Wallner, Earl Klosner Berentje Pohlman Henry’s Barber Shop—Mr. and Mrs. Henry Erickson Moore and Liberty Telephone Company—Gordon and Alma Brown Enderlin Oil Company—Ves Jordet, Leonard Peterson Grille Cafe—Michael and Gladys Vercheak Fernow’s Plumbing and Heating—Harvey Fernow Standard Oil Bulk Service—C. O. (Oz) Sveum Lindemann’s—Rex and Lillian, Don and Verna Schlecht Implement Co.—Matt Schlecht Enderlin Implement Co.—Norman Anderson Don’s Laundromat—Don and Peg Chesley Don’s Trio Bar—Don and Donna Spiekermeier The J. Roy Peterson Funeral Home Crane Johnson Lumber Co.—Stan Ronningen, Mgr. Kraemer Motors—Matt Kraemer Dairy Queen—Jim and Helen Combs Red Owl—Jerry and Irene Schons The Enderlin Independent—Kent and Roberta Cable Merlin’s Leather Goods Store—Merlin and Vivian Skramstad Quality Cleaners—Stan and Betty King Friendly Tavern—Lloyd Koetz George’s Diner—George and Betty Kaber Abbie’s—Abbie and Pauline Peterson Gwen’s Beauty Shop—Gwen Klosner Cox Market—George and Ruth Cox 125 Al’s Hardware—Al and Ruth Hong Peoples and Enderlin State Bank—V. F. Hegeholz, Mgr. Our Own Hardware—Bjerke and Nygaard Ben Franklin Store—Charles Lehman Erickson Super Valu—Duane and Lou Erickson Dr. Allan and Judy Olson Mertz Gift and Jewelry—Mertice C. Johanneson John and Glennis Thorson Soo Line Railroad—J. A. Weltin, Supt. Western Division Enderlin Timber Company—George Lund Geeslin Bookkeeping Service—Darryl Geeslin B Plastics—Bob Bailer, Al Meade Dr. and Mrs. S. C. Bacheller American Family Insurance—Clarence Gulland Morry’s—Morry and Carole Wavra Sandhills Veterinary Service—Dr. Larry Hovland, Dr. Darrell Johnson Cummings Furniture and Enderlin Dept. Store—Byard and Margaret Cummings White System—Harlan and (Dolly) Fraedrich Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 9050 Wills Construction—Forrest (Frosty) Wills Hilton Hotel and Cafe—Roy and Inga Haarsager Clarice’s Beauty Shop—Clarice Roessler City Bakery and Bill’s Sunflow Candy—Bill and Norma Golkowski Fritz Truck Line—Ray and Vi Fritz Grand Theatre—Helen Lehman Bayman’s Standard Service—Harlan Bayman Albert Erickson Barber Shop—1927-1966 Otter Tail Power Company—Walter Hanson, Mgr. Tschida’s Clothing—Adolph and Bunny Tschida Tri County Lanes—Otto Trapp, Mgr. J and L Service—Bud and Don Jordet Home Gas Company—Pershing Sims, Mgr. Pfaff Sheet Metal Co.—Bill Pfaff Coast to Coast Store 126 The " Enderlin, North Dakota 1891-1966 Diamond Jubilee" booklet was reproduced from its original paper format to this digital format by George L Smith with permission granted by the Enderlin Historical Society and Museum, Inc. on 21 November 2013. Minor corrections to spelling and photo senhancements have been included. V