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Full text of "History of Faulk County, South Dakota, together with biographical sketches of pioneers and prominent citizens"

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HISTORY OF 

FAULK COUKTY 

SOUTH DAKOTA 

BY 

V 

CAPTAIN C.H.ELLIS 

TOGETHER WITH 

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES 

OF 

PIONEERS AND PROMINENT CITIZENS 



ILLUSTRATED 



\^ 



19 9 



RECORD PRINT 

FAULKTON, S. D. 






THE NEW YORK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 

733381 

ASTOR, LENOX AND 
TILDEN FOUNDATIONS 

R 1916 L 



INTRODUCTION. 

The first quarter of a century has passed since the real 

work of pioneer life began in Faulk county — the work of 

transforming the wild, unbroken prairie, the home of the 

buffalo, the wolf and the wild and uncivilized red man — of 

blotting out the well worn Indian trail, extending from the 

eastern to the western boundary of the country. 

A work that means so much for us, that has been carried 

forward with such telling results, as the years go by, shall 

ever remain an enduring foundation upon which our future 

social, political, intellectual and moral greatness must 

stand, demanding a more enduring record than legend or 

story — Facts well authenticated, facts from the well stored 

memory, from brief records placed in historical form, before 

the ruthless hand of Time removes the heroic band from 

our midst. 

For the accomplishment of such a work is this History 

of Faulk County written. 

And to the men and women who composed that heroic 

band, who left home, with all its social surroundings that 

enter so largely into the present life, and builded greater 

than they knew in laying the foundation for a more liberal, 

broader and higher education and a nobler manhood and 

womanhood, is this work dedicated. 

C. H. Ellis. 
Faulkton, S. D. 




THE AUTHOR 



11 



CHAPTER I. 

INTRODUCTORY. 

It is not our home and immediate surroundings that 
are to be considered in the making up of actual and pros- 
pective conditions from a financial, social, political and 
moral standpoint; but the civil government, the national 
and state organizations, the higher powers, to which we 
are to look to guide and protect us. 

While among the youngest of the states. South Dakota 
occupies the fore-front in actual wealth and material pros- 
perity. In 1889 she exchanged her territorial relations 
with one general government for those of equal sovereign 
statehood in the Great American Republic. With an area 
of 76,000 square miles, divided almost equally east and 
west into two parts by the Missouri river, (with the except 
tion of the famous Black Hills country, which contains 
one hundred square miles located in the south-western 
part of the state, of the richest mineral deposits on the face 
of the globe), the entire state with a soil of unsurpassed 
fertility, with climatic conditions superior to all its sur- 
roundings, underlaid by the greatest artesian basin in the 
world, furnishing an inexhaustable supply of water for any 
and all purposes, when and wherever wanted; it needs but 
time and an intelligent appreciation of its wonderful re- 
sources to secure a world-wide reputation that shall secure 
an agricultural population second to no state in the union. 
With a population of only six to the square mile it 
produced in 1901; 
Wheat, 35,000,000 bushels, valued at $18,000,000.00 



12 



Corn, 70,000,000 bushels, valued at 35,000,000.00 

Other grains and Agricultural Products- • • • 35,000,000.00 

Hay Products 10,000,000.00 

Live Stock 35,000,000.00 

Dairy Product 9,000,000.00 

Wool, Hides and Furs 4,000,000.00 

Gold and other Minerals 13>000.000.00 

South Dakota now ranks among the states of the 
Union; Third in the production of corn, third in the pro- 
duction of wheat, first in the production of flax, fifth in the 
production of barley, oats and rye, eighth in the produc- 
tion of wool, tenth in the production of live stock, and 
actually produces more wealth in proportion to its popula- 
tion than any other state in the Union, as is proven by 
government.statistics and other reliable data. 

The climate is free from malaria, mild, invigorating and 
healthful, for which reason the death rate in the state is 
the lowest in the Union. The summers of South Dakota 
are moderate, without any excessive heat, the most de- 
lightful season of the year being the long„ beautiftfl autumn, 
and the winters are so mild that the live stock are grazing 
on the range all winter without shelter of any kind. 

The annual mean temperature of the state for the 3'ear 
1906, determined from forty-three stations having a com- 
plete record, was 45 degrees. Wheat growing is, and 
must continue to be, one of the important branches of farm- 
ing and is carried on at the present time with great profit. 
The crop for 1905 averaged fifteen bushels par acre. While 
South Dakota is sadly deficient in lumber for building, 
purposes, the deficiency is largely made up in the vast de- 
posits of material for the best Portland cement, which can 
be utilized in the erection of more permanent and cheap- 
er buildings, when durability is. taken into consideration. 



13 



With her vast deposits of coal and the introduction of al- 
cohol for the purpose of light, heat and power, a better and 
a more desirable supply is at hand. 

The following statistical record of 1906 ought to find 
a place in the permanent record of the production of wealth 
supplied to the world in one year. The following is an 
official report, viz: 

Wheat, 37,494,108 $20,931,877.24 

Corn, 77,414,331 33,224.299.30 

Oats, 51,324,557 12,831,139.25 

Barley, 24,603,257 7,380,077.10 

Flax, 2,283,156 • 2,383,156.00 

Speltz, 4,558,708 1,367,612.40 

Hay, 3,073,554 tons 14,868,770.00 

Potatoes, vegetables and Fruit 5,000,000.00 

Dairy Products 7,500,000.00 

Eggs and Poultry 5,000,000.00 

Honey, 90 tons 25,000,00 

Ivive Stock 36,000,000.00 

Wool and Hides, 300,000.00 

Mineral and Stone 9,000,000,00 

Total 145,812,831.29 

New wealth per capita, 278.00 

No more convincing proof of the prosperous condition 
of any state can be produced than her bank resources, to- 
gether with the valuation of all classes of property. The 
banks of South Dakota have $70,198,433.62, and a total 
valuation of all classes of property of $260,630,977.00; but 
the true yaluation is estimated at a billion of dollars. 

South Dakota has no bonded debt and the limit of tax 
levy cannot exceed 2 mills to the dollar, as provided by the 
constitution. The rate of taxation in South Dakota is low- 
er than in any of the Northern states. 



14 



EDUCATIONAL ADVANTAGES. 

South Dakota is the best equipped state in the Union 
for educational purposes. She is proud of her common 
schools. Where there are children to go to school, teachers 
are provided and school houses built: The school law con- 
templates that every child in the state shall receive the 
benefit of a common school education and makes liberal 
provisions to attain that end. It provides for the trans- 
portation to school of all children li\nng at an unreasonable 
distance from schools. Free school books are furnished, 
and libraries are also provided. Two sections of land in 
each township were set apart for school purposes by the 
general government, which assures a very low rate of tax- 
ation for the common schools. With four normal schools, 
one at Aberdeen, one at Madison, one at Spsarfish and 
one at Springfield, and a school of Mines at Rapid City, 
a State University at Vermillion, and an Agricultural Col- 
lege at Brookings, the supply of teachers should be equal 
to all demands. 

Denominational schools are as follows, viz: Methodist 

colleges at Mitchell and Hot Springs, Congregational col- 
leges at Yankton and Redfield, Presbyterian at Huron, the 
Baptist at Sioux Falls, the Scandinavian Lutherans at 
Sioux Falls and Canton, and the Episcopalians at Sioux 
Falls. The Roman Catholics have well equipped academies 
at Aberdeen, Sturgis, Elkton, Marion, Vermillion and 
other points, and the Mennonites at Freeman. 

The population is cosmopolitan, being composed, as 
reported by the census of 1905, of 33,473 Scandinavians, 
17,873 Prussian Germans, 12,365 Russian Germans, 22,144 
Canadians, 5,564 settlers from England, Scotland and 
Wales, 3,298 Irish, 1,566 Hollanders and the balance of the 
population, Americans. 



15 



By occupation the people are engaged as follows: 
Eighty-two thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven are 
farmers, of which 57,288 own their own homes; 16,821 are 
engaged in domestic and personal service, 15,247 are in 
trade and transportation: 14,327 follow mechanical pur- 
suits, and 7,877 are in professions. There are over 150,000 
school children enrolled in the public schools of the state. 
Three fourths of the farmers own the land they till, a most 
gratifying and satisfactory^ fact from a financial standpoint. 
Seventy-eight per cent of the population are native born. 

The state of South Dakota has provided liberally 
for her most unfortunate class, the insane, as well as to 
guard society from the most vicious element of the popula- 
tion. The hospital at Yankton has large, well constructed 
buildings where these unfortunates are well cared for. 
The Northern Hospital for the insane and feeble-minded 
has been erected at Redfield, where a certain class of the 
insane are cared for. The penitentiary^ at Sioux Falls is a 
modern structure, well suited for the purpose for which it 
was built and is under the best possible regulations. The 

state reform school is located at Plankinton. Its equip- 
ment consists of several large buildings, suitably furnished, 
and a 640 acre farm. The deaf mute school at Sioux 
Falls and the asylum for the blind at Gary are also 
well equipped institutions. The Soldier's Home at Hot 
Springs, with its well constrijcted buildings, is an institu- 
tion of which the state can well be proiid. 

The people of South Dakota are congenial and hospit- 
able, and as a class, morally, socially and intellectually, 
w^orthy and reliable. South Dakota as a state in the Ameri- 
can Union, stands in the front rank and is one to which 
■ev^ery citizen of Faulk county may well feel proud to own 
.allegiance. 



16 



CHAPTER II. 

vSTATE HISTORY. 

While it was as early as A. D. 1850, that a few hardy . 
adventurers settled within the bounds of what is now re- 
organized as the state of South Dakota there was no real 
conception of its vast and imposing natural resources 
until 1875, and it was five years later before the real tide 
of immigration set in. So far as its real existence as a de- 
sirable land for homes and civilization is concerned, there 
was gradual development and passing through an experi- 
mental stage of nearly two decades, before actual facts be- 
came fixed in intelligent minds that it was actually one of 
the most, if not the "most desirable agricultural and mining 
state in the Union. 

The following, published about 1890 in the Dakota 
Outlook, is the best and most reliable information in regard 
to the early histor}' of South Dakota, obtainable: 

"As originally organized Dakota included Montana, 
Idaho and Wyoming, thus embracing about a half million 
square miles. 

"The first settlement of Dakota by white men was in 
1812, when a few of the Scotchmen who composed theAssi- 
naboine colony of Lord Selkirk, settled at or near where 
Pembina now is. These loyal subjects of the British crown 
were not a little annoyed, years after, to learn that they 
had been tilling the soil and breathing the air of the land 
presided over by' Uncle Sam's 'bird o' freedom,' and most 
of them moved northward. 



17 



"it does not appear to be definitely known when the 
first settlers came into South Dakota. The party of lyewis 
and Clark (1803-6) were the first white men to explore the 
Missouri river to its source, and the report of the expedi- 
tion, published in 1814 probably gave the first information 
of Dakota. But the accounts of the extreme cold and other 
hardships which the explorers encountered were not such 
as to make this land inviting. While the course of empire 
took its westward flight, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado and 
Kansas became the promised land of the eastern emigrants. 
Dakota was considered a part of the Great American Desert, 
a land of barren sands in summer, and of snows and frosts 
in winter. 

"Sometime, however, about the year 1850, a few hardy 
adventurers settled in Dakota, and their magnificient crops 
of wheat bore unmistakable evidence that this was, indeed, 
a goodly land. Their reports caused others to come, and 
by the year 1858 thriving settlements had been made along 
the Missouri at Elk point, Vermillion, Yankton and other 
places, and at different points along the Big Sioux. These 
settlements were upon Indian land, which was finally deded 
in the spring of 1858. 

"During the next two or three years a large number of 
settlers came in and the people began to move for the for- 
mation of the Territory of Dakota. In these early days the 
citizens of Sioux Falls were no less energetic and enter- 
prising than they are now. They not only discussed the 
matter, but proceeded to organize a provisional govern- 
ment, choosing also a full list of territorial officers. 



18 



"This was during the latter part of 1859. On the 8th 
of November of the same year there was held at Yankton a 
meeting, the object of which u^as to petition congress to 
organize the territory. A similar meeting was held at 
Vermillion on the day following. The organization was 
not accomplished, however, until February, 1861, and the 
approval on the organic act on March 2nd, was one of ths 
last official acts of President Buchanan. 

"William Payne, the first governor, entered upon the 
discharge of his official duties May 27, 1861. A census 
showed the population to be 1,786. 

"On September 16, there occured the first election, at 
which J. B. S. Todd was elected delegate to congress. 

"The first legislative assembly met on the 17th of 
March, 1862 and adopted a full code of laws. 

"in 1870 the census showed a population of 14.181, of 
whom 12,887 were white. This was a small gain for ten 
years; but little was yet known of the natural resources of 
Dakota. 

"Up to this time two-thirds of the population of the 
territory lived in the counties of Union,, Yankton and 
Clay. 

A gradual increase continued until 1875, when the 
Dakota boom may be said to have begun. At this time 
gold was discovered in the Black Hills, and almost all the 
papers in the country published wonderful stories of the 
•I^recious yellow nuggets that were found there. Adven- 
turers flocked in from every direction. Not only did they 
find gold, but they found also, millions of acres of the 
very best land, and that the country was one of the most 



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THE NEW YORK 
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Til n N F T'. IONS 



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healthful in the world. While thousands passed onward 
to the Hills many stopped on this side of the Missouri. 
Many more, attracted by the marvelous stories of the gold- 
en wheat fields crowded into North Dakota. In that sec- 
tion where in 1878 there could not be found 1,000 people, 
there are to-day 100,000 people, the assessed value of 
whose property last year was over three hundred million. 
South Dakota has nearly a quarter million of people, whose 
property, assessed on a scale much lower than that of 
North Dakota, is over one billion in valuation." 

The following extract from a letter from the distin- 
guished and much beloved Ex-Governor Faulk in regard to 
the creation of Faulk county, now in the posession of the 
author, will be of interest not only for the important facts 
but from the source from which they are obtained: "l 
know from my own personal knowledge, that in the winter 

of 1873, during the administration of Governor Burbank 
and Gen. Edw4n McCook, the territorial secretary, was 
acting governor, Governor Burbank being absent in the 
east. The legislature passed a bill Creating several coun- 
ties, among which was Faulk county. No other county 
had been previously created by the Dakota legislature 
covering any portion of the territory embraced in this 
county. And the same is true to the best of ray recollec- 
tion as to all the other counties created that winter. It 
was organized under the laws of the territory while Ordway 
was Governor, the date and facts relating to which you 
will find in the Times, or other papers published in your 
vicinity at that period. 

"In the winter of 1883 an attempt was made to pass a 
bill through the legislature cutting off range 72 and 73 



22 



from the west side of Faulk county and adding thein to 
Potter county. County seat rivalry appears to account 
for this very singular movement, at any rate it was resisted 
so vigorously that a compromise was eJEFected at the last 
moment by which only one tier of townships w^as taken, 
and which left the present county seat within three miles, 
of the geographical center of the county. 

You wished me to say something about the very be- 
ginning of general knowledge concerning this portion of 
South Dakota. I will briefly allude to its history prior ta 
1861, the time of Jhe organization of Dakota Territory.. 
Previous to that date, and before the act of congress cre- 
ating the territory of Minnesota,, the Missouri river formed 
the western boundary of Wisconsin and all that portion, 
laying east of the Missouri river was embraced in the 
county of the St. Croix. But after the: state of Minnesota, 
was created, coixgress in 1849, caused it to be attached 
to Mirmesota, and the legislature of Minnesota changed its-, 
name to Dakota county or, at least it formed a portion of. 
that county. All o£ that portion of Dakota laying west of 
the Missiouri river was taken from the territory of Neb- 
raska. 

"When r came to Dakota in 1861, this huge territory- 
embraced what are now the four states North and South 
Dakota, Montana arwi Wyoming and a part of Idaho — an 
area of 350,000 square miles. This was more than one 
third of the whole of the Louisiana Purchase. This vast 
region was really as little known to the most of the Ameri- 
can people as if it had been located in the darkest portion 
of Central Africa. The Lousiana Purchase, in which, 
^outh Dakota is situated, was made by President ]ei- 



23 



ferson in 1803, and contained about 1,000,000 square 
miles, which was obtained at thenominal cost of $15,000,000. 
It had once been claimed by Spain by right of discovery , 
then sold to France, and by France transferred to the 
United States." 

Gov. Faulk finished up his most interesting letter with 
the following, which is most highly appreciated by the 
people of our county: Andrews, the historian, in his 
•"Historical Atlas of Dakota," published in 1884 at Chicago, 
after giving a general sketch of the geographical features 
■of the country, concludes with this paragraph: 

The climate soil and productions of Faulk county 
•compare favorably with other counties of central Dakota, 
-and the county is being settled and occupied by a very su- 
perior class of people, largely from lUinoiSj lowa^ Minneso- 
ta and Wisconsin." 

This was the verdict of history eleven years ago, and 
to-day I am very stue it may be written that it has lost 
nothing of the distinction awarded to it by .the publisher 
•of the Atlas of Dakota. 



■CHAPTER III. 

FAUIvK COUNTY. 

Faulk County, South Dakota, is located on the east 

:side of the divide between the waters of the James and 

^Missouri Rivers^ and, strictly speaking, is in the James 

River valley and is bounded on the north by Edmunds 

<county , on the south by Hand and Hyde counties, on the east 

by Spink and on the west by Potter counties. The county 

has an area of one thousand and eight square miles, con- 

.-sisting, by government survey, of Townships 117, 118, 119 



24 



and 120 north, and range 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71 and 72 
west, being twenty-four miles north and south, and forty- 
two miles east and west. It is watered by Scatterwood 
lake and Snake or Nixon creek, which rises in the south- 
western portion of Edmunds county and the coteaux 
upon the extreme western line of Faulk county, which for 
ages had been the feeding ground of vast herds of buffalo, 
until they had been exterminated by the Indians who 
roamed upon the plains. 

The field notes of government sur\-eyors gave a most 

discouraging account of the whole region, and, when in 
April 1882, a party of three home-seekers from Missouri 
left the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad at Redfield and 
started out in a westerly direction, on a three days' tour of 
exploration, one would have said it was inspiration rather 
than sound judgment, that prompted their movement. 
But after a most careful exploration , in place of a " barren 
waste scattered over with growin'g cactus," they beheld a 
beautiful, slightly rolling prairie covered with luxuriant 
grasses and the clear waters of the Nixon. They returned 
with a most happy report that it was a "goodly land," and 
one to be earnestly sought after. This party consisted of 
Alexander LaFoon, D. S. Smith and T. H. McMullen. 
The location they selected was upon the south side of the 
creek, in what proved to be Township 118, range 68. 
(The government survey had not then been made.) Their 
plan was for a large colony, but the arrival of others broke 
up their arrangements so that their plan, so far as a Mis- 
souri colony was concerned, never materialized. A para- 
mount idea was the location of a future county seat, and, 
but for the subsequent coming of the Chicago & Northwest- 



25 



ern Railroad, there is little doubt but lyaFoon, in place of 
Faulkton, would have been the county seat today. 

The first party of immigrants located permanently up- 
on the ground in June, 1882, and among them were T. H. 
McMullen, Booth, Russell and Whitehead. Additions 
were soon made to the colony, and among them were 
some of the strong, influential men of our county at the 
present day. About this time a party of home-seekers 
from Charles City, la., located on the creek about five 
miles west of them in Range 67, and christened their 
town Faulkton; in honor of the distinguished and hon- 
ored Governor Faulk, for whom the county was named. 

Faulkton at once became an active competitor for 
the county seat. On Dec. 21st, 1882, the first number 
of the Faulkton Times appeared, withH. A. Humphrey, 
editor and publisher. It is claimed that the Times was 
the first paper printed in Faulk county, yet the LaFoon 
Record, A. E. Evans, editor; Evans & Geddis, proprie- 
tors, was a very close second. On Dec. 25th the La- 
Foon town site was platted. Each of the papers left 
no stone unturned in advocating the advantages and su- 
perior claims, of its own location. 

The struggle to control the county organization and 
secure the county seat became the one and only theme of 
-conversation and effort that commanded first attention. 
It soon became evident that a new factor must be taken 
into consideration. Gov. Ordway, through his son, 
George L. Ordway, and one Tibbits, who had been a 
business partner of George E. Ordway in Denver, Colo- 
rado, had put up the county organization, including the 
county seat, to the highest bidder. A den of thieves 



26 



were in control and must be recognized. The Faulkton 
Times, in commenting upon the transaction, said: ' The 
deal was a public one, and much of it a matter of pub- 
lic record. It was consummated in broad daylight, — as 
a matter of fact barter, — without a blush of shame, and 
the participants candidly conversed about the amount of 
land and money paid. The people of the county were 
disgusted and outraged that their interests should have 
been made an article of merchandise, and their most 
sacred rights should have been put up by the governor 
and sold to the highest bidder as an article of speculation" 
An intelligent and candid writer, who was fainiliar with 
all the circumstances at the time, said: "Faulk county 
residents are entirely excusable for the part taken by 
them in this piece of open bribery, because it was im- 
possible to proctu'C an organization of their county with- 
out yielding to the demands of the organizer. There 
were at least 2,500 people in the county at the time of 
its organization and they were suffering great inconven- 
ience and expense for want of local government. A math- 
ematical calculation has been made by a resident, and his 
figures show that if Faulk county had paid $10,000 in cash 
six months ago for an organization, the people would have 
been ahead today in a financial sense. ' ' 

It can, therefore, readily be seen that after so large ex- 
perience and the disastrous consquences of delay, the citi- 
zens of Faulk county were ready to resort to any process 
which would give them government. They were forced 
into a bargain by the procrastination of a scheming execu- 
tive. Faulkton had made her bid, and of course LaFoon 
must go her one better. Nearly a section of adjoining 



27 



land, half of the town site and $3,000 was the price paid. 
As soon as this man Tibbits had time to confer with Govern- 
or Ordway, commissions were issued to Thomas L. Humes, 
Matthew J. Jarvis and Hervey A. Humphrey, appointing 
them commissioners of P'aulk county, with full power to 
organize said county. On the 5th day of November, 1883, 
they met at the office of J. A. Pickler, Esq., in Faulkton, 
each of them presenting his commission of appointment to 
the office of county commissioner in and for said Faulk 
county, by His Excellency, N. G. Ordway, Governor of 
the Territory of Dakota. The commissioners qualified ac- 
cording to law^ and organized as a board by the election of 
Hervey A. Humphrey as chairman, and on motion, Geo. 
W. Fifield was elected temporary secretary. On motion 
of Commissioner Hume, Joseph H. Bottum was elected by 
ballot, register of deeds. 

On motion the board adjourned to meet at the office of 
D. N. Hunt & Co. at LaFoon in said Faulk county on 
Wednesday, Nov. 7th, 1883, at 10 o'clock a. m. 

The board met pursuant to adjournment and J. H. 
Bottum was elected clerk pro. tem. C. F. Hardy was 
elected judge of probate. By a vote of two to one LaFoon 
was declared the county seat. 

At the afternoon session E. C. Sage was cho'sen sheriff; 
George J. Jarvis, assessor; H. S. Utley of DeVoe, county 
treasurer; Miss Angie Harrington, superintendent of 
schools; E. Baldwin, county surveyor; J. S. Bates, coroner; 
Frank Turner and C. M. Kellogg, justices of the peace; 
J. T. McKinley and Edward Chapman, constables. 

Other and continued efforts were made to remove the 
county seat five miles west to Faulkton and that much 



28 



nearer the geographical center of the county, but as the 
eastern part of the county was first and more densely in- 
habited, always resulted in favor of LaFoon, and it is quite 
evident that LaFoon would have remained the county seat 
until the present day if the coming of the Chicago & North- 
western railroad had not aided Faulkton; so soon 
to be followed by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul 
railway, with a branch road from Aberdeen to Faulkton 
and Orient near the southern line of the county. Even 
then LaFoon was able to dictate its terms of surrender and 
come as equals, with equal rights and privileges, including 
their homes, their churches and their public buildings. 

On Sept. 18, 1884, the first convention for the elec- 
tion of county officers was held at L<aFoon composed of the 
following citizens: 

Precinct No. 1 G. S. Rice, L- H. Bailey, Ed. Clif- 
ford, James Devine and Charles B. Chambers. 

No. 2: M. Purdy, C. C. Getting and A. Garrick. 

No. 3: Morgan G. Millard, G. W. McTier and G. B. 
Dyer. 

No. 4: Charles Rathke and Otto Mielke. 

No. 5: Harry H. Sprowls, J. B. Smack and B. H. 
Clark. 

No. 6: J. A. Pickler, W. G. Faulkner, J. W. Bass 
and J. H. Shirk. 

No. 7: P. B. Durley, Ed. Hoisel, H. A. Humphrey 
and J. W. Hayes 

No. 8: A. B. Sheldon, R. G. Morton, Joseph Powell^ 
C. B. Oakes and A. E. Evens. 

No. 9: H. S. Utley, George M. Butterfield, Alex 
Miller and Travis. 



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No. 10: Robert Kmapton, F. M. Brown and J. M. 
Miles. 

No. 11: H. Chain, H. Pool, Orin Strevel and H. 
Metz. 

No. 12: D. N. Hillman, Geo. A. Morse and Chas. 
F. Chase. 

No. 13: C. H. Ellis, W. W. Gwin and John Parsons. 

The convention was called to order by Judge C. H. 
Derr and Morgan G. Millard and A. E. Evans were chosen 
secretaries. The following persons were placed in nomi- 
nation for the several county offices, all of whom were 
elected on Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 
1884: C. H. Derr, judge of probate; Frank A. Pangburn, 
clerk of district court; James W. Johnston, register of 
deeds; P. E. Knox, treasurer; Mrs. Angle Rose, county 
superintendent; for sheriff, L,. M. Buland; for assessor, 
E. G. Sage; for coroner, Dr. ly. M. Sprowles; for surveyor, 
B. H. Clark; for district attorney, C. C. Clifford; for jus- 
tic^s of the psace, Frank Turner, W. R. Davis, W. G. 
Faulkner and D. S. Smith; for constables, J. W. Bass, C. 
B. Oakes, Ed. Hoisel and Channey J. Cooper. 

John E- Chain was nominated for county commissioner 
for the second commissioner district. 

The following persons were chosen to the republican 
convention at Pierre: John A. Pickler and John E- Chain. 
To the district convention at Redfield, W. S. Belknap, C. 
H . Ellis, M. E. Wood and F. M. Brown. Thus ended the 
first organized and well attended county convention in 
which there was a consciousness that it was the people and 
not politicians that were then in control of county affairs. 



32 



CHAPTER rv. 

COUNTY ORGANIZATION. 
No history of Faulk county can be complete without a 
careful review of the unusual methods adopted by the Gov- 
ernor, N. G. Ordway, through his son, George L,. Ord- 
way. and one Tibbits, who had been a business partner of 
George ly. Ordway in Denver, Colorado. As reference has 
been made to this affair in a former chapter, the writer 
will confine himself to extracts and editorials from the- 
press of that day. The following aiBdavit is from the- 
columns of the St. Paul Pioneer Press. 

FAUl-K COUNTY.. 

"■'ThomasH. McMullin. one of the towm site proprie- 
tors of lyaFoon, in an affidavit sworn to, before C. H., 
Squire, notary public,. Faulk county, says: 

On or about Sept. 2, 1883, William B. Tibbits came to- 
LaFoon and exhibited a letter from George L. Ordway,, 
son of Gov. Ordway, stating that. Tibbits came to Faulk 
county for the purpose of looking it over with reference to 
its organization. Tibbits stated to me that the count>- would 
be organized as soon as he reported to the governor, and in 
accordance with his report. I met Tibbits at the office of 
D. W. Hunt, in LaFoou. Tliere were present, beside 
Tibbits, C. F. Hardy, D. R. Miller, John Hough, F. W. 
Rogers and myself, all of whom were members of the town; 
site company, and D. S. Smith, who had land adjoining.. 
Conversation was had with Tibbits relative to the location* 
of the county ssat. On? of the party proposed to, Tibbits, 



33 



that he become a partner in the town site of LaFoon. To 
this Tibbits assented. The meeting then broke up and 
Tibbits withdrew. The balance of the party being a major- 
ity of the shareholders of the town site., called a meeting at 
which it was agreed to give Tibbits one-half of the town site 
'of LaFoon, comprising 160 acres. They also concluded to 
^ive him all the land they could get donated and whatever 
money they could get subscribed. It was agreed that those 
who donated the lands should execute deeds to Tibbits, and 
that the deeds and money subset ibed should be placed in 
the hands of D. R. Miller of Redfield., to be delivered and 
paid to Tibbits whenever F'aulk county should be organized 
and the county seat located at TaFoon. I proceeded at 
vonce to procure the deeds of property' donated., and D. R. 
Miller and John Hough went to work .to raise money. I 
'Obtained deeds from Andrew Greenwald, Alex LaFoon,, 
Xouis Kneisel. Jr.. Lee M. Sprowls, James P. Rathbun, 
James \V. John.ston, William T. Hensley,, Lawrence W. 
Hensley, Darius .S. Smith, Joel C. Booth and Nora Reppy 
for 380 acres of land in all. After I had procured those 
•deeds they were shown to Tibbits, who expressed himself as 
highly gratified at the result. He was also informed of the 
amount of money subscribed, and which I then understood 
and have since been informed, amounted to about $3„000,. 
The deeds were deliveied to D. R. Miller of Redfield 
with a paper accompanying them signed by each stating 
thafthey (the deeds) were to be delivered to William B. 
'Tibbits upon the happening of a certain event, to-wit: 
when the commissioners of Faulk county vrere appointed 
by the governor, and the county seat located at LaFoon. 
After the delivery of tlie deeds Mr. Tibbits wejit away. 



34 



He said- he was going to Bismarck to see the governor and 
make his report. I saw Tibbits again Oct. 1, 1883, in the 
presence of D. R. Miller in the latter's bank at Redfield. 
Miller said it was all right, but that the deeds would have 
to be changed and made out to him (Miller), and that he 
would convey to Tibbits. Miller stated in the presence of 
Tibbits that the reason for changing the deeds was because 
it appeared too open and barefaced to have the deeds go 
direct to Tibbits. In accordance with this request, new 
deeds were executed to D. R. Miller. I wrote out four of 
the deeds myself. One of the deeds, that of Kneisel, was 
not changed, but went on record direct from him to Tibbits. 
The deed of Nora Reppy was also changed, but her deed to 
Tibbits has not yet been recorded. I have been informed, 
and so understand, that the money subscribed, amounting 
to about $3,000, was paid to D. R. Miller, to be paid by 
him to Tibbits, and that it was so paid. Tibbits subse- 
quently returned again from Bismarck to Redfield, and 
stated that the governor wanted a petition asking for the 
appointment of the commissioners that we wanted. 
Thereupon a petition was prepared and privateh^ circulat- 
ed around lyaFoon and the eastern portion of the count}'^, 
asking for the appointment of Thomas L. Humes, Mat- 
thew J. Jarvis and Hervey A. Humphrey. This petition 
was forwarded to the governor, and the parties above 
named were appointed the commissioners of Faulk county. 

E. S. Spinden, 

one of the to\\n site proprietors of Faulkton, in an affidavit 
made before W. S. Bowen, notary public, Yankton county, 
stated he met Gov. Ordway in June, 1883 — after numerous 
petitions for organization had been sent to him — and repre- 



35 



sented the urgent necessity for an immediate organization 
of Faulk count}^ In August, 1883, he saw George L. 
Ordway at Pierre and was informed by the latter that he 
liad sent W. B. Tibbits to Faulk county to look the ground 
over, and that the parties interested ■could confer with Tib- 
bits. On returning to Faulkton, Spinden met Tibbits, 
■who said he had been there to investigate and report. 
Spinden told Tibbits that it was unnecessary to keep up 
pretenses, and that he was prepared, as president of the 
Faulkton Town Site company, to make an oifer for the 
•county seat. The town site company offered Tibbitts, or 
those for whom he was acting, 120 acres of land adjoining 
Faulkton, 250 lots in the town site and $1,000 in cash. 
Tibbits remained ten days in Faulkton and then went to 
IvaFoon. He assured me that we should have an oppor- 
tunity to make a second bid if necessary. Afterward I 
■went to Pierre and told Tibbits we would add to our offer 
the hotel in Faulkton and $1,000 for him (Tibbits) per- 
:sonally. I regarded hjm as acting for Gov. Ordway, to 
•whom he said he was to report. It was understood bj^ us 
all that a bonus must be given Gov. Ordway before the 
commissioners were appointed. Of the three members of 
the board, two were residents,, at the time of their ap- 
pointment, of Spink county. 

H. A. Humphrey., 

of Faulkton, and one of the commissioners of Faulk ■county 
appointed by Gov. Ordway, in an affidavit before C. H. 
,'Squire, notary public, Faulk count}^ states that the letter 
written and signed by George L. Ordway, the governor's 
.son, and brought by Tibbits to Faulkton, stated that Tib- 
;bJtsc3me there for the purpose of looking the county over. 



36 



in view of its approaching organization. Humphrey had 
several interviews with Tibbits, who said he wanted to see 
the most prominent men in various localities, and gave 
Humphrey to understand that the county would be orga- 
nized in accordance with his report. He further gave 
Humphrey to understand in a manner not to be mistaken 
that he was prepared to receive and consider any proposi- 
tion that might be made to him in regard to Faulkton's 
securing the county seat. On being asked wdiat proposi- 
tion LaFoon had made, Tibbits replied that "that was 
confidential." Humj^hrey also states that he has been 
informed by men who subscribed to the LaFoon fund, that 
Tibbits had received large amounts of monev and land in 
consideration of the location of the county seat at LaFoon. 

George W. Fifield. P. B. Durley, H. A. H,umphrey 
and J. A. Pickler of Faulkton, and Thomas H. McMullin 
of LaFoon, in a joint affidavit before C. H. Squire, notary 
public, Faulk county recite the facts in regard to the re- 
peated efforts of the citizens of Faulk county to obtain 
organization. Petition after petition was forwarded for 
this purpose in vain. The affidavits state that during the 
period of eleven months between the time the county should 
have been organized, as required by law, and the time it 
was finally organized, Faulk county was without local 
government or any court of justice, without schools, being 
without the power to levy taxes for their support. That 
many settlers, residents of the county, in making final 
proof on their claims, were put to great trouble and ex- 
pense by being compelled to travel with their witnesses, a 
distance of from thirty-five to forty miles to an adjoining 
county to reach an officer who could administer the neces- 



37 



sarv oath. That litigants and witnesses were compelled to 
travel a like distance at like expense in any action or pro- 
ceeding at law. 

Nora Reppy, 
a property owner residing near lyaFoon, in an affidavit be- 
fore J. M. Miles, clerk of the district court of Faulk county, 
states at the time of Tibbits' visit to lyaFoon, as the repre- 
sentative of Gov. Ordway, she was asked how much of her 
land she would give to have the county seat at lyaFoon. 
She gave forty (40) acres, being the southwest fourth of 
section 17, township 117, range 68, a deed for which she 
executed to Tibbits and delivered to D. R. Miller, a banker 
of Redfield, to be given to Tibbits when I^aFoon got the 
county seat. She understood that the land donated by her- 
self and others was for the governor, and that I^aFoon's 
chances for the county seat depended on the amount of 
money and land donated. 

The certified copies of the deeds on record in the office 
at LaFoon of J. H. Bottum, register of deeds for Faulk 
count, Dakota, whi.ch accompany the affidavits, show the 
following transfers: 

lyouis Kneisel, Jr., to William B. Tibbits, 40 acres; 
consideration, $1. Andrew Greenwald to D. R. Miller, 
20 acres; consideration, $1. Alexander LaFoon to D. R. 
Miller, 40 acres; consideration, $1. Lee M. Sprowls to 
D. R. Miller, 40 acres; consideration $1. James P. Rath- 
bun to D. R. Miller, 20 acres; consideration, $1. William 
T. Hensley to D. R. Miller, 20 acres; consideration $300. 
Lawrence W. Hensley to D. R. Miller, 20 acres; considera- 
tion, $1. Darius S. Smith and Adelia M. Smith, his wife, 
to D. R. Miller, 60 acres; consideration, $1. D. R. Miller 



38 



and Delia B.Miller, his wife, to William B. Tibbits, 380 
acres; consideration, $2,800. 

The description and amount of property conveyed by 
Andrew Greenwald and others to D. R. Miller correspond 
with that of the property conveyed by Miller and his wife 
to William B. Tibbits, except in one instance, where twenty 
acres are deeded by Miller to Tibbits in lieu of the forty 
acres deeded to Miller by Alexander LaFoon. The other 
twenty acres may have been allowed Miller, who is a Red- 
field banker, as his per cent for negotiating the transaction. 
The lands deeded to Tibbits, included the forty acres 
given by Nora Reppy whose deed was not recorded. 

The value of the sixty acres immediately joining the 

town site may be estimated at $1,500. If L,aFoon has a 
"boom" this spring, this land can be platted and sold so^ 
as to bring anywhere from $3,000 to $5,000. The value 
of the remaining 300 acres is about $3,700, ranging from 
$10 to $15 an acre, the latter figure applying to 140 acres, 
situated within a radius of half a mile from the town site. 
The value of the one-half interest in the 160 acre town site 
proper, which Tibbits received according to the affidavit of 
Thomas H. McMullin, cannot be less than $10,000 to its. 
owner, if he will handle it properly. It is extremely pro- 
bable that $15,000 will be realized this year by the owner 
of that one-half interest." 

That Gov. Ordway, if not 'entirely responsible for the- 
whole transaction, was hand and glove with George L. 
Ordway and Tibbits, was so evident to the people of the 
territory, as to call forth the following from the territorial 
press and the Chicago Inter-Ocean, 

Campbell County Courier: Poor Governor Ordw.a.v 




ALONG THE NIXON RIVER NEAR FAULKTON 



THE NEW YORK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



TIUDLN FOU 04 IONS 



41 



wails to the Secretary of the Interior because the task of 
organizing new counties is imposed upon Dakota's Execu- 
tive. He also wails because the law does not give the ex- 
ecutive power to remove or suspend the commissioners 
whom he has appointed, or their appointees as county 
officials. The Governor also intimates that designing men 
aim, through organization, to gain control of county poli- 
tics. No one in Dakota remembers of Ordway, in his an- 
nual message to the legislature, saying anything about be- 
ing relieved of the task of organizing new counties. Why 
did he not make this wail to the legislature, instead of the 
interior department, if he wanted any action taken upon it. 
But to protest because he cannot hold the official ax over 
his appointees' heads, thereby dictating their acts, is simply 
kicking because his political power is not extended, in- 
stead of contracted. "Oh! consistency." Ordway has 
evidently been asked to giv^e some explanation of his delay 
in organizing counties, as his wrils are a sort of appendix to 
his report, and he has dished up something which may sat- 
isfy congress, but not Dakotans— they know he does not 
want to be relieved of the task of organization, and that 
his report about designing men is nothing but another 
blow at our people, whom he delights to defame. That 
there are some designers, is not to be denied, but Ordway 
generally sees that only his friends, or those designers who 
make it an object to him, succeed in their designs. He 
does not consider the wishes of the people whom he should 
aim to please. 

Cavour Independent:— Governor Ordway is receiving 
scourgings on all sides and not without abundant provoca- 
tion. It is one of the bitter things that accompanies terri- 



42 



torial government that we must call our own Uncle Sam 
to help us out of this shameful predicament. We're of age 
and able to take care of ourselves, Uncle — admit us and 
see how deftly we will shift (Ordway) for ourselves. 

Mitchell Capital: — Register McCoy, of the Aberdeen 
district, is at Washington, attending a meeting of the 
National Republican convention which assembled in that 
city on Wednesday of this week. While there he will be 
able to check-mate some of Ordway 's schemes, opposing 
the endorsement of McCoy's appointment. 

Press & Dakotan: — Delegate Raj-mond has introduced 
in congress a bill to establish the territory of North Dakota 
by dividing the present territory on the forty-sixth parallel. 
Mr. Raymond has taken early opportunity to carry out his 
promises, and to occupy an open position against the 
schemes of the Ordway clan to retain Dakota intact. He 
has taken this action in accordance with the wishes of 
ninety per cent of his constituents, 

Andover Gazette: — The appointment of T. C. McCoy 
as register of the Aberdeen land office was confirmed on 
Tuelday. This is good news for the people of southern 
Dakota, but a "bad pill" for Governor Ordway. 

Press & Dakotan: — C. T. McCoy has won in the fight 
against Ordway. McCoy's ijomination as register of the 
Aberdeen land office was made to the senate by the presi- 
dent Tuesday night. This is an open vindication for Mc- 
Coy. Ordway has been charging him for a 3'ear or two 
past with complicity in Douglas county matters of unsavory 
repute, but this false accusation has fallen to the ground, 
and the object of his venom is clearly the winner in the 
contest. Charges of dishonesty are Ordway's weapons of 



43 



offense and defense, but in this particular instance the 
means employed are liable to assume the size, proportions 
and pecuilarities of a boomerang. Mr. Ordway himself 
may be called upon to explain his suspicious connection 
with the original organization of Douglas county and the 
mysterious disappearance of Walter Bown, chief witness in 
the case. Mr. McCoyJs success is a subject for congratula- 
tion. He is an old resident of Dakota, a capable man and 
one worthy of the place bestowed upon him. 

Exchange: — The next popular prairie song will be en- 
titled, "The Old Man's Losing his Grip." Not the grip 
he carries his county seat deeds in, but the grip he had on 
the powers in Washington. The McCoy appointment in- 
dicates that things are slipping through his fingers. 

Faulkton Times: — A petition to the President to re- 
move Governor Ordway, the robber executive of Dakota, is 
being circulated in every county. As none feel more deep- 
ly the tyranny and exasperating conduct of this barnacle 
upon our body politic than the people of Faulk county, it 
is hoped and believed that said petition will be unanimous- 
ly signed by our people, and by none more gladly than 
those so outrageously bled by him in connection with his 
Redfield deal in organizing the county. 

Chicago Inter-Ocean: — Popular disapproval of the acts 
of Governor Ordway, which has been noted from time to 
time in the Dakota correspondence of the Inter-Ocean, has 
at last taken the shape of a pointed petition to the Presi- 
dent, embodying the prayer of a people for the removal 
from office of an executive who, it is claimed in general 
terms, "is not fitted for the place by education, experience, 
or qualities of mind, heart or character." This move of 



44 



an intelligent, law and order loving people for the removal 
of their Governor, whose present administration is alleged 
to be scandal to Dakota and upon the public service, is 
made the subject of correspondence in another column, and 
should certainly receive the attention of the country, and 
be given careful consideration by the President, to whom 
the appeal is made. There may be more things charged to 

• 

the account of Governor Ordway than can be substantiated, 
but it is not to be supposed that the people are signing the 
petitions in every county in the territory, without some 
reasonable measure of just provocation. Affidavits bearing 
on Governor Ordway 's acts in relation to the organization 
of new counties and the capital commission scheme, are to 
accompany the petition. 

At the present day it is impossible to form the least 
conception of the scorn and contempt in which Governor 
Ordway was held, and the wrath and indignation aroused 
against him throughout the territory. It was not alone in 
the County of Faulk that his system of bargain and sale 
was set up. Hand, Hyde, Potter and other counties were 
victims of his system of plunder. At last he was brought 
to the bar of justice. A United States grand jury found 
two indictments against him. On a plea of lack of juris- 
diction the case was thrown out of court, and what all the 
people believed to be a consummate scoundrel, escaped the 
just penalty of the law. 



45 



CHAPTER V. 

THE FIRST SETTIvER. 

At the present date it has been decided that Hiram 
Rose was the first white man to locate in Faulk county. 
In the Autumn of 1881 he made a location and erected a 
shanty upon the shore of Scatterwood Lake in township 
120, range 66, and remained there through the \n inter of 
1881 and 1882. But if we are correctly informed, it was 
more for the purpose of trapping and hunting than for a 
permanent location . In April of 1882, D. S. Smith, Alex- 
ander lyaFoon and T. H. McMullin from Hillsbofo, Mis- 
souri, arrived at Redfield in Spink county and started out 
on a tour of observation, the object in view being a perman- 
ent location. Although Mr. McMullin was the first to 
move his family into the new settlement, the town was 
named after Mr. lyaFoon. The long years, and influential 
and commanding positions filled, placed D. S. Smith of 
Faulkton, in line to claim the honor of being the first pio- 
neer settler in the county. The LaFoon settlement re- 
ceived important additions from Wisconsin, while a party 
from Charles City selected the present county seat on the 
bank of the Nixon and pjt forth desperate effort to secure 
for their settlement the honor of becoming the leading town 
in the new and important county. Among the men of 
qualities who were members of the LaFoon colony, were: 
J. H. Bottum, J. W. Johnston, F. A. Seaman, Dr. J. P. 
Rathbun, I. Allen Corn well, W. H. Race, Hon. F. M. 
Byrne, Judge C. H. Derr and J. P. Turner, who have re- 



46 



mained, and are active and influential citizens of Faiilkton 
at the present day. 

The first settlers of Faulkton were mostly from Iowa, ^ 
and came here in the spring of 1882. 

LOOKING BACKWARD. 

It is impossible for us to realize the changes that a few 
years bring into our every day life, save as they enter in 
and become a part of it, and not even then, unless some 
written record is made to recall them to mind. Only a 
quarter of a century has passed since the full consciousness 
entered into the minds of men that Faulk county, South 
Dakota, was really a goodly land, to be sought out as a 
home for civilized men. 

Government surveyors who made preliminary surveys, 
gave no word of encouragement to induce the homeseeker 
to even "come to see." Only one small bod}^ of water 
(Scatterwood Lake) was known to exist within all its bor- 
ders. Tha westsrn line of the county was on the divide 
between the waters of the James and Missouri rivers, and, 
lying at the foot of the coteaux, had the appearance of a 
low region of country, while in reality it was nearly 1,000 
feet higher than the eastern line of the county. 

In the spring of 1882 the tide of emigration set strongly 
toward Dakota Territory. A party of three, leaving the 
Chicago & Northwestern railroad at Redfield, started 
out on a three days' trip in a westerly direction. The trip 
was one of most remarkable surprises. A beautiful ex- 
. pause of rolling prairie covered with luxuriant grasses lay 
out before them. A creek of delicious spring water — God's 
best gift to man — proclaimed it a "goodly land," much 
to be desired by any intelligent homeseeker. Not only 



47 



the rich, luxuriant grasses, but the deep trodden paths, 
proved it to have been the feeding place of vast herds 
of buffalo for many long years. 

The report that these first explorers, Alexander La- 
Foon, D. S. Smith and T. H. McMullin gave, soon brought 
others. Before the winter of 1883-4 nearly all the land in 
the eastern half of the county had been located. LaFoon, 
Faulkton and DeVoe had become active enterprising cen- 
ters, around which intelligent and industrious homeseekers 
were located. In March, 1884, C. H. Ellis, Chas. V. 
Ellis, Joseph McGregor and Rufus Richie, who came from 
Michigan to Beadle county in 1882, located on the line of 
the railroad survey made by the Chicago & Northwestern 
railroad in township 117, range 72. The Ellisville post- 
office was soon established, and before the season ended, 
most of the land in ranges 70, 71 and 72 had been taken. 
As late as 1882, the buffalo, antelope and coyotes had full 
range in Faulk county. In June, 1884, it was transformed 
into homes and farms, with all that makes up happy com- 
munities. 



48 



CHAPTER VI. 

BUFFALO IN FAULK COUNTY. 

The deep worn trails or tracks and numberless bleached 
heads and bones of the American bison that were scattered 
over the prairies of Faulk county, gave to the early pioneers 
the most positive assurance that at a time when the wild 
Indians roamed unmolested over the western prairies, this 
was a favorite feeding ground for vast herds of buffalo, 
which have now become almost exterminated in the great 
North-we'st. 

The westward march of civilization had come in too 
close proximity, even before actual settlement had com- 
menced in the county. Only one small herd of buffalo were 
seen by the early settlers, and two or three single animals, 
one of which was followed and killed near LaFoon, as the 
following account from the LaP'oon Record of Nov. 3rd, 
1883, shows: 

"C. A. Ritter of this place, shot a buffalo three miles 
west of town on Thuisday, with a shot g^un. The animal 
came from the north, and a party of residents of 119-68 fol- 
lowed him several miles with Joseph Powell's team, from 
the claim of Herbert Geddes, where he was first discovered. 
Upon overtaking the animal three miles west of town, Mr. 
Ritter rode up within thirty feet of him and shot him with 
No. 6 shot just back of the shoulder. That was a lucky 
day for LaFoon. On the same day news came that the 
commissioners were appointed, two for this place and one 
for Faulkton. Blessings as well as misfortunes, never 



> 

l-H 

> 

o 
_^ 

t/2 




Jb'XS^'' 






0«'^^'':t\0N9 



Ttt^ 



51 



come singly. Buffalo steak is now on tap at the hotels 
through the kindness of Mr. Powell, who brought it to 
town on Friday morning, and threw up his hat when he 
heard that I^aFoon had the county seat. Remember, two 
for LaFoon and one for Faulkton," 

One was seen near Ellisville in the south-west town^ 

ships of the county; but no effort was made to kill or 
capture him. In fact, so sudden and almost mysterious 
was the departure of all large game after the coming of the 
white man, that Faulk county is almost without a record 
along this line. 

And yet sportsman may find an occasional coyote or 
prairie wolf and a few prairie dogs. In their season ducks 
and geese in their northward flight, find here a favorite 
feeding and resting place, and with the jack and cotton- 
tail rabbits, prait;ie chicken, plover and snipe, make excel- 
lent and exciting pleasure for the experienced sportsman. 



52 



CHAPTER VII. 

THE BIvIZZARD OF JAN. 12, 1888. 

Nature's changes are nowhere more marked and signal 
than upon the broad prairies of the Dakotas. Beyond all 
conception as to numbers and splendor, were the charming, 
sunshiny days and moonlight nights, yet they were some- 
times suddenly, without warning, interrupted by the most 
dreadful cyclones in summer and yet more terrible blizzards 
in winter. 

On the 12th of January, 18S8, all nature smiled to 
usher in a most delightful day. It was a most beautiful 
winter morning, warm and gracious, with soft, variable 
breezes. One moment, bright, warm, glorious; the next 
moment, without the slightest warning, the terror fell with 
unexpected fury. An indescribable terror that pen cannot 
picture, swept over the great northwest. F'or fifteen hours 
it continued, blinding, impenetrable and intensely cold, 
the atmosphere filled with needles of ice driven by a furious 
wind with a terrific roar, producing an intense darkness 
and shutting out objects onlj- a few feet away. In a mom- 
ent it was gone and the sun came out as beautiful as a 
morning in May. Its work of death was ended. 

In South Dakota one hundred and twelve perished and 
many more sustained life long injuries. In Faulk county 
the following sad record was made and publislied at the 
time: 

"At Faulkton the blizzard began at 10 a. m. on Thurs- 
day, January 12th, 1888, and spent its force by two or 



53 



three o'clock, Friday morning, making the duration of the 
storm in all its fury, about sixteen hours. The wind 
freshened up again Frida}^, drifting such snow as had not 
already found permanent lodgement, and the mercury fell 
rapidly to 24 below zero Friday night, dropping perhaps to 
its lowest point, nearly 30 below, on Sunday morning. 

"Faulk county with her 5,000 population, scarcely 
averaging in the county, a family to the square mile, fur- 
nishes four names for the fatal list, viz: Joseph Metz of 
117-68. Mr. Metz was a strong man in the prime of life. 
He went out into the storm to look after and care for his 
stock, got lost and perished. William Klenip of 119-71, 
went out into the storm just at night to care for his stock, 
has not been found and is supposed to have perished. 
(His body was subsequently found in an unoccupied sod 
shanty more than a mile from his home.) Mr. Klemp was 
in the full vigor of manhood, and many will remember his . 
marriage last September. Miss Ella lyamar, aged 29 years, 
teacher at the Auman school house, seventeen miles south- 
west of Faulkton in the Ellisville school district; Carrie 
Auman, aged 8 years, a pupil of Miss Eamar's. The 
teacher and pupil left the school room to go to Mr. Auman's 
house, a distance of forty rods, nearly with the wind. 
Their bodies were found as far beyond the house for which 
they started, as the house was distant from the school 
house. Had they remained in the school-room they would 
have been safe. 

"Herman and Edwin Giese, aged respectively 12 and 
9 years, of 117-70, were at school with Miss Lamar, and 
against their wishes, accompanied her and little Carrie Au- 
man from the school house into the storm. The bovs re- 



54 



port that when Miss Lamar gave out they all lay down and 
remained until Friday. The snow had drifted over them 
and gave some protection. Though badly frozen, the boys 
were able to walk a half mile to Henry Hillman's and said, 
"they could not wake the teacher and Carrie — they were 
dead." 

When the storm burst with its fury the Faulkton 
primary and intermediate schools were in full progress, 
Mrs. McCoy and Mrs. Bissell, teachers. A rescue party 
was organized, a rope was fastened to tlie hotel door, and 
with the coil in hand, the party struggled on and succeeded 
in reaching the intermediate school house. Another rope 
from there and they were soon at the primary school, 
where, with the assistance of the teacher, the pupils were 
tied to the rope and taken to the intermediate school build- 
ing, with an experience that led to no further efforts in that 
direction. Teachers and scholars were compelled to re- 
main in the intermediate school room until Friday morning. 

Dakota blizzards are among the things of the past. 
Volumes of incidents, which neither pen nor pencil could 
describe, tliat might have been written, are forgotten; yet 
the dark, blinding, roaring storm once experienced, ever 
remains an actual living presence, that has marked its path- 
way witli ruin, desolation and death. The 12th of January, 
1888, is, and long will be, remembered, not only by Dako- 
tans, but by many in the northwest, not for tlie things we 
enjoy, love and would see repeated; but for its darkness, 
desolation, ruin and death, spread broadcast; for the sor- 
row, .sadness and heartache that followed in its train. 

The following from tie Faulkton Times of that date 
will give a fuller account oi that terrible stor.n that swept 



55 



with such fearful force over the northwest, though largely 
referring to incidents outside of Faulk county: 

"During Wednesday a snow storm from the southwest 
prevailed most of the day and into the night. Thursday 
morning snow was still falling with little or no wind and 
without any indication of the storm that broke upon Faulk 
county from the northwest at about 10 a. m. The mercury 
then stood at IHO above zero, and was still abov^e zero at 
night, and the cold was by no means intense during the 
storm. The wind was furious, the volume of snow im- 
mense, and the storm was much the worst of any ever ex- 
perienced since the settlement of the county, "it was a 
blizzard" and no mistake, though hardly to be compared 
to the three days' blizzard of 1873, as experienced in Min- 
nesota and Iowa and as the recorded death roll in Minne- 
sota and northwestern Iowa testifies in confirmation of the 
recollection of those who were there. The blizzard of '73 
lasted for three consecutive days and nights without cessa- 
tion, and the loss of life in northwestern Iowa and Min- 
nesota was very great. They were then as Dakota is now, 
a newly and sparsely settled country that made it compara- 
tively i npossible to find shelter from the storm if caught 
out on the prairies. That was fifteen years ago. Fifteen 
years from now Dakota will be so settled and developed as 
to render the loss of a life in such a storm as unlikely and 
comparatively impossible as in Iowa today. At this place 
the blizzard begun Thursday at about 10 a. m. and had 
spent its force by 2 or' 3 a. m. Friday morning — the wind 
easing down to a calm at 9 a. m. — making the duration of 
the storm in all its fury about 16 hours. The wind fresh- 
ened up again Friday, drifting such snow as had not al- 



56 



ready found permanent lodgement, and the mercury fell 
rapidly to 24 below zero Friday night, standing about the 
same Saturday night, dropping perhaps to its lowest point 
Sunday morning to near 30° below. 

The telegraphic reports now give the death roll of Da- 
kota, as perfected and complete, at 100. This is not large 
considering its realm-like area — two and a half times as 
large as all New England, and almost three times as large 
as Iowa — and its widely scattered inhabitants, and, as the 
morning was not bad, the loss is composed mostly of those 
caught away from home, though in some instances lives 
were wantonly sacrificed by going out into the storm, at- 
tempting to go home, or to some other place of safety near> 
and death was the penalty of not realizing the danger, and 
exercising the good judgment to remain where they were 
safe. Faulk county, with her 5,000 population, yet scarce- 
ly averaging in the country a family to the square mile„ 
furnishes four names for the fatal list, viz: 

Joseph Metz, of 117-68. Mr. Metz was a strong man 
in the prime of life. He went out into the storm to look 
after and care for his stock, got lost and perished. 

Wm. Klemp, of 119-71, went out into the storm just 
at night to care for his stock, has not been found, and is. 
supposed to have perished. Mr. Klemp was in the full 
vigor of manhood, and many will remember of his marriage 
last September.. 

Miss Ella Lamar, aged 29 years, teacher at the Aumaii 
schoolhouse, seventeen miles southwest of Faulkton in the. 
Ellisville school district. 

Carrie Auman. aged 8 years, a pupil of Miss Lamar.. 



57 



The teacher and pupil left the schoolhouse to go to 
Mr. Auman's house, a distance of forty rods— nearly with 
the wind. Their bodies were found as much farther be- 
yond the house. Had they remained in the schoolhouse 
they would have been safe. 

Herman and Edwin, sons of lyudwig Giese, of 117-70, 
aged respectively 12 and 9 years, were at school with Miss 
I^amar, and against their wishes, accompanied her with 
little Carrie Auman from the school house into the storm. 
The boys report that when Miss lyamar gave out they all 
lay down and remained till Friday morning. The snow 
had drifted over and protected them. The boys were not 
so badly frozen as reported. They walked a half mile to 
Henry Hillman's and said, "They could not wake the 
teacher and Carrie— they were dead." 

Thus it will be seen that those who perished in Faulk 
county left a place of safety, defied the storm, braved death 
and perished. Others went miles in the storm unharmed. 
Mr. Wood walked from Seneca to Faulkton, 22 miles, 
traveling almost east, with the storm in the north-west. 

Frank Fluent came to town from Mr. Kirk's, who 
lives seven or eight miles northwest of town. Frank said 
he kept cool, didn't hurry and was careful. He came in 
warm and unfrozen in any way. Mr. Wood and Mr, 
Fluent well illustrate what cool, strong men can endure 
and accomplish when successful in keeping their reckoning. 

Miss Maggie Dunn, a teacher near Polo, northwest 
Hand county, perished in the storm. Miss Dunn had gone 
to her school before the storm set in, and none of her 
scholars arriving she started back only to lose her life a few 
.•steps from the house where she boarded. 



58 



A woman named Shoultz and a boy by the name of 
May were frozen to death in northeast Hand county. 

In Faulkton the pupils of the primary and intermedi- 
ate departments were gathered in the intermediate school 
room. Mrs. Bissell and Mrs. McCoy, their teachers, 
remained with them during the night. A few parents 
took their children home and provisions were taken 
to the schoolhouse and all were made comfortable for the 
night. John Keithley was one of the most effectivs work- 
ers in opening communication with the schools and provid- 
ing for the wants of the children. 

A current of electricity extended across the west por- 
tion of the town, from C. C. Moulton's, on the banks of 
the Nixon, southwest to the C. & N. W. depot. Messrs. 
Moulton, Pierce, McCaffry, Howe and others relate inter- 
esting experiences relating to the electric phenomena. 

Volumes of incidents could be written giving details of 
individual experiences, etc., that would be of more or less 
interest but our space forbids. 

The latest authentic summary of blizzard fatalities re- 
ported from Minneapolis shows ninety-seven dead in Da- 
kota, thirteen in Minnesota, six in Iowa, seventeen in Ne- 
braska and two in Montana. Total 135. 

It will likely be a week yet before the facts and rumors 
are all sifted out and the correct figures known. The 
totals are not reported for Kansas and Texas." 



T 



THE NEW YORK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



ASTOR. LENOX 
TILDEN FOUNDATIONS 



61 



CHAPTER VIII. 

FAULKTON. 

The selection and the location of the City of Faulkton, 
was from the first, far above any other location within the 
bounds of the county. Its central location commended it, 
not only to those who came to see it, but attracted the at- 
tention of all land seekers. 

The first settlers, as a class, were of the type not only 
to assure success to the enterprise in which they engaged, 
but to attract and draw others to them. 

Among that heroic band, who early in 1882 turned 
their backs to all the rest of the world with undying de- 
termination to turn these bleak and desolate acres upon the 
banks of the sluggish Nixon into delightful, happy homes 
and a prosperous, enterprising commercial center, no one 
was more devoted, or in a position to do as much for the 
accomplishment of this most desired object, as Capt. H. A. 
Humphrey. Quick to see and prompt to act, on the 21st 
day of December, 1882, The Faulkton Times, H. A. Hum- 
phrey, editor and proprietor became an active force in the 
shaping of the destiny of the town and county. 

On October 28th. 1882, the town site had been platted 
and became a matter of record, A. B. Melville, Preston B. 
Durley, G. B. Eastman, H. A. Humphrey, John Mahara, 
J. A. Collins, William G. Kelley, J. Wood, Francis H. 
Fluent and Frank Smith, being the incorporators. Subse- 
quent to this time many others had joined these first set- 
tlers and a most heroic fight had been put up to secure the 
location of the county seat at this place. 



62 



But all that came, became an integral part in their 
efforts for the accomplishment of the one single purpose, 
the one central idea, that of making Faulkton the county 
seat. In the accomplishment of this object their efforts 
never ceased and their faith never faltered until the sur- 
veyors for the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad company 
sealed a compact that virtually settled the question in their 
favor. 

Among those who are entitled to equal credit in the 
accomplishment of this work, are Major John A. Pickler, 
Capt. J. H. Wallace, Frank Turner, A. A. Colgrove, A. 
W. Morse, F. A. Pangburn, J. W. Hays and C. C. Moul- 
ton, all of whom are identified with Faulkton 's interests at 
the present time. 

It was not until the coming of the Chicago & North- 
western Railroad in 1886, that the important question of 
the real status of Faulkton as the town and futurecounty 
seat, was fully and definitely settled. 



63 



chapter viii continued. 
LaFOON. 

The beautiful location of the first county seat of Faulk 
county, with its miles of broad prairie and its rich, luxuri- 
ant grasses, supplemented by the fact that the eastern part 
of the county was first settled, and largely by a class of 
real homesteaders, made an active, growing business town, 
and at the coming of the Northwestern Railroad, had it not 
been for the fact that superior railroad facilities pointed to 
Faulkton, all other circumstances and conditions were in 
its favor and it would have continued its onward, prosper- 
ous and commanding course. 

With such men as D. S. Smith, J. H. Bottum, F. A. 
Seaman, H. D. Chamberlain, W. H. Race and Dr. J. P. 
Rathbun; with the LaFoon Record, E. A. Evans, editor 
and proprietor, the recognized official paper of the county, 
LaFoon 's interests were well cared for, giving every as- 
surance, not only to its own citizens, but to every impar- 
tial observer, of present permanency and future prosperity. 

This state of things continued with increasing strength 
until the inhabitants awoke to the unwelcome fact that the 
final survey of the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad had 
been made, the line passing to the south of them and direct 
to Faulkton, their persistent rival for county seat -honors. 
. Quick to see and apt to take advantage of their remain- 
ing hope, JvsF'oon was soon on wheels, passing westward 
over the prairies to become an integral part, if not a con- 
trolling factor in the upbuilding of their late persistent and 
unyielding rival, - • . • . • 



64 



CHAPTER VIII CONTINUED. 

DEVOE. 
On the 23rd of May, A. D. 1882, H. S. Utley, C. J. 
Cooper and A. F. Clark were the first settlers at this, to be 
a permanent center in the new county. Mr. Utley 's family 
did not arrive from Wisconsin until April, 1883. On Au- 
gust 20th, 1882, Butler Lambert and Robert Young ar- 
rived from Wisconsin and settled in the immediate neigh- 
hood. Rev. P. E. Knox, J. H. DeVoe, John Dubois, E. 
M. Jessup and George Butterfield were added to the set- 
tlement before the close of the year. 

A store was opened by Messrs. Crossly & Baird, a post- 
office called Cresbard, established, and a Sunday school or- 
ganized at the store, which proved entirely too small for the 
number who desired to attend. A house of worship was 
promptly erected, and in 1884 they had a Sunday school 
with an average attendance of fifty -three, and preaching 
once in two weeks by Rev. Clinton Douglas, of Faulkton. 
In 1884 the DeVoe correspondent of the L-aFoon Record 
gave the names of the following pioneers, viz: Peter Phil- 
lips, T. B. Norton, Rush Francis, John Hoskin, D. Roy 
Jones, R. M. Griffith, C. C. Gettings, Thomas Morris, J. J. 
Price, J. H. Thomas, J. W. Tucker, J. H. Tucker, C. E. 
Kittinger, Harry Ressigue, M. C. Baker, Chas. O'Connell, 
E. Evans, G. W. Cropsey, and Fred Benson, who had lo- 
cated in that vicinity up to that date. In May, 1882, the 
tide of immigration had set toward eastern Faulk county, 
almost every day brought its party of pioneer settlers. 



65 



New centers of population were established. Cresbard, 

Millard, Zell, Miranda, Orient and Harrington became fa- 

milliar names to the pioneers of the new county. 

It was not until late in the autumn of 1883 that tht? 

government survey was completed in western Faulk county, 

and the land was opened for settlement early in the spring 

of 1884. 



66 



CHAPTER IX 

THE WESTERN THIRD OF THE COUNTY. 

Late in the autumn of 1883 the west half of range 70 
and all of ranges 71 and 72 were without a settler. Early 
in March, 1884, C. H. Ellis, who had been located at Wes- 
sington in Beadle county for two years, started on a trip 
of exploration of these lands, which had just come into the 
market. Leaving the line of the Dakota Central railroad 
at St. Lawrence, in Hand county, and taking a northwest- 
erly direction, with his brother, Chas. V. Ellis, Joseph 
McGregor and Rufus Richie, they arrived at Mr. Conner's, 
section 3, township 119, range 69 for dinner. . In the after- 
noon they traveled about six miles north and eight miles 
west, and stopped for the night at a sod shanty on section 
34, township 118, range 70. The following day until 3 
o'clock p. m., was spent exploring land in township 117 
in ranges 71 and 72, and a location was decided upon on 
section 1, in township 117, range 72. They then started 
in a southeasterly direction, hoping to reach Ree Heights, 
on the Dakota Central railway. A few minutes past 5 
o'clock p. m., they sighted a shanty, which they decided 
to try to reach for a stopping place for the night, and 
which they judged to be not over three miles distant. Urg- 
ing their weary horses as best they could, at dark the shanty 
was yet in the unknown distance, but to their great joy a 
light appeared at the window. At a few minutes past 9 
o'clock the horses came to a sudden stop and could not be 
urged further. Upon examination they found themselves 



67 



at the top of a deep ravine. As they made this discovery 
the light -in the window went out; but after a few loud 
halloos, to theirdelight it reappeared. Soon a man, light in 
hand, made inquiry as to who was there and what was 
wanted. A few minutes later he was with the party and 
piloted them to a very comfortable stopping place for the 
night. The following day they reached their home at 
Wessington, via Ree Heights. 

With their railroad base established at Ree Heights, a 
few days later the party of six, with wagons loaded wnth 
lumber, made their second trip to the new location, which 
they had already christened EHisville. When about fifteen 
miles from Ree Heights and near the foot of a low range of 
cotea'ux that extended east and west along the north line of 
Hand and Hyde counties, they had their first experience 
with the sudden atmospheric changes peculiar to the Dako- 
tas. In an instant, from a beautiful, balmy, sunshiny af- 
ternoon, the weather changed and there were dark, whirl- 
ing clouds and furious, piercing winds that shut out all hope 
of their reaching their destination that night. Their course 
was promptly changed to due west, where they had dis- 
covered signs of civilization, which proved to be the home, 
consisting of a house and barn, of a pioneer settler. After 
a heroic struggle they suceeded in reaching the place and 
were made comfortable for the night. 

The following morning they started due north and at 
the foot of the coteaux or hills, discovered a creek of con- 
siderable size. They decided to follow its course in a 
northeasterly direction through the hills to the south line 
of Faulk county, where they discovered a small lake out of 
which the creek before mentioned flowed, and then made 



68 



their course northeast about six miles to EHisville. After 
they had eaten a cold dinner the work on the shanty com- 
menced, and before night closed in upon them they had 
completed a good, board shanty 10x14, set up the stove, 
made themselves comfortable for the night and felt quite at 
home. 

This party consisted of C. H. Ellis, George Hines, 
Otto Hines, Charles V. Ellis, Theodore Rector and Joseph 
McGregor. A land locating office was opened, a post-office 
established, with semi- weekly mail from Ree Heights, a 
printing office, store and school house soon followed. 
Ellisville was located on section 1, township 117, range 72, 
on the line of survey by the Chicago & Northwestern rail- 
way, with the positive assurance from the officers of that 
company that the road would certainly be built on the line 
of that survey. Ellisville was twenty miles south and west 
of Faulkton, twenty-five miles north and west from Ree 
Heights and twenty miles north of Highmore. And if the 
railroad officials had carried out their part of the agreement 
Ellisville would today be the leading and most influential 
town in western Faulk county. 

It was not long before Highmore became the railroad 
town for mail and all other communication with the out- 
side world, on account of the shorter distance, Even 
twenty miles over the prairie in the heat of summer, or 
cold, storms, and high, piercing winds and drifting snow, 
of winter without a single landmark by which to determine 
one's bearing, was a most severe and trying experience, 
that demanded courage and heroism which taxed the full 
power of the inexperienced pioneer. But for a light sus- 
pended twenty feet in the air, many a land -seeker would 



t/2 

o 

O 

U 

O 

o 

> 



00 
00 
00 







1'- 



71 



have spent a night in the prairie. Not that the experience 
of the pioneers was more exciting or tragic than many- 
others; but as an illustration of the common lot of the first 
settlers upon the broad prairies of the great northwest, is 
this sketch published. 

While some of these settlers are among the prominent 
and influential citizens of Faulk county to-day, many of 
them were young, unmarried men, who, after "proving up" 
their claims, returned to their former homes, leaving their 
lands unimproved. Many of these broad acres are now 
upon the market at prices that make them the most valu- 
able of any land in Faulk county, when the price at which 
they can be bought, is taken into consideration. 



72 



CHAPTER X. 

THE PIONEER SETTEER. 
(financial.) 

The history of the pioneers and early settlers of Faulk 
county has nothing materially different from what could 
be recorded of thousands of others. There have been hard- 
ships and disappointments, there have been sickness and 
discouragement, the drouth and hot waves; the blight, the 
wind and tornado, with the hard storms of winter. To 
those without the knowledge and experience to meet and 
successfully contend against such conditions, they brought 
disaster and ruin, which, together with homesickness, 
drove man}- a hardy pioneer to seek other, and, as they 
then thought, better and more desirable locations. Those 
years which brought little but disappointment and unre- 
quited toil, have long since passed, we hope and believe, 
never to return . Climatic changes have been marked and 
signal, and with the experience and superior knowledge of 
the enterprising, intelligent and persevering husbandmen, 
they have been turned to the advantage and actual advance- 
ment of the country and prosperity of the people. 

The return now and then of one of the disheartened 
and disappointed pioneers, who left in the years when crop 
failure was the rule rather than the exception, has almost 
invariably been followed by admission that it would have 
been far better to have remained and continued the strug- 
gle until the wonderful change that climatic conditions and 
perseverance have wrought on every hand, were available 
to all. 



73 



Could the history of all those who came to Faulk county 
in the eighties be written, and careful comparison be made 
between those who have struggled on through sunshine 
and storm, through adversity and prosperity, and who are 
now in possession of so many broad acres that make up the 
happy, prosperous homes now in the possession of these 
enterprising farmers and stockmen, and those who yielded 
to privation and hardship, it would be self evident that 
here, as in every other instance, perseverance and a heroic 
struggle come out very far ahead. 

And as year after year, with its abundant harvest and 
increasing prosperity comes to Faulk county, each adding 
to the happy homes the broad acres under cultivation, 
many times multiplied, with its waving grain and luxuri- 
ant grasses, grazing herds and various industries, support- 
ing a population of 25,000 and occupying her right position 
as the garden of South Dakota. This looking forward is 
not visionary nor imaginary, but based upon careful obser- 
vation and fully realized in all save actual numbers. 



74 



CHAPTER XI. 

THE FIRST MEMORIAL DAY. 
Among the pioneer settlers of Faulk county, the vete- 
rans of 1860-1864 were a goodly number, who had served 
their country in the Civil War. On the near approach of 
May 30, 1884, there was a general desire to appropriately 
observe this national holiday. Upon the coming of the day 
the people went forth with flowers to decorate the graves 
of our fallen heroes. The rains descended to baptize the 
floral offerings that came from sincere and sympathetic 
hearts. While the day opened rainy, and Unfavorable to 
those intending to come from distant parts of our county, 
the patriotism, love of country, enterprise and intelligence 
indicated by the number who did come, necessitated the 
idea of an indoor meeting being abandoned, and an out- 
door meeting to be held. The procession was formed at 
the school house, headed by some thirty children bearing 
wreaths of flowers; next came fifteen old soldiers, of which 
the following is a roster, viz: 

John H. Shirk, Co. E, 79th Reg., Penn. Vol. Infantry; 
J. P. Sutton, Co. D, 34th Reg., Iowa Vol. Infantry; 
H. K. Hursh, Co. A, 89th Reg., Indiana Vol. Infantry; 
L. K. Parmenter, Co. A, 14th Reg., Illinois Vol., Infantry; 
J. W. Parker, Co. G, 45th Reg., Illinois Vol. Infantry; 
G. Niederauer, Co. G. 1st Reg., Michigan Vol. Infantry; 
Rev. C. Douglas, Chaplain, 18th Reg., Mo. Vol. Infantry; 
W. H. DuBois, Co. D, 9th Reg., Indiana Vol. Cavalry; 
J. A. Pickler, Major, 3rd Reg., Iowa Vol. Cavalry; 



75 



M. Summy. Co. , 9th Reg., New York Cavalry, 
H. A. Humphrey, Co. A, 8th Reg., Illinois Cavalry; 
Peter Hawn, Co. Q, 8th. Reg., Illinois Cavalry; 
George J. Jarvis, 3rd Wisconsin Battery; 
P. B. Durley, Q. M., 124th Reg., Illinois Infantry; 
J. S. Hamilton, U. S. Navy. 

Then followed a large body of citizens. The column 
marched from the school house to a monument erected 
above a new made soldier's grave. The procession formed 
on three sides of the monument and grave, when the 
president of the day, Capt. J. H. Wallace, announced that 
exercises would be opened by prayer by Comrade Chaplain 
Clinton Douglas, followed by singing "Cover Them Over," 
by the Glee club. 

The children then decked the base of the monument 
with wreaths and covered the grave appropriately with 
flowers. Then followed an able and eloquent oration by 
Major J. A. Pickler, which was followed by the song, 
"Battle Cry of Freedom." The program closed with the 
reading, by Miss Ella Hamilton, of Will Carleton's beauti- 
ful Memorial Day poem, entitled, "Cover Them Over With 
Beautiful Flowers." 

The exercises were so intensely interesting that an 
hour was spent in reminiscences and song before the 
patriotic company broke up. 



76 



CHAPTER XII. 

NEW SOCIAL RELATIONS. 

No one element in human character is more marked 
and goes farther to make life happy and enjoyable than the 
readiness with which Americans, whether from the east or 
from the larger and more liberal west, adapt themselves to 
their immediate surroundings through their happy, genial 
sociability, the intuition with which they wisely select and 
appropriate, until the past, with all its loving and loveable 
association, is largely exchanged — though not forgotten — 
for present, active, living associations, to continue while 
life may last. 

These elements of character, so prominent among the 
first settlers of Faulk county, dispelled all loneliness and 
brought the pioneers from various sections of the Union 
into one satisfied, happy and congenial society. 

The extent to which this was accomplished in Faulk- 
ton may be realized from the following items published in 
the Faulkton Times of February 10th, 1884. a little more 
than a year after the first actual settlement of the town: 

"The Chautauqua Circle with invited giiests.to the 
number of nearly half a hundred, met at the residence of 
Major Pickler on Friday evening last, to celebrate the 
birthday anniversary of the Scottish poet, Burns, by appro- 
priate literary and musical exercises. If the unanimous 
and enthusiastic decision of those present can be adjudged 
correct, this proved to be the most enjoyable evinin.f4 in 
the three months history of the circle. And was carried 
out by the following programme: 



77 



Caledonia March, organ and violin — Messrs. McElherne 

and Howard, 
Biography of the Poet — F. A. Pangbyrn. 
Song, "Annie Laurie" — Mrs. Douglas, Mrs. Fifield and 

Mrs. Darby, 
Recitation, "Man was Made to Mourn" — P. B. Durley. 
Song, "Sweet Af ton "—Messrs. Turner, McElherne and 

Howard, 
Recitation, "Tarn O'Shanter" — Frank Turner, 
Recitation, "Bide a Wsa"— Mrs. Darby, Mrs, Fifield and 

Frank Turner, 
Recitation, "Northern Farmer" — F. S, McElherne. 
Recitation, "McPherson's Farewell"— -C. H. Howard. 
Medley of Scottish Airs, organ and violin,— Messrs. 

McElherne and Howard. 
Recitation, "John Anderson, my Jo, John" — Mrs, Pickler 

assisted by J. A. Pickler, 
Sentiments by the Circle. 
"Auld Lang Syne," by the company. 

In a programme so entirely well executed it seems 
scarcely just to discriminate, but the biography of the poet, 
by Mr. Pangburn, was such an admirable criticism of the 
life and character of the poet, that it is deserving of special 
mention. And the recitation of Tarn O'Shanter, by Mr. 
Turner, was faultless in force, dialect and expression, as 
was Tennyson's Northern Farmer, so finely rendered by 
Mr. McElherne. The music was good, as it always is in 
charge of those to whom that part was assigned. As a 
happy reminder of the occasion, the name "Robert Burns, 
1759," in silver letters on cardinal streamers was promin- 
ently displayed. It is a pleasure to note the increasing in- 



78 



interest in, and love for the best literature of the age, 
which the C. L,. S. C. brings to its members. Let others 

be organized in the county." 

* * 

* 

On Saturday evening last one of those pleasant sur- 
prises that sweeten life and awaken the heart to newer and 
tenderer sympathies, found its intended victim in the per- 
son of our worthy bachelor friend, Mr. Bernard Paulson, 
and happened in this way: A few days ago, Captain and 
Mrs. Humphrey discovered, in looking over the Times of 
a year ago, a reference to Mr. Paulson's birthday occuring 
on the 9th of February. With their characteristic trait of 
doing something to make people happy, they decided to 
make arrangements, unknown to Mr. Paulson, to celebrate 
it this year. They accordingly invited him to spend the 
evening with them, and extended the invitation to as many 
friends as could be accomodated in their snug little home. 
On the evening named, as the company turned the curve in 
the road which brings the house into full view, there was a 
spontaneous burst of admiration as they caught sight of it, 
beautifully illuminated, every window radiant, looking like 
a fairy picture, with its background and foreground of 
snow, over which the lights were brilliantly gleaming. 
We were met at the door by the gsnial host and hostess ex- 
tending a welcome to all, and soon found ourselves under 
benign influences radiating from the big base burner in an 
atmosphere that spake not of the winter without. When 
all the guests had assembled, Capt. Humphrey in a few well 
chosen words, in which he said something about bachelors 
needing someone to assist tliem in celebrating aimiver- 



81 



saries, introduced Mr. Paulson as the honored guest of the 
evening, it being the occasion of his 47th birthday. Mr, 
Paulson's surprise found expression in kindly thanks, also 
remarking that his birthday had not been celebrated since 
ten years ago, and that a friend had written a poem for that 
occasion, which he, in looking over other papers that day 
had found and put in his pocket and which at the request 
of the company he read, and his happy countenance and 
cheerful acquiescence in the pleasures of the evening gave 
evidence of his appreciation of the honor intended. Well, 
we wish space would permit us to tell about the refresh- 
ments — how delicious was the ice cream, how we had real 
wedding cake all the way from Illinois, and sponge, and 
delicate, and chocolate and other cake, and amber coffee 
with real cream, etc., etc., and the sprightly conversation 
and amusing games, among them that of prominent men, 
when Mr. Paulson kept us guessing so long about Barnuni, 
and Mn Munroe did likewise with Daniel Boone, and 
others equally good, and how reluctantly the party rose to 
go at nearly the midnight hour and took leave, wishing 
Mr. Paulson many happy returns, and expressing their in- 
debtedne.ss to Captain and Mrs. Humphrey for one of the 

happiest evenings spent in our new Dakota/' 

* * 

"The Congregational church of Faulkton was organ- 
ized on Saturday, January 6th, by adopting a carefully 
drawn constitution, articles of faith and covenant. And 
at an adjourned meeting held on Wednesday afternoon^ 
January 10th, there were thirteen members who entered 
into <covenantj and there were seven niore who proposed to 



82 



unite at the first communion. The following- officers were 
elected at the adjourned meeting: Pastor, Clinton Douglas; 
Trustees, M. Summy, P. B. Durley and Geo. A. Morse; 
Deacons, P. B. Durley, S. N. Whittlesey; Treasurer, E. E. 
Pierce; Clerk, R. G. Newton. An examining committee 
and a committee on music were also chosen. The church 
voted to have regular service every Sunday at 11 o'clock, 
and a prayer meeting at the pastor's house every Wednes- 
day afternoon at three o'clock. Communion at the hour 
of regular service, every two months, beginning on the 
first Sabbath in January," 



g3 



CHAPTER XIII. 

THE FIRST ELECTION. 

A county organization had been secured with appointed 
officials; but not until the national election of November, 
1884, had county and district conventions been held, and 
the LaFoon Record, Vol. II, No. 36, Evans & Geddes pro- 
prietors, of November 1, 1884, published the following 
National Republican ticket: 

P'or president, James G. Blaine, of Maine; for vice 
president, John A. Logan, of Illinois. Territorial ticket: 
For delegate to congress. District of Dakota, Oscar S. Gif- 
ford. Legislative ticket, sixth district: For councilmen J. P. 
Day and J. H. Westover; for representatives, J. A. Pickler, 
G. W. Pierce, J. T. Blackmore, and M. L- Miller; County 
Ticket: For Judge of Probate Court, C. H. Derr; for 
Clerk of District Court, F. A. Pangburn; for Register of 
Deeds, Jas. W. Johnston; for County Attorney, E. G. Clif- 
ford; for County Treasure, P. E. Knox; for Sheriff, L- M. 
Buland; for Supsrintendant of Schools, Mrs. A. P. Rose; 
for Assessor, E. C. Sage; for Surveyor, B. H. Clark; for 
Coroner, L- M. Sprowls; for Justices of the Peace, Frank 
Turner, Darius S. Smith, W. R. Davis and W. G. Faulk- 
ner; for Constables, J. W. Bass, C. B. Oakes, Edward 
Hoisel and C. J. Cooper; for County Seat, LaFoon; for 
County Commissioner, Second District, John L- Chain. 

The following account of the First Republican County 
Convention, published by the Faulkton Times of Sept. 
1884, is entitled to a place of record as a historical event of 
that day. 



84 



"Faulk county has had her first county convention for 
the nomination of county officers. It assembled at LaFoon 
last Saturday pursuant to call. Shortly after 11 o'clock, 
the hour set for the convention to meet, the delegates, can- 
didates and spectators — about an equal number of each — 
assembled at the school house, and were called to order by 
C. H. Derr. The call was read by M. L. Wood, who 
placed in nomination L. H. Bailey for temporary chairman. 
Morgan G. Millard and A. E. Evans were chosen secretar- 
ies. 

On motion the delegation of each precinct named a mem- 
ber of the committee on credentials. The following per- 
sons were named: 

Precinct No. 1, G. S. Rice, 

Precinct No. 2, Mark Purdy, 

Precinct No. 3, Geo. B. Dyer, 

Precinct No. 4, Chas. Rathke, 

Precinct No. 5, J. V. Smack, 

Precinct No. 6, W. G. Faulker, 

Precinct No. 7, P. B. Durley, 

Precinct No. 8, Chas. Oakes, 

Precinct No. 9, H. S. Utley, 

Precinct No. 11, Harris Pool, 

Precinct No. 12, Geo. A. Morse, 

Precinct No. 13, C. H. Ellis. 

There being a contest from number 10 no member of 
the committe was allowed from tiiis precinct. 

On motion the chairman appointed the following com- 
mittee on permanent organization; R. G. Morton, M. G- 
Millard, H. A. Humphrey and two others whose names 
are not given. 



85 



On motion each precinct designated a member of the 
County Central Committee. The following now constitute 
the Central Committee: 

Precinct No. 1, J. P. Randall, 

Precinct No. 2, W. M. Walker, 

Precinct No. 3, Morgan G. Millard, 

Precinct No. 4, Chas. Rathke, 

Precinct No. 5, H. W. Reinicke, 

Precinct No. 6, J. H. Shirk, 

Precinct No. 7, P. B. Durley, 

Precinct No. 8, C. H. Derr, 

Precinct No. 9, A. F. Clark, 

Precinct No. 10, J. R. Dutch, 

Precinct No. 11. M. L. Wood, 

Precinct No. 12, Geo. A. Morse, 

Precinct No. 13, Wm. H. Lower, 

On motion the chairman appointed the following as a 
committee to place in nomination delegates to the Pierre 
and Redfield conventions: 

P. B. Durley, B. H. Clark, F. M. Byrne and Charles 
Chambers. 

The convention then adjourned until 1 p. m. 

When the convention met in the afternoon the com- 
mittee on credentials reported the following delegates: 

1— G. S. Rice, L. H. Bailey. Ed. Clifford, James 
Devine, Chas. Chambers. 

2— M. Purdy, C. C. Gettings, A. Garrick. 

3— Morgan G. Millard, G. W. McTier, Geo. B. Dyen 

4— Charles Rathke, Otto Mielke. 

5— Harry A. Sprrwles, J, V, Smack, B. H. Clark. 



86 



6— J. A. Pickler, W. G. Faulker, J. W. Bass, J. H. 
Shirk. 

7— P. B. Durley, Ed. Hoisel, H. A. Humphrey, J. W. 
Haj^s. 

8— A. B. Sheldon, R. G. Morton, Joseph Powell, C. 
B. Oakes, A. E. Evans. 

9— H. S. Utley, Geo. M. Buterfield, Alex Miller, 
R. Travis. 

10 — Robert Knapton, F. M. Brown, J. M. Miles. 

11— H. Chain, H. Pool, Orin Strevel, H. Metz. 

12— D. O. Hillman, Geo. A. Morse, Chas. S. Chase. 

13— C. H. Ellis, W. W. Gwin, John Parsons. 

Geo. A. Morse presented a minority report on precinct 
No. 10 recommending Theodore Speltz and August Seemer 
to seats in the convention, but this was voted down and 
the delegation above named admitted to seats. 

Committee on permanent organization repOx"ted in 
favor of making the temporary organization permanent, 
which report met the unanimous endorsement of the con- 
vention. 

The convention then proceeded to the nominations. 

C. H. Derr received 46 votes for the nomination of 
probate judge and was declared the unanimous choice of 
the convention for that office. 

On motion it was ordered that the first vote in all the 
succeeding nominations be considered informal. 

Frank A. Pangburn, of Faulkton, received 40 and J. 
W. Miles, of LaF^oon, 6 votes for the nomination of clerk 
of district court. The nomination of Mr. Pangburn was 
made unanimous. 



87 



Before the convention assembled it was plain to be 
seen that the nomination for register of deeds and county 
clerk had narrowed down to Charles I. Crow, of DeVoe, 
and Jas. W. Johnston, of LaFoon. No other candidates 
were talked of. On the informal ballot Johnston received 
27 and Crow 19 votes. The nomination of Johnston was 
made unanimous. 

For treasurer, P. K- Knox received 37 votes and E. C, 
Sage 9. 

For county superintendent of schools, Mrs. Rose re- 
received 37 votes and Mr. Davis 9. 

For sheriff ly. M. Buland received 30 votes and Harry 
Chamberlain 16. 

For assessor E. C, Sage received 17 votes, F. A. Sea- 
man 15, Samuel Davisson 8, A. A. Garrick 3, A. E. Clark 
3. The name of Davisson was then withdrawn in favor of 
Seaman. The second ballot resulted as follows: Sage 28 
votes, Seaman 18. 

Dr. ly. M. Sprowles was nominated by acclamation for 
the office of coroner. 

B. H. Clark received 46 votes for the nomination of 
surveyor. 

E. C. Clifford and Geo. J. Jarvis were the candidates 
before the convention for district attorney, the former re- 
ceived 42 votes, the latter 4. 

Each of the foregoing nominations were, in their turn, 
and with a hearty and good natured shout, made unanimous. 

The following were nominated for justices of the peace: 
Frank Turner, W. R. Davis, W. G. Faulkner, and D. S. 
Smith. For constables: J. W. Bass, C. B. Oakes, Ed. 
Hoisel and Chauncy J. Cooper. 



88 



The report of the committee on nomination of dele- 
gates to the Pierre and Redfield conventions was taken up 
and adopted. Following- are the delegates: To the Pierre 
convention, J. A. Pickler and John L, Chain; to the Red- 
field convention: W. S. Belknap, C. H. Ellis, M. L. Wood 
and F. M. Brown. 

The following resolutions were adopted by a unani- 
mous vote of the convention: 

Resolved, 1, That in this, the first republican conven- 
tion of Faulk county, we affirm our allegiance to the prin- 
ciples of the republican party and, although deprived of 
the privilege of expressing our preference by the ballot, we 
desire to voice our sentiment in favor of James G. Blaine 
and John A. lyOgan for President and Vice-President of 
the Nation, and that we invite all persons without regard 
to farmer party affiliation to join and cooperate with us in. 
furthering the common interests of our county. 

2nd, That deeming the division of this territory and 
the admission of that porfion south of the 46th parallel as 
a state, paramount in importance to all other political ques- 
tions, we respectfully and persistently demand such nat- 
ional legislation as will secure this result. 

3rd, That we are unalterably opposed to the admission 
of the territory, as a whole, to statehood. 

4th, That the thanks of the party are due to the gen- 
tlemen comprisng the Wood and Derr committees for the 
masterly and satisfactory manner in which thev united 
their connnittees, thus restoring harmony in the party, and 
that we pledge our earnest support to the ticket today uom- 
inaLted by the couventioii. 



YOl 









M' X 



91 



The following resolution recommending J. A. Pickler 
as a candidate for the territorial legislature and instructing 
the delegates to the Redfield convention to support him 
was introduced by G. S- Rice in a brilliant and eloquent 
speech. 

Whereas, It seems to be the desire of the republicans 
of Faulk county to present the name of a Faulk county 
citizen for the office of member of the legislature, be it 
therefore, 

Resolved, That our delegates to Redfield be instructed 
to use all honorable means to secure the nomination of 
Mr. J. A. Pickla- as candidate for said office. 

The Major responded in a few touching words, thanks 

ing the convention for the honor conferred, and pledging 

himself, if elected, to faithfully protect the interests of the 

people. The resolution was unanimously adopted. 

Thus, having finished its labors, the first county con- 
vention of Faulk county adjourned to meet at the polls and 

elect the ticket, A more intelligent and harmonious body 

we have seldom seen. The order and system with which 

the proceedings were carried on showed, on the part of all, 

&. familiaritv with the public business, ' ' 



92 



CHAPTER XIII CONTINUED, 

NEW POSTOFFICES. 

On October 17th, 1882, the Faulkton postoffice was 
established, being the first one in Faulk county. On the 
24th of July, 1884, one year and nine months from the 
establishment of the first office, there were twelve post- 
offices doing business in the countj^ viz: Faulkton, LaFoon, 
DeVoe, Wesley, Roanoke, Scatterwood, Cresbard, Har- 
rington, Newton, Myron, Mason City and EHisville, with 
mail and stage routes as follows: From Miller, in Hand 
county, to Faulkton; tri- weekly from Faulkton to Aber- 
deen, in Brown county; from Athol, in Spink county, tri- 
weekly' and from Highmore, in Hyde county, to Ellisville, 
semi- weekly. 

An educated, intelligent, law abiding class of citizens 
were to be found in all parts of the county. Schools were 
established, the Sabbath observed, there were Sunday 
schools in numerous places and religious services were reg- 
ularl}' held and were well attended. 

The people had come from their old homes in different 
sections of this country, from Canada, and quite a number 
from Europe, to find a common home in Dakota, to become 
Dakotans, neighbors and friends, with common interests 
and a common purpose, to succeed. Not to be satisfied 
with conditions of the past, but to improve upon them, to 
surround themselves with better and more enjoyable asso- 
ciations, to lay the foundation broad and wide for greater 
social, intellectual and political advancement and pros- 
perity. 



93 



CHAPTER XIV. 

THE DONATION OF A CHURCH BEI.L. 

Among the early settlers of Faulk county there was no 
one of broader and more liberal view than Capt. John 
Douglas, who located in the extreme western part of the 
county, or one who took a deeper interest in the general 
upbuilding of society. His family, his town or his im- 
mediate surroundings were far from being the whole world 
to him. Among the public spirited acts of Capt. Douglas, 
and one that reached our people in a way not to be forgot- 
ten, was his influence in securing to a struggling congre- 
gation a fine toned bell that continues to ring out upon 
every Sabbath morning a call to assemble, recognize and 
"Praise Him From Whom all Blessings Flow." 

The interest in and appreciation of the act by the 
people of Faulkton, is best told by the following extracts 
from the local paper of that week: 

"judge J. Douglas, of Eonaconing, Md., father of 
Capt. J. Douglas of Seneca, has presented to the Congre- 
gational church of this place a 550-pound bell, tone "a." 
The bell will be shipped from the McShane bell foundry of 
Baltimore, and will cost $140. The bell is the free and 
generous gift of Judge Douglas, and one that will be most 
acceptable and gratefully received by the church and fully 
appreciated and enjoyed by all. It is anticipated that its 
welcome tones will be heard in Faulkton within a month." 

THE BELL. 
"The Times last week mentioned the arrival of the 
bell donated by Judge J. Douglas of Lonaconing, Maryland, 



94 



to the Congregational church of this place. On Saturday 
afternoon it was raised by willing hands to its place in the 
belfr^^ of the new church — which is an ornament to the 
town and county — and an impromptu service was held. 
Among other choice selections rendered by the choir, was 
the following hymn, written for the occasion by C. C. 
Moulton, leader of the choir, which, with its perfect ren- 
dering, seemed a happy inspiration, aptly expressing the 
sentiment and feeling of th2 hearts of all: 

Thanks be to God 

Our bell has come! 

Its tones our hearts rejoice. 

Now, let a joyful song of praise 

Ascend from heart and voice. 

Its clarion tone, 

From yonder tower, 
Shall o'er these prairies ring! 

Inviting all to come to church 
And worship Christ, their King. 

With grateful hearts 

Our thanks we send 

To him w ho gave the bell; 

And may the blessings of our God 

With him forever dwell. 

Rev. Douglas, pastor of the church, spoke with much 
feeling in behalf of his people, giving Judge Douglas the 
thanks and God the praise. Others spoke, representing 
the generous sentiment of other churches, in congratula- 
tion of Rev. Douglas and his people in gratitude to Judge 
Douglas for a gift so unsectarian as to be of equal pleasure 
and benefit to all; in representation of the sentiment of 



95 



thanks, universally shared by the citizens of the town, for 
the generous gift; praise for the good genius of Judge 
Douglas, in discovering the key that would open to him 
the door of every home in Faulkton, and the improving by 
him of an opportunity to reach directly and at once the 
hearts of all our people by the single stroke of the bell; in 
acknowledgement of the gratitude of the people for the 
bell — the first church bell in the county — the hanging of 
which would mark an event in the progress of the develop- 
ment of the county and the building of Faulkton, that 
would be looked back to as a mile stone in our history. 
As supplementary, and in addition to such action as might 
be taken by the church, the following resolutions were un- 
animously adopted: 

Whereas, Judge John Douglas, of Lonaconing, Mary- 
land, has^ presented a church bell to the Congregational 
people of this place; and, 

Whereas, Its tones, sounding from the belfry of their 
church, are enjoyed and appreciated by all the people of 
Faulkton; therefore, 

Resolved, That the citizens heartily unite with the 
people of the Congregational church in extending to Judge 
Douglas most sincere and grateful thanks for his thought- 
ful and generous gift. 

Resolved, That a unanimous vote of thanks is due 
Capt. J. Douglas, of Seneca, through whose interest and 
influence the magnificent gift of his father, Judge Douglas, 
was made to the people of Faulkton. 

Capt. J. Douglas, of Seneca, accompanied by his 
daughter. Miss Jessie, and his sister, Mrs. Beltz, of Ohio, 
was present at the hanging of the bell. The Captain spoke 



96 



\n modest depreciation of the magnitude of the gift, in the 
estimation of his father, and, while he gracefully acknowl- 
edged the expressions of thanks and gratitude, thought 
them greater than WQUW be desired by him^" 



97 



CHAPTER XV, 

VETERANS OF THE CIVIL WAR. 

Among the early comers to Dakota were a large num- 
ber of Civil War veterans. To those who were able to en- 
dure the hardships and privations of pioneer life, the home- 
stead, pre-emption and tree claim laws of the United States 
offered great inducements. To a class of men whose busi- 
ness had been destroyed by the ravages of the Civil War, 
there was much to lead them. Grand Army posts were 
organized, and while the discussion of political affairs was 
excluded from regular post meetings, there is not a doubt 
that the power and influence of these organizations did 
much to shape and materialize the political ascendancy of 
republican party in Faulk county, and in fact in the entire 
State of South Dakota, 

The old soldiers as a class were second to none in 
.sturdy manhood, and in their devotion to home and 
country. These brave men are answering to the last roll call. 
Soldiers' homes will be turned to other uses and the Grand 
Army posts will soon close their doors forever to the veter- 
ans of the Civil War. 

The Faulk ton post has borne upon its rolls many 
honored names of veterans who have already answered the 
last roll call. At the present time seventeen names ap- 
pear upon the roll. Many of the old soldiers are too feeble 
to regularly attend the meetings of the post, and were it 
not for the assistance and encouragement they receive from 
the loyal members of the devoted and hard working 
Woman's Relief Corps, who so faithfully came to their 
support, they would have ere now, ceased to exist. This 
popular, worthy and successful organization bears upon its 



98 



rolls at the present day the names of the following earnest 
and faithful workers: 

John A. Pickler 

John Swearngen 

M. S. McDearmon 

Geo. J. Jarvis 

John W. Hays 

A. A. Andrews 

Thomas O'Neil 

D. W. Pillsbiiry 



John A. Shirk 
Robert Knapton 
C. H. Derr 
A. J. Sprague 
John Pafford 
Jasper Wakefield 
Edwin MoComb 
Henry A, Wilkinson. 




.,<^#^ 



THE NE^V YORK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



^STOR. LEMOX 



101 



CHAPTER XV CONTINUED. 

GRAND ARMY POST 

Phil H. Sheridan Post, No. 72, Department ©f South 
Dakota, is located in the citj^ of Faulkton, in Faulk county. 
The first regular step toward effecting the organization 
was at the time of holding the memorial service, heretofore 
referred to in this history, on the 30th of May, 1884. Major 
Pickler was elected commander of the post. Since its or- 
ganization the names of one hundred and eight veterans 
have been borne upon its rolls. Removals, death and other 
causes have reduced that number to eighteen. The follow- 
ing worthy comrades have been elected to the office of 
commander: 

J. A. Pickler . Charles H. Gardner 

M.S. McDearmon John H. Shirk 

M. Summy H. W. Bailey 

Ernest Thiede A. P. Cavit 

George J. Jarvis Joel Rush 

John W. Hays John Pafford 

A. J. Sprague 

After 24 years, in 1908, Major Pickler was again elect- 
ed post commander. 

At an earlv day a lot was set aside in the Faulkton 
cemetery for soldiers of the Civil War. in which the fol- 
lowing have been laid to rest, and where, each Memorial 
Day markers are set up and the stars and stripes wave over 
their graves, viz: 



102 



Levi Morse A. A. Morse 

Henry M. Metz James Carn 

Adam Findeis Henry Potter 

Joel Rush Solomon Trude 

Clark Rice 
Ere another twenty-four years shall have passed, the 
hall of the Faulkton Grand Army Post and Woman's 
Relief Corps will cease to exist so far as its present users 
are concerned, but as a memorial to its worthy dead may it 
ever stand. 



103 



CHAPTER XVI. 

EDUCATIONAL. 

It was not long that the sod shanty stood alone; for 
these early, persevering pioneers were of that class who 
had enjoyed and highly prized educational advantages. 
The sod school house came as an accompaniment to the 
humble homes that in a day sprang up over the broad 
prairies, so lately the home of wild beasts and wilder 
Indians, who roamed undisturbed over these beautiful 
prairies. The education of their children was among the 
first duties of parental life, and with food and clothing 
stood in equal rank, all absolutely necessary. 

There were sources of worry connected with, and a 
part of, school life. The going to and coming from school 
along a dim and almost unmarked trail, the occasional 
predatory bands of Indians passing in close proximity, and 
the storm and blizzard, that left desolation and death in 
their train, were all to be contended with, and added much 
to the burden of life that bore so heavy upon these sturdy 
pioneers. Yet, in spite of all these, the good work went on. 
The school was so highly prized and its importance so 
fully realized, that it kept equal pace with the best efforts 
of pioneer life. Even those who had enjoyed few educa- 
tional advantages, became interested and were anxious for 
their children to improve every opportunity to learn. The 
sod school house was soon succeeded by good, substantial 
frame buildings, and as early as 1886, became landmarks 
even in remote parts of the county, by which the location 
of various pioneer settlers were described. 



104 



Townships were organized for school purposes, taxes 
levied and good, comfortable school houses erected wherev- 
er required. From the first, Faulkton was prominent and 
active in the interest of education. Among the early 
teachers were, Mrs. McCoy, Mrs. Bissell, Mrs. Putney, 
Mr. Pangburn, Mrs. G. S. Staples and Mr. Coste. Rev. 
Mr. Curtis, Mr. George A. Morse, C. C. Moulton, J. H. 
Bottum, C. C. Norton, Mr. Bissell and Mr. Bryden were 
active supporters in all that advanced the interests of the 
common schools. It was not until 1900, that the present 
school building, suitable to accommodate all the schools in 
Faulkton was erected. 

In 1901 the High School was organized with Prof. J. 
F. Armstrong, principal, and Rev. Mr. Curtis, Mrs. Frieze, 
lyula Pickler and Miss Coman, teachers. 

In 1908 the Faulkton High School is the equal of any 
high school in the state, its graduates passing a creditable 
examination for taking a collegiate course, and of as high 
intellectual, social and moral standard as those with whom 
they associate. 

The present board of education is C. C. Norton, clerk; 
J. H. Wallace, treasurer, and the following board of direct- 
ors; F. M. Byrne, J. H. Bottum, C. C. Norton, P. H. 
O'Neil and Frank Turner. Prof. H. B. Callin, superin- 
tendent, with a most excellent corps of assistants, are ad- 
vancing the high standard of excellence the school has al- 
ready attained. 

The county superintendent of schools, Mrs. I. M. Al- 
den, makes the following report as to the schools in the 
county for 1907: 



105 



"There are one thousand six hundred and thirty-one 
pupils enrolled in the county and there are eighty-two 
school houses, valued at $56,000. There were seventy- 
eight teachers employed, to whom $21,694 were paid for 
monthly wages. Each district contains a school library. 
The total expenditures for district schools for the year 
A. D., 1907, was $53,976.82." 



106 



CHAPTER XVII. 

THE RAILROAD. 

It was not until 1886 that the railroad question was set- 
tled, and that year, Oct. 28th, regular trains commenced 
running from Faulkton to Redfield. On August 7th, 
Engineer Miller of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul 
Railway, with his engineer corps, arrived at Faulkton on 
the survey from Aberdeen, via Roscoe, to Orient. The 
location of these roads settled the question of the location 
of town sites along their lines, and changed the county seat 
from LaFoon to Faulkton. The county seat question hav- 
ing been settled for all time, and nearly all the townships 
for school and election purposes with business centers es- 
tablished. There was a consciousness of permanent, rather 
than pioneer, settlement, a security of home and business 
relations that could not be realized while this important 
question, that means so much to every civilized community 
was in doubt. 

Altogether, 1886 was an eventful year in the history of 
Faulk county. Possibly more real homes were established 
by the arrival of wives and children to occupy the humble 
but substantial houses that had been erected by the enter- 
prising and self-sacrificing husbands and fathers, that with 
high hopes of better conditions had preceded them, than in 
any other one year in its history. 

But with the coming of the railroad towns were not 
only made, but their downfall assured. LaFoon, with its 
homes, school houses, churches and county building, was 



107 



on wheels to become an integral part of Faulkton. Harring- 
ton was lost in Burkmere and Ellisville, save in name, be- 
came Seneca. Business centers became fixed, new social 
surrounding assured and a general consciousness felt that 
a foundation had been laid upon which future structures 
should be erected and future greatness established for all 
time. 



108 



CHAPTER XVIII. 

F^AUIvK COUNTY IN 1908. 

Faulk county is most favorably located in Central 
South Dakota. It is a little north of the geographical cen- 
ter of the state and embraces a most beautiful portion of 
that most wonderful wheat belt that produces No. 1 hard, 
and is known all over the world. In extent it is north 
and south, twenty-four miles; east and west, forty-two 
miles comprising a total area of one thousand and eight 
square miles divided into twenty-eight congressional town- 
ships, six miles square. It is a high plateau, slightly roll- 
ing, lying east of, and at the foot of, a light range of 
coteaux that divide the waters of the James from those of 
the Missouri river, and gradually sloping toward the James 
river. The Snake, or the Nixon, river rises in the extreme 
western portion of the county and runs east through its 
center, emptying into the James river near Ashton in Spink 
county, supplying a large region with beautiful, clear 
spring water. In addition to the water from the river, 
springs and lakes, there are now in Faulk county 360 flow- 
ing artesian wells, which have completely removed Faulk 
county from the dry belt into the "sure crop" region of 
the country. 

There are now thirteen railroad towns in the county, 
five besides the City of Faulkton, on the main line of the 
Chicago and Northwestern railroad from Gettysburg, in 
Potter county, to Watertown, Brookings, St. Paul, Min- 
neapolis, Milwaukee and Chicago. Three are on the 



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THE NEW YORK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



ASTOR. LFNOX 
TiLDEN FOU* 0" :^'<f' 



Ill 



Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, on its extension from 
Aberdeen via Roscoe, in Edmunds county, and Faulkton, 
to Orient. The Minneapolis & St. lyouis railroad, passing 
through the northern part of the county from east to west 
to the Missouri river at lycBeau, has five stations, around 
which are springing up live and promising towns. A 
grade from Aberdeen direct to Pierre, passing through the 
county via Faulkton from northeast to south west, which, 
if not ironed in the near future, will be as soon as the 
traffic along its line actually demands it. The completion 
of this line will make Faulk county one of the best, as far 
as railroad facilities to meet the demands of the agricul- 
tural industries are concerned, in all the northwest. 

Typographically, P'aulk county is without a peer. 
Its gradual descent from the western line of the county to 
the eastern line, though slightly rolling, gives many of the 
most delightful views to be found. Its high altitude, clear, 
bracing atmosphere, its charming, sunshiny days and love- 
ly, moon shining and starlight nights are entrancing to the 
beholder. Its luxuriant grasses and quick response to the 
tiller of its soil, are the wonder and admiration of the 
agriculturalist- 
Its high altitude or some unknown cause gives shorter, 
milder and more desirable winters than are found either 
immediately east or west of the county. The soil is heavy, 
fertile and very productive, adapted to stock-raising and 
farm products of every variety. Wheat, oats, corn, flax, 
barley and rye are staple crops. All varieties of vegetables 
are successfully raised in the most enormous quantities and 
of the finest quality. Though a comparatively new county, 
Faulk county took the third premium in 1885 and the sec- 



112 



ond premium in 1887, for the best county exhibit at the 
Territorial Agricultural Fair. At the State Fair at Aber- 
deen in 1891, Faulk county took the first premium on gen- 
eral farm products; also at the State Fair at Yankton in 
1903 and 1904 and at Huron in 1905. In fact she has 
never made an exhibit without receiving a premium, which 
speaks volumes for her climate conditions, the fertility of 
her soil and the perseverance and skill of her husbandmen. 
The rich, nutritious buffalo grass, which is indigenous 
to the entire county, not only in the usual grazing season, 
but through the entire year (unless covered with snow) 
furnishes abundant feed to keep horses and neat stock in 
good growing condition. For the winter of 1907-8 there 
was only a part of one day in which, the snow was too deep 
for stock to live and thrive upon the range. I learn from a 
reliable farmer and stockman that his horses and neat 
cattle steadily thrived and actually gained in flesh through 
the entire winter. The season of 1908 has returned an 
abundant harvest, commanding high prices on the market 
and the outlook for the future was never so encouraging 
as at the present time. 

The climate is delightful, the atmosphere dry, but rain 
is generally abundant when most needed. The roads are 
muddy only for a few hours after the rain ceases, the water 
passing down into the ground almost immediately. The 
seasons are as early, the summer is as long and the autumn 
as late, as in states farther east and south of South Dakota. 
Seeding is generally completed here before it is begun in 
Northern Iowa and while Minnesota, and Wisconsin are 
snowbound. 



113 



The most careful observation warrants the opinion 
that nowhere in northern latitude can a more desirable lo- 
cation be found for successful diversified farming, than in 
Faulk county, South Dakota, where there is abundant 
room for an agricultural population of 20,000 or 25,000. 
In 1883 and 1884 a large number of persons came to Faulk 
county for the sole purpose of securing a quarter section of 
government land under the preemption law, and, after 
proving up — making final proof — returned to their homes, 
holding their land as an investment, until it should be- 
come more valuable. Thousands of acres of these lands 
are now on the market and can be obtained for less than 
half the price of inferior and less productive lands in north- 
ern and central Iowa. 

The future of Faulk county, from a financial, social 
and intellectual standpoint, is exceedingly flattering, The 
steady westward trend of emigration warrants the predic- 
tion that Faulk county lands will soon be in the hands of 
actual, industrious farmers, becoming the richest and 
most prosperous in its various agricultural productions and 
placing more of them upon the market, than any other 
county in the northwest. 

Another important fact to be taken into account by 
the home-seeker, is the educational advantages of Faulk 
county. More than 35,800 acres of these rich, fertile lands 
constitute a school fund in perpetuity. While a wise 
policy may determine that they shall not be sold, they can 
be rented and the rich, luxuriant grasses utilized for hay 
and pasturage, while at no very distant future a revenue 
should be realized to materially lighten the burden of taxa- 
tion for our common schools. 



114 



With the best of vSchool facilities and commodious 
houses of worship at ahiiost every desirable point in the 
entire county, one can make no mistake in securing a quar- 
ter or half section of these rich, productive lands for a per- 
manent home. 

The city of Faulkton, the county seat, is located on 
the bank of the Nixon river on sections 14 and 15, town- 
ship 118, range 69, near the geographical center of the 
county, and with its immediate suburbs has about 1,000 
inhabitants. A commodious, well constructed and con- 
venient court house, good for the next fifty 3^ears, four 
churches — Methodist Episcopal, Congregational, F^ree 
Methodist and Roman Catholic — a fine school building with 
school second to none in its primary and preparatory 
courses, a high school of the first order. 

With an intelligent, educated class of citizens, deeply 
interested in sustaining the high standard attained, and 
with a determination that the education of the young peo- 
ple of this city shall hold them in the front rank, our edu- 
cational facilities would appear to be assured. 

The Masonic lyodge and Royal Arch Chapter of 
Masons, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Maccabees. 
Workmen, Woodmen, Eastern Star, Ladies of the Macca- 
bees, Degree of Honor, Woman's Relief Corps, Grand 
Army of the Republic, Tuesday Club, Modern Brother- 
hood of America and the various organizations connected 
with the churches, speak well for the social, intellectual, 
moral and religious standing of the people. 



115 



CHAPTER XIX. 

FROM COUNTY COMMISSIONER'S RECORD 

At a meeting of the county commissioners held at Ea- 
Foon, Monday, September 8, 1884, Commissioner H. A. 
Humphrey and M. J. Jarvds present the county was divid- 
ed into thirteen election precincts with the following voting 
places: 

No. 1. School house near section 31, township 120, 
range 66. 

No. 2. House of S. E. Purdy on the southwest quar- 
ter of section 21, township 120, range 68. 
No. 3. House of Edward Stickle. 
House of Charles Rathke. 
House of Abram Griffee. 
School house at Harrington. 
Office of Union House at Faulkton. 
Office of Bottum & Johnston, LaFoon. 
Office of hotel at DeVoe. 
No. 10. School hovise on section 7, township 117, 
range 66. 

No. 11. School house on section 16, township 117, 
range 68. 

No. 12. House of C. S. Clare, southwest quarter, 
township 118, range 70. 

No. 13. Office of C. H. Ellis in EUisville. 
The following were appointed judge in said precincts: 
No. 1. R. O. Thayer, W. P. Randall and C. H. 
Maxwell. 



No. 


4. 


No. 


5. 


No. 


6. 


No. 


7. 


No. 


8. 


No. 


9. 



116 



No. 2. Alex Garrick, D. Roy Jones and W. M. 
Walker. 

No. 3. George B. Dyer. Cephus R. Saunders and J. 
L. Robinson. 

No. 4. Chas. Rathke, K. Rathke and Otto Mielke. 

No. 5. Abram Griffee, J. V. Smack and B. H. Clark. 

No. 6. W. G. Faulkner, J. W. Bass and J. H. Shirk. 

No. 7. E. S. Brown, E. H. Thayer and E. C. Sage. 

No. 8. Joseph Powell, C. M. Kellogg and A. H. Yost. 

No. 9. S. P. Clark, W. R. Davis and W. W. Morse. 

No. 10. August Harmon, Jacob Parsons and Joseph 
Brown . 

No. 11. Harris Pool, Charles Geddis and A. A. McCoy. 

No. 12. Charles S. Chase, D. O. Hillman and M. O. 
Shuttle. 

No. 13. C. P\ Geer, W. W. Gwinn and J. Parsons. 

On December 8, 1884, the commissioners held a special 
meeting, Commissioners Humphrey and Jarvis present, at 
which considerable important business was done, and a 
dead lock created on the location of county seat. Action 
appealed from by J. A. Pickler. Finally Commissioner 
Humphre\- absented himself from the meeting. Commis- 
sioner Jarvis adjourned the meeting to the next da}- at 
which time Commissioners Jarvis and Hume met and fin- 
ished up the business and adjourned sine die. 

On January 5, 1885, the new board of commissioners 
met, consisting of Charles Marvdn, John L. Chain and J. 
H. Wallace. 

The efforts to change the county seat from EaFobn to 
Faulkton was responsible for the change of commissioners 



117 



from three to five by the territorial legislature of 1885. 
On April 25, 1885 this order came up for consideration. 

The action of the board was such as to cause great 
dissatisfaction in the western part of the county and a 
special election was called which resulted in the election of 
C. H. Ellis to the office of commissioner. The election 
taking place according to the apportionment or subdivision 
of the county commissioners. Morgan G. Millard, Charles 
Marvin, Alex Garrick, J. H. Wallace and John h. Chain 
were declared elected commissioners. An appeal was tak- 
en from their decision and the appeal was prosecuted by 
John A. Pickler so far as the election of Alex Garrick was 
concerned, in the district court at Aberdeen, Judge 
Smith presiding, and decided in favor of the election of 
C. H. Ellis. 

On the 7th of September, 1885 C. H. Ellis became an 
active member of the board for the remainder of the 
term. 

At an election prior to January 4, 1886, Alex Garrick 
was elected a commissioner in place of John E- Chain. 

At the first session of the board for the year 1886, on 
motion of Commissioner C. H. Ellis, it was voted that no 
license be granted for the sale of intoxicating liquors in 
Faulk County for the year 1886, and on that vote the yeas 
and noes were ordered and Millard, Wallace, Garrick and 
Ellis voted yea and Marvin no. 

The board of county commissioners for the year 1887 
were: Charles Marvin, Alex Garrick, D. S. Smith, O. D. 
Johnson and J. S. Nevins, and the first meeting held 
at LaFoon, the county seat, on January 3, 1887, and in 
place of J. W. Johnston, who had held the office of secre- 



lis 



tarv up to this time, I. Allen Cornwell was duly elected 
and filed his official bond which was approved as was also 
that of H. D. Chamberlain for sheriff, C. E. Warner for 
treasurer, A. A. McCo^^ for county school superintendent, 
C. H. Derr for county judg-e of probate, A. D. Griffee for 
assessor and Frank Turner and F. M. Brown for justices 
of the peace. 

On April 25th, 1887, a petition was presented to the 
board of county commissioners and by them approved, for 
the legal organization of the city of Faulkton. The elec- 
tion was to be held on the 25th of May, 1887, and C. A. 
Morse, F. A. Pangburn and Fred Griffee were appointed 
judges of election. 

In July of that year an exciting election was had by 
the county commissioners to secure a county auditor. The 
election board consisted of the board of commissioners to- 
gether with the Hon C. H. Derr, judge of probate and C. 
E. Warner, county treasurer, seven in all, four votes being 
a majority and necessary to elect. The election commenced 
at the opening of the afternoon session and extended into 
the middle of the next afternoon. Twenty-one ballots 
were taken in which no candidate succeeded in getting 
more than three votes. On the twenty-second ballot, the 
other coveted vote, the fourth was forthcoming and M. P. 
Springer was declared elected. 

At the regular election in November 1887, the follow- 
ing officers were elected: county commissioner for district 
No. 1, J. A. Day, for district No. 6, Chas. Marvin. 

The first canvas of votes for county officers that we 
find recorded was on November 9, 1888. It was at an ad- 
journed meeting. The full board of commissioners consist- 



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ins of Chas. Marvin, J. A. Day, D. S. Smith, J. S. Nevins 
and O. C. Johnson were present. 

J. H. Shirk having received a majority of the votes 
for register of deeds, was declared elected, as was W. B. 
Monroe, treasurer; John L. Chain, auditor; H. D. Cham- 
berlain, sheriff; C. H. Derr, judge of probate; M. Summy, 
assessor; Frank Turner, district attorney; B. F. Ruhlman, 
county surveyor; J. P. Rathbun, coroner. 

County commissioners for second district, Fred Rey- 
nolds; third district, O. C. Johnson; fourth district, J. A. 
Van Valkenberg . 

O. C. Johnson, J. A. Day and Fred Reynolds, com- 
mittee to settle with county treasurer, C. E. Warner re- 
ported that accounts were correct and balance of $10,804.38 
paid to W. B. Monroe, treasurer elect, and receipt for that 
amount is in the hands of retiring treasurer Warner. 

Faulk county sent the following delegates to the Sioux 
Falls convention, who were elected on May 14, 1889, viz: 
H. A. Humphrey, J. G. Dayis and Peter Couchman. 

The October election of 1887, held on the fifth day of 
that month, at which time the first officers of the state of 
South Dakota were elected, was of too much interest and 
importance not to have a place in this history. At a re- 
publican state convention held at Huron, the following 
nominations were made all of whom were elected, viz: for 
governor, Arthur C. Mellette; lieutenant governor, James 
H. Fletcher; secretary of state, A. O. Ringsrud; state audi- 
tor, ly. C. Taylor; state treasurer, W. F. Smith; superin- 
tendent of public instruction, G. L. Pinkham; attorney 
general, Robert Dollard; commissioner of school and public 
lands, O. H. Parker; judges of supreme court, Dighton Car- 



122 



son, A. G. Kellum, John E. Bennett; judge of circuit 
court, H. G. Fuller; members of congress, Oscar S. Gif- 
ford of Canton, and John A. Pickler of Faulkton. At the 
county election that fall the following were elected: For 
state senator 35th district, Frank M. Byrne; representative 
to the legislature 34th district, E. Clarence Sage; county 
judge, C. H. Derr; temporary seat of government, Pierre 
748; Huron 216; Watertown 142; Sioux Falls 10 and Mit- 
chell 1 vote. 

For the prohibition clause in the constitution, 626 
votes in favor and 459 votes against. 

At an election held November 5, 1889, the following 
were elected county commissioners, viz: For commission- 
er, district No. 1, Robert Maxwell received 108 votes and 
was elected; district No. 3, W. G. Faulkner received 69 
votes, being a majority cast and was elected; district No. 4 
R. G. Morton received 103 votes and was elected and as 
commissioner in district No. 5 William Buss received a 
majority of ballots cast and was declared elected. 

On October 9th the records show commissioners J. A. 
Day, Charles Marvin, D. H. VanValkenburg, Fred Rey- 
nolds and O. C. Johnson present and voting for a clerk of 
court. 

At the same meeting the appointing board accepted 
the resignation of D. H. VanValkenburg as a commis- 
sioner for district No. 4, and appointed Wilber J. Porter to 
serve in his place and also accepted the resignation of O. C. 
Johnson. At the next session, the appointment of Wilber 
J. Porter was reconsidered and an election ordered. 

On the 10th the resignation of Chas. Marvin, commis- 
si6nerj was accepted to take effect at the end of this session. 



123 



The appointing board appointed George J. Jarvis a com- 
missioner to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of 
Chas. Marvin. 

On October 8, 1889, on motion of commissioner J. A. 
Day, the commissioners proceeded to elect a clerk of the 
circuit court and county courts to take effect immediately 
after the President of the United States issues his proclama- 
tion, admitting South Dakota to statehood. 

On the second ballot, H. W. Bailey received three 
votes, being a m.ajority and was declared elected. 

On November 8th, 1889 an adjourned meeting of the 
county commissioners was held at Faulkton with the fol- 
lowing elected and appointed commissioners present, viz: 
J. A. Day, Fred Reynolds, George J. Jarvis, R. G. Morton 
and W. G. Faulkner. 

At this meeting the official bond of Hon. C. H. Derr, 
.county judge was approved. 

On January 6th commissioners met in regular session, 
all present, viz: Fred Reynolds, W. G. Faulkner, R. G. 
Morton, Robert Maxwell and William Buss. R. G. Mor- 
ton was elected chairman of commissioners. 

At this meeting a committee on rules was appointed. 

Committee reported and report accepted. 

The following committees were appointed, viz: On 
justice of the peace reports, Faulkner, Buss and Morton; 

on revenue, Maxwell, Reynolds and Morton; on fees and 
salaries, Buss, Maxwell and Morton. 

The Seneca Sun and Faulk County Record were made 
official papers for the year. 

On July 16th, 1890, the county commissioners as a board 
of equalization fixed the value of land per quarter section 
as follows: 



124 



111 Precinct No. 1, $500.00 In Precinct No. 7, $525.00 
In Precinct No. 2, $500.00 In Precinct No. 8, $325.00 
In Precinct No. 3, $475.00 In Precinct No. 9, $500.00 
In Precinct No. 4, $475.00 In Precinct No. 10. $500.00 
In Precinct No. 5, $475.00 In Precinct No. 11, $500.00 
In Precinct No. 6, $475.00 In Precinct No. 12, $475.00 
In Precinct No. 13, $475.00 

At the meeting held on October 6, 1890, arrangements 
were made for the coming November election and judges 
of election appointed for the several election precincts, and 
whereas R. W. Maxwell had resigned the office of county 
commissioner, it was voted to accept the resignation to 
take effect when his successor was elected and qualified. 

State Senators: The counties of Faulk and Potter con- 
stitute one senatorial district. In 1889, Hon. Frank M. 
Byrne was elected from Faulk county and in 1890 the Hon. 
R. W. Maxwell from this county was elected. In 1892 a 
Potter county man was elected; in 1894, Hon. D. S. Smith 
of Faulkton was elected senator; in 1896, a Potter county 
man was again nominated and elected. In 1898, Hon. 
J. H. Bottum of Faulkton was elected. In 1900 the right 
of Potter county was recognized; in 1902, Mr. Bottum 
was again elected; in 1904, Mr. Whitlock of Potter county 
was again elected and in 1906 Hon. Frank M. Byrne, our 
present senator, was elected. 

The following are the representatives from this county 
since the state of South Dakota was admitted to the Union: 

In 1889, E. C. Sage and Wilbur Elting. 

In 1890, Hon. W. S. Belknap and Capt. John Douglas. 

In 1892, Hon. Alexander Miller and re-elected in 1894. 

In 1896, Hon. James B. Devine, who was re-elected in 
1898, Andrew J. Porter in 1900 and re-elected in 1902. 



125 



In 1894, Hon. Frank Turner was elected representative 
to the legislature and in 1896, ex-representative Alexander 
Miller was re-elected, and now has the republican nomina- 
tion for re-election. 

The following is the list of county officers since 1890. 

ELECTED IN 1890: 

For register of deeds, John H. Shirk. 

F'or auditor, John ly. Chain. 

For clerk of courts, H. W. Bailey. 

For sheriff, J. K. Sechler. 

For assessor, Henry Joynt. 

For county judge, Hon. C. H. Derr. 

For county attorney, Hon. J. H. Bottum. 

For county treasurer, E. H. Thayer. 

For county surveyor, J. W. Johnston. 

For coroner, Dr. J. P. Rathbun. 

For county superintendent of schools, W. R. Davis. 

For county justices of the peace, F. P. Smith, F. A. 
Pangburn, F. M. Bacon, George Trainor, John Palraeter, 
Isaac White, Andrew Penning and C. B. Oakes. 

For constables, O. M. Moe, C. D. Sutton, A. M. 
Thompson, J. E. Stevenson, Jesse Nevins, Winfield White, 
C. A. Warner and Jerome Ross. 

ELECTED IN 1892: 
Judge, Hon. C. H. Derr. 
Auditor, C. C. Norton. 
County treasurer, E. H. Thayer. 
Register of deeds, J. W. Johnston. 
Sheriff, J. H. Hays. 
Clerk of court, H. W. Bailey. 
State's attornay, Hon. J. H. Bottum. 



126 



Superintendent of schools, W. R. Davis. 

County surveyor, A. M. Bass. 

Coroner. Dr. J. P. Rathbun. 

Assessor, J. L. Randall. 

County commissioners, Jasper Wakefield, F. E. Hat- 
field, W. G. Faulkner, A. J. Haskins, and William Buss, 
chairman of the Board. 

At the election held November 6, 1894, the following 
county ofhcers were elected: 

County judge, C. H. Derr. 

Register of deeds, lycwis Severance. 

County treasurer, William H. Smith. 

Sheriff, J. H. Hays. 

Clerk of Court, H. W. Bailey. 

State's attorney, D. H. lyatham. 

County school superintendent, F. A. Pangburn. 

County assessor, William Kellett. 

Coroner, Dr. J. P. Rathbun. 

Justices of the peace, C. B. Chambers, M. E. Drake, 
Jerome Ferguson, J. W. Shaver, J. W. Hays, Chas. Griffee, 
and J. H. Emery. 

County commissioner for 2d. district, F. E. Hatfield; 
3rd district, S. D. Peck. 

■ The defalcation of W. B. Monroe, county treasurer, 
presented a most difficult problem to the county commis- 
sioners. There were failures of crops, money could not 
be had on securities. Banks were failing, the money was 
gone, and just what steps should be taken to obtain it was 
difficult to decide. Just who was to blame, or in fact, if 
there was any one that had committed any intentional 
wrong was an open question. With these financial con- 



127 



ditions existing to enforce the conditions of the treasurer's 
bond would have ruined some of the bondsmen. It is 
doubtful if any one knows just what the tax payers lost by 
the unfortunate affair. 

The lesson of the past is only valuable to direct us in a 
wiser and safer course for the future. 

November 5th, 1895, election for county commissioners 
was held in commissioners district No. 1 and No. 5, and J, 
B. Devine and William Buss elected respectively. 

For 1896, the Republican-Record was made the county 
official paper. 

At the state election of 1896 held on the 9th day of 
November A. D., 1896, the following county officers were 
elected; 

County judge, George J. Jarvis. 

County auditor, W. G. Faulkner. 

Regi-ster of deeds, I^ewis Severance, 

County treasurer, William Smith. 

County sheriff, O. M. Moe. 

Clerk of court, H, W. Bailey, 

State's attorney, D. H. Latham. 

Superintendent of schools, Frank A. Pangburn. 

County assessor, William Kellett. 

Coroner, Dr. Samuel Hall. 

Surveyor, J. F. Armstrong . 

County commissioner, 1st district, J.J. Price. 
County commissioner, 2d. district, James F. Nestor- 
County commissioner, 3d. district, Christ Sorenson. 
County commissioner, 4th district, W. R. Hall. 
On the 2d day of November, 1897, J. J. Price was 

elected county commissioner in the first district, and Wjl- 

liam Buss in the 5th district. 



128 



At the general election held November 8th, 1898, the 
following county officers were elected: 

County judge, George J. Jarvis. 

County auditor, O. A. Rogers, 

Register of Deeds, George H. Stoddard. 

County treasurer, Frank M. Byrne. 

County sheriff, O. M. Moe, 

Clerk of court, Henry Joynt. 

State's attorney, Frank Turner. 

County superintendent of schools, Belle F. McCoy. 

County assessor, George S. Stevenson. 

County coroner. Dr. Wm. M. Edgerton. 

County surveyor, J. W. Johnston. 

County commissioner 2d district, J. F. Nestor. 

County commissioner 3d district, John D. Smith. 

County commissioner, 4th district, Ernest Thiede. 

County officers elected November 7th, 1899, county 
commissioners full board, viz: William Buss, J. F. Nestor, 
John D. Smith, Ernest Thiede and Henry Resseguie. 

At the general election, November 6th 1900, the fol- 
lowing county officers were elected, viz: 

County treasurer, Frank M. Byrne. 

Register of deeds, George H. Stoddard. 

Count}' auditor, O. A. Rogers. 

County sheriff, J. W. Smith. 

Clerk of Courts, M. S. McDearmon. 

State's attorney, Frank Turner. 

County judge, George J. Jarvis. 

County superintendent of schools. Belle F. McCoy. 

County assessor, George S. Stevenson. 

County surveyor, J. F. Armstrong. 



131 



County coroner, Dr. Wm. M. Edgerton. 

County commissioners, January 4, 1901, William Buss, 
chairman; Earnest Thiede, N. Freitag, O. P. Howe and 
H. Resseguie. 

At a meeting of the board of county commissioners on 
November 12, 1901, present, O. P. Howe, Herman Freitag, 
and Ernest Thiede. On motion, Ernest Thiede was re- 
quested to act as chairman. Announcement was made of 
the death of William Buss, late chairman of the board. 

On motion the board adjourned until one o'clock p. m. 

At the afternoon session, Ernest Thiede, O. P. Howe, 
Herman Freitag and Henry Resseguie were present and on 
motion, the board proceeded to elect by ballot a commis- 
sioner to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Commis- 
sioner Buss. 

Fred Clark received a majority of votes cast and was 
declared an elected commissioner for the 5th district, to 
fill the vacancy caused by the death of William Buss. 

At an election held on the'4th day of November 1902, 
the following county officers were elected, viz: 

Treasurer, Albert Gooder. 

Register of deeds, Frank M. Ramsdell. 

Auditor, W. G. Faulkner. 

Sheriflf, Johxi W. Smith. 

Clerk of court, M.S. McDearmon. 

County judge, George J. Jarvns. 

Superintendent of schools. S. S. Strachan. 
Assessor, N. F. Metz. 
Surveyor, J. W. Johnston. 
Coroner, Albert J. Jones. 

County commissioner, F. E. Clark in district No. 5 
and E. W. Ford in district No. 1. 



132 



At a meeting: of the board of county commissioners on 
the 4th day of July, 1904, the proposition was submitted to 
the legal votes to see if they would vote to build a $50,- 
000.00 court house at the county seat, and issue county 
bonds for that amount to pay the same. 

At an election held on the 8th day of November, A. 
D., 1904, the following county officers were elected, viz: 

County judge, George J. Jarvis. 

Auditor, W. G. Faulkner. 

Register of deeds, Frank M. Ramsdell. 

County Treasurer, Albert Gooder. 

Sheriff, N. F. Metz. 

Clerk of court, Charles Coste. 

State's attorney, D. H. lyatham. 

County school superintendent, S. S. Strachan. 

County surveyor, J. F. Armstrong. 

Coroner, Dr. Wm. M. Edgerton. 

County commissioner, 2d. district, O. P. Howe. 

County commissioner, 3d. district, George lyloyd. 

County commissioner, 4th district, E. H. Thayer. 

At a meeting of county commissioners held on Novem- 
ber 15th and 16th, 1904, plans were adopted and advertise- 
ments for bids for a new court house were ordered. 

At a commissioners' meeting held on September 5th, 
1905, the following estimate as a basis for levying taxes 
were presented, viz: 

County auditor and clerk $1200.00 

County treasurer, deputy and clerk $2030.00 

County judge $ 499.97 

Sheriff and deputy $ 507.84 

Superintendent of schools $ 900.00 



133 



County commissioners $1271.70 

State's attorney $ 600.00 

Clerk of court $ 129.76 

Jurors fees $ 317.20 

Witness fees, justices courts $ 115.95 

Justice of peace $ 126.80 

Board of health $ 15 .50 

Poor relief funds $ 758.56 

Books and stationery $ 815.45 

Printing and advertising $1074.16 

Election expenses- • • • $ 574.75 

Light, fuel and repair county building $ 593.00 

Wolf bounty $211.00 

Postage and express $ 187.02 

County assessor, — $1063.00 

Miscellaneous items $1013.80 

Commissioners of insurance $ 30.45 

$13976.79 
On the sixth day of November, 1906, for the election 
of congressmen, state and county officers, the following 
were elected: 

Congressmen, Philo Hall and William H. Parker. 

For governor, Coe I. Crawford. 

Secretary of the state, D. D. Wipf. 

Attorney general, S. W. Clark. 

Faulk county judge, George J. Jarvis. 

County auditor, W. H. Race. 

Register of deeds, John P. Shirk. 

County treasurer, C. L. Fisk. 

Sheriff, N. F. Metz. 



134 



Clerk of courts, Chas. E. Coste. 

State's attorney, J. H. Bottmn. 

County superintendent of schools, Mrs. I. M. Alden. 

County surveyor, J. F. Araistrong. 

County commissioners, Lewis Severance and Wilson 
Brown, 5th district. 

The first session of the county commissioners for the 
year 1908 met at the auditor's office at the court house on 
January 7th, 1908. County commissioners all present, viz: 
Lewis Severance, John Olen, George Lloyd, E. H. Thayer 
and Wilson Brown. E. H. Thayer was elected chairman. 

The first session of the board of county commissioners 
ever held was on November 5th, 1883, at the law office 
of J. A. Pickler. Looking back over a period of twenty- 
five years, we find the foundation laid and a steady growth 
that has only to be maintained for another quarter of 
a century to make a record, and place Faulk county in a 
position to be looked up to, not only approved by her own 
citizens, but by the united people of the commonwealth. 

The first meeting of county commissioners for the 
year 1908, was held on January 7th. With the following 
commissioners present, viz: Lewis Severance, John Olen, 
George Lloyd, E. H. Thayer and Wilson Brown. 

E. H. Thayer received a majority of v'otes cast and was 
declared elected chairman of the board of county commis- 
sioners. 

At this session, as well as subsequent ones, the board 
confined itself largely to routine county business. 

In the general line of advancements the increasing de- 
mand for increasing expenditures has been guarded by the 
board. 



135 



At the September meeting the following itemized ac- 
count of expenses for 1906 was reported as a basis for levy- 
ing taxes for the year 1907, viz: 

County auditor and clerk $1200.00 

County treasurer $1533.00 

County judge $ 600.00 

County sheriff, deputy and bailiff $1170.87 

County superintendent of schools $ 937.80 

County commissioner $ 666.75 

State's attorney $ 600.00 

Clerk of courts $ 420 .45 

Stenographer $ 151.50 

Justices of the peace $ 801.45 

Jurors and witness fees, circuit court $1135.78 

Relief of county poor $ 528.73 

Books and stationery $1200.90 

Printing and advertising $ 515.75 

County election $ 848.13 

Light, fuel and repairs county buildings $1390.59 

Janitor $ 641.56 

Wolf bounty $ 149.50 

Postage and express $ 149 50 

Miscellaneous $3214.65 

$17866.60 
Judges for the primary election together with the ex- 
penses of national, state and county election for 1908 con- 
stitute no small share of county expenses. 

The last important event to record from the county 
record was the canvas of the national, state and county 
votes as polled in this city and county at the national elec- 



136 



tion on the 3d of November 1908, which proved that every 
man voted for by the republican electors of this county 
were duly elected to the ofhce to which they had been nomi- 
nated. The following republican ticket comprises the 
entire list: 

For President of United States, William H. Taft. 
For United States senate, Coe. I. Crawford. 
Representatives in congress, Charles H. Burke and 
Eben W. Martin. 

Governor, R. S. Vessey. 

Lieutenant governor, H. C. Shober. 

State treasurer, George G. Johnson. 

Secretary of state, S. C. Polley. 

State auditor, John Hiring. 

Attorney general, S. W.. Clark. 

Superintendent of public instruction, H. A. Ustrud. 

Commissioner of school and public lands, O. C. Dokken. 

Railroad commissioner, 2nd district, P\ C. Robinson. 

State senator, Frank M. Byrne. 

Representative, Alex Miller. 

County auditor, W. H. Race. 

Register of deeds, J. P. Shirk. 

Treasurer, C. L. Fisk. 

County judge, George J. Jarvis. 

Sheriff, George D. Hughes. 

Clerk of courts, Chas. E. Coste. 

State's attorney, J. H. Bottum. 

Count}' superintendent, Mrs. I. M. Alden. 

Assessor, Soren Hansen. 

County sur\^eyor, J. F. Armstrong. 

Coroner, Fred A. Boiler. 



137 



County justices, C. C. Norton; A. T. Ericsen, D. S. 
Smith and A.M. Strachan. 

Commissioner 2d district, John Olen. 
Commissioner 3d district, Chas. H. Peck. 
Commissioner 4th district, Emerson H. Thayer. 



138 



CH-APTER XX. 

FAUI.K COUNTY. 
By D. H. Smith, Esq. 

In an article written by one of our oldest and most in- 
fluential citizens for another publication in 1904, covering 
much ground that has all ready been occupied, the follow- 
ing extracts deserves a place and will be of interest and 
real value for information and historical facts they contain: 

"Faulk county is so named after that illustrious citi- 
zen and stateman, Ex-Governor Faulk, of Yankton. This 
county was first inhabited by parties from near St. lyouis, 
Mo., in the summer of 1882, among whom was D. S. Smith, 
A. LaFoon, Thomas McMullen and J. C. Booth, also on 
the eastern extremity by Eou Reed and Hiram Rose. By 
some mistake range 66 was unattached to any county. 
The territorial legislature of 1883 added this range to 
P'aulk county and detached range 73 from Faulk and added 
it to Potter county. Faulk county is centrally located in 
what is termed the great artesian basin of South Dakota 
and within the last two years something over eighty- five 
flowing artesian wells have been completed and at this 
time are supplying from eighty to one hundred gallons of 
water each per minute. Faulk county is to day conserva- 
tively estimated to contain 6000 inhabitance. Major John 
A. Pickler from this county has been honored with four 
elections to the United States house of representatives." 

"As is the case in many of the early settled counties 
comparatively few practical farmers were among the set- 



THE NEW YOP.K I 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



ASTOR. LENOX 
'ILDEN FOUNDATIONS 



141 



tiers, and final proof put a good deal of the land of the first 
settlers of the county into possession of mortgage com- 
panies and non-residents by mortgage foreclosures. Since the 
lands have been falling, into other hands, marked progress 
has been noted in the prosperity of the county, wheat rais- 
ing is successful and profitable and with some of our farm- 
ers becoming a specialty. Corn is fast becoming and in a 
large portion of the county is already established as one 
of the staple crops, stock raising has become an important 
industry with quite a number of successful ranchmen in 
our county, the county is by nature well adapted to this 
pursuit. I attributed the enviable position that Faulk 
county occupies to day to cohesiveness of the people and 
the production of the soil; and notwithstanding the slovenly 
and neglectful manner in which a portion of our agricul- 
turalist have done their work, nature asserts her superiorty 
and brings forth abundant crops. Our people are inteli- 
ligent, happy and prosperous, they are improving the bene- 
fits of our school sj^stem, and the youths of our county are 
applying themselves in a way that assures us that our 
county will stand with the foremost in the young, pros- 
perous and progressive state of South Dakota." 
A HEAI.TH RESORT. 

Faulk county lies east of the divide, between the waters 
of the Missouri and James river. Strictly speaking it may 
be claimed that only the east half of the county is in the 
James river valley, yet the rise is so gradual to an eleva- 
tion of less than fifteen hundred feet at the Potter county 
line as to be almost imperceptible to a casual observer. 

Snake creek christened by the early settlers of Faulk- 
ton, Nixon river, takes its rise in the coteaux or hills in 



142 



Potter county, runs in an easterly direction entirely across 
the county, flowing into the James river in Spink county. 

The land is sufficiently rolling to secure the best of 
drainage, not only for the natural flow of water but for the 
hvmdreds of artesian wells that have become an important 
factor to the wealth and prosperity of the county and I am 
fully satisfied that they have not in the least interfered 
with the wonderful, life giving power of remarkable sun- 
shiny days and powerful bracing atmosphere that our high 
altitude vouchsafes to us. 

Believing as I do, and that opinion based upon careful 
observation and practical experience, Faulk county is 
not only a good plac2 to S2cure abundance of this world's 
goods, but to secure (at last) good health and the con- 
tinued use of vital forces. 

In 1884 I came to southwest Faulk county, suffering 
from wounds received in the army, producing contusion of 
the left breast and paralysis of the left side. With a wife 
and a family of small children on my hands, there was a 
desperate struggle for life. After several changes, among 
them a year upon the gulf coast of Texas, without an3' 
permanent improvement, in the spring of 1884 I located 
in the western range of townships in this county. While 
my improvement was not rapid, it was marked and steady 
and in the summer of 1886 I was comparatively free from 
suffering and able to take up constant employment. These 
conditions continued until I left Faulk county for Wash- 
ington, D. C, in 1889. 

I had not been absent from here one year before there 
was a renewal of my trouble, which finally culminated in 
a complete breakdown in the spring of 1907 at which time 



143 



I could not dress and undress my.self without assistance. 
In August of that year I returned to Faulk county. At first 
I was unable to see any improvement, in fact, not until the 
last of April, 1908, had I been able to see much improvement. 

At the present writing, December 22, 1908, there is a 
decided and most happy change for the better. As I look 
back to A. D., 1825, when I first saw the light of day or 
even to fifty years ago, when I saw more light, I am 
admonished by the infirmities of passing years, that old age 
is approaching and evidently has been hastened by hard- 
ships, privation, and wounds received in army life, but 
with uninterrupted sunlight, clear, pure bracing air, water, 
whether from the surface or brought up from deep down in 
the depths of mother earth, tinctured with health giving 
properties, almost the essence of life, I have almost forgot- 
ten that four score and three years have already passed by. 

As I look around and see the freedom from disease, 
the sturdy, well preserved people well advanced in life and 
realize what the glorious sunlight, the clear, dry, cool, 
vitalizing air and the clear sparkling water, a beverage 
prepared by God Himself, has done for them, I am inclined 
to place these health giving and health restoring properties 
in the first and highest place in all of God's gifts to man. 



144 



CHAPTER XXI. 

EARI.Y HISTORY. 

Robinson, in the History of South Dakota, Vol. 1, 
pag-e 399, says: 

"Faulk county was named after the third Governor of 
the territory, and dates from January 8, 1873. It was not 
organized until October 25th, 1883, when Governor Ord- 
way appointed commissioners for that purpose. The 
county seat was located at LaFoon but soon removed to 
Faulkton. The railroad reached the county in 1884 (evi- 
dently a misprint as Faulk county was without a railroad 
until the fall of 1886.) The earliest exploration of the 
county was probably by William Dixon, in one of his trips 
to the James river in 1828. The county is upon the line 
of travel from the Missouri to the Minnesota, and John C. 
Fremont and Joseph N. Nicollet passed through it in 1839, 
Dr. Stephen R. Riggs in 1840. James R. Brown made 
many trips through this section in the thirties. Scatter- 
wood lake in the northeastern portion, was a famous Indian 
camp. Faulkton is the chief town. John A. Pickler of 
this county was representative in congress from 1889 to 
1896. Howard Fuller, judge of the supreme court. 
Major Humphrey, adjutant general from 1897 to 1901. 
Area 1016 square miles, population 3547." 

We are under obligations to D. H. Latham, Esq. for 
the following interesting conununication upon this interest- 
ing subject: 

"General John C.Fremont and party visited what is 
now Faulk county in 1839. 



145 



"Doane Robinson, our state historian, has discovered 
by delving into the records and reports of General Fremont 
on file in the war department at Washnigton, that General 
John C. Fremont and party traveled across what is now 
Faulk county in the year 1839, and no doubt was one of 
the first white people to visit this section. 

"in 1839, Dr. Joseph N. Nicollet, the famous French 
scientist, came up the river to Fort Pierre, accompanied by 
General C. Fremont, then a young man. They \\erein 
the employ of the government and had been sent out to 
map the Dakota country, the first official action of this 
kind. They remained at Pierre for several weeks, prepar- 
ing for their work, and then set out for the James riv^er 
and arrived at Medicine knoll, near Blunt, on the evening 
of July 3. At midnight Fremont went to the top of Medi- 
cine knoll and fired guns and rockets in celebration of the 
national anniversary. After traveling part way to the 
James they stopped to fish at Scatterwood lake, Faulk 
county, finally reaching the river at Armadale grove in 
Spink county. This grove was a famous camping place 
for the Indians and early travelers. Thence thev passed 
up the James and across to Devils lake, and thence 
back down the coteaux to Lake Traverse and Big Stone, 
whence they left the state, going down the Minnesota to 
St. Paul. 

"in traveling across the country from Blunt to Scat- 
terwood lake, General Fremont and party must have 
crossed the Nixon river in the vicinity of Faulkton, about 
July 5th, 1839." 



146 



CHAPTER XXII. 

TOWN ORGANIZATIONS IN'FAULK COUNTY. 
Town Township Range Date of Organization 



Arcade 


117 


68 


July 15, 1908 


Centervalle 


118 


67 


January, 1905 


DeVoe 


119 


67 


Spring of 1905 


Emerson 


120 


68 


May 15, 1900 


Enterprise 


120 


70 


July 20, 1901 


Elroy 


119 


72 


March 4, 1890 


Fairview 


120 


67 


March 7, 1893 


Freedom 


120 


69 


1896 


Hillsdale 


117 


67 


March 7, 1905 


EaFoon 


118 


68 


January, 1889 


Latham 


118 


71 


March 1, 1885 


Myron 


119 


68 


March 5, 1901 


Orient 


117 


69 


October 3, 1887 


Pioneer 


118 


66 


January 1, 1905 


Pulaski 


119 


69 


1891 


Saratoga 


119 


70 


July 27, 1891 


Seneca 


118 


72 


March 1, 1904 


Sherman 


120 


72 


February 23, 1892 


Union 


120 


66 


March 5, 1907 


Wesley 


119 


66 


May 20, 1905 


Zell 


117 


66 


1888 



The seven remaining townships in the county, viz: 

Clark, Bryant, Ellisville, Irving, Tamworth, township 117, 

range 71 and township 119, range 71, without regard to 
township lines, are arranged into school townships, with 
the following officers: 



1-47 



Clark school township, 120, range 71, 

Joseph Heintzman, chairman. 

Edward P'ord, clerk. 

Joseph Sahli, treasurer. 

Bryant school township, part of township 118, range 
70, with the most of township 119, range 71, 

John Barrett, chairman, 

J. H. Peck, clerk. 

August Weyand, treasurer. 

Irving school township, all of township 117, range 70, 
one-third of township 118, range 71 and one-half of town- 
ship 117, range 71: 

O. M. Roberts, chairflian. 

P. J. Maloney, clerk. 

Christ Hansen, treasurer. 

Ellisville school township, township 117, range 72 and 
one-half of township 117, range 71: 

Frank Arzt, chairman. 

P. M. Christensen, clerk. 

Adam Sangster, treasurer. 

Tamworth school township, all of township 118, range 
69, less the city of Faulkton, which is located upon sections 

fourteen and fifteen in this township. 

The following are the school officers in Tamworth 
township: 

Fred Kleeblatt, chairman. 

F. A. Paugburn, clerk. 

Emerson Thayer, treasurer. 

The village and railroad station of Orient are in the 
town of Orient. The villages of Zell and Rockham on the 
Chicago & Northwestern railroad are both in the towji of 



148 



Zell. The village and railroad station of Miranda are on 
section 1, in the town of Arcade. The town and railroad 
station of Burkmere are on section 7, township 118, range 
70. 

The village of Seneca is an important and flourishing 
railroad center for western Faulk county and eastern Potter 
county. Millard station is ten miles north of Faulkton in 
the town of Pulaski on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul 
railroad. 

The following are the several railroad stations in Faulk 
county on the line of the Minneapolis & St. Louis railroad, 
viz: Chelsea in the town of Union; Cresbard in Emerson; 
Carlyle in Enterprise and Onaka in Sherman. 

At the present time Cresbard has become an import- 
tant, flourishing business center. 



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151 



CHAPTER XXIII, 

TOWN OFFICERS. 

ARCADE. 

Oren Strevel, H. H. Metz, and W. A. Milligan, super- 
visors. 

John Grau, clerk. 

Sam lyoy, treasurer. 

John Noble and R. Alexander, justices of the peace. 
CENTERVILLE. 

The first town officers were: George M. Johnson, CM, 
Hammond and Henry Nicholson, supervisors, 

Victor Moberg, clerk. 

R. E. Travis, treasurer. 

CO. Moberg, assessor. 

D. W. Pillsbury, justice of the peace. 

Officers for 1908: George M. Johnson, C. M. Ham- 
mond and Henry Moberg, Supervisors. 

Victor Moberg, clerk. 

R. E. Travis, treasurer. 

A. W. Moberg, assessor. 

DEVOE. 

First town officers: Alex Miller, J. B. Devine and I. H. 
Eerew, Supervisors. 

A. B. Clifford, clerk. 

Lewis Severance, treasurer. 

W. T. Jackman, assessor. 

Officers for 1908: Alex Miller, S. W. Lerew and J. A, 
Devine, Supervisors, 



152 



A. B. Clifford, clerk. 
Frank Smith, treasurer. 
W. T. Jackman, assessor. 

EMERSON. 

F^irst board of town officers: Jacob Gabler, Mack 
Baker and Jasper Wakefield, supervisors. 

Frank Currier, clerk. 

J. A. Day, treasurer. 

A. A. Andrews, assessor. 

J.J. Price and J. F. lyuke, justices of the peace. 

Officers for 1908; Henry Thiede, chairman of the 
board of supervisors. 

Frank Currier, clerk. 

J. F. Luke, treasurer. 

Jacob Fillbach, assessor. 

ENTERPRISE. 

First board of town officers: S. G. Akers, J. L. Ran- 
dall and W. A. Stephenson, supervisors, 

L. W. Dawson, clerk, 

Nels McClain, treasurer, 

William Wade, assessor. 

H. Y. Wallace and O. A. Olson, justices of the peace. 

Officers for 1908:— T. P. Nestor, Allen Law and Ole 
Olson, supervisors. 

W. O. Landon, clerk. 

James F. Nestor, treasurer. 

H. W. Ward, assessor. 

E. F. Guernsey and Nels Olson, justices of the peace. 

ELROV. 
Roland Hill, treasurer. 
William O. Lester, assessor. 
William O. Lester, clerk. 



153 



FAIRVIEW. 
First board of town officers: P. Deitz, R. O. Thayer 
and John Younkin, supervisors. 
J. T. Yates, clerk. 
E. McConib, treasurer. 
S. R. Ogden, assessor. 

E. D. Eldred and E. G. Clizbe, justices of the peace. 
Officers for 1908: William Hunter, George Horen, 

and H. O. McComb, supervisors. 

A. E. Jewell, clerk. 

R. N. Styles, treasurer. 

C. A. Thompson, assessor. 

J. C. Hanson andD. W. Welton, justices of the peace. 

FREEDOM 

W. W. Thomas, Henry F. Holden, and Ed. Bohnke, 
supervisors. 

F. W. Holscher. clerk. 
William Holscher, Jr., treasurer. 
John Bohnke, assessor. 

John C. Smith and John Witzel, justices of the peace. 

Officers for 1908: Henry F. Holscher, Herman Hols- 
cher and Henry F. Malts, supervisors. 

F. W. Holscher, clerk. 

William Holscher, Jr., treasurer. 

Jk)hn C. Smith, assessor. 

Herman H. Holscher and John Mclntyre, justices of 
the peace. 

HILLSDALE. 

Officers for 1908: M. Stammers, Chairman of the board 
of Supervisors. 

B. F. Ruhlman, clerk. 



154 



Willi-am Hogeboom, treasurer. 
John Christianson, assessor. 

LAFOON. 

First town officers: A. M. Warner, Jacob Geist and 
L. L. Anderson, supervisors. 

Soren Hansen clerk. 

James Purdon, treasurer. 

John Blair, assessor. 

Samuel Purdon, justice of the peace. 

Town officers for 1908: H. W. Simpson, J. E. Hutch- 
inson and W. H. Smith, supervisors. 

Charles S. Schenck, clerk. 

Frank Schenck, treasurer. 

Charles Hogg, assessor. 

James Warner, justice of the peace. 

LATHAM. 

First town officers: J. S. Smith, A. J. Hagan and B. 
J. Finney, supervisors. 

J. O. John.son, clerk. 

H. M. Dahl, treasurer. 

T. J. Schomebem, assessor. 

T. J. Potter, justice of peace. 

Officers for 1908: A. J. Hagan, T. J. Potter and 
William Zellman, supervisors. 

J. O. Johnson, clerk. 

H. M- Dahl, treasurer - 

Fred Kettleman, assessor. 

T. J. Potter, justice of the peace. 

MYRON. 

First town officers, J. H. Treat, Joseph Powell and 
William Blair, supervisors. 



155 



C. E. Chapman, clerk. 

W. H. Lehman, treasurer. 

G. E. Frink, assessor. 

W. H. Reinecke and Scott Demmery, justices of the 
peace. 

Officers for 1908: John Younkin, C. H. Paul and W. 
A. Childs, supervisors. 

C. E. Chapman, clerk. 

A. J. Wakefield, treasurer. 

G. E. Frink, assessor. 

ORIENT. 

First town officers: John J. Conway, Barney Deenej^ 
and David Mooney, supervisors. 

Edward M. Hand, clerk. 

Lewis J. Pratt, treasurer. 

Samuel Downs, assessor. 

John Reilly and Joseph B. Sprowles, justices of the 
peace. 

Town officers for 1908: Albert Gooder, chairman of 
board of supervisors. 

H. P. Weidman, clerk. 

N. A. Gardner, treasurer. 

J. W. Thomas, assessor. 

A. H. Robbins, justice of the peace. 

PIONEER. 

First town officers: T. N. Brown, Robert Knapton 
and Lewis G. Reed, supervisors. 

George Mead, clerk. 

Oscar Babcock, treasurer. 

Wilson Brown, assessor. 

Town officers for 1908: Thomas N. Brown, William 
T. Loesch and Robert Knapton, supervisors. 



156 



George Mead, clerk. 
Joseph Kegler, treasurer. 
Fred E. Clark, assessor. 

PULASKI. 

First town officers: W. H. Elliot, E. Thiede and 
Soren Hanson, supervisors. 

E. B. Eittlefield, clerk. 

O. N. Beim, treasurer. 

G. W. Hulet, asses.sor. 

W. H. DuBois, justice of the peace. 

Town officers for 1908: Hans E- Hanson. John Mc- 
Grath and H. Korrup, supervisors. 

Nicholas Wik, clerk. 

Andrew Seim, treasurer. 

Elias Eoken, assessor. 

John McGrath, justice of the peace. 

SARATOGA. 

First town officers: John E- Robinson, Amos Voss 

and Henry Hazelhorst, supervisors. 

Morgan G. Millard, clerk. 

V. R. Freeman, treasurer. 

G. P. Moberg, assessor. 

George Wakefield and Morgan G. Millard, justices of 
the peace. 

Town officers for 1908: A. C. Voss, William Haga- 

dorn and E. W. PVeitag, supervisors. 
Henry Hazelhorst, clerk. 
August Weyand, treasurer. 
E. W. Freitag, assessor. 

SENECA. 

Town officers for 1908: M. Geiver, Adolph Reinecke 
au.d Elias Roseland, supervisors.. 



157 



D. C. Hobart, clerk, 
J. T. Snell, treasurer, 
William Kellett, assessor, 

A. Frayn and A.M. Thompson, justices of the peace, 

SHERMAN. 

First town officers, J. S. Nevins, Martin Miclvkelseji 
and Paul I/inke, supervisors. 
George McGraw, clerk, 
Charles O'Neil, treasurer, 

E, F. Schuler, assessor, 

O, P. House, and F, H. Simmons, justices of the 
peace. 

Town officers for 1908: James P, Paulson, Paul E, 
Berg and Henry Iverson, supervisors, 

Knud Hanson, clerk, 

Hans Hanson, treasurer, 

Herman Berg, assessor. 

L,. C, Paulson and R. S. Patterson, justices of the 
peace, 

UNION. 

First town officers: H. F, Bittner^ Harry Tinker an(| 
F. D. Persons, supervisors. 

Elmer D. Evans, clerk, 

A. A. Tracy, treasurer, 

E- W. Ford, assessor. 

R. W. Maxwell, justice of thepeace. 

Town officers for 1908: J.. H. Finley, Uriah Tinker 
;and E, P, Holland, supervisors^ 

Howard Africa, clerk. 

CM. Mortensen, treasurer, 

A. ly: McWhinney, assessor. 

R_. W. Maxwell, justice of the pe^ce. 



15S 



WESLEY. 

First town officers: A. M. Strachan, John Sebring 
and Henry Benson, supervisors. 

Henry Joynt, clerk. 

August Koester. treasurer. 

H. F. Reed, assessor. 

Town officers for 1908: John Weiderhoft, H.J. Hunt 
and J. P. Joynt, supervisors. 

Josiah Sensecal, clerk. 

Fred Batteen, treasurer. 

H. F. Reed, assessor. 

ZELL. 

First town officers: William Benworth, Christ Harder 
and Matt Keppler. supervisors. 

John Tweed, clerk. 

William Buss, St., treasurer. 

Herman Pohl, assessor. 

Henry Stemper, and F. M. Brown, justices of the 
peace. 

Town officers for 1908: William Kinnsr, James H. 
St^!llp^r and Frank Pentmin, supervisors. 

George H. Hermann, clerk. 

Frank Bruggeman, treasurer. 

P. S. Hand, assessor. 

J. P. Smith and Henry Arms, justices of tlie peace. 



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PUBLIC library! 



ASTOR. LENOX 
TILDEN FOUtvOATIONS 



161 



CHAPTER XXIV. 

THE COMING OF THE RAILROADS. 

Among the early settlers the question of business cen» 
ters was a matter of no small interest. While EaFoon and 
Faulkton were struggling for county seat honors, DeVoe 
was looking on hoping their disagreement might redound 
to her benefit. With some, a division of the county be- 
came a matter for discussion. With the western part of 
the county' especially it was difficult to see how anything 
was to be gained by such a move. 

While a railroad survey had been made from Redfield 
through range 117, through the county, influences were 
being brought to bear to induce the Chicago & Northwest- 
ern railroad company to change their line. All were hope- 
ful, but none sure, as to what the final outcome would be. 
In fact it was not until the summer of 1886 when the final 
survey came to Faulkton and Seneca, leaving LaFoon and 
Ellisville out in the cold, that any definite calculations 
could be made. In October, 1886, Zell, Rockham, Miran- 
da, Faulkton, Burkmere and Seneca became railroad sta- 
tions and necessarily centers of business to the exclusion of 
other competing points; soon to be followed by Millard, 
Faulkton and Orient, stations on the Chicago, Milwaukee 
& St. Paul railroad. In 1906 the survey of the Minneapo- 
lis & St. Louis added the five stations of Chelsea,, Cresbard 
Wecota, CarlyleandOnaka, giving most desirable centers of 
trade to a large and much needing section of our county.. 
Ey reason of the extensive breadths of country under cultj- 



162 



vation and the prosperous condition of the farming com- 
munity, these new stations may look for the rapid up- 
building of enterprising, prosperous towns, some of which 
are already discussing the question of city organization. 
The first to be reached by the traveler upon the Minneapo- 
lis & St. Paul railroad is the new and enterprising town of 
Chelsea. 

CHELSEA. 

The new town of Chelsea is located five and one-half 
miles from the Edmunds county line and about one mile 
from the Spink county line, in Union township and upon 
the new extension of the Minneapolis & St. Louis railway 
from Watertown to LaBeau. 

It is surrounded by one of the richest settlements in 
this county if not in the state of South Dakota. 

With their large and attractively built farm buildings 
and well tilled broad acres together with an abundance of 
artesian water for power and domestic purposes, assure the 
rapid building up of a prosperous and enterprising city. 
With two reliable banks doing an active but conservative 
business, enterprising and prosperous merchants, intelli- 
gent and industrious mechanics, a good start has already 
been made upon the road to its future greatness. 

The Chelsea Herald, Howard Africa, editor and pub- 
lisher, a live and enterprising paper, speaks well through its 
list of advertisements for the intelligent business methods 
of its enterprising citizens. 

While a home maker will give enlarged cultivation and 
increasing prosperity to a surrounding agricultural region it 
offers to the active up-to-date professional and business 
man a most desirable location. 



163 



A railroad ride of ten miles west through a well culti- 
vated, beautiful country dotted with fine farm buildings 
and pleasant homes, brings you to the rapidly growin-g 
town of Cresbard. 

CRESBARD. 

Cresbard is located eleven miles from the east line of 
Faulk county and five miles from the Edmunds county 
line in the town of Fairview, on the line of the Minneapo- 
lis & St. lyouis railroad, and is surrounded with as fine, 
if not the finest body of land and best improved farms in 
Faulk county. 

Here, as everywhere, the upbuilding and prosperity . 
of the town must depend upon the agricultural improve- 
ments of its immediate surroundings. In this particular 
direction, at the present time, Cresbard stands in the front 
rank among her sister villages in Faulk county, with a 
large class of independent farmers, with their many broad 
acres and fine farm buildings in their own and surround- 
ing towns. lyocated upon a line of railroad commanding 
a line of business second to none in the northwest, with a 
class of intelligent enterprising business men, second to 
none in the county, the future of this young and enter- 
prising town is already assured. To be more specific, 
neither climate, soil, or its adaptation to the various cereal 
crops of the great northwest is in an experimental stage, 
that has been completely and satisfactorially passed, not 
only all the small grains, but corn is as successful, as upon 
$125.00 per acre land in Illinois and Iowa and late practi- 
cal experiments assure us that the sugar beet will yield as 
large a per cent of sugar as in . any part of our common 
country. To the enterprising, practical farmer, the 



164 



chance is yet open to exchange their $100.00, $150.00 and 
$200.00 land for these valuable and productive Faulk county 
farms, at a much lower price. The first twenty-five years 
of improvement and development in Faulk county has 
passed and with it has corns wonderful changes, marked 
development, great prosperity; in place of the humble, de- 
pendent pioneers — the prosperous independent farmer with 
his hundreds of acres of improved land worth from $40.00 
to $50.00 per acre. 

With confidence looking into the near future when the 
lands shall not onh' double in value, but on every line the 
changes shall be greater with increased prosperity, accum- 
kted wealth shall make these homes second to none in the 
great northwest. With such surroundings and such de- 
mands for the necessities and luxuries of life, the advant- 
ages of a permanent location and successful business in the 
new and growing village of Cresbard must commend itself 
to every thinking progressive business man. The follow- 
ing is a list of business already in the new and enterprising 
town : 

Cresbard Grain Co., grain, coal and flour, B. DeMersh- 
mann, manager. 

Security Elevator Co. , H. O. Hanson, manager. 

Pacific Elevator Co., C. L- Gauge, manager. 

Eagle Roller Mills, C. Tenold, manager. 

Imperial Lumber Yard, lumber, etc., S. W. Bakke, 
manager. 

Central Eumber Co., George M. Tinker, manager. 
Gange & Palmer, farm implements, etc. 
G. Bruneau, blacksmith and machine shop. 
City Livery Barn, livery, feed and sale barn. A- A. 
Thel.an, proprietor.. 



165 



Hotel Cresbard, F. H. Potter, proprietor. 

C. Niemeyer, clothing and gents furnishings. 

The Beacon, job work and printing, F. O. Mark, edi- 
tor and proprietor. 

George Ham, barber shop, bath room. 

Hotel Moliter, lunch counter in connection, A. D. 
Moliter, proprietor. 

City Meat Market, Wm. lyockwood, proprietor and 
st«ck buyer. 

Fountain & Chute, hardware. 

Cresbard Mercantile Co., general merchandise, H. 
.R. Ives, manager. 

E. Geist, hardware and furniture. 

Wilson Bros., farm machinery, etc. 

City Pool Hall, L- Deloy, proprietor. 

Cresbard Land Co., real estate, J. B. Hein, manager. 

Farmers State Bank, John A. Day, president; W. P. 
Holmes, cashier; C. H. McCoy, assistant cashier. 

The Bank of Cresbard, A. M. Moore, president; P. H. 
O'Neil, vice president; P. W. Loomis, cashier. 

T. F. Forsyth, general merchandise. 

J. Bentson, drugs. 

McKay's, general merchandise and ladies furnishings. 

City Restaurant, G. Cloutier, proprietor. 

Home Bakery, Mrs. M. Moore, proprietor. 

City Dray Line, B. Mosher, proprietor, 

WECOTA. 

Wecota is a new town on the extension of the Minne- 
apolis & St. lyouis railway, about 300 miles west of Minne- 
apolis and 65 miles east of the Missouri. It is located in 
the heart of the "New Empire," in a well settled farming 



166 



and stock raising country. The farmers here are all well 
to do and independent, have fine homes, good outbuildings 
and good bank accounts. 

The crops are always good here and this section has 
not had a crop failure in 12 years. Wecota has three large 
elevators, a state bank, grocery stores, general stores, drug 
store, hardware store, lumber yard, livery barn, implement 
and harness dealers, etc. A section house and stock yard 
are also located here. The business men who have located 
here are of the broad minded, enterprising sort such as are 
to be found -in the west, and they are enjoying a good trade 
and are glad they are here. Although not more than a 
year old, Wecota has a start in life that would take several 
years to accomplish in the states east of here and its citi- 
zens are of the kind that would make a town thrive and 
grow in a country that was not endowed by nature with 
an ideal climate and soil such as is found in this vicinity of 
the "New Empire." The town has no dead ones or croak- 
ers who are ever ready to belittle the efforts of its enter- 
prising citizens in making Wecota grow. It is bound to 
advance steadily. They have the soil, the climate and the 
push and energy to back it up and they invite the business 
men, the farmers, laborers and mechanics who are strug- 
gling along in the stunted and over crowded communities 
east of us, to come here, acquire the western spirit and 
grow up with us. 

Wecota is ten miles directly north of the county seat, 
with a beautiful stretch of farming land fast being put 
under cultivation, with the following well established 
places of business, viz: 

Wecota State Bank, E. J. Levong, cashier. 



167 



Archer's Merchandise Store, conducted by Frank Arch- 
er and his experienced wife. 

Hardware store, G. P. Kakkan, proprietor. 

Grocery store and postoffice, James Mclntyre, post- 
master. 

Wecota Independent, R. S. Holder, editor and pro- 
prietor. 

Drug store and pool hall, J. W. Balsom, proprietor. 

Livery stable and agricultural machinery, Lars Jacob- 
son, proprietor. 

Wecota Hotel, E. A. Magnuson, proprietor. 

Independent Elevator Co., James Mclntyre, mana- 
ger. 

Pacific Elevator Co;, Peter Christensen, manager. 

CARLYLE. 

Carlyle is located on the Minneapolis & St. Eouis rail- 
way in the town of Enterprise, eight miles west of Wecota. 

On April 23d, 1907, the town was started by Mr. 
Peavey and Mr. Ward. Since then Mr. Peavey retired, 
selling his interest to T. R. Kenderdine; Messrs Ward and 
Kenderdine now own the townsite and while they are in 
the banking business, do not neglect their townsite and 
other interests. With the telephone and their general 
land business and the newspaper, (The Carlyle Gazette) they 
find themselves among the busiest, men in Faulk county. 

The following lines of business are represented in this 
new and lively town: 

Central Lumber Company, E. A. Brewster, manafger. 

Dakota Town Lot Company, E. A. Magnussen, local 
manager. 

The first and most important public building is a first 



168 



class school house. Rapid improvements and rushing of 
business are the order of the day. 

Banking and real estate, Messrs. Kenderdine & 
Ward, proprietors. 

General store, Henze & Luscher, proprietors. 

Hardware and farm implements, William Olson, 
proprietor. 

Carlyle Hotel, Michael Gengler, proprietor. 

Livery stable, T. R. Kenderdine, proprietor. 

Pool and billard parlors, Michael Gengler, proprietor. 

Carlyle Gazette, Fred Linch, proprietor. 

Blacksmith shop, P. G. Hancer, proprietor. 

Barber shop, Carl Jennings^ prpprietor. 

Meat market. Good Brothers, proprietors. 

Pacific Elevator Company, J. F. Nestor. 
• W. H. Henze, postmaster. 

ONAKA. 

Onaka is located on the line of the Minneapolis & St. 
lyouis railway, in the township oi Sherman, six miles from 
the west line of Faulk county and four miles from the Ed- 
munds county line. The town is only one year old and 
has now about two hundred inhabitants,, and is one of the 
best towns on the line of the Minneapolis & St. Eouis rail- 
way in this county and has one of the best, if not the best^ 
hotel in the county. 

The following is a complete list of business houses in 
the town, viz: 

State Bank of Onaka, R. S. Patterson, cashier; is also, 
doing an important real estate business and owns the towa- 
site property. 



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THE NEW yoRR- . 
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ASTOR. LENOX 
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171 



Two stores for general merchandise, Patterson & Mc- 
Carthy and M. F. Schwick, proprietors. 

Hardware, Christ. Dufloth, proprietor. 

Central lyumber Company, L. H. Rose, proprietor. 

Pacific Elevator Company, Henry Dufloth, manager. 

Independent Elevator Company, H. Iverson, manager. 

Pool and billiard hall, Herman Berg, proprietor. 

Saloon, Lock wood & Iverson, proprietors. 

Meat market, Patterson & McCarthy, proprietors. 

Livery Stable No. 1, George Riley, proprietor. 

Livery Stable No. 2, J. S. Nevins, proprietor. 
■TheOnaka Hotel, all modern improvements, steam 
heated, brick building, 20 rooms, J. M. Young, proprietor. 

Postofiice and confectionary, Mrs. Mary Crom, pro- 
prietor. 

Drug store, Dr. Olson from Iowa, proprietor. 

A new school house. 

Catholic church. 

P>om location and surrounding farm property this is 
destined to become one of the best and most prosperous 
towns in the county. 



172 



CHAPTER XXIV CONTINUED. 

THE TOWN OF ZEI.L. 

As the west bound train over the Chicago & North- 
western railway leaves Redfield in Spink county, South 
Dakota, the first station to be called is Zell, in Faulk 
county. It is a town of about three hundred inhabitants. 
The first settlers were from Germany and Austria, in re- 
ligious faith. Catholics. While forming an enterprising, 
industrious community a Catholic church and school have 
been and now are prominent features in the makeup of the 
town. Among the early settlers were Leo Heppler, Wen- 
zel Heppler, A. Schade, M. Heppler, Eustace Weis, Jos. 
Abris, Frank Spannbauer, Leonard Jungferdorf and P. J. 
Berger. As early as the beginning of 1883, Rev. Bishop 
Marty began to look after the spiritual interests of this 
people. Rev. J. L-ameseh was the first resident priest, 
died July 5, 1895 and was laid to rest in the local cemetery. 
On the 15th of April, 1883, more than a year before the 
arrival of the resident priest, the people had decided to 
have a sisters' convent which was for the time being, to 
serve as a church and school. 

The St. Mary's Boarding School for young ladies and 
children, under the management of Benedictine sisters, 
has been a power in the intellectual and moral uplifting of 
the young. The need of a larger and more modern church 
had been felt for some years, but not until the coming of 
the present parish priest. Rev. F. S. Meyer, in 1904, did 
the enterprise take tangible form. 



173 



The summer of 1904 was a time of deep interest to the 
good people of Zell, as the beautiful new church took on 
form, the interest continued until the completion and dedi- 
cation of the church, which is not only an honor to the 
town, the people who so readily furnished the means and 
successfully carried it forward, but the entire county. In 
size 40x100, with a tower 75 feet high, in artistic design 
and finish, it is the equal if not the superior of any church 
edifice in the county. An illustration of the Zell church 
and St. Mary's school may be found in this history. 

The following is a partial list of business enterprises; 

General Merchandise, Chris. L/Utz, proprietor. 

Post Office, Frank Bruggeman, postmaster. 

Atlas Elevator Co., Henry Arend, manager. 

Western Elevator Co., George Miller, manager. 

Refreshment Parlor, Raymond Jungworth, proprietor. 

Blacksmith Shop, Chas. Bosch, proprietor. 

Carpenter Shop, John Hoesing, proprietor. 

Lumber Co., Henry Arend, manager. 

Hotel, Philip Kolegraff, proprietor. 

ROCKHAM. 

Rockham is located on section 32, 117-66, Faulk coun- 
ty, and has a population of about 250. Has good graded 
schools, German M. E. church and English M. E. church, 
and also hold meetings here of the German Euthern de- 
nomination. 

It has two banks, three general stores, furniture store, 
drug store, harness shop and shoe repairing, two hotels and 
one lunch counter, three land offices, general hardware 
and farm machinery, two lumber yards, livery barn, meat 
market, three elevators, coal sheds and a newspaper also a 
good opera house. 



174 



The business men are energetic and are alert for any 
business enterprise that will benefit the town . They are 
courteous in their business and invite all that are looking 
for a good place to locate to investigate here before they 
decide on a location. 

The country is settled by wide-a-wake farmers and 
stock raisers and produces a good amount of grain and live 
stock. This is a great shipping point for farmers and is 
one of the best towns west of Redfield on the Chicago & 
Northwestern line. 

The stores here keep their stock of goods up to those 
that are located in towns three times the size of this and 
you are able to purchase goods here at a price that will 
astonish you. 

The business firms of Rockham: 

State Bank of Rockham. 

J. P. Smith, furniture and undertaking. 

WolterBros., general merchandise. 

W. D. Hudkins, land office. 

T. G. Irwin, meat market. 

A. D. Irwin, stock buyer. 

Hagman, Moore & Co., general merchandise. 

Farmers State Bank of Rockham. 

The Rockham House. 

R. ly. Dean, hardware and farm machinery. 

Rockham Telephone Exchange. 

The Rockham Record, L. E. Howard, editor. 

F. A. Grabinski, land office. 

D. H. Lynde, land office and insurance. 

C. A. Smith, drugs and stationery. 

C. A. Buss, general merchandise and post office. 



175 



The Hammond House, J. L- Hammond, proprietor. 

City livery and horse exchange. 

Shoe shop, Wm. Kissner. 

Dray line, C. W. Miller, proprietor. 

Express and telegraph office, R. M. Walker, agent. 

Atlas Lumber Co., Ed. Kolegraff, agent. 

Blain Lumber Co., W. H. Blevins, agent. 

Atlas Elevator Co., G. A. Buss, agent. 

Sleepy Eye Milling Co., C. W. Wolcott, agent. 

Eagle Roller Mills, Ed. Mack, agent. 

Billard hall and barber shop, P. J. Hand, proprietor. 

New barber shop, A. L- Card, proprietor. 

Blacksmith shop. Severance & Son, proprietor. 

Millinery, Mrs. F. Severance. 

Cement block factory, A. C. Levtzow. 

Plaster and Stone mason, Henry Levtzow. 

Physician and surgeon, Dr. H. J. Seeman. 

MIRANDA. 

Miranda is the third station on the Chicago & North- 
western railroad in Faulk county and is located eight miles 
west of Rockham and nine miles east of the county seat, 
on section one in Arcade township. It is surrounded by a 
rich, well farmed agricultural territory, which gives it a 

large grain shipping business and a good lumber trade. It 
is too near Faulkton to do a large mercantile business. 

It has two stores, a lumber yard and two grain ele^'a- 
tors. It is an important business center. 

The following is a full list of the business places of the 
town : 

General merchandise. Pierce & Haag, proprietors. 

Hardware and postoffice, O. C. Riedlinge, proprietor 
and postmaster. 



176 



Lumber and building material, Philip Findeis, pro- 
prietor. 

The Atlas Grain Elevator Co., Philip Findeis, mana- 
ger. 

J. T. Scrogg Grain Elevator & Coal, J. E. Scroggs, 
manager. 

Miranda railroad station, J. E. Moel, agent. 

R. Alexander, pool hall and harness shop. 

J. H. Niemeyer, blacksmithing and feed grinding. 

Miranda State Bank, Philip Findeis, president; J. A. 
Rouse, cashier. 

The Miranda Hotel, the Misses Olson, managers. 

Livery stable, Joe Pesha, proprietor. 

Agricultural implements, H. Grabinski, agent. 

Real estate, J. A. Rouse. 

Since the organization of the town Miranda has main- 
tained a band and orchestra, which has proved a credit to 
the town and an honor to all that are identified with it. 
An illustration of the musicians may be found in this his- 
tory. 

ORIENT. 

Orient is located in the southeast corner of Orient town- 
ship, ten miles from Faulkton and on the south line of 
Faulk county. It is the southern terminus of the Roscoe 
and Orient branch of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul 
railroad. Its distance from Miller in Hand county has 
given it a large amount of trade from the northern part of 
Hand county. Surrounded by large tracts of improved 
farming land it furnishes ample business for its four large 
grain elevators. It has a flourishing coal and lumber trade 
and meets a large and increasing demand for farm machin- 



177 



ery and general merchandise. With a fine large school 

building and two churches, the Methodist Episcopal and 

Catholic, the intellectual and spiritual welfare of the people 
are well cared for. 

In addition to the four grain elevators there is a farm- 
ers' independent platform from which shippers may load 
and unload cars without paying tribute to anyone. 

The Conway Brothers, William McKay general mana- 
ger, have one of the largest if not the largest business 
place in Faulk county. In addition to a well stocked 
store of dry goods, groceries and a heavy stock of ready 
made clothing, they have a full stock of hardware with 

lumber and coal, and an extensive assortment of farm 
machinery. 

Messrs. Reilly & Pagel have a well filled store of 
general merchandise and ready made clothing, with shelf 
hardware, dealing also in paint and oils and farm machin- 
ery. 

Orient State Bank, N. A. Gardner and general mana- 
ger. 

Hotel, C. P. Forrest, proprietor. 
Drug store, Dr. F. L,. Mitchell, proprietor. 
Eggerling & Hand, general merchandise. 
Bakery and confectionery store, L. L. Sebring. 
Meat market, E. N. Dignan. 
Meat market, Deinslake & Reglin, proprietor. 
Blacksmitn shop. A. Adamak, proprietor. 
Blacksmith shop, August Zellmer proprietor. 
The Orient Argus, Carl Thomas, proprietor. 
Restaurant, Mr. Mellue, proprietor. 
Bryant & Eoomer, C. A. Steinke, Bartley O'Donnell, 
contractors and builders. 



178 



Pool hall and barber shop, W. N. Meyers, proprietor. 
N. A. Johnson, painter and paper hanger. 

BURKMERE AND MILLARD. 

The stations at Burkmere on the Chicago & North- 
western railroad, and Millard north of Faulkton on the 
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad have found two 
almost unsurmoun table obstacles to material growth. The 
surrounding lands have been held largely unimproved and 
for speculation, and their nearness to Faulkton with her 
attractive market and social surroundings has proved ob- 
stacles that could not be overcome. The amount of land 
that has lately passed into the hands of enterprising and 
industrious farmers and the large shipments of grain from 
these stations, is producing a marked change in their im- 
mediate surroundings, that will invite business industries 
and the upbuilding of live and prosperous towns. 



THE NEW yOF;K 

PUBLIC library! 



ASTOR. LFNOX 
TILDEN FOUNDATIONS 



181 



CHAPTER XXIV CONTINUED. 

SENECA. 

The village of Seneca is located ih the town of Seneca, 
on the line of the Redfield and Gettysburg branch on the 
Chicago & Northwestern railroad, fifty -four miles west of 
Redfield and twenty-two miles west of P'aulkton, the 
county seat of Faulk county, and in the center of one of 
the finest sections of rich agricultural and grazing land to 
be found in the great northwest. From its location and 
surroundings, it is, and ever must remain the important 
business center of western Faulk county. At this writing, 
Seneca contains two hundred twenty-five inhabitants and the 
following business houses and wnth its various branches 
of business indicates a live, enterprising town, viz: 

Hardware and agricultural machinery, F. E. Hatfield 
& Son, proprietors. 

Hardware, Benson Brothers, proprietors. 

Drug store, Hobart & Bickell, proprietors. 

Post office, William Kellett, postmaster. 

General store and meat market, O. A. Rogers, manager. 

State Bank of Seneca, J. A. Dixon, cashier. 

Farmers State Bank, B. A. Chester, cashier. 

Bakery and grocery store, Frayn & Beath, proprietors. 

Real estate, N. A. Hagan, manager. 

Seneca Land Co., M. E. Stevens, manager. 

Land office, A. C. Rudine, manager. 

Palace Restaurant. A. T. Erickson, proprietor. 

Barber shop, John Christie, proprietor. 



182 



Job work and printing, John Snell, proprietor. 

Seneca Journal, John Snell, editor. 

Livery stable, Ernest Ream, proprietor. 

Ivivery stable, Peter Putes, proprietor. 

Pool, billiards and bowling alley, E. D. Smith, pro- 
prietor. 

Saloon, Nugent & Christianson, proprietors. 

Blacksmith shop, John Miller, proprietor. 

Lumber and coal, A. J. Eaton. 

Lumber and coal, William Bell. 

Atlas Elevator, William Bell, manager. 

Sleepy Eye Elevator Co., B. A. Chester, manager. 

M. E. church. Rev. Tanner, pastor. 

Catholic church, Rev. Father Keene, parish priest. 

First class graded school, Prof. R. J. Calkins, princi- 
pal. 



183 



CHAPTER XXV. 

FUTURE GROWTH. 
The future growth and prosperity of the business cen- 
ters are dependent here as everywhere upon the law of 
supply and demand. While the laws of trade give activ^e 
employment to an army of workers whose many wants 
must be supplied, it is to the creators of wealth that we 
must look, and upon them depend for the development and 
prosperity, that constitute actual advancement and future 
greatness. To the tiller of the soil — the farmer — must we 
look and upon him depend for the supplementing of 
nature's vast resources, in soil, sunshine and climate. 
Practical illustrations upon every hand shows us that Faulk 
county stands in the front rank with the class of her citi- 
zens not only in physical efforts, and in all the departments 
of labor but in the use of mechanical appliances to produce 
the most with the least possible expense. The seeder, the 
header and the steam thresher many times multiplied the 
labor preformed in former days, as did also the steam 
breaking outfit, turning from eight to twelve furrows to 
which is attached a pulverizer, leaving that which one 
minute before was unbroken prairie, in fine condition for 
the seeder. It is impossible for us to make at this writing 
a correct estimate of the amount of virgin prairie that has 
been transformed into cultivated fields with growing crops 
since the first of April, A. D. 1909, with the fifty-three of 
these steam and gasoline outfits, and the many four and 
six horse teams that have not been idle and which had 



184 



been depended upon for all the breaking until within the 
last four years. 

We venture the opinion that seventy- five thousand 
acres is a very conservative estimate. Seventy-five thous- 
and acres of wheat and flax, more than was produced last 
year, will go far in placing Faulk county in the front rank 
among the oldest and most wealthy counties in the state. 



185 



CHAPTER XXVI. 

FAUIvKTON. 

As a business center Faulkton stands preeminently 
in the front rank, with the following branches of business 
established on a firm foundation, and doing a good paying 
business, viz: 

The Security State bank, A. W. Morse, president. 

The Merchants Bank of Faulkton, A. M. Moore, 
cashier. 

General merchandise, C. M. Whitney & Son, pro- 
prietors. 

Grocery and shoes, N. J. Frayn, proprietor, J. C 
lyingo, manager. 

General Merchandise Co., W. J. Grater, proprietor. 

General Merchandise, George Stoddard, proprietor. 

General Merchandise Co., W. J. Frad, proprietor. 

Bakery, N. J. Frayn, proprietor; J. C. Lingo, manager. 

Meat market, F. M. Ramsdell, proprietor. 

Hardware, stoves, etc., Hollands worth-Hart Co., pro- 
prietor; T. Picton, manager. 

Hardware, farm machinery and general merchandise, 

J. H. Wallace, proprietor. 

Farm machinery, harness and coal, A. A. Colgrove, 
proprietor. 

Drug store, F. T. Reid, proprietor. 

Drug store, S. Hall Jarvis, proprietor. 

Furniture, A. Boiler, proprietor. 

Watches, jewelry and silverware, L. A. Walker, pro- 
prietor. 



186 



Watch and clock repairing, W, A. Bowers. 

Merchant tailor, C. Niemeyer. 

Ready made clothing, C. Niemeyer, proprietor. 

Newspaper and job printing, Bickell & Rice, pro- 
prietors. 

Newspaper and job printing, Fremont Young, pro- 
prietor. 

Faulkton Record, Bickell & Rice, editors. 

Faulkton Advocate, Fremont Young, editor. 

Postoffice, Eva M. Young, postmaster. 

Millinery and dress making. Misses E. «& J. Pad- 
dock, proprietors. 

Millinery, Mrs. G. F. Kreasch, proprietor. 

Blacksmithing, horse shoeing and repairing, J. P. 
Turner, proprietor. 

Blacksmithing, horse shoeing and repairing, James 
Cramer, proprietor. 

Harness shop, Butler Lambert, proprietor. 

Harness shop, John Bass, proprietor. 

Automobile repair shop, Butler Lambert, proprietor. 

Livery and sale stable, Headly & Clark proprietors. 

Livery and sale stable. Snider & Branneman, propri- 
etors. 

Queen City Hotel, Capt. C. H. Ellis, proprietor. 

The Gem Hotel, Rose M. Grater, proprietor. 

Matt's Inn Hotel, M. J. Jarvis, proprietor. 

Restaurant, Douglas Bros., proprietors. 

City plumber, Geo. Zaelke. 

Western Telephone Exchange, Mrs. J. H. Hays, pro- 
prietor. 

Opera House, A. W. Morse, proprietor. 



187 



Pool, billiards and bowling alleys, Tuttle & Ingalls, 
proprietors. 

Pool and billiard hall, Barney McGough, proprietor. 
Atlas Lumber Co., C. J. Moll, manager. 
Atlas Elevator Co., Olaf Opsetta, manager. 
Faulkton Roller Mills, C. B. Dodge, proprietor. 
Hollandsworth-Hart Lumber Co., Thos. Picton, man- 
ager. 

Elevator, C. E. Warner, proprietor. 

Bagley Elevator Company. 

Real estate, F. M. Byrne. 

Real estate, A. P. McDowell. 

Real estate, F. A. Seaman. 

Real estate, C. B. Chambers. 

Real estate, Jensen Bros. 

Real estate, F. A. Oulton. 

Real estate, J. W. Hays. 

Real estate, Phelps & Griff ee. 

Real estate. Burr & Seaman. 

Abstract office, I. A. Cornwell. 

Abstract office, J. W. Johnston. 

Stockman and cattle buyer, P. H. O'Neil. 

'Bus line, C. H. Ellis, proprietor. 

'Bus line, S. F. Thorn, proprietor. 

Painting and paper hanging, Chas. Greener. 

Painter and paper hanger, H. J. Keppen. 

Painter and paper hanger, Robert Drolet. 

Undertaker and embalmer, F. A. Boiler. 

Photographer, M. A. Cass. 

Barber shop, Jarvis & Hansel, proprietors. 

Barber shop, Geo. F. Kreasch, proprietor. 



188 



Dray line, A. \V. Phelps, proprietor. 

Dray line, S. F. Thorn, proprietor. 

Dealer in ice, J. M. Dunsmore. 

Dealer in ice, A. J. Flint. 

Architects, contractors and builders, W. J. Dodds, 
Claus Johnson and M.S. McDearmon. 

Contractors and builders, J. T. Garwood, A. L,. Allen, 
and Wni. Nicholas. 

House moving contractors, C. W. Miller & Son, and 
E. J. Tuttle. 

Stone masons and plasterers, E. Hulet, J. C. Church, 
Vanmeerbeck & Ottart. 

Surveyor and civil engineer, J. F. Armstrong. 

Auctioneer, D. T. Eindburg. 

Grain buyer, A. J. Wakefield. 

Coal dealers. Atlas Elevator Co.. J. H. Wallace, C. E. 
Warner and A. A. Colgrove. 

Dealer in flour, butter, cream and eggs, T. R. Nan- 
ney. 

Dealers in milk cream, live and dressed poultry, D. 
Roberts & Son. 

Cement block factory, Vanmeerbeck & Ottart, propri- 
etors. 

Rag carpet factory, Victorena Rush, proprietor. 

Notary publics, A. M. Moore, A. W. Morse, D. H. 
Eatham, Mrs. D. H. Eatham, Ruby McDearmon, Frank 
Turner, Eva Hines, C. B. Chambers, and E A. Cornwell. 

Stenographers and typewriters, Mrs. D. H. Ef^tham^ 
Miss Ruby McDearmon, Miss Mary Bryden, Miss Mayme 
Brewer, Miss Fannie Bottum, Mi.ss Gertrude Cornwell, 
Miss Rhea Griffee and Herbert Chambers. 



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PROFESSIONAL. 

Pastor Congregational church, Rev. A. 'A. Wood. 
Pastor Methodist Episcopal church, Rev. E. Holgate, 
Pastor Free Methodist church, Rev. D. Waller, 
Pastor Catholic church. Father Reilly. 

ATTORNEYS. 

Hon. J. A. Pickler, retired. 

Hon. J. H. Bottum, judge of circuit court. 

Frank Turner. 

George J. Jarvis, judge of county court. 

D. H. Latham. 

F. E. Snider, state's attorney for Faulk county. 

PHYSICIANS, 

W. M. Edgerton, M. D. 
Abbie A. Jarvis. M. D. 
D. Carson, M. D. 
A. J. McDowell, D. D. S. 
Foster H. Pierce, V. S. 
C. B. Reynolds, V. S. 

FAULKTON CITY GOVERNMENT. 

Dr. W. M. Edgerton, mayor. 
A. W. Morse, treasurer. 
J. F. Armstrong, auditor. 
F. E. Snider, city attorney. 
C. C. Norton, assessor. 
S. F. Thorn, chief of police. 

AIvDERMEN. 

First ward, H. E. Headly and Frank Oulton. 
Second ward, C. W. Miller and F. T. Reid. 
Third ward, A. Boiler and W. B. Foncannon. 



192 



SCHOOL BOARD. 

J. H. Bottum, Frank Turner. P. H. O'Neil, J. F. 
Armstrong and N. J. Frayn, directors. 

J. H. Bottum, president; Frank Turner, vice president; 
C. C. Norton, clerk. 

HIGH SCHOOL FACULTY. 

J. Jones, Jr., superintendent. 

Hazel lyouise Tompkins, first assistant principal. 

Nellie Bottum, second assistant principal. 

Mrs. J. Jones, grammar department. 

Mae Race, first intermediate. 

Maynie Byrne, second intermediate. 

Margaret Nichol, primary department. 

FAULKTON CEMENT BLOCK BUILDING FACTORY. 

The manufacturing of concrete or cement blocks, one 
part Portland cement and ten parts sand, has become an 
established business in this city. A visit to the factory 
secured the following information from the gentlemanly 
proprietor, Mr. Vanmeerbeck. 

There are now two buildings in the city of Faulkton, 
a barn owned by Mr. Ernest Hulet and the two story 
building on the corner of Ninth avenue and Court Street, 
the first floor of which is occupied by the Faulk county 
Abstract Company, I. Allen Cornwall manager, and P. H. 
O'Neil's office. The second floor by the Faulkton Com- 
mercial Club. Three thousand blocks are now completed 
towards a building for Mr. A. A. Colgrove, 50 by 100 feet 
and two stories. 

These blocks are 24 inches long, 10 inches wide and 8 
inches high, they are in two parts attached by four one- 
fourth inch wire rods, allowing an air space through the 



193 



middle of the wall, which will prevent all frost or dampness 
from the coldest of winter weather or extreme heat in sum- 
mer. 

The room required for this establishment is 20 by 28 
feet with a shed 10 b}^ 20 feet. The machinery used, includ- 
ing a gasoline engine, costs $700. A very little additional 
machinery would double the capacity of the factory, 
which is 70 or 75 blocks per day. As now running it re- 
quires a crew of three men at a cost of 30 cents per block. 
With some improvements in location and machinery and on 
a larger scale, these blocks should be had for $20.00 per 
hundred and completely displace lumber for the outside 
w^all, if not for the partitions for the most of our buildings, 
at a much less cost while they would be almost fire proof. 



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CHAPTER XXVII. 

SOCIAL ORGANIZATION. 

ANCIENT FREE AND ACCEPTED MASONS. 

Among the first settlers of Dakota Territory were 
members of this ancient and honorable order. Yet it was 
not until 1863 that a charter was granted for St. John's 
Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons at Yankton, under the 
jurisdiction of the grand lodge of Iowa, with the following 
list of officers: 

Melanhen Hoyt, Master. 
Douner T. Bramble, Senior Warden. 
John Hutchinson, Junior Warden. 
Moses K. Kingsbury, Secretary. 
George W. Kingsbury, Treasurer. 
George N. Proper, Senior Deacon. 
F. M. Liebach, Junior Deacon. 
Blight E. Wood, Tyler. 

This was followed by Increase Lodge No. 257 at Ver- 
million in 1869, Elk Point Lodge No. 288 in 1870, Minne- 
haha Lodge No. 328 at Sioux Falls was instituted that 
year and in 1875 Silver Star Lodge No. 345 was in- 
stituted at Canton. Delegates from these five lodges met 
at the hall of Elk Point Lodge on June 22, 1875, and 
adopted a constitution and by-laws for a Grand Lodge and 
petitioned the Grand Lodge of Iowa imder whose juris- 
diction they were acting for authority to organize under 
a separate jurisdiction. 



195 



It was not until the spring of 1887 that any decisive 
steps were taken to organize a Masonic lodge in Faulk 
county. 

The following brethren having obtained their demits 
from the lodges to which they belonged, received authority 
to meet and work under a dispensation from the Grand 
Lodge of Dakota Territory, viz: 

Ira C. Adams Charles W. Dunkel 

Roswell Bottum Edward Ensch 

John Butman Charles H. Gardner 

I. Allen Corn well Jeremiah H. Howe 

John Darby A. D. Hursh 

Chalkley H. Derr Herman A. Kaeppler 

John Douglas George A. Morse 

Caleb H. Ellis Charles C. Moulton 

John A. Pickler Donald W. Pillsbury 

Tanson O. Sanborn A. Smith 

Frederick Teed James H. Wallace 

Preston H. Wilson 

On the 17th of June, 1887. they met at Faulkton and 
perfected their organization by the election of officers. 
While working under a dispensation sixteen members were 
admitted. On June the first, 1888, the Grand Eodge of 
Dakota Territory granted a charter for Faulkton Eodge No. 
95, and on July 5, 1888, the first regular communication was 
held at which brother James S. Huston, of Redfield Lodge 
No. 34, having been appointed Deputy Grand Master 
instituted the lodge and installed its officers. After appoint- 
ing John A. Pickler Grand Marshall he proceeded to in- 
stall the following officers, they havang been duly 
elected : 



196 



Ira C. Adams, Worshipful Master. 
I. Allen Cornwell, Senior Warden. 
George C. Bissell, Junior Warden. 
George A. Morse, Treasurer. 
Charles A. Morse, Secretary. 
H. A. Kaeppler, Senior Deacon. 
H. D. Chamberlain, Junior Deacon. 

C. H. Derr, Senior Steward. 

D. Bryden, Junior Steward. 
D. S. Smith, Tyler. 

Since July 5th, 1888, there has been ninety-four men 
good and true, made Masons in Faulkton Lodge No. 95. 

The following officers have been elected and installed 
for the year 1909: 

Hubert L. Headly, Worshipful Master. 

Frank T. Reid, Senior Warden. 

Clark L. Streeter, Junior Warden. 

Alvin M. Moore, Treasurer. 

James P. Turner, Secretary. 

I. Allen Cornwell, Chaplain. 

Adelbert J. McDowell, Senior Deacon. 

Arthur W. Phelps, Junior Deacon. 

William J. Dodds, Senior Steward. 

John Dignan, Junior Steward. 

William Garrick, Tyler. 

While a number have removed from the county and 
taken their demits with them, the grim reaper — Death has 
made his inroads, so that the present membership is re- 
duced to seventy-seven. 

After the division of Dakota Territorv, North and 
South Dakota remained under one Masonic Jurisdiction 
until 1899. 



197 



Free Masonry has found a very fruitful field in South 
Dakota, counting among its members many of the state's 
most talented, influential and reliable citizens. Today 
there are lodges of Free and Accepted Masons and chapters 
of Royal Arch Masons. 

YORK MASONRY. 

The York rites of Free Masonry in Dakota Territory date 
from February 25th, 1885, when charters were issued for 
chapters at Yankton, Sioux Falls, Deadwood, Canton. 
Huron, Watertown, Brookings, Flandreau, Redfield and 
others to the number of fourteen, delegates from which met 
at Sioux Falls, July 8, 1885 and proceeded to organize the 
Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Masons for South Dakota. 
This branch of this ancient order together with the auxili- 
ary order of the Eastern Star have found a very fruitful 
field in this state. The class of people who constituted the 
pioneer settlers of Faulk County were of that degree of 
intelligence that required just such social and intellectual 
enjoyment that this popular and influential organization 
was prepared to supply. 

It was not until December 21, 1888, that discussion 
and agitation culminated in a meeting at the Masonic 
Hall at Faulkton, at which decisive measures were taken 
to secure from the Grand Chapter a dispensation under 
which to meet in view of a permanent organization. 

The first meeting under a dispensation was held at the 
Masonic Hall in Faulkton, Jan. 23, 1889, with the follow- 
ing active members: 

Companion R. G. Morton, High Priest, 

Visiting Companion C. H. Ellis, King. 

Companion H. S. Humphrey, Scribe. 



198 



Companion M.S. McDearmon, Captain, of the Host. 

Companion I. Allen Cornwell, Royal Arch Captain. 

Companion J. A. Pickler, Grand Master Third Veil. 

Companion C. H. Derr, Grand Master Second Veil. 

Companion Jerome Ferguson, Grand Master First Veil. 

Companion G. A. Morse, Secretary. 

The Most Excellent High Priest read the dispensation 
under which the Chapter was acting. It was decided to 
elect a secretary and treasurer. Companion George A. 
Morse was unanimously elected to fill both of the offices. 
The following is the record of the first Stated Convocation 
of Faulkton Chapter No. 30 Royal Arch Masons, held at 
the Masonic Hall, Faulkton, South Dakota, July 10, 1889. 

Companion, H. S. Williams, of Aberdeen Chapter No. 
14 South Dakota, a duly appointed Deputy, Most Excellent 
Grand High Priest, installed the following elected officers, 
viz: 

Companion R. G. Morton, High Priest. 

Companion H. S. Williams, King. 

Companion Ed. W. Lowe, Scribe. 

Companion M.S. McDearmon, Captain of the Host. 

Companion P. H. Wilson, Past Scribe. 

Companion I. Allen Cornwell, Royal Arch Captain. 

Companion H. D. Chamberlain, Grand Master Third 
Veil. 

Companion F. A. Seaman, Grand Master Second Veil. 

Companion David Bryden, Grand Master First Veil. 

Companion Geo. A. Morse, Treasurer. 

Companion C. A. Morse, Secretary. 

Companion J. A. Pickler, Guard. 



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The passing years have brought no unusual changes. 
Some of its valued members have been called to the Supreme 
Lodge and if found worthy, to enter into the Sanctum 
Sanctorum above. Others have removed to other jurisdic- 
tions. From the surrounding community good men and 
true have been found to take their places. 

The opening year of 1909 finds a membership of 
seventy Companion Royal Arch Masons, with the following 
elected and appointed officers, viz: 

Companion A. M. Moore, High Priest. 

Companion I. Allen Co wn well, King. 

Companion A. D. Griffee, Scribe. 

Companion Thomas Picton, Treasurer. 

Companion C. E. Haskins, Secretary. 

Companion A.J. McDowell, Captain of the Host. 

Companion A. W. Morse, Royal Arch Captain. 

Companion A. A. Garrick, Grand Master Third Veil. 

Companion A. W. Phelps, Grand Master Second Veil. 

Companion John Dignan, Grand Master First Veil. 

Companion N. J. Frayn, Guard. 

EASTERN STAR. 

Faulkton Chapter No. 69 Order of the Eastern Star 
was organized in May 1907, and June 11th of that year re- 
ceived their charter. 

This organization is composed of the wives, widows, 
mothers, sisters and daughters of Master Masons. Al- 
though the Eastern Star is closely related to the Masonic 
fraternity, it is no part of that ancient institution, but be- 
comes active in advancing the principles of Free Masonry. 

From seventeen charter members there has been a 
rapid growth of nearly one hundred members. Regular 



202 



meetings are held on the second and fourth Monday even- 
ings of each month. The officers for the present vear 
(1909) are as follows: 

Inez Armstrong, Worthy Matron. 

James Turner, Worthy Patron. 

Abbie A. Jarvis, Associate Matron. 

Mayme Bryden, Conductor. 

Frances Cornwell, Associate Conductor. 

Adah, Nellie Bottum. 

Ruth, Nora McDearnion. 

Esther, Louise Simon. 

Martha, Mattie Colgrove. 

Electa, Jane I^ockey. 

Elizabeth Jones, Secretary. 

A. M. Moore, Treasurer. 

Rheta Garrick, Chaplain. 

Ruby McDearmon, Organist. 

Sue Phelps, Warden. 

Emma Moore, Sentinal. 

Alice Morse of Faulkton is Grand Associate Matron 
of the Grand Chapter of South Dakota. 

THE INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS. 

The Odd Fellows of Faulkton in the early eighties 
organized a lodge of considerable size which continued un- 
til about 1893, when owing to the hard times, and there 
being no hall in the town that was suitable to hold meet- 
ings, which they could procure, they .surrendered their 
charter. This lodge was known as Nixon River Lodge. 

On May the 2nd, 1906, Faulkton Lodge No. 169, I. O. 
O. F. was organized with a good membership and is now 
considered a good strong working lodge. 



203 



There is also a lodge at Chelsea, South Dakota, of 
which I am unable to give the name and number. Also at 
Cresbard where New Empire Lodge was organized on April 
the 15th, 1909. These two lodges are located in good 
thriving towns, along the line of the M. & St. L,. rail- 
road, and in a portion of the county that is well populated 
and in one of the finest agricultural sections of South Da- 
kota, and are destined to become strong and influential 
organizations. 

LILLY REBECCA LODGE. 

There was on the 19th day of April, 1909, organized 
in Faulkton, Lily Rebecca Lodge No. 116 with twenty-five 
members, and has a bright future before it, with the fol- 
lowing officers: 

Dora Louise Simon, Noble Grand. 

Frances Champlin, Past Grand. 

Anna Bixler, Vice Grand. 

S. Belle Jarvis, Secretary. 

Ada Dunsmore, Treasurer. 

Millie L. Ellis, Warden. 

Victorena Rush, Conductor. 

C. E. Coste, Inside Guardian. 

Ralph Warren, Outside Guardian. 

James Dunsmore, Right Supporter to the Noble Grand. 

Ada Alden, Left Supporter to the Noble Grand. 

Mrs. C. E. Coste, Right Supporter to the Vice Grand. 

Violetta Shaver, Left Supporter to Vice Grand. 

Emily Niemeyer, Chaplain. 

ANCIENT ORDER OF UNITED WORKMEN. 

The Ancient Order of United Workmen perfected an 
organization in Faulkton in 1889. This is a fraternal and 



204 



insurance organization and has always been popular with 
the business men of this city and has taken a strong hold 
upon the rural population of the county. 

DEGREE OF HONOR. 

In December, 1898, the Degree of Honor organized a 
temporary lodge in Faulkton, and since that time has been 
in active operation. In that time it has paid three thous- 
and dollars or more on account of the death of members. 
From the twenty-six, who were charter members, the order 
rapidly increased in number until nearly one hundred had 
identified themselves with it. The promptness with which 
death losses have been paid has done much to give the lodge 
both financial standing and a social influence both in the 
city and surrounding country, and as a beneficiary organi- 
zation is well worth}- the sympathy and patronage of a 
much larger number. Meetings are held on the second and 
fourth Saturdays of each month. The last meeting of 
each month, refreshments are served and especial attention 
is given to the social side of the order. 

The order has had its home in Hay's Hall ever since 
his block was erected and is in good financial standing. 

The following are the officers for the year 1909: 

Mary Griffee, Past Chief of Honor. 

Victorena Rush, Chief of Honor. 

Ann Thorn, Lady of Honor. 

Louise Simon, Chief of Ceremonies. 

Minnie Pangburn, Recorder. 

Eva M. Young, Financier. 

Emma Seaman, Receiver. 

Altia Edgerton, Usher. 

Frank Pangburn, Inner Watch. 

S. F. Thorn, Outer Watch. 

Mrs. Emma Rice, Advi.sor. 



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ORDER OF THE KNIGHTS OF THE MACCABEES. 

This order was introduced into Faulkton eleven 
years ago and a Hive established and a strong organization 
secured . 

After a destructive fire, with hall, charter and para- 
phernalia all destroyed, the order has never recovered from 
this heavy blow. The organization is barely kept up on 
account of the insurance benefits secured through this 
society. 

George Zaelke, Commander. 

R. M. Whitney, Recorder. 

THE LADIES OF THE MACCABEES OF THE WORLD. 

This order was introduced into Faulkton in November, 
1897, and a live working Hive of twelve members secured, 
which was soon increased to seventy-five, fifty of whom 
were benefit members. 

A fire in which their lodge room, charter and parapher- 
nalia were destroyed was a hard blow to the organization. 
The social members soon dropped out and by reason of that 
and the removal of benefit members there are at the pres- 
ent time only thirty-five members, with the following offi- 
cers: 

Inez Armstrong, Lady Commander. 

Millie Iv. Ellis, Lieutenant Commander. 

Emma Burge, Record Keeper. 

Mattie Colgrove, Finance Keeper. 

Emily Niemeyer, Chaplain. 

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA. 

Faulkton Camp No. 2774 of the Modern Woodmen of 
America was organized in April, 1895, with ten charter 
members, being a social order with fraternal features. 



206 



While the organization has received the hearty support of 
the community and acquired a good membership, there has 
not been a single death or a dollar of insurance paid out 
since its organization in 1895. 

The present officers are: 

C. ly. Streeter, Venerable Commander. 

F. A. Seaman, Clerk. 

A. Boiler, Banker. 

MODERN BROTHERHOOD OF AMERICA. 

The Modern Brotherhood of America organized a lodge 
in the city of Faulkton in 1903. This is a fraternal and 
insurance organization and has secured a very rapid 
growth, having a membership of one hundred. Frank A. 
Pangburn is president of the organization arid Mrs. Eva 
M. Young, secretary. 

GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC. 

Phil. H. Sheridan Post No. 72, organized in 1895, has 

had an eventful history. At one time, with one hundred 

and twenty-three Civil War veterans in the county, one 
hundred and two had their names upon the roll. 

Through the earnest and persistant efforts of the 

Woman's Relief Corps the Post has a place of meeting in 
a fine Grand Army and Relief Corps building. 

Many members have removed from the state and with- 
in less than one year five have answered to their last roll 
call. There are now onlj^ fifteen members, the oldest 

being in his eighty-fourth year and the youngest member 
sixty-three. 

The ownership of the lot and building is vested in the 

Grand Army Post and the Woman's Relief Corps and when 

the last roll call has been sounded the property will revert 
to the city of Faulkton for a public library building. 



207 



The following is a list of officers: 

John W. Hays, Commander. 

A. A. Andrews, Senior Vice Commander. 

H. A. Wilkinson, Junior Vice Commander. 

George J. Jarvis, Adjutant. 

M.S. McDearmon, Quarter Master. 

Thos. O'Neil, Officer of the Day. 

L. D. Wood, Officer of the Guard. 

A. J. Sprague, Chaplain. 

woman's relief corps. 

Phil. H. Sheridan Woman's Relief Corps No. 43 under 
territorial jurisdiction and 19 South Dakota jurisdiction 
was organized May 24, 1888, with twenty-one charter 
members as follows: Sarah B. Humphrey, Alice M. A. 
Pickler, Helen M. Bissell, Hattie F. Douglas, Lottie A. 
McDearmon, Belle F. McCoy, Nettie E. Haskins, Susan C. 
Moulton, Retta H. Miller, Carrie B. Norton, Hester A. 
Swearngen, Emma B. Miller, Eydia M. Bonsey, Viola E. 
Wallace, Mary Etta Talcott, Jane E. Hughes, Martha 
Anderson, Mary E. Summy, Silvia G. Bottum, Alia A. 
Bottum and Mattie M. Johnston. 

This organization has been one of the most devoted, 
successful and efficient working Relief Corps in the west. 
Too much credit cannot be given for the beautiful, com- 
modious Grand Army hall, now worth two thousand dol- 
lars, and for the sympathy and encouragement extended to 
our comrades in sickness and in health, and for the most 
loyal support, when the last sad roll call has sounded. 

The following ladies have served as president of the 
Corps in the following order named: Mrs. Humphrey, 
Moulton, McCoy, Pickler, Wallace, Finney, Stoddard, 



208 



Whipple, Hays, Rush, Miller and Mrs. Spencer, now act- 
ing president. 

This corps has also had the honor of having two state 
department presidents, viz: Sue C. Moulton and Alice M. 
A. Pickler. 

The following are the officers for A. D., 1909: 

Eliza Spencer, President. 

Frances C. Champlin, Vice President. 

Frances Hays, Junior Vice President. 

Mary A. Finney, Secretary. 

Emma Rice, Treasurer. 

Victorena Rush, Conductor. 

Emily Niemeyer, Chaplain. 

THE TUESDAY CLUB. 

The Tuesday Club of Faulkton was organized in the 
fall of 1897 as a literary club exclusively for ladies. Meet- 
ings were to be held every Tuesday evening from October 
first to May first. 

The early membership was limited to sixteen and in 
later years to twenty. 

For several years Shakespeare's plays were the chief 
.study, and not one year has passed without some study 
of one or more of the plays of the greatest master of litera- 
ture. 

Carlyle said: "The study of history is the preliminary 
to all right and full understanding of anything we can ex- 
pect to find in books," and the club recognizing the fact, 
has made thorovigh study of the history of nearly all the 
great nations of the world. With the history has been in- 
cluded the study of geography, literature, art, music, 
government and the people. Three complete years have 



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ASTOR. LENOX 



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been devoted to the study of America and three years to 
the study of England. Other countries studied are Ger- 
many, Russia, Scandinavia, Holland, Belgium, Italy, 
Switzerland, Greece, China, Japan and Mexico. 

Each year one program at least has been devoted to 
both the question of Household Economics and the Woman 
Question. 

In 1906 the club raised one hundred dollars to pay for 
trees to be planted in the city park. 

During the club years 1906-7 the club wrote a "progress- 
ive story" the main incidents of which were all authentic 
facts in the knowledge or experience of the writers. The 
story was named "Three P's" or Pioneer Pen Pictures of 
Dakota, and was published in book form in the fall of 1907, 
and has met with a ready sale. 

The "lopen meetings" of the club, once or twice a year 
have always been counted among the leading social events 
of the year. 

In October 1907. the tenth anniversary of the organi- 
zation of the club was celebrated by a grand banquet, to 

which husbands and friends, to the number of seventy-five 
were invited. 

The following is the list of presidents names from the 
beginning: Belle F. McCoy, Sylvia G. Bottura, Mable R. 
Morse, Carrie M. Norton, and Sue C. Moulton. 

The club joined the "State Federation of Women's 

Clubs" in 1900, and has been identified with all its pro- 
jects for general welfare and charity. 

CHAUTAUQUA LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC CIRCLE. 

The history of the county would not be complete 
without at least a brief mention of the Chautauqua Liter- 
ary and Scientific Circle of the winters of 1887-88, 1888-89. 



212 



It was the aftermath of a small circle which was the 
source of much pleasure in the earliest days of Faulkton, 
of which Mrs. Pickler was president and her home head- 
quarters. 

The later circle, with few exceptions, met weekly at 
the home of George A. Morse and his sons, A. W. and 
C. A. Its membership was composed of doctors, lawyers, 
merchants, bankers, editors, ministers, housewives, young 
men and maidens, about fifty in all, and the flow of wit 
and wisdom was unsurpassed in any other literary circle of 
the land. C. A. Morse was president of the circle both 
years. 

There were many notable events in connection with 
these meetings that cannot even be mentioned in a short 
article, but who of the old crowd will ever forget Frank 
Turner's recitation of "Tarn O'Shanter," or the lecture on 
Burns by Captain Douglas of Seneca, or the time the gen- 
tlemen played "Pyramus and Thisby" from Shakespeare's 
"Midsummer Nights Dream." Joe Bottum played the 
part of "Bottum," Joel Booth the part of " Pyramus," 
Leslie Bailey, "Thisby." A. W. Morse, "Wall," and C. A. 
Morse, "Moonshine." 

The birthdays af all the great authors were appropri- 
ately celebrated in turn, and many brilliant papers were 
read. The greatest event in the circle's history was when 
Albion W. Tourgee lectured in Faulkton on "Socialism 
and its Allies," and a grand reception by the circle, at the 
"Morse House," at which he read selections from his own 
writings. His gracious, friendly cordiality was fully ap- 
preciated by those present and he seemed equally pleased 
with his entertainment and entertainers. 



213 



THE SWASTIKA CLUB. 

This organization is composed of young ladies and the 
membership is limited to sixteen . The object is for social 
and intellectual improvement. The meetings are held from 
September to June on every Tuesday evening and the so- 
ciety has proved a perfect success for the first year of its 
existence. 

There has been general enthusiasm among all the 
members to faithfully perform the work assigned them. 

This club was organized in March 1908 and in July 
became a member of the State Federation of Women's 
Clubs. 

The first president of the club was Margaret Frayn. 
The following are the present officers of the club: 

Mayme Byrne, President. 

Margaret McDowell, Vice President. 

Katherine Harty, Secretary and Treasurer. 

Margaret Nichol, Press Correspondent. 

FAULKTON COMMERCIAL CLUB. 

lycading all the improvements in the city was the 
erection by I. Allen Corn well of his fine concrete block on 
the corner of Ninth avenue and Court street. The 
first floor supplies two of the finest offices in the city, 
one occupied by the Faulk County Abstract Company, 
supplying every facility and abundance of room for its im- 
portant and ever growing business, the other by P. H. 
O'Neil, who, on account of his extensive cattle business 
is now known throughout the state as "South Dakota's 
Cattle King." In addition to his dealing in neat stock, 
Mr. O'Neil has made some extensive deals in real estate 
which brings him well up as a real estate man. 



214 



The second floor of this building is the home of the 
Faulkton Commercial Club. It contains four spacious and 
conveniently arranged rooms with all modern improve- 
ments and conveniences. It has been furnished most 
sumptuously and with e\-ery facility to care for and attract 
a large membership. No organization has ever started 
out under more favorable circumstances or made more per- 
fect arrangements to interest and hold together its more 
than one hundred members. 

Its genial affable and social president, Mr. P. H. 
O'Neil, seconded by the mayor of our city, Dr. William 
Edgerton, vice president of the organization, will do much 
in providing not only the pleasing and companionable en- 
joyment that such an organization should afford, but in 
bringing the members of the club in one solid phalanx to 
support anything that tends to the upbuilding or the social, 
moral and financial advancement of the city. 

With the fact before her that each year adds largely to 
the value of surrounding farm lands, more largely to the 
number of acres put under cultivation, together with the 
rapid and almo.st unparalled increase in bank deposits 
Faulkton must keep a pace in the onward march, and her 
Commercial Club if true to themselves and the general 
prosperity of our city must lead in the onward march. 

The following is a full list of its efficient and popular 
officers: Hon. P. H. O'Neil, president; Dr. William 
M. Edgerton, vice president; Dr. A. J. McDowell, secre- 
tary; A. M. Moore, treasurer. The board of directors con- 
sists of all the above named officers, together with Messrs 
A. Boiler, A. D. Griff ee and Frank Oulton. 



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CHAPTER XXVIII. 

CHURCH ORGANIZATION. 

CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. 

The Congregational church of F'aiilkton had its birth 
in the fall of 1883 in a rough board building sided up with 
sod when a few earnest dev^oted christian men and women 
met to organize themselves into church fellowship. This 
organization was perfected January 10th, 1884, with thir- 
teen members by whom the following officers were elected, 
viz: Rev. Clinton Douglas, pastor; P. B. Durley and N. 
S. Whittlesey, deacons; George A. Morse, P. B. Durley 
and M. Summy, trustees; E. E. Pierce, treasurer; R. G. 
Newton, clerk. For more than two years the church oc- 
cupied a rented building. These were the days of small 
things commencing before the organization of the county 
and keeping full abreast with its development and improve- 
ments. Four years after the organization found itself in a 
large well furnished church costing $4000.00 with a fine 
toned bell ringing out its calls to worship. The bell was a 
gift of Judge John Douglas of Eonaconing, Maryland. 

To these thirteen members has been added more than 
150 more and through all its years under eight different 
pastors, stood in the front rank of moral reform and earnest, 
devoted christian work. 

After a two year pastorate. Rev. J. E. Fisher has just 
severed his relation with this church to accept a call to a 
sister church in Omaha, Nebra.ska. Doubtless before this 
writing is in the hands of our friends another worthv minis- 



216 



ter will have taken up the work just laid down, for while 
God removed the workmen His work has and will go on to 
the end of time. 

In February, 1909, the church extended a call to Rev. 
A. A. Wood of Fond du L,ac, Wis., who is now faithfully 
and acceptably discharging the duties of his important office. 

CATHOLIC CHURCH. 

On the 15th of August A.D., 1903, Rev. Father Reilly 
called a meeting to arrange plans for a new Catholic 
church in Faulkton. 

There were seven earnest and devoted members who 
responded to the call, viz: P. H. O'Neil, Patrick Duggan, 
J. Iv. Grater, Henry Nicholson, Bernard McGough, Nicho- 
las Kennedy and Thomas O'Neil. Plans w^ere adopted 
and approved by Bishop O' Gorman and the work went 
forward . 

A chruch building 36 bj^ 60 was erected, an honor to 
the city and a monument of devotion to the cause it repre- 
sents. 

In the summer of 1904, the church wath a seating 
capacity of two hundred, at a cost of $7,000.00 and free 
from debt, was ready for dedication, and on September 14th 
of that year, Bishop O'Gorman of Sioux Falls, assisted by 
Revs. Father Nolon of Sioux P'alls; MacConnachie of Red- 
field; Myers of Zell; Monohan of Gettysburg and Reilly of 
of Orient, dedicated and set apart the fine edifice to the 
ser\'ice of Almighty God. 

This was a most important event in the history of the 
Catholic church in Faulkton and its immediate vicinity, 
giving new life and power to its influence in the community. 
Its worshipers have now increased to forty families and 



217 



still greater good will soon be accomplished through the 
influence of a resident priest. 

FREE METHODIST CHURCH. 

The Free Methodist church of Fault ton, South Dako- 
ta, was incorporated on the 15th day of January, A. D., 
1900. Rev. Rufus Farl at that time purchased the build- 
ing from the Presbyterian denomination. Rev. Earl was 
pastor of this church two years, afterwards moving to 
Port Arthur, Canada, where he has since died and gone to 
his eternal reward. Since Rev. Earl's pastorate of the 
Faulkton circuit there has been four different ministers 
serving this charge. Rev. W. N. Vennard, now of Wessing- 
ton Springs; Rev. Gallaway, of Indiana, who has since 
passed to his reward; Rev. W. D. McMullen, now pastor of 
the Wessington Springs circuit and the present pastor Rev. 
Daniel B. Waller, who was born in the state of Ohio in the 
year 1866, and at the tender age of two years was left 
motherless, and some of you know what home is without a 
mother. He was let to do about as he pleased, so he grew 
up something like Topsy. At the age of fifteen he left his 
home and became a wanderer upon the face of the earth; 
became a victim to bad habits and waded into sin, but he 
will ever thank God that he had a praying mother, and he 
was told by his sisters after he grew older that the last 
words of that sainted mother was offered in prayer for her 
baby boy and often times in after years when he would have 
went into sin and probably crime, the thought of that 
deathbed scene and that prayer from those loving lips 
which were growing cold with the death damps, caused 
him to stop and look with horror upon that road that leads 
to hell and eternal night. Thirty years after that prayer 



218 



was offered, thank God, in the year of 1889 he became a 
follower of the L,ord. He was called shortly after conver- 
sion to preach God's eternal truth which he has been en- 
deavornig to do for the past six years and can say today: 
He is walking in the light, and his path is shining 
bright. 
And there is no more night, where he dwells. 
This old world he bids adieu, and its pleasures fade 
from view; 
All things now to him are new; all is well. 

METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 

In 1885 Rev. Thomas Simmons was appointed by the 
Dakota Annual Conference, missionary for Faulk county, 
and located his family in Faulkton. And from that time 
there has been regular Methodist religious services held in 
this place. 

For two years the society was without any fixed place 
of worship, but in 1887 the present commodious church 
building was erected under the direction of Rev. Thomas 
Simmons. 

For three years Rev. Simmons continued in charge of 
his missionary work in the county. After the dedication 
of the P'aulkton church, Faulkton and Orient became an 
independent charge. 

At that time, with the failure of crops and hard times 
that necessarily followed, it was a Herculanean effort to ac- 
complish such a work, for which Rev. Simmons and the 
members, and the friends of the church, are deserving of 
great credit. 

This church, like others, has had its seasons of pros- 
perity and adversity, but through all these years has sus- 



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223 



tained Methodist preaching. At the present time under 
the pastorate of Rev. Ernest Holgate, who has entered up- 
on the fourth year of his labors with this church, there is 
a very prosperous condition of affairs, a church member- 
ship of one hundred, a Sunday school of one hundred and 
fifty, an Epworth League of sixty and a Ladies Aid of fifty 
active, working members. 

In 1903 the present parsonage property was purchased. 
This makes the Methodist Episcopal church property in 
Faulkton worth eight thousand dollars without a dollar of 
indebtedness against it. 



[By Rev. Thomas Simmons.] 
By the counsel of his physician in the spring of '84 
Rev. Thomas Simmons was induced to try Dakota ozone 
for his broken down health. The experiment was so suc- 
cessful that in the fall of '85 he entered the Dakota Con- 
ference to help build the empire of the Dakotas. He was 
given the choice between a charge at $800 and parsonage 
or to organize Methodism in Faulk county. He chose the 
latter and became the first M. E. pastor of Faulk county 
and January 15, 1886, began revival work at Eatondale 
schoolhouse, closing a two week's meeting by organizing 
a class of twenty-four members, then went to Hope Center 
schoolhouse and in about a fortnight organized another 
class of thirty-eight members. Next at LaFoon a class of 
twenty-six, then to DeVoe where a class of thirty-three was 
organized, closing the season with a nine day's meet- 
ing at Roanoke (now Cresbard) organizing with forty- 
two members. The work of the year embraced one hun- 
dred and twenty conversions, two hundred accessions to 



224 



the church, nine Sunday schools with preaching appoint- 
ments. Rev. Chas. Chapman, a local preacher from Iowa, 
rendered good assistance in supplying these appointments 
with preaching. There was no possible place to hold ser- 
vices in Faulkton until the fall of 1886 when the new 
schoolhouse was secured and the first M. E. church of 
Faulkton was organized comprising the following names: 
J. A. Pickler, Alice M. A. Pickler, Lula Pickler, Mrs. 
Clark, Ollie Ireland, Mrs. Dr. Goslee and Anna R. Sim- 
mons. A Sunday school was organized with Mts. Sim- 
mons as superintendent and J. A. Pickler, bible class 
teacher, which office he has held with delight till his pres- 
ent sickness, except during his absence in congress. 

From the schoolhouse we went to a new store building, 
thence to the town hall and then into an abandoned saloon, 
after some scrubbing and disinfecting, we called it Salva- 
tion hall and had one hundred conversions in our first 
revival . 

By this time the M. E. swarm had multiplied so we 
began to provide for a new hive. Having bought the sheet- 
ing and dimension lumber for a new church, we built with 
it a temporary building to accomodate the congregation of 
two hundred, and w^hen ready put it into the new churchy 
meantime using a tent for church services. A happy peo- 
ple responded to P. E. Fielder's call for $1100 to meet full 
arrears and enjoy Dr. Stafford's dedication sermon on the 
last Sabbath of September '88 and the first Methodist 
church of Faulkton was committed to the sacred trust of 
the Board of Trustees, J. A. Pickler, Alice M. A. Pickler,, 
C. E.Warner, Nora Warner, C. H. Seeley, Mrs. M. M. 
John.SQn. 



225 



The three year time limit permitted the pastor but one 
Sabbath in his new pulpit. But he went rejoicing over 
such results — from almost nothing had sprung into exis- 
tence — three full charges, seven Sunda\' schools, three new 
churches built and dedicated, besides two preaching ap- 
pointments given to the Athol charge. Truly God wrought 
marvelously in these three short years. 

MYRON CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. 

In the early spring of 1883 a few christian neighbors 
gathered at the home of Mrs. K. Wirts, on section 3-119-69 
and organized a Sunday school which, with many changes, 
is still in existence. 

The following spring, 1884, Rev. Clinton Douglas of 
Faulkton, learning of this Sunday school and the interest- 
edness of the people in it, called on some of the prominent 
workers, offering his services for an occasional sermon on 
Sunday afternoon. 

The interest increased, and in April, 1895, an organi- 
zation was perfected, called the Congregational church of 
Myron with the following members and officers: 

Members, S. ly. Maltby, Mrs. J. A. Stoddard, Mrs. 
Louise Kimball, Mrs. Kate Wirts, Miss Annie Wirts, 
Joseph Powell, Mrs. Sadie Powell, Wm. Bigelow and Mrs. 
Helen L. Treat. 

Pastor, Rev. Clinton Douglas. 

Deacons, Joseph Powall and Stephen Maltby. 

Trustees, J. H. Treat, Joseph Powell and Wm. Bigelow. 

Clerk, Mrs. H. L. Treat. 

Treasurer, Mrs. Sadie Powell. 

About this time steps were taken for a permanent 
church home, and by the united efforts of pa.stor, people 



226 



and Church Building Society, the now existing Myron 
church was erected on section 7-119-68 and dedicated in No- 
vember, 1896. 

M. Bodine and J. H. Treat drew the first load of 
Stone onto the ground for the church. 



227 



CHAPTER XXIX. 

THE WOMAN SUFFRAGE QUESTION. 

No history of Faulk county would be complete without 
an account of the earnest and persistent work done by 
some of our Faulk county ladies along the line of the 
Woman Suffrage movement. 

As early as 1872 the territorial legislature lacked but 
one vote of conferring equal suffrage upon the women of 
South Dakota. While the territory was too sparsely settled 
for thorough and successful organization, there were 
enough earnest, intelligent, educated women scattered over 
the territory to keep the fire burning, and in this respect 
Faulk county occupied an enviable position, with more 
than a score of active workers. Mrs. Anna R. Simmons 
and Mrs. Alice M. A. Pickler should receive special men- 
tion. In 1879 the territorial legislature passed a law giving 
women the right to vote at school meetings, but the school 
township law of 1883 which required regular polls and a 
private ballot instead of special meetings, abrogated that 
right. At the meeting of the territorial legislature in 1885 
Major J. A. Pickler early in the session introduced a bill 
in the house granting full suffrage to women of the terri- 
tory, as under the organic act, the legislative body had to 
prescribe the qualification for the franchise. The bill passed 
the house, February 1 1 , by a vote of twenty-nine ayes to 
nineteen noes. Gov. Gilbert A. Pierce who had been 
appointed only a few months before by President Arthur, 
failed to recognize the greatest opportunity of his life, the 



228 



power to enfranchise fifty thousand American citizens b^' a 
single stroke of his pen. Such an opportunity seldom 
comes to an American citizen and when so stupidly ignored 
turns pity into contempt. In 1887 a law was passed en- 
larging the school suffrage possessed by women and giving 
them the right to vote at all school elections and for all 
.school officers and also made them eligible for any school 
office. At this time under the liberal land law of the Unit- 
ed States, more than one-third of all the land opened to 
settlement in the territory was held by women. 

In the same legislature of 1887, another effort was 
made to pass an equal suffrage bill and a committee from 
the franchise department of the Woman's Christian Tem- 
perance Union, consisting of Madams Helen M. Barker, 
S. V. Wilson and Alice M. A. Pickler appeared before the 
committee and presented hundreds of petitions and able 
arguments. The committee reported favorably but the 
bill failed in its passage to become a law. This is by no 
means the extent of women's work and influence in South 
Dakota. In all its history they hav^e been a power in all 
social and moral legislation, especially in regulating where 
it was not possible to control. 

In 1885 the American Women's Suffrage Association 
held a national convention in Minneapolis, Minn., which 
was attended by some of the most active and progressive 
men and women of this part of the state, and who took an 
active part in its proceedings. 

The material for the following write up for another 
work was furnished the writer by Mrs. Alice M. A. Pickler 
of Faulkton, who is one of the most influential workers in 
the Woman's Suffrage Association in the northwest and has. 



229 



been honored with the presidency of the South Dakota 
State Suffrage Association. In June, 1883, a convention 
was held at Huron. 

[History of South Dakota (Robinson), chapter 102, 
page 597:] . 

"The territory of Dakota was created in 1861, but in 
1889 it entered the Union divided into two separate states, 
North and South Dakota. As early as 1872 the territorial 
legislature lacked only one vote of conferring full suffrage 
on women. The sparsely settled country and the long 
distances made any organized work an impossibility, al- 
though a number of individuals were strong advocates of 
equal suffrage. In 1879 women were given the right at 
school meetings. In 1883 a school township law was 
passed requiring regular polls and a private ballot instead 
of special meetings, which took away the suffrage from 
women in all but a few counties. 

At the convening of the territorial legislature in Jan- 
uary, 1885, Major J. A. Pickler (afterwards member of 
congress), without solicitation, early in the session intro- 
duced a bill in the house granting full suffrage to women, 
as under the organic act the legislative body had the power 
to prescribe the qualifications for the franchise. The bill 
passed the house, February 11th, by twenty-nine ayes, 
nineteen noes. Soon afterward it passed the council by 
fourteen ayes, ten noes, and its friends counted the victory 
won. But Governor Gilbert A. Pierce, appointed by Presi- 
dent Arthur and only a few months in the territory, failed 
to recognize the grand opportunity to enfranchise fifty 
thousand American citizens by one stroke of his pen, and 
veto 2d the bill. Not only did it express the sentiment of 



230 



the representatives elected by the voters, but it had been 
generally discussed by the press of the territory and all the 
newspapers but one were outspoken for it. An effort was 
made to carry it over the governor's veto, but it failed. 

In 1887 a law was passed enlarging the school suffrage 
possessed by women and giving them the right to vote at 
all school elections and for all school officers, and also mak- 
ing them eligible to any elective school office. At this 
time, under the liberal provisions of the United States land 
laws, more than one-third of the land in the territory was 
held by women. 

In the same legislature of 1887 another effort was made 
to pass an equal suffrage bill, and a committee from the 
franchise department of the Woman's Christian Temper- 
ance Union, consisting of Mesdames Helen M. Barker, S. 
V. Wilson and Alice M. A. Pickler, appeared before the 
committee and presented hundreds of petitions from the 
men and women of the territory. The committe of both 
houses reported fav-orably, but the bill failed by thirteen 
votes in the house and six in the council. 

It was mainly through women's instrumentality that a 
local option bill was carried through this legislature, and 
largely through their exertions that it was adopted by sixty- 
five out of the eighty-seven organized counties at the next 
general election. 

In October, 1885, the American Woman Suffrage As- 
sociation held a national convention in Minneapolis, Minne- 
sota, which was attended by a number of people from Da- 
kota, who were greatly interested. The next month the 
first suffrage club was formed in Webster. Several local 
societies were afterwards started in the southern part of 



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the territory, but for five j^ears no attempt was made at 
bringing these together in a convention. 

At the New Orleans Exposition, in 1885, the displays 
of Kansas, Dakota and Nebraska taught the world the ar- 
tistic value of grains and grasses for decoration, but it was 
exemplified most strikingly in the Dakota's Woman's De- 
partment, arranged by Mrs. J. M. Melton, of Fargo. 
Among the industrial exhibits was a carriage robe sent from 
a leading furrier to represent the skillful work of women 
in his employ. There were also bird fans, a curtain of 
duck skins and cases of taxidermy, all prepared and cured 
by women, and a case of work from women employed in 
the printing office of the Fargo Argus. Four thousand 
bouquets of grasses were distributed on Dakota Day and 
carried away as curious and beautiful memorials. All 
were made by women in the territory. 

The long contention as to whether the territory should 
come into the Union as one state or two, was not decided 
until 1889, when congress admitted two states. Thence- 
forth there were two distinct movements for women suf- 
frage, one in North Dakota, and one in South Dakota. 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 

[The editor is indebted to Mrs. Alice M. A. Pickler, 
of Faulkton, president of the State Woman Suffrage Asso- 
ciation, for the material contained in this part of the chap- 
ter.] 

In June, 1883, a convention was held at Huron to dis- 
cuss the question of dividing the territory and forming 
two states, and a convention was called to meet at 
Sioux Falls, September 4th, and prepared a constitution 
for those in the southern portion. The suffrage leaders in 



234 



the East were anxious that this should include the fran- 
chise for women. Mrs. Matilda Joslyn Gage, of New York, 
vice president at large of the National Suffrage Association, 
lectured at various points in the territory during the sum- 
mer to awaken public sentiment on this question. On Sep- 
tember 6th a petition signed by one thousand Dakota men 
and women, praying that the word "male" should not be 
incorporated in the constitution, was presented to the con- 
vention, accompanied by personal appeals. There was 
some disposition to grant this request, but the opponents 
prevailed and only the school ballot was given to women, 
which they already possessed by act of the legislature of 
1879. However this constitution never was acted upon. 

The desire for division and statehood became very ur- 
gent throughout the great territorv, and this, \\ith the 
growing sentiment in congress in favor of ths same, in- 
duced the legislature of 1885 to provide for a convention at 
Sioux Falls, composed of members elected by the voters of 
the territory, to form a constitution for the proposed new 
state of South Dakota and submit the same to the electors 
for adoption, which was done in November, 1885. Many 
of th; wo;nen had become landholders and were interested 
in the location of schoolhouses, county seats, state capitals, 
and matters of taxation. As their only organization was. 
the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, a committee 
was appointed from that body, consisting of Alice M. A. 
Pickler, supsrintendent of the franchise department; Helen 
M. Barker and Julia Welch, to appear before the committee 
on suffrage and ask that the word "male" be left out of 
the qualifications of electors. They were helped by letters 
to members of the convention from Lucy Stone, Henry B. 



235 



Blackwell, Susan B. Anthony, Lillie Devereux Blake and 
others of national reputation. Seven of the eleven mem- 
bers of the committee were willing to grant this request, 
but there was so much opposition from the convention lest 
the chances of statehood might be imperiled, that they 
compelled a compromise and it was directed that the first 
legislature should submit the question to the voters. They 
did incorporate a clause, however, that women properly 
qualified should be eligible to any school office and should 
vote at any election solely for school purposes. This ap- 
plied merely to school trustees, as state and county superin- 
tendents are elected at general and not special elections. 

The constitution was ratified by the voters in 1885, 
with a provision that "the legislature should at its first 
session after the admission of the state into the Union, sub- 
mit to a vote of the electors at the next general election, 
the question whether the word 'male' should be stricken 
from the article of the constitution relating to elections and 
the right of suffrage." 

Congress at that time refused to divide the territory 
and thus the question remained in abeyance awaiting 
statehood. 

In 1889, an enabling act having been passed by congress, 
delegates were elected from the different counties to meet 
in convention at Sioux Falls to prepare for the entrance of 
South Dakota into statehood. This convention reaffirmed 
the constitution adopted in 1885, and again* submitted it to 
the voters, who again passed upon it favorably, and the 
territory became a state November 2, 1889. 

The first legislature met at once in Pierre and, although 
they were required by the constitution to submit an amend- 



236 



ment for woman suffrage, a vote was taken as to whether 
this should be done. It stood in the senate, forty yeas, 
one nay; absent or not voting, four; in the house, eighty- 
four yeas; nine nays, twenty-one absent. 

On November 11, 1889, Miss Anthony, in response to 
urgent requests from the state, made a lecture tour of 
twelve cities and towns and addressed the Farmers' Alliance 
at their convention in Aberdeen, when it officially indorsed 
the suffrage amendment. On her return home she sent fifty 
thousand copies of Senator T. W. Palmer's great woman 
suffrage speech to individual voters in Dakota under his 
frank. 

A State Suffrage A.ssociation had been formed, with S. 
A. Ramsey, president; Alonzo Wardall, vice-president; the 
Rev. Mr. Barker, secretary, and Mrs. Helen M. Barker, 
treasurer and state organizer; but the beginning of this 
campaign found the women with no funds and very little 
local organization. Mr. Wardall, who was also secretary 
of the Farmers' Alliance, went to Washington and, with 
Representative and Mrs. J. A. PicHer, presented a strong 
appeal for assi.stance to the national suffrage convention in 
February, 1890. It was heartily responded to and a South 
Dakota campaign committee was formed, with Miss 
Anthony chairman. The officers and friends made vigorous 
efforts to raise a fund and eventually five thousand five 
hundred dollars were secured. Of this amount California 
sent one thousand dollars; Senator Stanford personally gave 
three hundred dollars; Rachael Foster Avery, of Philadel- 
phia, the same amount; Mrs. Clara L,. McAdow, of Mon- 
tana; two hundred and fifty dollars; a number gave one 
hundred dollars, among them United States Senator R. F. 



237 



Pettigrew, of South Dakota, and different states sent vari- 
ous simis. The speaker raised about one thousand four 
hundred dollars, which went towards paying their expenses. 
Over one thousand dollars were secured by other means. 
Most of the state workers donated their expenses. 

The first of May, Miss Anthony returned to South Da- 
kota and established campaign headquarters in Huron. A 
mass convention of men and women was held and an active 
state organization formed, with Mrs. Philena Everett John- 
son, president; and Mr. Wardall, vice-president, which co- 
operated with the national committee and inaugurated an 
active campaign. The new state had adopted as its motto, 
"Under God the People Rule," and the suffragists wrote 
upon their banners, "Under God the People Rule; Women 
are People." A large number of national speakers came in 
the summer. Local workers would organize suffrage clubs 
in the schoolhouse and these efforts w^ould culminate in 
large rallies at the county seats where some noted speakers 
would make addresses and perfect the organization. 

Those from the outside who canvasssed the state were 
Henry B. Blackwell, editor Woman's Journal, Boston; the 
Rev. Anna Howard Shaw, national lecturer; Mary Seymour 
Howell, of New York; the Rev. Olympia Brown, of Wis- 
consin; Matilda Hindman, of Pennsylvania; Carrie Chap- 
man Catt, of Washington; Laura M. Johns, of Kansas; Clara 
Berwick Colby, of Nebraska; the Rev. Helen G. Putman, 
of North Dakota, and Julia B. Nelson, of Minnesota. Miss 
Anthony was always and everywhere the moving spirit and 
contributed her services the entire six months without pay. 
When three hundred dollars were lacking to settle the final 
expenses she paid them out of her own pocket. Mr. Black- 



238 



well also donated his services. Most effective state work 
was done by Mrs. Eninia Smith DeVoe, of Huron, and the 
home of Mr. and Mrs. DeVoe was a haven of rest diiring' 
the campaign. 

Among the other valuable state workers were Dr. 
Nettie C. Hall, Mrs. Helen M. Barker, and Mrs. Elizabeth 
M. Wardall, superintendent of press. A large number of 
ministers indorsed the amendment. Two grand rallies of 
all the speakers were held, one at Mitchell, August 26th 
and 27th, during which time Miss Anthony, Mr. Blackwell, 
Miss Shaw and Mrs. Pickler addressed the Republican state 
convention; the other during the state fair in September. 
The 17th was "Woman's Day," and the fair association 
invited ladies to speak. Miss Anthony, Miss Shaw and 
Mrs. DeVoe complied. The summing up of the superin- 
tendent of press was as follows: Total number of addresses 
by national speakers, 789; state speakers, 707; under the 
auspices of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, 10'4; 
total, 1,600; local clubs of women organized, 400; literature 
sent out to every voter. 

It would be difficult to put into words the hardships of 
this campaign of 1890, in a new state throught the hottest 
and dryest summer on record. Frequently the speakers 
had to drive twenty miles between the afternoon and even- 
ing meetings and the audiences would come thirty miles. 
All of the political state conventions declined to indorse the 
amendment. The Republicans refused seats to the ladies 
on the floor of their convention, although Indians in blan- 
kets were welcomed. The Democrats invited the ladies to 
seats, where they listened to a speech against woman 
suffrage by E. W. Miller, land receiver for Huron district. 



239 



too indecent to print, which was received with cheers and 
applause by the convention. The minority committee re- 
port, presented by Judge Bange, of Rapid City, asking for 
an indorsement, was overwhehiiingly voted down. A big 
delegation of Russians came to this convention wearing 
yellow badges lettered, "Against Woman Suffrage and 
Susan B. Anthony." 

The greatest disappointment of the campaign was the 
forming of an independent party by the Farmers' Alliance 
and the Knights of Labor. The Alliance at its convention 
the previous year, four hundred and seventy-eight delegates 
present, at the close of Miss Anthony's address, had de- 
clared that they would do all in their power to carry the 
suffrage amendment, and it was principally on account of 
their assurances of support and on the invitation of their 
leaders that she undertook the work in South Dakota. 
The Knights of Labor at their convention in January of the 
present year had adopted a resolution that said: "We will 
support with all our strength the amendment to be voted on 
at the next general election giving women the ballot — be- 
lieving this to be the fir-st step toward securing those re- 
forms for which all true Knights of Labor are striving." 
But the following June these two organizations formed a 
new party and absolutely refused to put a woman suffrage 
plank in their platform, although Miss Anthony addressed 
their convention and implored them to keep their promise, 
assuring them that their failure to support the amendment 
would be its death blow. The previous summer H. L. 
Loucks, president of the Farmers' Alliance, had made a 
special journey to the state suffrage convention at Min- 
neapolis to invite her to come to vSouth Dakota to conduct 



240 



this canvass. He was a candidate for governor on this new 
party ticket and in his speech of acceptance did not mention 
the pending amendment. Before adjourning the conven- 
tion adopted a long resolution containing seven or eight 
declarations, among them one that "No citizen should be 
disfranchised on account of sex," but so far as any party 
advocacy was concerned the question was a dead issue. 

A bitter .contest was being made between Huron and 
Pierre for the location of the state capital, and the woman 
suffrage amendment was freely used as an article of barter. 
There were thirty thousand Russians, Poles, Scandinavians 
and other foreigners in the state, most of whom oppo.sed 
woman suffrage. The liquor dealers and gamblers worked 
vigorously against it, and they were reinforced by the 
women "remonstrants" of Massachusetts, who sent their 
literature into every corner of the state. 

' At the election, November 4, 1890, the amendment re- 

ceived 22,072 ayes, 45,862 noes, majority opposed, 23,790. 
The Republicans carried the state by 16,000 majority. 

At this same election an amendment was submitted as 
to whether male Indians should be enfranchised, it receiv- 
ing an affirmative vote- of forty-five per cent.; that for 
women suffrage received thirty-five per cent. Of the two 
classes of voters it seemed the men preferred the Indians. 
It was claimed by marty, however, that they did not 
understand the wording of the Indian amendment and 
thought they were voting against it. (A graphic account 
of this campaign, with many anecdotes and personal re- 
miniscences, will be found in the "Life and Work of Susan 
B. Anthony," chapter XXXVIII.) 

As the school suffrage possessssd bv women applied 



o 

> 

M 

> 

w 
o 

W 
n 

w 

CO 

> 
>d 








.QTOR. LENOX 



243 



only to trustees and did not include the important offices of 
state and county superintendents, and as it was held that 
the franchise for this purpose could be secured only by a 
constitutional amendment, it was decided to ask for this. 
Through the efforts of Mrs. Anna R. Simmons and Mrs. 
Emma Crannier, officers of the state association, a bill for 
this purpose was secured from the legislature of 1893. 
As there seemed to be no objection to women voting for 
school trustees, it was not supposed that there would beany 
to extending the privilege for the other school officers. It 
was submitted at the regular election in November, 1894, 
and defeated by 17,010 ayes, 22,682 noes, an opposing 
majority of 5,672. 

In 1897 the above ladies made one more effort and se- 
cured from the legislature the submission again of an 
amendment conferring the full suffrage on women. The 
campaign was managed almost entirely by Mrs. Simmons 
and Mrs. Cranmer. The national association assisted to 
the extent of sending a lecturer, Mrs. lyaura A. Gregg, of 
Kansas, who remained for two months preceding the elec- 
tion; and one hundred dollars' worth of literature also was 
furnished for distribution. The Dakota women raised 
about one thousand five hundred dollars, and every 
possible influence was exerted upon the voters. The re- 
turns of the election in November, 1898, gave for the 
amendment 19,698; against 22,983; adverse majority, 3,285. 

In 1890, the amendment had received thirty-five per 
cent, of the whole vote cast upon it; in 1898, it received 
forty-seven per cent. The figures show unmistakably 
that the falling off in the size of the vote was almost wholly 
a iiong the opponents. 



244 



Petitions have been presented to several legislatures to 
grant municipal suffrage b}^ statute, but a bill for this pur- 
pose has been brought to a vote onh^ once, in 1893, when 
it was passed by the senate, twenty-seven ayes, eleven noes; 
and defeated in the house by only one vote. 

Organization. — After the defeat of the suffrage 
amendment in 1890, a more thorough state organization 
was effected and a convention has been held every year 
since. That of 1891 met in Huron and Mrs. Irene G. 
Adams was elected president. Soon afterwards she com- 
plied a leaflet showing the unjust laws for women which 
disgraced the statute books. 

In 1892 a successful annual meeting took place at 
Hastings and Mrs. Mary A. Grosebeck was made president. 
In September, 1893, the convention was held in Aberdeen 
during the Grain Palace Exposition. The state president 
and the president-elect, Mrs. Kmma A. Cranmer, had 
charge of the program for woman's day, and Mrs. Clara 
Hoffman, of Missouri, gave adresses in the afternoon and 
evening. 

In 1894 Mrs. Anna R. Simmons was elected president 
and continued in ofhce for six years.- This year one hun- 
dred dollars was sent to aid the Kansas campaign. During 
1894 and 1895 she made twenty public addresses and held 
ten parlor meetings. At the convention in Pierre in Sep- 
tember, 1895. she w^as able to report fifty clubs organized, 
with seven hundred members. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, 
chairman of the national organization committee, was 
present at this convention. 

Active work was continued throughout 1896 and 1897, 
when the submission of a suffrage amendment was secured. 



245 



The year 1898 was given up to efforts for its success. Mrs. 
C. C. King established and carried on almost entirely at her 
own expense the South Dakota Messenger, a campaign 
paper which was of the greatest service. The state con- 
vention met in Mitchell, September 28th, 29th and 30th. 
Miss Elizabeth Upham Yates, of Maine, came as a repre- 
sentative of the national association and gave two addresses 
to large audiences. The following October a conference 
of national and state workers was held at Sioux Falls, the 
former represented by Mrs. Chapman Catt, the Rev. Hen- 
riette G. Moore, of Ohio, and Miss Mary G. Hay, national 
organizer. Several interesting public sessions were held. 

The annual meeting of 1899 took place in Madison, 
September 5th and 6th. The tenth convention met in 
Brookings, September 5, 1900. Mrs. Simmons having re- 
moved from the stats, Mrs. Alice M. A. Pickler was elect- 
ed president. Mrs. Philena Everet Johnson was made vices 
president. Others who have served in the official position- 
are vice-president, Mrs. Emma A. Cranmer; corresponding 
secr5tari23, Mesdamss Kate Uline Folg^r, F. C. Bidwell, 
Hannah W. Best; treasurers, Mrs. Elizabeth M. Wardall, 
Mrs. Marion L. Bennett, Mrs. Clara M. Williams; auditor, 
Mrs. John Davis; superintendents of literature, Mrs. Jane 
Rooker Breeden, Mrs. Delia Robinson King. 

Among the prominent friends of woman suffrage may 
be mentioned the Hon. Arthur C. Mellette, first state gov- 
ernor; United States Senators, Richard F. Pettigrew, 
James H-. Kyle and Robert J. Gamble; Eieutenant Gover- 
nor, D. T. Hindman; Members of Congress, J. A. Pickler, 
W. B. Lucas and E. W. Martin; the Hons. S. A. Ramsey 
and Coe I. Crawford; Attorney-General, John E. Pyle; 



246 



Judge, D. C. Thomas; General, W. H. Beadle; Professor 
McClennen, of the Madison Normal School, and ministers 
of many churches. The Hon. J. H. Patton and the Hon. 
W. C. Bowers paid the expenses of the legislative com- 
mittee of the suffrage association while they were in Pierre 
during the winter of 1897 to secure the submission of an 
amendment. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, A. J. 
Edgerton, was a pronounced advocate of woman suffrage 
and appointed a wpman official stenographer of his judicial 
district, the best salaried office within his gift. Associate 
Justice, Seward Smith, appointed a woman clerk of the 
Faulk county district court. The list of other men 
and women widel}^ known and who have stood faithfully 
for woman suffrage would be a long one. Among them 
are S. H. Cranmer, Rev. Ramsey, Mrs. Ruby Smart, Kara 
Smart and Floy Cochrane. 

Laws. — Neither dower nor curtesy obtains. If either 
husband or wife die w^ithout a will, leaving a child or chil- 
dren or the lawful issue of one, the survivor is entitled to 
one-half of the separate estate of the other. If there are 
no children nor the issue of any, the survivor is entitled to 
one-half of the estate and the other half goes to the kin- 
dred of the deceased. If there are none the survivor takes 
all. A homestead of one hundred and sixty acres, or one- 
quarter of an acre in town, ma\^ be reserved for the widow 
or widower. 

Either husband or wife may dispose of separate pro- 
perty, real or personal, by deed or will, without the con- 
sent of the other. Joint real estate, including the home- 
stead, can be conveyed only by signature of both, but the 
husband may dispose of joint personal property without the 
consent of the wife. 



247 



In order to control her separate property the wife must 
keep it recorded in the office of the county register. 

On the death of an unmarried child the father inherits 
all of its property. If he is dead and there are no other 
children, the mother inherits it. If there are brothers and 
sisters she inherits a child's share. 

A married woman cannot act as administrator. Of 
several persons claiming and equally entitled to act as ex- 
ecutors, males must be preferred to females. 

A married woman can control her earnings outside the 
home only when living separate from her husband. 

The father is the legal guardian and has custody of 
the persons and services of minor children. If he refuses 
to take the custody, or has abandoned his family, or has 
been legally declared a drunkard, the mother is entitled to 
the custody. 

The law declares the husband the head of the family 
and he must support the w if e bv his separate property or 
labor, but if he has not deserted her, and has no separate 
property, and is too infirm to support her by his labor, the 
wife must support him and their children out of her sepa- 
rate property or in other ways to the extent of her ability. 
An act of February 21, 1896, makes the wife liable for 
necessaries for the family purchased on her own account to 
the same extent that her husband would be liable under 
a similar purchase, but with no control over the joint 
earnings. 

The causes for divorce are the same as in most states; 
six months' residence is required. The disposition of the 
children is left entirely with the court. 

In 1887, through the efforts of the Woman's Christian 



248 



Temperance Union, the "age of protection" for girls was 
raised from ten to fourteen years. In 1893 they tried to 
have it made eighteen, but the legislature compromised on 
sixteen years. Rape in the first degree is punishable by 
imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than ten years; 
in the second degree not less than five years. 

The penalty for seduction and for enticing away for 
purposes of prostitution is prescribed by the same words, 
"is punishable," which in reality leaves it to judgment of 
the court, but the statutes fix the penalty for all other 
crimes by the words "shall be punished." In addition to 
this latitude the penalty for seduction or enticing for pur- 
poses of prostitution is, if the girl is under fifteen, impris- 
onment in the penitentiary not more than five years or 
in the county jail not more than one year, or by fine not 
exceeding one thousand dollars, or both; with minimum 
penalty. 

Suffrage. — The territorial legislature of 1879 gave 
women a vote on questions pertaining to the school, which 
were then decided at school meetings. This was partially 
repealed by a law of 1883, which required regular polls and 
a private ballot, but this act did not include fifteen counties 
which had school districts full}' established, and women 
still continue to vot^ at th^se district school meetings. 
In 1887 a law was enacted giving women the right to vote 
at all school elections for all officers, and making them 
eligible for all school offices. The constitution which was 
adopted when South Dakota entered the Union (1889) pro- 
vided that "any woman having the required qualifications 
as to age, residence and citizen-ship may vote at any election 
held solely for school purposes." As state and county 



249 



superintendents are elected at general and not special elec- 
tions, women can vote only for school trustees. They have 
no vote on bonds or appropriations. 

Office Holding. — The state constitution provides 
that all persons, either male or female, being twenty-one 
years of age and having the necessary qualifications, shall 
be eligible to the office of school director, treasurer, judge, 
or clerk of school elections, county superintendent of pub- 
lic instruction. All other civil offices must be filled by 
male electors. 

There are at present eleven women serving as county 
superintendents. They sit on the school boards in many 
places and have been treasurers. A woman was nominated 
for state superintendent of public instruction by the inde- 
pendent party. 

Efforts to secure a law requiring women on the boards 
of state institutions have failed. The governor is required 
to appoint three women inspectors of penal and charitable 
institutions, who are paid by the state and make their re- 
port directly to him. They inspect the penitentiary, re- 
form school, insane hospitals, deaf and dumb institution 
and school for the blind. There is one assistant woman 
physician in the State Hospital for the Insane. Women in 
subordinate official positions are found in all state institu- 
tions. They act as clerks in all city, county and state 
offices and in the legislature, and have served as court 
stenographers and clerks of the circuit court. There are 
eight women notaries public at the present time. 

Occupation. — No profession or occupation is legally 
forbidden to women. Ten hours is made a legal working 
day for them. Four women are editing county papers. 



250 



Education. — All institutions of learning are open 
alike to both sexes and there are women in the faculties. 
In the public schools there are 1,225 men and 3,581 women 
teachers. The average monthly salary of the men is 
$36.45; of the women, $30.82. 

The Woman's Christian Temperance Union was the 
first organization of women in the state and through its 
franchise department has worked earnestly and collected 
numerous petitions for suffrage. The Woman's Relief 
Corps is the largest body, having one thousand eight hun- 
dred members. The Eastern Star, Daughters of Rebekah, 
Ladies of the Maccabees and other lodge societies are well 
organized. The Federation of Clubs, the youngest associa- 
tion, represents two hundred members. A number of 
churches have women on their official board. 

In the year 1904 an effort was made, led by the W. C. 
T. U. of the state, to secure names of verified voters suffi- 
cient, under the inititative and referendum law, to justify 
the legislature in again submitting a woman suffrage amend- 
ment to the constitution, to the electors of the state. They 
presented more than the required number of names to the 
Secretary of State, O. C. Berg, whose duty it was to trans- 
rait the same to the legislature, to be by them submitted to 
the people. He refused to receive the petition stating to 
the committee of ladies and taxpayers that they might in- 
voke mandamus to compel him to act if they saw proper. 
As it was impractical to do this in the closing hours of the 
session they again met defeat. We are pleased to state, 
that at this writing, the men of Norway, Mr. Berg's native 
land, have given to their wo.nen the same political rights 
that they enjoy. 



IPUBUCLI 



.gTOR. LPNOX 
_ ., c-' DAT IONS 




253 



In the legislature of 1907 a still larger enrollment of 
those who believe that women should vote was presented 
and acted upon by the senate in a joint resolution, carrying 
by 24 to 21 and was lost in the house by 51 to 33. 

In the legislature of 1909 through the efforts of the 
W. C. T. U. a petition of over 12000 names was again 
presented in both senate and house and a joint resolution 
submitting the amendment to the electors in 1910 was 
passed in the house by 56 to 42, in the senate by 34 to 10, 
and signed by our broad minded governor, Robert S. Ves- 
sey, who has always believed in the broad principles of our 
national constitution, recognizing women as citizens in 
every sense of the word. 

Senator Frank M. Byrne and Representative Alex 
Miller, in both the legislature of '07 and '09, honored the 
women and did credit to themselves in this senatorial dis- 
trict and Faulk county by voting in the affirmative. 

Ever since statehood twenty years ago, the Equal 
Suffrage Association has maintained an organization auxil- 
liary to the National Woman's Suffrage Association. 

The annual convention held at Aberdeen, June 18tli, 
1909, had representative men from republican, democratic 
and prohibition parties and women representing the largest 
organizations in the state, as accredited delegates. 

The roll call showed the following officers: 

President, Alice M. A. Pickler, Faulkton. 

Vice-President, Edith M. Fitch, Hurley. 

Gorrespondmg Secretary, Florence Jefferies, Ft. Pierre. 

Recording Secretary, Rose Bowser, Rapid City. 

Member National Executive Committee, Anna R. 
Simmons, Faulkton. 



254 



Treasurer, Jennie M. Taylor, Oral. 

Auditors, Ruby J. Smart, Wessington Springs and 
Jane R. Breeden, Pierre. 

Superintendent Press Work, Jane Waldron, Fort 
Pierre. 

President District West of the Missouri River, Nina R, 
Pettigrew, Belle Fourche. 

The covention elected the following ofldcers: 

President, Lydia B. Johnston, Fort Pierre. 

Vice-President at Large, Harriette Curtiss, Aberdeen. 

1st Vice-President, Mrs. Olson, Lead. 

2nd Vice-President Mrs. Margeret Hendricks, Sioux 
Falls. 

Corresponding Secretary, Emma Stiles, Blunt. 

Recording Secretary, M. L. Ogin, Mitchell. 

Treasurer, Mrs. Record, Watertown. 

Member National Executive Committee, Mrs. Scott, 
Sioux Falls. 

Auditor, Miss Walker, Bruce. 

First Delegate to National Convention, Mrs. Philena 
E. Johnson, Highmore. 

Second Delegate to National Convention, Florence 
Jeffries, Fort Pierre. 

Third Delegate to National Convention, Mrs. Mundt, 
Pierre. 

The National Society sent Miss Laiu-a Gregg of Kan- 
sas and Mrs. Ella S. Stewart of Chicago, who were made 
members of the convention, and as this is the third time 
Miss Gregg has been in the state much credit must be giv- 
en her for timely aid, while Mrs. Stewart's address in the 
evening was a very able and convincing one to the very 



255 



interested audience that filled the court room to listen to it. 

Mrs. Pickler, who for nine years has been the State 
President, retires from active work on account of illness of 
her husband and was elected a life member of the national 
organization. 

Since the convention the Relief Corps and G. A. R. 
at their annual encampment have expressed themselves as 
favoring the amendment, and the Commercial Club of 
Sioux Falls have invited the national association to hold its 
convention in Sioux Falls in 1910. Prospects are bright 
now that the pioneer women of South Dakota may come 
into their own in the twenty-first year of statehood." 



256 



CHAPTER XXX. 

THE FAUI.K COUNTY COURT HOUSE. 
[By Hon. D. H. Latham.] 

The present Faulk county court house was erected in 
the year 1905, at a total cost of fifty thousand dollars. At 
the general election of November 8th, 1904, bonds of this 
amount were voted by the people and the proposition 
carried by a good majority. 

W. R. Parsons & Son, of Des Moines, Iowa, were the 
architects and the structure is of the Roman style of archi- 
tecture. The building was erected by the Gray Construc- 
tion Company of Watertown. The court house is three 
stories high, length 97 feet 6 inches by 65 feet 7 inches in 
width with concrete floors and inside walls of hollow brick. 
The outside walls are Omaha grey pressed brick, trimmed 
with Lake Superior brown sandstone. The court house 
presents a fine appearance and is conceded to be the best 
one in the state for the amount expended. 

April 27th, 1905, was a red letter day in Faulk county 
for the corner stone of the new court house was placed on 
that date with impressive ceremonies by the Masonic 
order, county and city officers and residents from all parts 
of the county. A strong box was placed in the corner 
stone containing the following papers and documents, to- wit: 

Printed program of exercises of laying the corner stone 
April 27th, 1905, showing pictures of the building, also 
copies of the Republican Record and Faulkton Advocate 




FAULK COUNTY'S COURT HOUSE 



a£^--' 






259 



announcing the program and sectional map of Faulk 
county. 

Names of the present county officers, city officers and 
school officers of the city of Faulkton also Brown & Saeng- 
er's directory giving names of all state officers and members 
of state boards, also published list of all members of last 
legislature. 

Official ballot used by Faulk county in last election, 
November 8th 1904. 

Certified copy of proceedings of first board of county 
commissioners showing date the county was organized and 
appointments of first county officers, November, 1883. 

A certified copy of resolutions of the board of county 
commissioners of July 14th, 1904, submitting question of 
voting on the court house bonds, also full certified copies 
of all proceedings of said board since said date in regard to 
canvass of vote, sale of bonds, letting contracts for the 
court house furnishings, lighting and heating the same, 
names of contractors and architect and showing total cost 
of the building. 

Also copies of official newspapers with published rec- 
ord of said board proceedings pertaining to the court house, 
also picture and plans of the court house. 

Documents giving history of each church organization 
in the city of Faulkton. 

History and names of officers of each lodge and order 
in the city of Faulkton. 

Copies of all newspapers puplished in the county, also 
a copy of the first newspaper published in the county. 
Names of all public school teachers and scholars attending 
school in the county. 



260 



The first money collected by the first treasurer of the 
count3^ December 4th, 1883, being seven cents, was kept 
intact until this time and the identical coin was deposited 
in this box. 



261 



CHAPTER XXXI. 

OLD SETTLERS' ANNUAL PICNICS IN 
FAULK COUNTY. 

The great events of the year in Faulk county are the 
Old Settlers' picnics held in the month of June each year. 
The P'aulk county Old Settlers' picnic is held at Miller's 
grove in DeVoe township, and the Western Faulk county, 
Potter and Hyde counties Old Settlers' picnic is held at 
Seneca. 

The two picnic associations were organized about the 
year 1895, and were only attended by a few hundred the 
first years, but have steadily increased in attendance each 
year until now the attendance at the Miller's grove picnic 
is three thousand five hundred, and twenty-five hundred at 
the Seneca picnic. The entire county turns out enmasse 
to these Old Settlers' gatherings and all enjoy the splendid 
programs arranged for the occasion. 

The pioneers of this part of the state were an intelli- 
gent, social, hopeful and industrious class of people. The 
physically or mentally weak never emigrate — the strong 
and courageous do. The true pioneer is a person of in- 
domitable courage, of great capacity for seeing into the 
future. To such men and women we owe much. The 
younger generation and new settlers appreciate and feel 
the debt of gratitude. 

The annual picnics are held for the purpose of bring- 
ing together the pioneers who suffered privations, endured 
hardships and braved the dangers and storms of pioneering 



262 



in a new country. It is a pleasure now and quite the right 
of these early day settlers in thes2 years when they are be- 
ginning to rest, to meet and talk of the old times and to ex- 
change stories and reminiscences of the hardships of by- 
gone days. 

It is interesting to note some of the changes that have 
occurred in Faulk county since the first Old Settlers' picnics 
were held. At that time the majority came in lumber 
wagons from claim shanties, sod houses and dug-outs. 
Now they come, a well dressed people, in top buggies, car- 
riages and automobiles, from large well built farm houses 
with big red barns and artesian wells, driving through 
thousands of acres of waving grain and corn fields. We 
hope that there may be many more days in future years 
when the people shall meet to pay honor that is due the 
pioneers. 



s^' 



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,0^i^ 






MEW CATHOLIC CHURCH. ZELL. BUILT 1904 



IpUBLlC LIBRARY 






267 



CHAPTER XXXTI. 

BIOGRAPHICAI, 

MAJOR JOHN A. PICKIvER is a native of Washing- 
ton county, Indiana, where he was born on the 24th of 
January, 1844, being a son of George and Emily (Martin) 
Pickler, the former of whom was born in Indiana and the 
latter in Kentucky, while both families early settled in the 
Hoosier state, in the pioneer epoch. The father of Major 
Pickler was for many years engaged in agricultural pursuits, 
finally removing to Davis county, Iowa, where he engaged 
in merchandising, as did he later in Kirksville, Missouri, 
where both he and his wife passed the closing years of their 
earnest and useful lives. Major Pickler passed his boy- 
hood days on the old Indiana homestead and secured his 
preliminary educational discipline in the district schools, 
after which he completed a course of study in the high 
school at Bloomfield, Iowa, where his parents had taken 
up their abode. He was later matriculated in the Iowa 
State University, where he was graduated as a member of 
the class of 1870, with the degree of Bachelor of Philoso- 
phy. Shortly afterwards he entered the law department of 
the celebrated University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, 
where he completed the prescribed course and was gradu- 
ated in 1872, receiving the degree of Bachelor of Laws. 
After thus fortifying himself for the work of his exacting 
profession he engaged in the practice of law at Kirksville, 
Missouri, whence, in 1875, he removed to Muscatine, Iowa, 
where he entered into a professional alliance as a member of 



268 



the law firm of Hoffman, Pickler & Brown, which held 
prestige at the bar of the Hawkey e state, and he continued 
to be thus associated until coming to Dakota Territory in 
1882, since which year he has retained his home in Faulk 
county. He possesses one of the largest and best selected 
libraries in the state. 

Prompted by intrinsic loyalty and patriotism, Major 
Pickler early offered his services in defense of the Union 
when "grim-visaged war reared its horrid front.'* In 1862 
he enlisted in Company D, Third Iowa Volunteer Cavalry, 
in which he became a non-commissioned officer. During 
his period of service with tliis command he was granted a 
furlough of thirty days in order that he might attend, in 
Philadelphia, a military training school for applicants for 
command in colored troops. He was later examined, in 
the city of St. Louis, and passed for captaincy, and there 
rejoined his regiment to await developments. He con- 
tinued in active service with the Third Iowa Cavalry until 
1864, when he veteranized and rejoined tlie same company 
and regiment, being promoted to second lieutenant, first 
lieutenant and finally captain of Company D, in the mean- 
while having declined to be mustered in as captain in the 
One Hundred and Twenty -second Regiment of the United 
States Colored Infantry. Upon being mustered out of the 
Third Cavalry he was made major of the One Hundred 
and Thirty-eighth Regiment of United States Colored 
Infantry, at the age of twenty-one years,, and commanded 
this regiment for several months at Atlanta, Georgia 
This regiment was mustered out in January, 1866, and 
Major Pickler then received his honorable discharge. He 
participated in a number of the notable engagements of 



269 



the great internecine conflict and made an enviable record 
as a faithful and valiant soldier and able commanding 
officer. He retains a deep interest in his old comrades in 
arms and is an honored member of the Grand Army of the 
Republic. 

In September, 1882, Major Pickler came from Iowa 
by railroad to Mitchell, South Dakota and thence by stage 
to Huron, at which point he joined a party of gentlemen 
who were going to the center of Faulk county to locate a 
town, which they hoped to make the county seat. The 
party proceeded by rail to Miller, Hand county, where the 
subject of this sketch and others of the company procured 
lumber for claim shanties, the material being loaded with 
other lumber belonging to others of the party and designed 
for the construction of a hotel in the new town. In the 
procession that finally proceeded northward over the un- 
trampled prairies there were thirteen wagons, each being 
well loaded. For eight miles out of Miller they followed a 
somewhat beaten track, but thereafter proceeded across the 
prairies without a trail, placing lath on various high points 
as they traveled, in order that they might find their wav 
back by the same route. On sunfall of the second day 
they arrived on the present site of Faulkton, locating that 
town on the south bank of the Nixon river. The next day 
Major Pickler settled upon a pre-emption claim adjoining 
the town, and his pleasant home is located on this propsrty, 
a considerable portion of which is now platted into town 
lots. He was active in assisting in the organization and 
development of Faulk comity, being one of the most prom- 
inent members of the bar of this section. 

In politics he has ever given an uncompromising al- 



270 



legiance to the republican party and has long been known 
as one of its leaders in the state. He served as state's at- 
torney of Adair county, Missouri, and while engaged in 
practice in Iowa was a Garfield elector from the second dis- 
trict of that state. He served as a member of the legisla- 
ture of Iowa, and in 1885 was elected to the territorial legis- 
lature of South Dakota. By his old colonel of the Third 
Iowa Cavalry, General John W. Noble, secretary of the 
intertor under President Harrison, he was appointed an in- 
spector in the public land service, in which capacity he 
served until his election to congress in 1889. Upon the 
admission of South Dakota to the Union, Major Pickler 
was elected at large as one of the fir.st members of congress 
from the state, the fifty-first congress. He was re-elected 
at large to the fifty-second, fifty-third and fifty-fourth con- 
gresses, and thus was a representative of his state in the 
lower house of the federal legislature for four successive 
congresses, within which he accomplished much for the 
furtherance of the best interests of South Dakota. He ser- 
ved as a member of the committees of public land, Indian 
affairs, invalid pensions, irrigation of arid lands, alcoholic 
liquor traffic and that of claims. He was chairman of the 
committee on invalid pensions in the fifty-fourth congress. 
He was not a candidate for re-election to the fifty-fifth con- 
gress but was a candidate for nomination for the United 
States senate. He received tlie Republican legislative cau- 
cus nomination and the unanimous vote of the caucus for 
more than thirty days, but the Republicans were lacking 
five votes of a majority and as it was deemed improbable 
that a Republican could be elected, the representatives of 
the party, with one exception, voted for Hon. James H. 



^^^ 



W\3^^ 



o^--^%^ 







MAJ. JOHN A. PICKLER 




MRS. ALICE M. A. PICKLER 



275 



Kyle to succeed himself as senator, and he was duly elected. 
The senate succeeding President McKinley's first election 
was known to be very equally divided between the Republi- 
cans and the opposition, and the national Republican com- 
mittee was very desirous; and so expressed itself to Major 
Pickler, that in case it became apparent that a Republican 
could not be elected, the Republican strength in South Da- 
kota be thrown to a man who would, if necessary, vote for 
the tariff and financial policies of the Republican party. 
In accordance with this expressed desire of the national 
leaders, and after protracted support by the caucus, Major 
Pickler advised the change of vote from himself to Senator 
Kyle, who could be relied upon to support the measures 
desired. While acting as chairman of the house committee 
on invalid pensions Major Pickler 'became so popular with 
the veteran soldier elements in the Republican party, that 
petitions poured in from every direction by the thousands 
asking the Secretary of the Interior to appoint him com- 
missioner of pensions, a request which if seconded by the 
man who had been so anxious for him to withdraw from 
the race for senator in the interest of the party, when at 
last an equal chance for victory was before him, would 
have assured his appointment, but the request of thous- 
ands of comrades was not seconded and the appoint- 
ment was not made. The Major is identified with the 
Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, the Knights of 
Pythias and the Ancient Order of United Workmen. He 
and his wife are prominent and valued members of the 
Methodist Episcopal church in their home city. 

On the sixteenth of November, 1870, was solemnized 
the marriage of Major Pickler to Miss Alice M. Alt, who 



276 



was born in Johnson county, Iowa, in 1848, being a daugh- 
ter of Joseph A. Alt, one of the sterling pioneers of that 
state. They have four children, LulaA., wife of W.J. 
Frad, dry goods merchant in Faulkton. Madge E., wife 
of Prof. N. E. Hoy, editor of the Grand Valley Herald 
and real estate dealer at Meadow, Perkins county, South 
Dakota, Alfred A., editor of the Aberdeen (South Dakota) 
Daily American, and Dale Alice, now a student at Sim- 
mons College, Boston, Mass. 



ALICE M. A. PICKIvER is the daughter of Joseph 
andElizaAlt. She was born in Johnson county, Iowa, near 
Iowa City, in 1848. She comes of a family ver\' old in 
America. A paternal ancestor, Michel Drew by name, left 
the ser\nce of the king a few years prior to the outbreak of 
the Revolution, came to America, and enlisted and served 
in the Continental army. An ancestor on her mother's 
side, Frederick Kepford, was with Washington at \''alley 
Forge. A family tradition has it that upon one occasion, 
as he slept one winter night at his accustomed place under 
a baggage wagon, his cue froze fast to the ground. The 
names of these ancestors still survive among the Christian 
names of the family. Mrs. Pickler's father was born near 
Harper's Ferry, Virginia, and when a few weeks old was 
taken by his family to Springfield, Ohio, where he lived un- 
til 1840. He then came to Johnson county, Iowa, and resid- 
ed on land which he obtained from the government, until 
his death, in January, 1904, a period of sixty-four years. 
Her mother, Eliza Kepford, removed with her people from 
Pennsylvania to the same county in the 'forties, where she 
married Mr. Alt and where they had their home together 



277 



for fifty-six years. She died February 5, 1904, one week 
after the death of her husband. They were the last of the 
early Iowa pioneers in that vicinity. 

Mrs. Pickler lived with her parents upon the farm, at- 
tending the district school and engaging in the duties de- 
volving upon a girl living in the country at that time. 
She attended the Iowa State University for a period of six 
years, commencing when at the age of fourteen. She was 
one of the early students of that institution and is a mem- 
bsr of the Elder Daughters of the University. She taught 
school a portion of the time during her attendance at the 
university, a part of the time in the model school of that 
institution. While attending the university she became 
acquainted with her future husband, J. A. Pickler, who 
was attending at the same time. They were married No- 
vember 16, 1870, She accompanied her husband during 
his law course at Ann Arbor, Michigan; afterwards they 
resided at Kirksville, Missouri, two years and at Musca- 
tine, Iowa, seven years, from whence they came as pioneers 
to Faulk county, Dakota Territory. She was accompanied 
to Dakota by her two younger sisters, Kate E. and Nellie 
Alt, the wives respectfully of W. G. Faulkner, ex-county 
auditor, and D. H. Eatham who has been state's attorney 
for Faulk count}'. 

Mrs. Pickler' s parents were quiet, but aggressive and 
positive, people, who loved good principles as their own 
lives, and in this atmosphere their oldest daughter, Alice, 
grew to womanhood. The church and the temperance re- 
form found in her parents warm friends. During the great 
Civil war eight of their immediate relatives had a part, ser- 
ving with fidelity and distinction. Mr. Alt was a Whig 



278 



and cast his vote for John C. Fremont for President. So 
intense was their loyalty that it was deeply impressed on 
the minds of the children who were old enough to under- 
stand the editorials in the New York Tribune, which was 
the standard paper in the family. The enthusiasm that 
sent hospital supplies to the army at the front was shared 
by the children and young people. When the war ended 
a number of the younger soldiers attended school at the 
Iowa State University, among them Major J. A. Pickler, 
then twenty-two years old. A four years acquaintance in 
this pleasant college ended in the marriage of Alice M. Alt 
to him. 

Up to the time of their removal to Dakota, Mrs. Tick- 
ler's field of work was most and first of all, her family of 
three children, the Methodist church and a membership in 
the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. When she, 
with others in that great territory of Dakota, began to 
make homes and "plant the roots of states," a desire for 
the same happy environments in the new state that had 
been left in the old, led her into more active work along 
broader lines. Her husband was a member of the territori- 
al legislature of 1885, which gave her a wide acquaintance 
with many of the best and most active men and women of 
the two Dakotas. This friendship she cherishes at the 
present time. Her sphere of opportunity was still more 
widened upon the accession of statehood and during the 
eight years following she became acquainted with a number 
of representatives of the western states, who made their 
home for a time at the national capital. 

Mrs. Pickler has been a member ef the executive board 
of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union in her state 



THE NEW YORK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



ASTOR. LENOX 
TILDEN fOUNDAIONS 



281 



for many years. Also was honored as the unanimous choice 
for president of the State Relief Corps. She was also 
national chaplain of that body in 1900. She was one of the 
first trustees of the Methodist Episcopal church at Faulk - 
ton. She has been a grand officer of the Order of the East- 
ern Star. In all of these organizations she is an earnest 
member, but to her family she is most devoted. The chil- 
dren, Lula A., wife of W. J. Frad. late editor of the Mitch- 
ell (South Dakota) Gazette and now dry goods merchant 
at Faulkton; Madge E., who has become the wife of N. E. 
Hoy, editor of the Grand Valley Herald and real estate 
dealer at Meadow, Perkins county, South Dakota; Alfred A. 
editor of the Aberdeen (South Dakota) Daily American, 
and Dale A., now a student at Simmon's College, Boston, 
Mass., have all done honor to themselves and parents in 
their college work, and the positions they occupy. 

In their pioneer home a large lamp always hung in the 
window to guide the lost traveler on the great prairies to a 
place of shelter. The home has grown to one of ample 
size, of the colonial type. The light still shines and friend 
or caller there finds the same open-handed hospitality which 
helped in the 'eighties to weave the ties that bind in un- 
broken friendship those pioneers who have made the history 
of the state of South Dakota. 



HON. JOSEPH H. BOTTUM of P\^ulk county. South 
Dakota, comes of sterling old colonial stock, both on the 
paternal and maternal lines and both families are of stanch 
English extractions. Record extracts show that two of the 
ancestors on the maternal side were valiant soldiers in the 
continental line during the war of the Revolution having 



282 



been participants in the historic battle of Bunker Hill. 

The original patronymic in the agnatic line was L,ong- 
bottom, the initial syllable having been dropped after the 
establishment of the family in America. 

Mr. Bottum is a native of the Empire state, having 
been born in West Bloomfield, Ontario county, New York, 
on the 26th of September, 1853, being the oldest of 
the eight children of Henry C. and Helen M. (Burnham) 
Bottum, both of whom were born 'and raised in Vermont, 
as was also the paternal grandfather of our subject, Roswell 
Bottum, w'ho was a man of prominence and influence in the 
old Green Mountain state, having served for a number of 
terms as a member of its legislature and also -held other 
offices of distinction, public trust and responsibility. 

The original American progenitors settled in the Mas- 
sachusetts colony, and the name has been long and honor- 
ablv identified with the annals of New England. As a 
man the father of our subject removed to the state of New- 
York, locating in Ontario county, where he was engaged in 
the mercantile business until 1854, when became west to 
Wisconsin, settling in Fond du Eac county and became one 
of the pioneers of that section. 

He was prosperous in his efforts and developed a large 
and valuable farm, and is living at the age of S3 years to- 
gether with his aged companion upon the old homestead. 
He always took a prominent part in the politics of county 
and state and was for three years a member of the Wiscon- 
sin legislature. Joseph Bottum passed his boyhood on the 
homestead farm in Wisconsin, having been an infant in 
arms at the time of his parents removal to that state, and 
his early educational discipline was secured in the public 



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tHE.^Jg^A^Xl 



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285 



schools, after which he completed a course of study in 
Ripon College in the town of that name, being there gradu- 
ated as a member of the class of 1877 with the degree of 
Bachelor of Science. Shortly afterwards he entered the law 
office of the firm of Shephard & Shephard, of Fond du I/ac, 
the interested principals being leading members of the bar 
of Wisconsin, and under their able preceptorship he con- 
tinued his technical study of the law, until 1880 when he 
was duly admitted to the bar. He immediately came to 
what is known as South Dakota and located at Sioux Falls 
where he remained until the spring of 1882, when .he re- 
moved to Spink county, w^here he engaged in newspaper 
work until March, 1883, when he located in the village of 
I^aFoon in Faulk county, five miles east of the present 
county seat and was there engaged in the practice of his 
profession until January, 1887, when the railroad was com- 
pleted to Favilkton whereupon he removed to this point 
where he has ever since been prominent in professional 
work and public and civic affairs, being one of the most 
successful members of the count^^ bar and being held in the 
highest regard in the communitv as is evident from the 
dignified official position which he has been called to fill 
in the gift of the people. 

When the county was organized in 1883, Mr. Bottum 

had the distinction of being its first register of deeds, La- 
Foon being the county seat. From 1890 to 1894 inclusive, 
he served as state's attorney for the county, making an 
enviable record as a public prosecutor. In 1898 he was 
elected to represent his district in the state senate, serving in 
the sixth general assembly and in 1902 he was again chosen 
to that important position, having gained the reputation of 



286 



a conservative and conscientious legislator, thoroughly de- 
voted to the interest of the people. 

In 1906 Mr. Bottum was again chosen state's attorney 
for his county which office he so ably and successfully filled, 
that he was unanimously nominated by the republican con- 
vention of 1908 for re-election, an action that was promptly 
ratified at the November election by the electors of the 
county by an overwhelming majority. 

Mr. Bottum has also served as city attorney for his 
home city, and upon the creation of the tenth judicial circuit 
he was appointed by Gov. Vessey, judge of the new circuit, 
a position which his large, extended and diversified prac- 
tice has prepared him in a marked degree to fill, with honor 
for himself, and to the satisfaction of the people he will be 
called to serve. 

Judge Bottum is fraternally a Royal Arch Mason and 
is also identified with the Knights of Pythias and the 
Ancient Order of United Workman. He takes great inter- 
est in local affairs, especially along educational lines. 

In 1885 he was united in marriage with Miss Sylvia 
G. Smith, daughter of Hon. D. S. Smith, and to them have 
been born seven children, viz: Nellie, Fannie, Dora, Emily, 
Julia, Roswell and Joseph H. 



HON. FRANK M. BYRNE was born in Volney, Iowa, 
October 23rd, 1858, and received his education in the pub- 
lic schools. 

In 1879, immediately after his majority he came to 
Sioux Falls, Dakota Territory. The following year he lo- 
cated a homestead in Grant township, McCook county. 
In 1888 Mr. Bvrne became a resident of Faulk countv. 




HON. FRANK M. BYRNE 






1TP,T 



289 



Two years later, 1890, he was elected state senator to the 
first South Dakota legislature. 

In 1898 he was elected county treasurer for Faulk 
county and re-elected to the same ofhce in 1900. In 1906 
Mr. Byrne was again elected senator from the thirty-fifth 
senatorial district, composed of Faulk and Potter counties, 
and through that session of the legislature his duties were 
so successfully and satisfactorily performed that he was re- 
nominated and elected to succeed himself in 1908. 

In the legislature of 1909 his senatorial duties were so 
faithfully performed that it is safe to predict that the in- 
telligent and far seeing constituency that have so cordially 
and heartily given him their support, will not permit him 
to retire from public life. 

Mr. Byrne is a self made man and occupies an enviable 
position socially, financially and politically among his 
fellow citizens; a man of sound judgment, large experience 
and yet a comparatively young man. He certainly has a 
bright future before him. 

In April, 1888, he was united in marriage with Miss 
Emma Beaver of Kenton, Ohio. To them have been born 
five children, viz: Carroll, Francis, Malcolm, Joe and 
Emmons. 

Mr. Byrne is engaged in the real estate business with 
his office on Court street in the city of Faulkton, where he 
commands the confidence and respect of the entire com- 
munity. 



PATRICK H. O'NEIL who is extensively engaged in 
stock raising and has come to be recognized as the "Cattle 
King" of South Dakota, is a native of the Badger state. 



290 



having been born in New Richmond, St. Croix county, 
Wisconsin, on the 16th of February, 1866, being a son of 
Thomas O'Neil who was born and raised in Ireland and 
when a young man came to America and located in Wis- 
consin, where he maintained a home for fort^^ years. 

The subject of this sketch was raised and educated in 
Wisconsin until he attained his legal majority. In 1887 
he came to Dakota Territory and located at Faulkton where 
he engaged in the meat market business, which soon de- 
veloped into the live stock industry upon a large scale. 
In 1906 Mr. O'Neil had twenty-two thousand acres under 
fence, twelve thousand of which he owned, upon which 
roamed his thousands of head of neat cattle and sheep. 
That summer he sold ninty-seven thousand eight hundred 
dollars worth of stock at one sale, to one man. His aver- 
age run of sheep was about fifteen thousand head. 

In 1906 Mr. O'Neil in the consciousness that the best 
interest of Faulk county demanded an increase of popula- 
tion and the cultivation of its unbroken prairie, yielded to 
the increasing demand for more farm land and sold ten 
thousand acres of his pasture land to be cut up into farms. 
This has not materially changed, but has to some extent 
modified, his plan of handling live stock. In fact the un- 
faltering courage, the undying faith that has urged him on 
while others stood still, is a part of the man. His sound 
judgment, prompt action and careful looking after the de- 
tails of every business transaction and ever}' branch of his 
business has led to success where others failed, a power 
that enables him to carry out his plans and do the work of 
half a dozen common men. It is impossible to measure his 
business energv and force by anv common rule. In a 



291 



single season to handle ten thousand head of cattle and cut 
eight thousand to nine thousand tons of hay, with prosperi- 
ty following every line of industry, is no uncommon feat • 
for the subject of our sketch. 

Since disposing of his large holdings in real estate, 
Mr. O'Neil has found himself in a situation to take up 
other business industries. 

He has served on the local school board for several 
years and taken a deep interest in our educational institu- 
tion. He is a director in the Merchants' Bank of Faulkton, 
vice president of the Bank of Cresbard and a stockholder 
in the Western National Bank at Mitchell and the Redfield 
National. He is active in all live stock interests. He has 
just returned from the Pacific coast where he was a dele- 
gate to the American National lyive Stock Association 
by whom he was elected a member of the executive 
board of the association and made a member of the 
committee on transportation. He was appointed on 
a committee of five by Governor Crawford to represent 
the state at the National Corn Exposition at Omaha, Ne- 
braska. He was the first president of the Faulkton Com- 
mercial Club, and is still holding that important local 
office. 

Mr. O'Neil is a republican in politics and an active 
worker in the party. He was a delegate to the Republican 
National Convention at Chicago last June that placed 
Judge Taft in nomination for the presidency; and vice 
president of the convention for South Dakota. 

Socially he started right, on June 13th, 1888, when he 

was united in marriage to Miss Annie Carline and to them 

have been born six children, viz: Aloysius B., Johanna, 
Mary K., Ignatius Patrick, John Thomas and Henry A. 



292 



MRS. ANNIE (CARIvINE) O'NEIE, daughter of 
Bryan and Bridget Carline, was born in Lexington, Illinois. 
Her parents were natives of Ireland and were among 
the Illinois pioneers, having immigrated to that state in 
1860 and located at Lexington. Eight years later they 
moved to Chenoa in the same county where they owned a 
beautiful farm and where their children had, the advantages 
of the Chenoa city schools, an advantage that Mrs. O'Neil 
has found of almost untold value to her in the active duties 
and responsibilities with which she has been surrounded, 
not only as a wife and mother, but in social and church 
work, that has been thrust upon her. 

As soon after leaving school as her age would allow, 
in company with her brother, P. J. Carline, she came to 
Dakota Territory, in 1885, and located government land in 
Hand county, having used her homestead right upon the 
northeast quarter of section 29, township 129, range 70 in 
that county. It was while holding down this claim that 
Miss Carline first met Mr. P. H. O'Neil and on June 13th, 
1888, they were united in holy matrimony at holy mass at 
the Catholic church at Zell, Faulk county, Rev. Father 
Benning, assisted by Rev. Father Menser, presiding. To 
them have been born six children. In addition to all the 
duties of home life, Mrs. O'Neil has filled an important 
place in social and christian life, ever lending a helping 
hand to her husband, Mr. O'Neil, in the all important 
part he has taken in the erection of St. Thomas Catholic 
church in their home city and in adv^ancing its interests in 
every good work. It is not alone upon sectarian lines but» 
in every effort for the upbuilding of educational and chris- 
tian work, botli Mr. and Mrs. O'Neil are active and efficient 
workers. 



. THE l^EW YORK 
PUBLIC UBKAR"^ 



A,STOR. LENOX 
TU nEN FOUNDATION3_ 




p. H. O NEIL 




MRS. ANNIE CARLINE O'nUIL 



THE NEW YORK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



ASTOR. LfNOX 
TILDtN FOUNDA lONF 



297 



Mrs. O'Neil is a member of the Faulkton Ladies Lit- 
erary Tuesday Club and is the writer of a chapter in a work 
of real merit, edited by the club and given the very appro- 
priate title of "Pen Pictures of Pioneer Life," a work that 
Mr. Robinson, the state historian, speaks of in most com- 
plimentary terms. For several years Mrs. O'Neil has rep- 
resented her club at the annual meetings of the South Da- 
kota State Federation of Women's Clubs and has been as- 
signed committee work by the state organizei . 



REV. THOMAS SIMMONS vvas born in Indepen- 
dence, Richland county, Ohio. December 23, 1841, immi- 
grating to Iowa with his parents in 1852, where they locat- 
ed in Tipton, Cedar county, where he grew up to young 
manhood. 

At twenty-three years of age he was converted to God 
and united with the Methodist Episcopal church. In two 
years from his conversion he received a call from God to 
preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. He gave up all his plans 
for his future prosperity and entered Cornell College, at 
Mount Vernon, Iowa, to fit himself for the ministry. At 
the close of his college career, he joined the upper Iowa 
conference and in 1873 and for eleven years thereafter ad- 
vanced steadily, in rising grades of appointment, until 
through the efforts of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Pickler, he took 
a transfer to the Dakota conference and was assigned to 
the pastorate of Faulk county. But one feeble Methodist 
Episcopal church was in existence at that time. He tra- 
veled the whole county through in 1882-1885 holding eight 
revival meetings and organizing as a result of his work 
three good charges. To accomplish this work he traveled 



298 



four thousand miles in an open buggy, through winter's 
cold and summer's heat. Four church buildings have been 
erected through his labors, viz: at Faulkton, DeVoe, Orient 
and Seneca. He was pastor of the first three named from 
1884-1885 to 1888 and Seneca from 1906 to 1908. At all 
these places he left strong church organizations. At Seneca 
he found but one member and the church paid but a nomi- 
nal salary when he took the charge. When he closed his 
pastorate he left a church of forty members able to pay 
an eight hundred dollar salary. 

In 1893 he was appointed by Bishop Nird, presiding 
elder of the Huron district. This office he faithfully and 
successfully filled for six years, building up the church and 
assisting his pastors; witnessing an average increase of 
five hundred souls brought toChrist each year in his dis- 
trict. Through all the dark days of Faulk county's history 
Rev. Mr. Simmons had unbroken faith in its future and 
all his careful earnings were invested in Faulk county 
lands, surrounding a pleasant and happy home adjoining 
the city limits of Faulkton. 

God has greatly blessed his labors through all the years 
of his ministry but nowhere no more marked and signally 
than in Faulkton and Faulk count>'. Two most successful 
revivals were held in Faulkton during the winter of 1 886 
and 1887, the latter resulting in driving every gambler and 
saloon keeper out of town to the rejoicing of Israel's hosts. 



[By Mrs. A. M. A. Pickler] 
MRS. ANNA R. SIMMONS was born in Nashville, 
Ohio, and came with her parents to Muscatine, Iowa. 
Later her home was in Tipton. Iowa, where she resided a 




REV. THOMAS SIMMONS 




MRS. ANNA R. SIMMONS 



pTHE NEW YOPK 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 



ASTOR. LENOX 
TILDEN FOUNDATIONS 



303 



number of years. She was educated at Cornell college, 
Iowa and ranked among the foremost as a student. 

In 1873 she was united in marriage with Rev. Thomas 
Simmons, an honored member of the South Dakota Annual 
Conference and Methodist Episcopal church. No woman 
who ever lived or worked in South Dakota is more widely 
known or more thoroughly respected than Mrs. Simmons, 
who for six years was president of the South Dakota Equal 
Suffrage Association, and for nine years vice president of 
the South Dakota Woman's Christian Temperance Union. 

For more than twenty-five years, she has labored in 
reform work, ever seconding her husbands efforts in his 
ministerial labors, toiling unceasingly for the betterment 
of humanity. 

She has rendered South Dakota most valuable service 
in legislative work. The passage of the equal suffrage 
amendment by the state legislature in 1898 was largely due 
to her efforts. As a speaker she is earnest and convincing, 
always impressing her hearers with her honesty of purpose 
and nobility of soul. 

A few years ago Miss Susan B. Anthony invited Mrs. 
Simmons to address the franchise committee of the United 
States senate. No address before the committee was better 
received or called forth more enthusiastic applause. Mrs. 
Simmons' lecture at Eake Madison Chautauqua was pro- 
nounced strong and logical. Her. services have been in 
demand not only in this, but in every .state of the Union. 

While Mrs. Simmons has been wonderfully successful 
as a reformer, there are few who would undergo the per- 
sonal sacrifice and hardship which have come to her. She 
has more than once tested the truthfulne.ss of the words^ 



304 



"no lonliness is more lonely, no separation more absolute, 
no tears more hot and bitter than is experienced in the lot 
of those who would change the world's destiny, heal its 
sores and quiet its pains," but believing she was doing the 
Master's service, she has gone forward with steadfastness 
of purpose and unfaltering faith. 

Rev. and Mrs. Simmons came to Dakota in 1884, and 
their work in this state has been a benediction to many 
lives. 

lyong may this gentle comrade live to work and pray! 

"For the cause that lacks assistance. 

For the wrongs that need resist ence, 

F'or the future in the distance, 

And the good that she can do. " 



I. AIvIvEN CORNWEI.Iv was born in Arcade, New 
York, March 18th, 1853, and is a son of John Cornwell, 
who was born and reared in England and served for some- 
time as a marine in the British navy. About 1830 the 
father came to this countr^^ and devoted his time and at- 
tention to farming. In 1834 he married Miss Viletta Sea- 
mon, a daughter of Peter Seamon, a full blooded Yankee 
and a farmer by occupation, spending his last days in Can- 
ada. Mr. Cornwell is the youngest of a family of six chil- 
dren. Two brothers died in the service of their country 
during the Civil War. 

In his native place I. Allen Cornwell grew to man- 
hood and completed his literary education in the Arcade 
Academy. From 1876 to 1879 he devoted his attention to 
the study of law and then conducted the Arcade Leader of 
Arcade mitil the spring of 1883 when he came to Faulk 



307 



county, Dakota Territor5^ with three companions. He 
located on land three miles from the town of LaFoon in a 
shanty 10 by 12 feet which he erected upon his place. He 
lived alone for two years, hauling his supplies from Red- 
field, a distance of thirty-five miles. On September 27th, 
1885, Mr. Cornwell was united im marriage with Miss 
Katie M. Derr, a daughter of Hon. C. H. Derr, a pioneer 
of Faulk county and who served for twelve years as county 
judge of this county. 

To Mr. and Mrs. Cornwell have been born six children, 
viz: Gertrude, Frances, Mary, John, Essie and Inez. 

Mr. Cornwell continued to reside upon his farm until 
the fall of 1886, when he was elected register of deeds for 
Faulk county on the people's ticket, and removed to Faulk- 
ton to assume the duties of the office. 

While filling that position he became interested in the 
real estate business in partnership with P. H. Wilson, and 
in 1888 also started the Faulk County Abstract Company, 
a business that has been exceedingly profitable and is now 
owned and controlled by himself and wife, and successfully 
managed from their commodious office, in their fine new 
building, within a stone's throw of the county court house. 
Socially Mr. Cornwell is affable and congenial and is sur- 
rounded by many warm and devoted friends. 

Politically he is a democrat and has held an almost 
commanding influence in the party in this county, but his 
friendship and sociability is not confined to party lines, he is 
ever ready to aid any worthy enterprise. Mr. Cornwell be- 
came a Roj^al Arch Mason and has served as master of the 
blue lodge four terms and as high priest of the chapter. 



308 



FRED ANDREW SEAMAN was born in Arcade, 
Wyoming county, New York, on March 11, 1857. His 
parents were Andrew and Mary A. (Jacknian) Seaman, the 
former a native' of Holland, who came to America when he 
was seventeen years of age, with his parents. The mother 
was born in Sardinia, Erie county, New York. The father 
died in 1882 and the mother has made her home in Faulk- 
ton, being in her 76th year. 

Fred A. Seaman resided in Arcade, New York, until 
he was twenty-five years of age. He receiv^ed a common 
school and academic education. 

He came to Dakota Territory in 1882 and located at 

EaFoon which afterwards became the county seat upon the 

organization of Faulk county. He organized the P'aulk 

county bank in LaFoon in 1885 and became its cashier. 

He removed to Faulkton in the fall of 1886, moving the 
bank from EaFoon. The bank was closed in 1890. For the 
past seven years Mr. Seaman has bean engaged in the real 
estate business and insurance, both fire and life, in Faulkton. 

He was united in marriage, December 2nd, 1886, to 
Miss Julia E. Smith of EaFoon, daughter of Hon. D. S. 
Smith who has served in the South Dakota state senate. 
To Mr. and Mrs. Seaman have been born nine children of 
whom two sons and two daughters are living, Leonard 17, 
Paul 12, Sylvia 3 and Fae Harriet 4 months. Mr. Seaman 
is a Mason being a member of the blue lodge and chapter. 
Also a member of the Modern Woodman of America, the 
Ancient Order of the Royal Arcanun and A. O. U. W. 
He is a member of the Congregational church. 



309 



ABRAHAM D. GRIFFEE is a native of the state of 
Iowa, having been born in the city of Oskaloosa on the 
21st day of September, 1861, and being a son of Abraham 
and Nancy (Higgeubothom) Griff ee, the former of whom 
was born in Virginia and the latter in Ohio. 

The Griffee family is of German extraction and was 
founded in the old patrician state of Virginia in the early 
colonial era, with whose history the name has been promi- 
nently identified. The father of the subject was reared 
and educated in Virginia and as a young man removed to 
Ohio, where he maintained his residence for a few years, 
and then about 1840, made the long overland journey to 
Iowa with team and wagon, being accompanied by his wife 
and their three children, the other four children being born 
in the Hawkeye state. He became one of the pioneers of 
Mahaska county where he reclaimed and improved a valua- 
ble farm and wrhere he continued to reside until his death 
which occurred in 1886. He became a man of prominence 
and distinctive influence in the community and passed 
away in the fullness of years and well earned honors. His 
devoted wife was summoned into eternal rest in 1899. 
Their children, all are living, the subject of this sketch be- 
ing the sixth in order of birth. 

Abraham D. Griffee was born in the town of Oskaloosa, 
Iowa, and from his sixth year was reared on a farm, and in 
youth was accorded the advantages of the excellent public 
schools of his native state, completing a course in the high 
school of Oskaloosa. He continued to be associated with 
the work and management of the home farm until 1884, 
when he came to Dakota Territory and took up land in 
Faulk couutv, whose organization had been effected about a 



310 



year previously. Upon his preemption claim he made 
good improvements, the place being eligibly located near 
the village of Seneca, and there he continued to be engaged 
in farming and stock growing until it appreciated in value in 
the intervening years. In the year mentioned he came to 
Gettysburg, the official center of Potter county, and here en- 
gaged in the grain business, owning an interest in the ele- 
vator at that place, and he continued to be identified with 
this line of business for the ensuing five years. At the ex- 
piration of that time he disposed of his interest in the same 
and turned his attention to the lumber business at which 
he was engaged until 1900. In that year he was elected to 
the office of register of deeds for Potter county, where he 
gave an able and systematic administration of the office 
and was chosen to succeed himself in 1902 for a second 
term of two years. In 1904 Mr. Griffee returned to Faulk 
county and located at Faulkton where he has been engaged 
in business. In January of 1909 he entered into co-part- 
nership with Mr. A, W. Phelps and they are carrying on a 
very successful real estate business. 

Mr. Griifee takes a lively interest in public affairs. 
Politically he is a democrat and an active worker in the 
party. He is a man of ability and strict integrity, and 
highly respected in the community. Fraternally he is 
identified with the Masonic Order, Knights of Pythias, 
Ancient Order of United Workman, Modern Woodmen of 
America and Independent Order of Odd Fellows. 

On the 2nd of February, 1886, was solemnized the 
marriage of Mr. Griffee to Miss Mary E. Douglas, who 
was born and raised in Lonaconing, Maryland, being a 
daughter of Capt. John W. and Ellen Douglas. Mr. and 
Mrs. Griffee have one daughter, Rhea, who was born July 
10th 1887. 



C«bI&*^' 



cTOP' ■ J 



r\t 




D. H. LATHAM 




MRS. NELLIE A. LATHAM 



THE SsWJ?/ V^'^i^ 

PUBLiECIiiBKAR^ 



4STOR- LENOX 



I 



315 



HON. D. H. IvATHAM is one of the prominent law- 
yers and public spirited citizens now practicing at the bar 
of Faulk county. He is a man who has brought his keen 
discrimination and thorough wisdom to bear, not alone in 
professional paths but also for the benefit of the county and 
state, which has been his home since pioneer days and with 
whose interest he has been thoroughly identified. 

The story of his life is one that offers a typical example 
of that alert American spirit which has enabled many a 
person without means, to rise from obscurity to aflBuence 
and worth solely through native talent, indomitable perse- 
verance and good judgment. 

Mr. lyatham was born in Wayne county, Michigan, 
December 23rd, 1859. The father and mother of our sub- 
ject were Scotch Irish. His father was a pioneer of Michi- 
gan where he settled upon a new farm in the year of 1839. 

Our subject worked on a farm and taught school, thus 
raising the funds to complete a course in the State Normal 
school and afterwards pursued his legal studies in Detroit. 

The call of the west had always been strong with him 
and in April, 1884, seized with a desire to try his fortune 
in the west, became to South Dakota, landing at Huron with 
a total capital of fifty dollars. He secured a first grade 
teacher's certificate and taught in the schools of Beadle 
county for one year. In 1885 he came to Faulk county 
and filed upon land in DeVoe township where he secured 
title to three hundred and twenty acres of land under the 
preemption and homestead laws. In April, 1888, he was 
admitted to the bar at the first term of court held in Faulk 
county. He practiced at DeVoe until 1890, when he 
opened an office in Faulkton. 



316 



In 1894, he was united in marriage to Nellie A. Alt, a 
native of Iowa, where her parents were pioneer settlers, 
her father having settled in Johnson county, Iowa, in 1839. 
In March, 1882, Mrs. Latham came to Faulk county with 
the family of her sister, Mrs. J. A. Pickler, and filed upon 
government land near Faulkton and still owns the three 
hundred and twenty acres upon which she made final proof 
in the early years. 

In political sentiment Mr. Latham is an ardent repub- 
lican and he has ever taken an active interest in county and 
state politics. 

In 1894, he was elected state's attorney and re-elected 
in 1896, 1902 and 1904, serving in all eight years in a most 
creditable and sati.sfactory manner. 

As one of the early settlers he takes great interest in 
the Faulk County Old Settlers' Picnic, held at Miller's 
grove each year, and has been chairman of the conmiittee 
on -arrangements for many years. Mr. Latham has always 
had great faith in the value of our black prairie soil and had 
the good judgment to invest largely in our cheap lands 
years ago and is now the possessor of over two thousand 
acres of the best farm land in the county. 



ALBERT J. SPRAGUE was born August 23, 1838, 
in Erie county, Pennsylvania. When about one and one- 
half years old his parents removed to the state of Illinois 
and located in Kane county where he grew up to manhood. 
In 1855 he remov^ed to Wisconsin and afterwards to Illinois, 
but in 1861 became a permanent resident of Wiscon.sin, 
and in 1862 enlisted on the 20th of August in Company B, 
Twelfth Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, and served until 



317 



the end of the war, being mustered out of the service in 
Washington on May 31, 1865. He then returned to Wis- 
consin and took up the duties of civil life. 

Mr. Sprague remained a resident of Toronto, in the 
county of Sauk, until 1883, when he took up his residence 
in Faulk county, Territory of Dakota, locating upon the 
north-west quarter- of section 19, township 117, range 67, 
and resided there until 1902, when he removed to Faulk- 
ton . 

On the 13th of October, 1860, he was united in mar- 
riage to Miss Susan A. Kinnemon of Ironton, Wisconsin. 
To them have been born six children: Almeda Jane, now 
Mrs. Breytenbach; Henry C, who now is a resident of 
Faulk county; Mary F.; Ada A.; Theresa M., now Mrs. 
Wm. Lestsr, and Herald H., who now resides in Illinois. 

Comrade Sprague is a member of Phil Sheridan Post 
in Faulkton. 

Politically he is identified with the republican party. 



WIIvIylAM G. FAULKNER was born of Scotch 
parents in December, 1853; his parents' names were John 
and Catherine. He emigrated to this country at the age 
of seventeen and with a boy companion landed in New 
York, where he had relatives, and spent his first year in 
that locality, then went to Bay City, Michigan, remaining 
there twelve years. At the end of that time he made a 
tour of Montana and North and South Dakota (then Da- 
kota Territory) and. settled on the south-west quarter of 
section 20, towmship 118, north of range 70, Faulk county, 
as a preemption, June, 1883. He proved up on the same 
and filed a homestead, being the south-west quarter of 



318 



section 30, township 118, north of range 70. This land is 
located near Burkmere, then Harrington. 

The board of county commissioners appointed Mr. 
Faulkner one of the four county justices upon the organi- 
zation and he was elected to that position in the succeeding 
general election. In 1885 he was appointed one of the 
state enumerators to. take the census of the county for that 
year. In 1889, he was elected county commissioner from 
the third commissioner district holding the office continu- 
ously until elected county auditor in the fall of of 1894, 
and after an interim of four years he was again elected 
county auditor, his last term expiring in 1906. The peo- 
ple of the count}^ during this time having voted $50,000 
bonds for the erection of a court house. Mr. Faulkner as 
auditor in his official capacitj^ had a large part in the con- 
struction and management of the beautiful and convenient 
building that contains the priceless records of Faulk county. 
At present he is serving as a member of the State Board of 
Agriculture. 

Mr. Faulkner was married in 1885, to Miss Kate E. 
Alt, one of the girls who came from Iowa City, Iowa, in 
1883, who took advantage of Uncle Sam's offer to file on 
government land. Her preemption was the south-east 
quarter of section 34, township 119, north of range 69. 
They have seven children, Maud C, student of Dakota 
Wesleyan University at Mitchell and teacher in the county 
schools; John A.; Hugh A.; May A., now a student at 
Dakota Wesleyan University; George W.; Drew J., and 
James D. 

Mr. Faulkner with his sons have developed one of the 
finest farms in Faulk- county, with a comfortable home, 



i 





W. G. FAULKNER 




MRS. W. G. FAUI.KNER 



323 



artesian well, immense stock barn, good granaries and 
buildings of every kind needed on the large farm which, 
with pastures, covers two sections of land. He raises 
Percheron pedigreed horses, and good breeds of cattle, 
hogs and sheep. Mr. Faulkner as a pioneer office holder 
and farmer has fulfilled his duties both in public and pri- 
vate with tenacity of purpose and strict integrity and is 
rated as one of the substantial and prosperous men of 
Faulk county. 



JOHN H. SHIRK was born in Lancaster county Penn- 
sylvania, March 12th, 1835,; was a descendent of Uhlrich 
Scherch (now spelled Shirk) , a French Huguenot, who upon 
the revocation of the edict of Nantes in 1685 by Louis 
XIV, fled to Switzerland. 

His son Uhlrich, from whom our branch of the Shirk 
family are direct descendants, in company with two broth- 
ers, emigrated from Switzerland to America about the year 
1729 and settled in eastern Pennsylvania. 

The subject of this sketch worked on the farm, with 
the exception of about four months schooling each winter, 
until eighteen years of age, then worked at the blacksmith 
trade two years, after which he attended, a summer term 
of ten weeks at a normal institute at Millersville, Pa., con- 
ducted by Hon. J. P. Wikersham, then county superin- 
tendent, afterwards state superintendent of schools, colonel 
of a Pennsylvania regiment in the Civil War and United 
States Minister to the Netherlands. 

Mr. Shirk taught his first term of school in Salisbury 
township, Lancaster county. Pa., in the winter of 1855-56. 
and followed this occupation most of the time until the 



324 



outbreak of the Civil War, when he enlisted in Co. E. 79th 
Pa. Vol. Inf. in September, 1861, and was mustered into 
service October 8th, 1861, at Pittsburg, Pa., and assigned 
with the 77th and 78th Pa. into a brigade commanded by 
General James S. Negley, and embarked on steam boats to 
Louisville. He served in the army of the Ohio, first under 
General Anderson of Fort Sumpter fame, and subsequently 
under General Sherman. In August, 1862, the brigade 
was assigned to McCook's corps and participated in the 
Buell-Bragg campaign. In December, 1862, they were 
assigned to the 14th army corps under General (Pap) 
Thomas, where they remained until after the battle of 
Chickamauga, when Thomas succeeded Rosecrans in com- 
mand of the army of the Cumberland. Mr. Shirk was tak- 
en prisoner September 19th, 1863, at the battle of Chicka- 
mauga and taken to Richmond where the prisoners were 
confined in large tobacco warehouses, under the name of 
lyibby prison. About December 12th they were transferred 
to Danville, Va., and confined in the prison at that place. 
He was in No. 5 military prison from which in F'ebruary, 
1864, in company with a few trusty comrades, he dug a 
tunnel and about one hundred and twenty-five prison- 
ers crawled through, at last to breathe God's fresh air 
again, if not to regain liberty. 

The .squad he was with was out twenty-one days and 
got within eight miles of our lines near Suffolk, Va.. when 
they were recaptured and sent back to Richmond and con- 
fined in Libby prison dungeon and Belle Island until about 
June 1st, 1861-, when they were transferred to Anderson- 
ville prison. In September, 1864, when the rebels feared 
that Gen. Sherman would release the prisoners at that place, 
they sent them to different parts of the confederacy. 



325 



The detachment, he was with was sent to Charleston, 
S\ C, where they herded them on the grounds of the race 
track for a month, until the stockade at Florence, S. C, 
was completed, to which place they were then transferred 
October, 1864, and kept until Sherman, on his famous 
march, had already paralleled them, then were loaded on 
trains and taken under a flag of truce without exchange or 
parole within three miles of Wilmington, N. C, and 
within our lines just one week after Wilmington surrendered. 

Thev there, for the first time in nearly eighteen months 
beheld the glorious Stars and Stripes supported by Uncle 
Sam's boys in blue, a sight never to be forgotten. From 
Wilmington ha was s^nt on a transport to parole camp at 
Annapolis, Md., and home to lyancaster, Pa., just three 
days before Richmond fell. 

Mr. Shirk was married in 1867 to Margaret J. Kuhn 
and in the spring of 1872 moved to Iowa. The climate of 
south-eastern Iowa not agreeing with him, in the spring of 
1883 he came to Faulk county, S. D. 

He was a member of the school board of Bryant school 
township from its first organization, 1884, except one year, 
until 1889 when elected register of deeds and served two 
consecutive terms, since which time he has held no public 
office. 



ORLANDO L. STONE was born July 24th, 1861, in 
Madison county. New York, and came to Wisconsin with 
his mother when eight years of age, 

Mr. Stone cannot remember of ever seeing his father, 
who was a soldier in the Civil War, who suffered a horrible 
imprisonment in Libby prison, and amid torttures worse 



326 



than death, was hurried south from that horrible den, to 
die in th3 summer of 1864 at Macon, Georgia. 

In the fall of 1881, Mr. Stone married Miss Nellie 
Hall, daughter of Dr. Samuel Hall, late of Faulkton. To 
them have besn born six children, viz: J. Weston, Preston, 
Minalv., Steese, Hattie and Willis. All but Hattie are 
now living, she died in the spring of 1908. 

On May 1st, 1902, Mr. Stone's home was made deso- 
late by the death of his wife, the mother of his children. 
His children are all at his home, except J. Weston, the old- 
est son, who is married and lives in the state of Washing- 
ton. 

Mr. Stone, like most of Faulk county's pioneers, came 
here with very little of this world's goods, but a good share 
of courage and perseverence. He successfuly passed 
through all the hardships and privations of pioneer life and 
is now the owner of nine hundred and sixty acres of valua- 
ble Dakota land, five hundred of which is in a fine state of 
cultivation and the remainder a fenced pasture, all neces- 
sary improved farm machinery, two sets of good farm 
buildings; has twenty-five head of horses, seventy head of 
neat stock and a just claim to be counted among Faulk 
county's successful and prosperous farmers. 

Mr. Stone has always taken a lively interest in public 
affairs and is one of the influential citizens of the town of 
DeVoe. 



HENRY W. REINICKE was born August 4th, 1861, 
in Germany and immigrated to the United States with his 
parents in 1871, locating in Muscatine, Iowa, where he 
resided with his parents until 1884 when he removed to 



327 



Faulk county, Dakota Territory, and preempted the north- 
east quarter of section 17, township 118, range 72. After 
proving up his preemption he filed a tree claim and a 
homestead on the east half of section 8, in the same town- 
ship where he remained and improved and proved up both 
his tree claim and his homestead until 1898, and then sold 
out his possessions and removed to Faulkton where he re- 
mained one 3^ear and then removed onto his improved farm 
nine miles north-east of Faulkton, that he had purchased 
before settling in the western part of the county. 

Since 1899, Mr. Reinicke has remained upon his farm 
consisting of four hundred and eighty acres, making exten- 
sive improvements, including a fine set of farm buildings 
and a two inch artesian well. In the meantime a new line 
of railroad has been established, bringing the new towns of 
Wecota and Cresbard within six and seven miles respec- 
tively and increasing the value of his farm. 

On January 9th, 1891, Mr. Reinicke was united in 
marriage to Miss Amelia Holstene of Gettysburg, Potter 
county, South Dakota. To them have been born four sons, 
viz: Frank, Richard, Harry, and Carroll. 

Mr. Reinicke in early years was surrounded by such 
influences as to lead to a most bitter hatred against intoxi- 
cating liquors, and to best oppose the evil that grow'S out of 
their use, he has identified himself with and has become an 
active and efficient worker in the prohibition party. Re- 
ligiously Mr. and Mrs. Reinicke are in sympathy with the 
doctrine and usages of the Methodist Episcopal church, but 
being so far beyond any local organization of that church, 
they have become active and worthy workers in the Myron 
Congregational church, which is located near their home. 



328 



GEORGE H. STODDARD was born at Brandy's Bend 
sixty miles from Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1857, the 
second son of Holmes and Ellen (Davis) Stoddard in whose 
family were nine children. The father who was an iron 
worker, was born in this country, as was also the grand- 
father, but the great-great-grandfather was a native of Eng- 
land who came to this country prior to the Revolutionary 
War, and when the colonies took up arras against the 
mother country he aided then as a soldier of the continental 
army in achieving their independence. The mother of our 
subject was born in England and came to this country when 
a girl of fourteen years. Her father, John Davis, was also 
an iron worker. 

When three years of age his parents . removed to El- 
mira, New York, where he grew up to manhood and was 
educated, graduating from the high school at that place. 
There he \a as engaged in clerking for five months and for 
three years was employed as an ironworker. In 1878 he 
became connected with railroading as a brakeman and held 
that position for four years. 

Coming west he landed in Faulk county, Dakota Terri- 
tory, March 24, 1883, and immediately took up a home- 
stead on which he erected a claim shanty 10x12. Mr. Stod- 
dard started with a capital of seven hundred and twenty 
dollars. At the time of coming to Faulkton to assume the 
duties in the office of register of deeds, to which office 
he was elected in the fall of 1898, he was the owner 
of three hundred and twenty acres of valuable land, 
two hundred of which he had placed under a high state of 
cultivation and improved with good and substantial build- 
ings. 



329 



Since 1904 he has been engaged in trade in Faulkton as 
proprietor of a general merchandise store and doing a good 
business. 

In 1885, Mr. Stoddard led to the marriage altar Miss 
Effie N. Deloy, a native of Wisconsin and a daughter of 
Joseph Deloy, a farmer who was born in France and was 
proud of his French descent. To Mr. and Mrs. Stoddard 
have been born eight children, viz': George E., Chas. E., 
Mary E., Ruth M., Florence E., Clarence D., Grace Anna 
Bslle, and Helen Gladys. 

Socially Mr. and Mrs. Stoddard are members of the 
Congregational chvirch and of the societies of A. O. U. W., 
the Woodman, M. B. A., and Degree of Honor. 



JAMES P. TURNER, a well known and highly re- 
spected citizen of Faulkton, is a blacksmith by profession, 
a business that has proved exceedingly prosperous since 
his coming to this county. 

Mr. Turner is a native of Ontario, Canada, born near 
the town of Aylmer, December 1st, 1858, and is a son of 
James Turner, who was born in Scotland and immigrated 
to Canada with his father, Donald Tiu-ner, a carpenter by 
occupation. 

James P. Turner, whose father died when he was only 
two years old, was given a good common school education 
and at the age of nineteen years commenced serving a three 
years apprenticeship at the blacksmith trade. On the ex- 
piration of his apprenticeship he continued to work at his 
trade in Canada for two years. In the spring of 1882 he 
came to Watertown, Dakota Territor^^ where he remained 
one year. 



330 



In the spring of 1883 he took up his residence in Fanlk 
cou^ity, and as one of its first blacksmiths started a shop in 
LaFoon, which was then the county seat. Soon after the 
removal of the county seat to Faulkton in the fall of 1886, 
Mr. Turner returned to Aylmer where he was married to 
Miss Belle K. Puntine, a native of Canada and a daughter 
of John Puntine, a ship builder by trade. As her mother 
died when she was but two years old, she was raised by an 
aunt in her native land. 

To Mr. and Mrs. Turner were born five children, viz: 
Hugh A., Jessie A., Frank A., Muriel and Charles. 

Since coming to Faulkton Mr. Turner has steadily 
prospered financially. 



HON. ALEXANDER MILLER of DsVoe, was born 
September 3rd, 1845, in Holmes county. Ohio, where he 
lived until he was twenty-five years of age. From there 
he went to Cedar county, Iowa. In the falL of 1875 he 
went to Saline county, Missouri. In the fall of that year 
he married Miss Emma McCellend of that county. To 
them have been born six children, viz: JohnL-, Samuel H., 
Sarah F., William H., James A., and EdnaN., who are 
now all residents of Faulk county. 

He resided in Missouri until the fall of 1882 when he 
moved to North\nlle, in Spink county and engaged in the 
livery business. In 1883 he came to this county and 
proved up a preemption, then moved to his present loca- 
tion and took a homestead. Mr. Miller is one of our most 
enterprising and prosperous citizens. He is a practical 
farmer and a successful horseman. He has acquired one 
thousand nine hundred and twenty acres of valuable land. 



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PUBLIC LlBKi^^^' 






333 



six hundred acres of which are under cultivation, while the 
remainder is enclosed for pasturing. He has made the 
breeding of Percheron horses a specialty. For fifteen years 
he has had on an average, one hundred head and often 
as many as one hundred thirty. Has much of the best 
registered and graded stock in the north-west and keeps 
from twenty-five to seventy-five head of neat stock. He has 
all necessary machinery, a pleasant, delightful home and 
beautifur grove in which thousands of the citizens of Faulk, 
Edmunds and Spink counties annually gather to attend the 
old settlers' picnic. 

Four consecutive times he has been elected to the state 
legislature and is a member of South Dakota's house of 
representatives at the present time. Mr. Miller stands high 
in t^e confidence and respect of the community in which 
he lives and his reputation both as a business man and a 
public servant is without reproach. 



ROBERT KNAPTON, a well known, enterprising 
and energetic farmer, residing on section 25, Wesley town- 
ship, Faulk county, South Dakota, and an honored v^eteran 
of the Civil War, is a native of England, born in Leeds, 
October 6th, 1843- Having lost his father during his 
infancy, he was raised by his grandparents and with the 
family came to the United States in 1847. As a boy he 
worked as a farm hand, and during the winter months, 
while pursuing his studies in an old log school house, he 
■worked out of school hours for his board. He was thus 
employed until after the opening of the rebellion when on 
the 27th of December, 1863^ he enlisted in company A., 



334 



Twenty-ninth Regiment, Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, 
which was first ordered to New Orleans. Later the regi- 
ment was with Gen. Banks on his Red River expedition 
and in the engagement of Sabine Cross Roads and Pleasant 
Ridge. They helped to construct the dam at Alexander 
which saved the fleet, and were then sent to Morgonza 
Bend where they were given six weeks rest. They next 
went to Memphis and on the 24th of August, 1864, to Port 
Gibson, where they did patrol duty in the surrounding 
country. They then returned to New Orleans and in 
March, 1865, were sent to Ciperdor Island in Mobile Bay, 
where they remained a few weeks. Crossing the bay they 
went to Spanish Fort and later to Fort Blakely, where they 
were stationed when the war ended. 

Later Mr. Knapton was engaged in garrison duty at 
Mobile and from there went to Shreveport, Louisana, where 
a large force of confederates surrendered. He then re- 
turned by boat to Montgomery, Alabama, and was finally 
mustered out at Mobile, being honorably discharged at 
Madison, Wisconsin, October 9th, 1865. Returning to 
his home in that state, Mr. Knapton remained there until 
the following spring, when he purchased a team of horses 
and began farming on his own account, upon rented land. 
Two years were thus passed and in 1867, after his marriage, 
he moved to Buchanan county, Iowa, where he made his 
home for four years. He then went to Harrison county, 
Missouri, but at the end of one year, on account of ague, 
he returned to his old home in Wisconsin, remaining there 
until coming to Dakota Territory in the fall of 1882. Here 
he filed a claim on the north-west quarter of section 25, 
township 119, range 66, Faulk county and then returned 



335 



to Wisconsin. In the spring of 1883 he broke fifteen acres 
of his land, and on the second day of November of that 
year, brought his family to the home he had prepared for 
them, having previously erected a house and barn and 
brought out a carload of goods from the east. He now 
owns three quarter sections of good land of which three 
hundred acres have been placed under th^ plow. In his 
farm operations Mr. Knapton has been eminently success- 
ful, about two hundred acres is devoted to wheat and eighty 
to corn. He generally keeps through the winter about 
sixty-five head of neat stock, ten horses for his farm work, 
and thirty or forty hogs» which are considered a good in- 
vestment. 

Since casting his first presidential vote at regimental 
headquarters, in a rice field in lyouisana, for Abraham 
Lincoln, in 1864, Mr. Knapton has been unwavering in his 
support of the republican party. He is identified with the 
Grand Army of the Republic, favors prohibition of the 
liquor traffic and gives his support to all measures which he 
believes calculated to prove of public benefit. 



DARIUS S. SMITH is the son of John and Mary 
(Burroughs) Smith, who were from North Carolina, and 
moved to Indiana in 1835. Mr. Smith was born August 
19, 1833, and remained with his parents until his majority. 
He was married May 20th, 1862, to Miss Adelia M. Wil- 
liams of Jefferson county, Missouri, and was a resident of 
that county until 1882, at which time he removed to Dako- 
kota Territory, with his family, consisting of a wife and 
four children, viz: Silvia G., now Mrs. J. H. Bottum; 
Julia E., now Mrs. P\ A. Seaman; Hope S., npw Mrs. J. 



335 



C. Morrison of St. Paul, Minn.; Mollie I., now Mrs. Fred 
Mears of Minneapolis, Minn.; one son of five years died 
before they left Missouri. 

In April, of 1882, Mr. Smith as president of an asso- 
ciation of twenty -five members started out on an ex- 
ploring expedition for a settlement upon government 
land. On the morning of April 6th he started out from 
Redfield in Spink county, Dakota Territory in company 
with Thomas H. McMullen and Alexander lyaFoon and 
the evening of that day they were upon the banks of the 
Snake river where they decided to locate. At that time 
they were so pleased with the country that they made the 
best possible selection of land for their entire association, 
upon the unsurveyed government land and with scrip upon 
forty acres for a future townsite, and as they hoped, a 
county seat for Faulk county. The rapidity with which 
settlers from all parts of the country arrived and squatted 
upon the land, broke up their plans and disorganized the 

association so that but very few of the members ever joined 
them . 

The first postoffice in the county was located upon 
their scripted town site and named Cyclops, by the post- 
office department, temporarily, until the new town site 
should be named, with Miss Norah Reppy, postmaster. 

The first school in this county was taught by Miss 

Silvia G. Smith and it consisted of fifteen scholars. The 

first frame house erected in this county was built by 

Thomas McMullen one of the original Missourian party and 
is now removed to F'atilkton and occupied by A. J. Sprague 
of this city. 

April 7th, 1882, Mr. Smith occupied his tent upon the 
laud improved with a single sod mound, as a mark of set- 



337 



tlement, no other work of improvement showing in all the 
surrounding country. On the following September he 
could stand in the door of his board shanty and count over 
thirty homes erected and occupied upon the surrounding 
land. 

In the early struggle for the location of the county 
seat, between Faulkton and LaFoon, Mr. Smith was an 
active and persistent worker, a safe and reliable adviser 
and a born leader. For twenty years he has served in the 
important office of justice of the peace, he lias served for 
two full terms upon the board of county commissioners and 
in 1895 and 1896 was a member of the South Dakota senate. 
At the last state election he was re-elected as one of the 
county justices of the peace, and promptly filed his bond 
for the faithful discharge of his duties. 

Mr. Smith has a most desirable residence located near 
the court house in the central part of the city, where he 
and his devoted wife have everything to make life desirable. 
Only two blocks away are two of his daughters (Mrs. Bot- 
tum and Mrs. Ssanian) with their lovely, interesting fami- 
lies; while only a few hours ride will bring them to the 
homes of their other two daiighters in Minneapolis and 
St Paul, Minn. 



DAVID BRYDEN was born in Ironton, Wisconsin, 
March 21st, 1860, and with his parents removed to Scot- 
land when he was four years old, that being his father's 
former home. After remaining there three years, they re- 
turned again to Ironton, where his early years were spent 
upon a farm, from which come so many of our best, 
jnost reliable aud useful citizens, Wheji twelve years old 



338 



there was a removal from the farm to the village of Ironton, 
where he enjoyed all the privileges of the common schools, 
dividing his time between the school and the outlaying 
farm, until h^ becam2 of age. Upon his twsnty-first birth- 
day he was married to Miss Eulella J. Blakeslee, who was 
born in Ironton, Wisconsin, on the 21st day of March, 
1862. To them, March 21st, became a red letter day,_ be- 
ing a double birthday and their wedding anniversary. 
After their marriage he removed to Reedsburg, Wisconsin, 
where he became an experienced hardware business man, 
a business that received his attention all through life. To 
them were born five children, one son and four daughters: 
David E., now of Canada; Eva M., now Mrs. Hubert Head- 
ly of Faulkton; Elsie E-, now in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 
receiving lessons in music; Mayhie J., a graduate from the 
stenographic department of the Dakota Wesleyan Univer- 
sity, now holding a position as stenographer in the city 
of Faulkton; and Janet M., now at home with her mother 
and attending the public schools in Faulkton. 

In the fall of 1886, Mr. Bryden came to Faulkton to 
look over the country in view of a permanent location, and 
before leaving, purchased lots on St. John's street, where 
he subsequently built a hardware store and for five years 
occupied the second story for a residence, then built his 
permanent home on the corner of Pearl street and Tenth 
avenue. He was a careful and reliable business man, yet 
deeply interested in all that went for the upbuilding of 
society, active and prominent in the improvement of the 
public schools and general advancement of all that makes 
good society. He was an active, influential member of the 
Masonic fraternity. In politics, he was a democrat, but 



339 



neither politics or fraternal relations were allowed to inter- 
fere with business relations, which always received strict 
attention, and as the years went by, increased prosperity. 

But his home relations and family always occupied the first 
and most important place. 

Up to the fall of 1901, there was no indication of the 

sudden and unexpected end, so soon to come. Through 

the summer of 1902, failing health admonished him that 

the end might be near. In the early part of November, 

accompanied by his devoted wife, as a last resort, he visited 

the noted sanitarium at Battle Creek, Michigan, but alas, 

the disease had so far advanced that it could not be stayed. 

On the22d day of November, 1902, the spirit took its flight 

to the great beyond. The sad and mournful return was 

made to his former home at Faulkton, when followed the 

usual and appropriate funeral service at the Congregational 

church; followed by the beautiful and impressive services 

by the Masonic order, who marched to the final resting 

place with all that was mortal of their departed brother. We 

close this sad chapter with the following just tribute of one 
who was.present and knew whereof he spoke: 

"Mr. Bryden was one of our most enterprising and 
energetic citizens, ever ready to assist in any public enter- 
prise which promised to aid in the upbuilding of our city, 
and from a small beginning, had built up a large and pros- 
perous business and was getting into a position to enjoy 
life, when called away by the grim reaper who waits not 
for time or circumstances. His last year was one of great 
suffering, but was borne witli great patience and forti- 
tude. While not a professed christian, he came to have great 
faith in a better life beyond, his last words being, 'we shall 
meet beyond the river.' 



340 



"His father, David Br3^den, St., died but three months 
before. He leaves a wife, an aged mother, four sisters and 
five children to mourn his loss, who have the heartfelt 
sympath}^ of all in their bereavement." 



JAMES W. JOHNSTON, a son of William E. and 
Agnes Johnston of Center county, Pennsylvania, was born 
on October 2nd, 1854. When he was fourteen years of 
age his parents mov^ed to Lee county, Iowa, where he re- 
mained until his majority, and where he received the ad- 
vantages of a first class common school education . 

In 1879 he came to South Dakota and located at Water- 
town. The 12th of January in 1883, he came to Faulk 
county. In 1885 and 1886 he was register of deeds and at 
the election of 1892 he was again elected to this important 
oflfice which he held for two years. Mr. Johnston was an 
active worker for the advancement of Faulk county in- 
terests, especially for the upbuilding of LaFoon, its first 
count}' seat. 

On November 5th, 1885, he was united in marriage 
to Miss Lizzie M. Cochrane, who was a resident of LaFoon 
and at that time clerk of courts for Faulk county. To 
them have been born ten children, six of whom died in 
early childhood; Belle M., a student at Huron College, S- 
D.; Lloyd, Laura and Ralph are vet at home and in the 
Faulkton public schools. 

In 1893 tlie Faulk Coimty Land and Title Company 
was incorporated with Mr. Johnston, secretary, subsequent- 
ly Mr. Johnston bought out the other members of the firm 
and now owns and devotes his time to tliis important busi- 
ness. 



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343 



LIZZIE M. COCHRANE, daughter of John C. and 
Sylvia Cochrane, was born at Oshaloosa, Kan., January 
13th, A. D. 1860. In early childhood, her parents re- 
turned to DesMoines, Iowa, where she enjoyed the ad- 
vantages of their most excellent schools. In March, 1883, 
she came to Faulk county and filed on public land which 
was subsequently proved up on in accordance with the 
public land law. 

On November 5, 1884, she was appointed clerk of 
courts for Faulk county by Judge Severance Smith of the 
Fifth Judicial District of the Territory of Dakota, which 
office she filled with satisfaction to all who had business 
with that office and with credit to herself. Upon her 
marriage to Mr. Johnston, her resignation was immediately 
forwarded to Judge Church, and after several months her 
resignation was accepted and a young man from California 
was appointed. 



WILEIAM H. EOWER was born in the state of Mich- 
igan, April 30th, 1851, of German -English parentage. 
"When about three years of age his parents moved to La- 
Crosse, in the state of Wisconsin. When he was about 
eight years of age his parents removed to Vermont, Ontario 
county, in the same state, where he enjoyed the privileges 
of the common schools until he became of age. and where 
he continued to reside until he came to Dakota in 1884. 

In 1875 he was united in marriage to Miss Hattie M. 
Culver, and to them have been born three children, viz: 
Roy E., Nellie R.. and Madison E. 

Upon coming to Dakota in March, 1884, he immediate- 
ly located upon a preemption, his present homestead in 



344 



township 118, range 72, being now the town of Seneca in 
this (Faulk) coiint5% being then, and until 1887, when 
the Chicago & Northwestern railroad was completed to 
Seneca, twenty-two miles from the nearest railroad point, 
Mr. Lower and his devoted wife experienced their full 
share of the privations incident to pioneer life. Neither 
the failure of crops nor storms of winter deterred hitn. W hile 
others, who had located land near him, became discouraged 
and moved away, he struggled on, and today finds himself 
in possession of his pleasant home, a view of which may be 
found upon page 99 of this history, surrounded by six hun- 
dred and forty acres of the best of South Dakota's rich, 
productive soil, and is counted among Faulk county's re- 
liable, enterprising and prosperous farmers, and has the 
satisfaction of having his oldest son located in his own 
happy home upon adjoining land. 



ADAM SANGSTER was born in Scotland, July 28th, 
1843, and was married to L,ouisa Lowe in January, 1867. 
In 1874, with his wife and two children, Mr. Sangster sailed 
from Liverpool for New York, from there to Wabasha 
county, Minnesota, where he remained until the 27th of 
May, 1884, when he located on the north-west quarter of 
section 18, township 118, range 71, F'aulk county, and re- 
turned to Minnesota for his family, consisting of his wife 
and six children. Since coming to Faulk co-untr>- he has 
added two more to his family. Through tlie years of hail,, 
storms and drought, with the prevailing hot winds that. 
drove so many of the pioneer settlers from Faulk county,, 
Mr. Sangster experierfced with his large family a full share 
of hardships and privations. Yet never faltering, never 



>45 



raidy to say dis, h; worked oa, struggled on, with faith in 
Him who had promised the seed time and harvest, until 
adversity was changed to prosperity, and not only the 
necessaries, but the comforts of life were assured, 

Mr. Sangster has added to the land he located as a 
homestead another quarter section. He has an excellent 
set of farm buildings, good farm machinery for diversified 
farming, and everything that goes to make a first class agri- 
cultural home. 

Since 1888 he has held the office of postmaster at the 
Elli.sville postolfice to the perfect satisfaction of the sur^ 
rounding community, and a few weeks since he received a 
very polite invitation from the postmaster general to file 
his bond for another four year's service. 

Mr. Sangster has almost constantly filled the office of 
school township treasureror or clerk of Ellisville township 
and is now finishing up his second term of four yQars as 
treasurer. An illustration of Mr. Sangster's beautiful 
home may be seen on page 89 of this history. 



JOHN H. FINLEY was born July 1861, in Guernsey 
county, Ohio, and came to Faulk county, South Dakota, 
May 1883, and located in what is now the town of Union. 
In March, 1893, he married Miss Cevilla Roth of Indepen- 
-dence, Iowa. In common with all pioneers of this county 
he experienced all the hardships and privations from hail 
and storm, from hot winds and drouth, but with a great 
climatic change no doubt brought about by the great num- 
•of artesian wells, bringing to the surface vast quantities of 
pure, clear water, forming beautiful lakes, abundant 
crops have followed, bringing prosperity, as indicated by 



346 



his fine farm buildings and immediate surroundings. 

He finds himself possessor of eight hundred and forty 
acres of fine land, three hundred and fifty acres of which 
is under cultivation. With thirteen horses, fifty head of 
neat stock and sixty hogs, with all necessary farm machin- 
ery, making a complete outfit for successfully carrying on 
his farm work. Forty dollars an acre would be refused for 
this fine Dakota farm. 



ELI AS ROSELAND was born on July 7th, 1866. 
When seventeen years of age he left home and cut loose 
from family relations and came to Marshall county, Iowa. 
In 1892 he came to Faulk county and located on a quarter 
section of land in township 117, range 71, and in 1893 he 
married Miss Ida Sangster who was born in Scotland, Janu- 
ary 13th, 1870, and came to Faulk county with her parents 
in the season of 1884. To them have been born two sons, 
Clarence and Earl. In 1900 they located their present 
home in the town of Seneca in this county. A view of 
which may b^ found in this history. 

None of the pioneers of the county are deserving of 
more credit or better entitled to recognition than this young 
couple, who have succeeded by their own personal efforts 
in securing a most desirable and lovely home and laying 
the foundation for future wealth and prosperity. 



GABRIEL T. ROSELAND was born in Norway, in 
1857, and when fourteen years of age commenced a sea- 
faring life which he followed for ten years. In 1881, ar- 
riving at the port of Galveston, Texas, he decided to leave 
ths ocean for a life upon the land. After a year with the 



THE NEW YQT-'K 
PUBLIC L1BRAR\ 



ASTOR. LENOX 
TlUDtN FOUNDA- IONS 



349 



Santa Fe Railroad Company, in the spring of 1882, he went 
to Calma, Iowa, and from there to Wisconsin, where he 
took a four year's course in the lumber woods. In the 
spring of 1886 he came to Dakota and settled upon section 
20, tdwnship 117, range 71, in Faulk county. 

In July of that year he married Miss Lizzie Linton 
who was born in Rondout, New York. Her parents re- 
moved to the state of Wisconsin when she was but three 
years old. To them have been born eleven children, eight 
boys and three girls who are all living at the present time. 
To the quarter section of land first taken, he has added by 
purchase eight more. Last year he sold from his stock 
ranch between five and six thousand dollars worth of stock, 
and now has upon his farm two hundred head of neat 
stock, fifty head of horses and thirty hogs. 

He is not only a successful stockman, but a practical 
farmer. In 1907 he raised 1,300 bushels of wheat, 2,000 
bushels of oats, 1200 bushels of speltz, 800 bushels of flax 
and 100 bushels of potatoes. 

He has a beautifully and pleasantly located farm resi- 
dence, also a hotel and several lots in the village af Seneca, 
the important business center of western Faulk county. 
Here we have an illustration of what enterprise, perse- 
verance, and undying faith in his own judgment will do 
in making a man prosper in the settling and development 
of a new country. 



FREDERICK D. PERSON was born September 28, 
1854, in Clyde, Iowa county, Wisconsin, and on September 
12, 1885, came to Faulk county, South Dakota, and located 
in what is now the town of Union. On March 14, 1889, 



350 



he was married to Miss Amanda S. Larson, of Dodgeville, 
Wisconsin. To them have been born two daughters, the 
first died at the age of two years, the second, Lucile Irene, 
no\A sixteen years of age, is a graduate of the Aberdeen 
high school and now attending the normal school in that 
city. Mr. Person has had a full experience of the hard- 
ships and privations of Dakota pioneer life. For the first ten 
years it was a constant struggle with hail and storm, dry, 
hot winds and drought. With climatic changes largely 
brought about by artesian waters, producing beautiful lakes 
of clear pure water, abundant crops and unusual prosperity 
has followed. Mr. Person has a beautiful home, a cut of 
which may be found on page 251 of this history. Nearby 
is a beautiful lake of five acres of clear pure water surround- 
ed with a border of thrifty trees. He has six hundred and 
forty acres of the best of Dakota soil, seventeen head of 
horses, fifty head of neat cattle and thirty hogs. With 
three hundred and fifty acres inider cultivation and all 
necessary machinery for farming, $40.00 per acre would 
not be considered a good offer for the farm. Mr. Person 
is also a stockholder and vice president of the Chelsea 
State Bank. 



JOHN HARRINGTON was born 1854 in Freeport, 
Illinois, and in 1884 he came to Faulk county, South Da- 
kota, and located in the present town of Scatterwood. He 
then had seven hundred dollars, all of which was lost the 
first year by reason of hail storms and fire. 

On June 1st, 1886, he was married to Miss Louisa B. 
Chambers, who was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1861, 



351 



and came to Faulk county in June, 1883, and located on a 
homestead one and one-half miles west of Scatterwood lake. 
To them have been born eight children, sev-en of wh^m are 
now livang, viz: Lawrence, Inez'M., James Ray, Austa, 
Clara Edna, Mabelle, and John D. 

Mr. Harrington had a large experience in the hard- 
ships and privations of Dakota pioneer life, for the first ten 
years, hail, dry, hot winds, drought and tornadoes all were 
in his pathway. Every dollar he could earn was expended 
in improving his land, in sinking wells and in exerting 
every effort to make a home, never loosing faith that it 
would be a Faulk county home. Passing over the inter- 
vening years we find one of the most complete and perfect 
farm homes in Faulk county. First of all he settled the 
water question. An artesian well, 1100 feet deep, was put 
down on the bank of a deep depression, covering an area of 
about thirteen acres, which in six months was filled to a 
depth of eleven feet, which has been stocked with black 
bass, from the United States fish commission to which has 
been added several other kinds of fish, and now he has 
sufficient fish for home use and will soon have them for the 
market. In addition to the supply of water for his beauti- 
ful lake, Mr. Harrington has installed a five horse power 
water motor which supplies power for his twelve thousand 
bushel elevator, together with mills for grinding corn and 
other grain for stock and house use. This elevator hrs 
scales for weighing and all improved facilities in modern 
elevators for handling grain. The barn, that years ago wss 
destroj'ed by a tornado, has been replaced by one 48x60 
feet with water piped to the barn and to the pastures. He 
has sufficient water for irrigating a small tree claim. 



352 



In 1907 a fine residence, at a cost of $5000.00 outside 
of all labor of teams and personal labor, which was no small 
amount, was erected. A fine cut of his buildings, with all 
modern improvements, can be seen on page 99 of this 
history. 

In addition to the usual plan of American farming, he 
has irrigated for his strawberries and other garden pro- 
ducts, raising at the rate of one hundred and sixty bushels 
of strawberries per acre; and sold from only a few square 
rods, $45.00 worth of cabbage, and from a car load of steers 
fed on Dakota corn he received $1400.00 on the Chicago 
market, and by actual experiment knows that more small 
grain can be raised in ten years from a given number of acres 
if two of those years the ground has been planted and 
thoroughly cultivated to corn, than if it had been planted 
ever}^ one of the ten years to small grain. 

Mr. Harrington has not only found time for the ac- 
complishment of all these lines of diversified farming but 
has done a large amount of work in the advancement of 
public enterprise. He has b'een chairman of the board of 
trustees of United Bretheren church in his own town and 
has been one of the principal promoters of the Mausfield & 
Scatterwood Telephone Company, incorporated with a capi- 
tal of $25,000.00. He has been on the board of supervisors 
for several years, and member of the school board and a 
road superintendent. 

In the year 1906 he raised and sold from four acres of 
ground $400.00 worth of melons, and manv were left to 
rot on ■ the ground by reason of a lack of market and the 
time to gather them . 



353 



ADAM FINDEIS was born in Germany, January 14, 
1825, and was married in 1849, and in 1850 to them a son 
was born. After the decease of his wife in 1853, he came 
to America. After traveling in the east and south, he 
located in St. lyouis, Missouri, and on the 30th day of 
September, 1861, he enlisted in the service of the United 
States and was mustered into service in Company 1., First 
Regiment Engineer, Missouri Volunteers at St. Louis, Mis- 
souri, and mustered out of service at East Point, Georgia, 
on September 28, 1864, at the expiration of his service. 
On the 15th day of February, 1865, re-enlisted and was 
mustered into service as a private in Company F., Sixth 
Regiment, Illinois Volunteer Cavalry for one year and was 
discharged on the 5th day of November, 1865. His resi- 
dence is stated as Clayton, Illinois. 

On the 14th day of January, 1874, he was married to 
Miss Margaret Metz at Eacon, Marshall countv, Illinois, 
and in 1883 he removed to Faulk county. South Dakota. 
To them has been born one daughter who is now a resident 
of Wisconsin. 

Mr. Findeis was an industrious hard working Faulk 
county pioneer who finished his earthly career and lay down 
for his final rest on Januar,y 16th, 1905. 



JOEL RUSH was born March 8th, 1844 in Green 
county, Wisconsin. When twelve years of age his par- 
ents moved to Fillmore county, Minnesota, where he made 
his home until 1887. August 15th, 1862, he enlisted in 
Company E., 10th Minnesota Regiment Volunteer Infantry 
in which he served three full years and a few days, being 
mustered out at Fort Snelling, Minnesota, on the 19th of 



354 



August, 1865. Although enlisted for service in the war of 
the rebellion, for a time, the regiment remained in their 
own state to settle with the Sioux Indians for their bloody 
massacre at New Ulm, his company doing valiant service, 
both in fighting, capturing and guarding the "red skins" 
until he saw twenty-eight of the five hundred captured 
suffer, the full penalty of the law for the high crimes 
they committed. With the Indian outbreak suppressed, in 
1863 the 10th Minnesota was ordered to join the depart- 
ment of the south at St. Louis and remained at barracks 
through the winter of 1863. This winter was no means 
lost time, thorough dicipline and drill were kept up and 
raw recruits soon became veterans. From that time to the 
end of the war the 10th was on duty in the army of the 
west, and proved worthy in every line of duty, an honor to 
the state and branch of service in which they served. At 
the battle of Tupelo, raid after Price, battle of Nashville, 
in pursuit of Hood, in its record in the 16th army corps, 
Company E., 10th Minnesota in which Comrade Joel Rush 
did his whole duty to the end of the war is one of which 
any veteran may well be proud. 

On the 15th day of November, 1868, Joel Rush was 
married to Miss Victorena Ogg, »who was born in Rasville, 
Iowa, February 22, 1850. To them have been born two 
children, a son who died when seven years of age, a daugh- 
ter, Mrs. Cora C. Bowers, who now resides in this city. 

Comrade Rush has been a citizen of Faulkton since 
1888 and a worthy member of Phil Sheridan Post, No. 72, 
Department of South Dakota of which he was past com- 
mander in 1903, until his death vvhich occurred May 2nd. 
1908. 



355 



CARIv NIEMKYER was born in Germany, May 1st, 
1851, and emig-rated to the United States in 1873 and 
located in Chicago, 111., working at his trade as a tailor 
for twelve years. 

January 26th, 1876, he was united in marriage with 
Miss Emily Wendt, who was born in Germany. To them 
have been born six children, viz: Carl Frederick, Lizzie, 
Arthur, William, Emma and Edgar. 

In 1884 he came to Ashton and engaged in business as 
a merchant tailor, remaining there three years until 1887, 
when he located in the city of Faulkton, where he has since 
resided and continued in the business of merchant tailor 
and dealer in ready, made clothing. 

Mr. Niemeyer is one of our most reliable citizens, is a 
member of the Methodist Episcopal church, an Odd Fellow, 
and in politics a republican. 



D. ROY JONES, son of Robert and Catherine (Hum- 
phrey) Jones, whose parents were natives of Wales, and 
emigrated to the United States at an early day and located 
in the county of Oneida iu the state of New York. 

Mr. Jones was born, November 19th, 1847, in the town 
of Steuben, Oneida county. New York, and remained with 
his parents, attending school and working on the farm un- 
til his majority. Mr. Jones remained a resident of Steuben 
until 1883. On December 22, 1874, he was united in 
marriage to Miss Elizabeth Humphrey of Ixona, Wis., and 
to them three children have been born, W. Forrest and 
W. Florence, who were born in Steuben, N. Y., and 
Edythe Lyle, who was born in Faulk county, territory of 
Dakota. 



356 



In 1883 on March 22nd, Mr. Jones became a resident 
of Faulk county and located upon government land, being 
the south-west quarter of section 3, township 120, range 68, 
and remained on his homestead until 1889, when he re- 
moved to Faulkton on account of educational advantages 
for his children. Since that time Mr. Jones has been en- 
gaged in the ice and water business in this city. 

Mr. Jones has been an active worker in public affairs, 
and both he and Mrs. Jones have been active workers in 
church circles, being members of the Congregational 
church, organized by Rev. Clinton Douglas, at Cresbard, 
and for several years Mr. Jones was superintendent of the 
Sunday school. 

There had been no material change in family relations, 
save that incident to the passing years until September 10, 
1906, when their son, W. Forrest, who had arrived at 
manhood, and was actively engaged in business as a con- 
tractor and builder in this city, and who from his fifteenth 
year had been a worthy member of the Congregational 
church in this city, was suddenly called, tho' well prepared 
for the great beyond, leaving a devoted wife and two small 
children. 



HENRY A. WILKINSON was born December 10th, 
1844, in Schennuta county, New York. When five years 
of age his father removed to the state of Wisconsin and his 
home was in the town of Gainsville in that state until 
he was sixteen years of age. In 1861 his father re- 
moved to Sangamon county in the state of Illinois, and in 
1863 he enlisted in the 124th Illinois Volunteer Infantry to 
serve in the war of the Rebellion, and in 1865 he received 



;57 



an honorable discharge and was mustered out of the United 
States service at Springfield, Illinois. 

In 1875 he removed to Butler county, Nebraska, and 
remained there until the autumn of 1882, and from there 
became to Sanborn county, Dakota Territory, and took a 
homestead and after proving up his government land in 
1884, he became a resident of Faulk county, and took 
a preemption claim on the north-west quarter of section 22, 
township 120, range 69, adjoining his tree claim that he 
had taken the year before. Since that time Mr. Wilkinson 
has been a resident of this county. Four years ago he sold 
his land and became a resident of the city of Faulkton 
where he engaged in the land business. For the last six 
months he has been at the National Sanitarium at Hot 
Springs, S. D., and has just returned to his home greatly 
improved in health. 



WILLIAM J. DODDS was born October 15th, 1856, 
in the county of Wigton, in Scotland. In 1879 he emi- 
grated to the United States, and arrived at lyansingburg on 
the Hudson on July 4th and remained in the state of New 
York, working at his trade as a cabinet maker and carpen- 
ter until 1883, then he removed to the state of New Jersey, 
working at his trade until January, 1900. 

On January 1st, 1885, he was united in marriage to 
Miss Ursula Comptom of Millington, N.J. To them have 
been born seven children, viz: Wenona Louise, Agnew 
Comptom, William, Ina, Zelda Randolph, Kenneth Janie- 
son and Margaret Katherine. 

On the 2nd day of January, 1900, Mr. Dodds, together 
with his family, became residents of the city of Faulkton, 
Faulk county. 



358 



Since that time he has been engaged as a contractor 
and builder in this city. Mr. Dodds is interested in the 
school and in public affairs, is a republican in politics 
and a member of the Commercial club in this city. Among 
the residences and other buildings erected by Mr. Dodds in 
this city, illustrations of which may be found in this his- 
tory, are those of C. B. Chambers, A. M. Moore, the 
Catholic church and the Commercial club building of this 
citv. 



STEPHEN F. THORN was born February 15, 1860, 
in Hillsdale county, Michigan, son of Albert S. and Louisa 
(Mosuer) Thorn. When he was but two years old his 
mother was called to Lexington, Kentucky, to visit and 
care for her sick and dying husband and she soon returned 
with his mortal remains. Then commenced her real life 
work in caring for, supporting and raising to man and 
womanhood her family of four children. 

The subject of this sketch remained at home with his 
mother, enjoying the advantages of the school and assisting 
her as best he could until twenty years of age, at which 
time he was, on the 2Sth day of July, 1880, united in mar- 
riage with Miss Anne E. Gibson, of Ranson, Hillsdale 
county, Michigan. To them have been born se^•en children^ 
Clark E., Norman S., Hamilton H., Springate L., Delia A., 
LunaCx., and Grace G.; the four youngest of them were 
born in Dakota after his removal here in 1886. 

Mr. Thorn located his preemption on the south-west 
quarter of section 18, township 118, range 72, and after 
proving up under the United States land law, he took a 
homestead and in common with other Dakota pioneers,, 



359 



built a sod shanty, an illustration of which may be found 
in this history (taken on a Sunday morning as they were 
about to start to Sunday school) in which they resided for 
nearly five years. Five years later he sold his homestead. 
Six years ago he became a resident of Faulkton, on ac- 
count of the better advantages of education for his children. 
Since coming to Faulkton, Mr. Thorn has been engaged 
in a ver}^ good business, running a 'bus to the train and 
other places as circumstances demanded and doing a suc- 
cessful draying business. 

Mr. Thorn is a democrat in politics and while being 
recognized by his party and receiving the nomination at the 
last election for sheriff, in a county overwhelmingly repub- 
lican, he failed at election. He is now city marshal. 



MERIIvIy S. McDEARMON is of a Scotch descent, 
tracing his ancestry to a period prior to the Revolutionary 
War, when they emigrated from Scotland and located in 
P>ie county in the state of New York. And when the 
Colonial struggle for independence commenced they prompt- 
ly took sides with the colonists to defend their manhood 
against the oppression of the mother county. 

The subject of this sketch was born October 14th, 
1843, HI Erie county, state of New York. In 1844, his 
father with his family removed to Chicago, 111., where he 
grew up to manhood and there enlisted into the 113th 
Regiment, Illinois Volunteer Infantry, which was organized 
under the auspices of the Chicago Board of Trade in 1862, 
and served until June 20th, 1865, when he was mustered 
out of service. His regiment saw active service, having 
been in sixteen engagements with the Confederate forces; 



360 



the most strenuous being the battle under General Sherman 
at Vicksburgin 1862 and the capture of that city by Gener- 
al Grant in 1862, when he triumphantly marched into the 
captured city on July 4th, of that year. 

Mr. McDearmon returned to Chicago after his dis- 
charge from the army. On November 30th, 1865, there he 
was united in marriage to Miss Charlotte Ann Russell of Chi- 
cago, 111., and immediately took up his residence in Sterl- 
ing in that state. To Mr. and Mrs. McDearmon have been 
born five children, viz, Hattie, who died when eleven years 
of age; Mabel, who died in infancy; Harry E., who is a 
citizen of Faulkton and is married to Miss Nora Purcell of 
DeVoe, in this county. (He is station agent for the Chicago 
& Northwestern railroad company in this city.) Allie, now 
Mrs. C. A. E. Whitton of the town of Fairview in this 
county, Ruby, who makes her home with her parents 
while for the last eight years she has been engaged as ste- 
nographer and typewriter in the law office of Frank Turn- 
er, Esq., in this city and is holding the office of notary 
public. 

Mr. McDearmon, since 1883, has been a resident of 
Faulk county, and identified with its social and political 
affairs, and for four years was clerk of courts for this 
county. He is a contractor and builder and has done a 
good business in this city and the surrounding countrj- . 



ARTHUR W. PHPXPS was born in Colfax, Wiscon- 
sin, February 11, 1873, and on July 11th, 1896, he 
was united in marriage to Miss Susie Howell of Deer 
Creek, Minnesota. To them has been born one child, 
Coila, born September 7, 1897. In 1902 he removed 



361 



to South Dakota and engaged in the lumber and coal busi- 
ness at Holmquist, in Day county. In 1906 Mr. Phelps 
became a citizen of Faulkton where he has since resided 
and on January 1st, 1909, he entered into partnership with 
Mr. A. D. Griff ee and engaged in the general real estate 
business'. Mr. Phelps is a veteran of the Spanish-Ameri- 
can War. He was a sergeant of Company F., 14th Minne- 
sota Regiment, and was appointed brigade quartermaster 
sergeant of the 30th Brigade Second Division First Army 
Corps, and is quartermaster sergeant of the 4th South Da- 
kota Infantry. Mr. Phelps is a member of the Masonic 
order and of the B. P. O. E. and the Modern Brother- 
hood of America. 



FRANK A. PANGBURN was born on December 10th, 
1856, in Fayette county, Iowa. His home with his par- 
ents was on a farm, yet he enjoyed an excellent opportun- 
ity for an education, completing a collegiate and commer- 
cial course and graduating from the Upper Iowa Univer- 
sity. 

After being engaged in teaching school for one year, 
in 1882 he came to Spink county, Dakota Territory, and 
located government land and then went to LeRoy, Minn., 
and engaged in teaching for six months. 

In 1883, Mr. Pangburn came to Faulk county and 
took a homestead six miles west of Faulkton, and for four 
years, while he was holding down his homestead he was en- 
gaged in the real estate business at Faulkton. On June 
21st, 1887, he was united in marriage to. Miss Minnie M. 
Johnson, from Cedar county, Iowa. To them have been 
born six children, viz: Jessie M., Paul W., Frank J., Mer- 



362 



rill W., and a son and daughter who died in infancy. Soon 
after his marriage Mr. Pangburn moved on a farm one 
mile north of Faulkton where he has since resided. 

At the first general election in 1884, after the organi- 
zation of Faulk county, Mr. Pangburn was elected clerk of 
court, but the presiding judge exercised his authority under 
the territorial organization and appointed a personal friend 
from Iowa to fill that position. In 1889 he became superin- 
tendent of the Faulkton public schools, and after teaching 
for four years he was elected county superintendent of the 
schools, which office he successfully filled for four years. 
Since that time he has been engaged in farming and stock 
raising and in teaching school winters. 

While Mr. Pangburn is a loj'al and influential member 
of the republican party he has never sought preferment, 
yet he has always been interested in the advancement of 
all educational interests. 

Socially, Mr. Pangburn is a member of the order of 
United Workmen and the Degree of Honor, also a member 
of the Modern Brotherhood of America and at the present 
time is president of the latter organization. 



EDWARD CHAPMAN was born in Tioga county, 
New York, December 20, 1852 and at the age of fourteen 
removed with his parents to Cedar county, Iowa, where he 
remained until the fall of 1882. when he came to this coun- 
ty and located a claim and built a shanty, after which he 
returned to Iowa. On February 15th, 1883, the land hav- 
ing come onto tlie market, he returned to Huron, Beadle 
county, and filed on the land and returned to Iowa for his 
family and on the 27th of March, was on the south-east 



363 



quarter of section 3, township 118, range 68, which was 
twenty-five miles from the nearest railroad station. 

Upon his arrival there he found that somebody had 
appropriated and removed the roof from his shanty and 
that it was already occupied by at least four feet of snow. 
After eating their dinner in the beautiful Dakota sunshine 
beside the shanty, and removing the snow from the inside, 
the roof of Judge Derr's unoccupied shanty was appropri- 
ated and a completed home was occupied that night. Up- 
on the arrival of his old friend and neighbor, Judge Derr, 
lumber had been bought and was on the ground for a roof 
to his depleted shanty. 

Mr. Chapman was married in Cedar county, Iowa, to 
Miss Sara C Golden, who was born in Pennsylvania, their 
mairiage occuring September 2nd, 1875. To them was 
born January 5, 1882, a son, Delbert, who now resides with 
his parents, a source of great comfort to them. 

Mr. Chapman in common with nearly all the pioneer 
settlers became perfectl}- familiar with privation, exposure 
and all the trials attendant upon drouth, hail and . storm, 
and suffered total loss of crops in 1888-89, yet he was able 
to adapt himself to the changing circumstances and condi- 
tions, and when, through climatic changes and larger ex- 
perience, the door to abundant prosperity stood open, he 
was prepared to enter in. 

He has now at least four thousand dollars' worth of 
Norman Percheron horses and two thousand dollars' worth 
of neat stock, is satisfied with his experience in Dakota, 
and believes that it has been and still is among the most 
desirable places for a home and to accumulate property in 
the great north-west. 



364 



THOMAS DEADY was born in New York City, April 

18, 1844 and remained in that city and had the advantages 

of the schools until. the fall of 1868, then went to the state 

of Illinois and remained there until the spring of 1883. In 

1877 he married Miss Ada Tuttle. To them was born two 

children, John Thomas and Edward E. John Thomas is 

married and lives in Seattle, Washington. Edward E. is 

married and lives in Montana. In the spring of 1883 Mr. 

Deady came to Dakota and located in Faulk county where 

he has since resided. After the decease of his first wife 

Mr. Deady married Miss Lulu May Frink, of Emporia, 

Kansas. To them have been born three children, viz: 

Cora Eester, Dora May and Jennie May, who are yet mem- 
bers of his family. 

Mr. Deady is now located upon the north-west of sec- 
tion 14, township 118, range 70 and has a fine farm and 
extra good farm buildings. Ninety-five acres are under 
cultivation, the remainder being in inclosed pasture. 

He has refused seven thousand dollars for this farm, 
but on account of a year's severe sickness, sold the most of 
his personal property and spent the winter of 1908-9 in the 
south. 



OSCAR VANMEERBECK was born in Belgium, in 

1877 and came to this country six years ago. He is a 

mason by trade. Two years ago he engaged in his present 

business, the manufacturing of cement building blocks. 

Up to the present time it has been in an experimental stage 

but with the completion of a barn for Ernest Hulet and the 
fine Faulk County Abstract Co. building, with I. Allen 
Cornwell manager, it has passed the experimental stage 
and become an established business. 



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367 



Mr. Vanmeerbeck has a contract with Mr. A. Colgrove 

to furnish blocks for a building 50 by 100 feet, which is 

now in process of construction. It will require about 5,000 
blocks. 



ALEXANDER GARRICK was born January 8th, 
1844, in Delaware county, New York, where he resided, 
enjoying all the advantages peculiar to country life, in that 
old and well settled part of the country until he removed 
to the west in 1878. 

In December, 1867, he was married to Miss Elizabeth 
Cowen and to them' have been born five children, viz: 
James C, Isabella C., William R., Alex A., and Georgia 
May, who died when four years of age. The others are 
all valued citizens of South Dakota. William R. is now 
deputy sheriff of Faulk county and Alex A. cashier of the 
Security State Bank of Faulkton. 

In the spring of 1883 Mr. Garrick came to Faulk 
county and located near Cresbard. Fifteen years ago he 
bought and moved onto theE. C. Sage farm one mile from 
Faulkton. This farm was bought for $1,400 and a few 
days ago sold for $6,400, a clear profit of $5,000. F'or the 
last five years Mr. Garrick has resided in the city of Faulk- 
ton. He has been elected to the board of county commis- 
sioners several times. He has taken a great interest in 
public affairs and at the age of 64 is a well preserved, active 

citizen. Only one mile from town Mr. Garrick owns an- 
other quarter section of land. 

On January 8th, 1909, his life partner, the mother of 
his children, after several months of lingering sickness, 
passed to the great beyond, loved and respected by her 
family and her numerous friends. 



368 



DOCTOR J. P. RATHBUN was one of the first settlers 
in Fanlk county and was successful in his . practice as a 
physician and when the settlers by reason of drougths and 
failures of crops were unable to pay for his services, he was 
as ready to respond to every call, as though they had the 
money, and many a poor family have reason to remember 
him with gratitude, for his visits of mercy, to minister to 
the wants of the sick and suflfering. 

A few months ago Dr. Rathbun removed from Faulk- 

ton to Wecota, a new town ten miles from this city on the 

St. Louis & Minneapolis railroad, where he is enjoying a 
successful practice. 



SAMUEL LOY, son of Samuel and Barbara (Henry) 
Loy, was born in Stinesville, Berks county, Pennsylvania, 
November 27th, 1853. The family is of German descent 
and was lounded in the Keystone state at an early day in 
the history of this country. When four years old he re- 
moved with his parents to Schuykill county, Pennsylvania, 
where he was reared on a farm and attended the county 
schools, until seventeen years pf age, when he returned to 
Lehigh county and devoted tsvo years to learning the mil- 
ler's trade. His salary the first year was forty dollars and 
the second one hundred and fifty dollars. He was engaged 

in the milling business in Berks and Lehigh counties for 
six years. 

In 1875 he was united in marriage to Miss Janet Faust, 
who was of German descent and reared in Berks county. 
To them have been born two children, viz: Charles Samuel 
and Eafl Richard. The oldest was the first boy to grow 
up in Faulk county and graduate in any school, he being a 
graduate from the Northern Indiana law school. 



369 



On l3aving his native state Mr. lyoy in 1876 went to 
Kansas, where he was employed for one year as a house 
carpenter and during the following four years was engaged 
in the milling business at Fort Iveavenworth and Norton - 
ville in that state, then after being on a farm for one year, 
he removed to Faulk county, Dakota Territory, in 1883, 
and on the 15th of March in that year took up his residence 
upon the present farm, being the first to locate in that 
township. Mr. lyOy has had a full share of the hardships 
and privations, with hail and storm of the early and inex- 
perienced pioneer settler, with the nearest market thirty- 
five miles away. 

He has been actively engaged in farming and stock 
raising, and has three hundred and sixty acres of valuable 
improved land located four and a half miles from the Chica- 
cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad station in the village 
of Orient. He has also four hundred and eighty acres of 
rented land in an inclosed pasture, and is wintering nineteen 
head of horses, seventy-six head of neat stock, forty hogs 
and a big lot of chickens. 

Upon coming upon his farm he built a house 16x22; 
additions were made to this until he had a comfortable 
home, a good barn, a granary 24 by 34, acorn crib 8 by 42, 
hog house 36 by 18, chicken house 40 by 15, and an artesian 
w^ell 1122 feet deep with a good ilow of water and 1200 feet 
of pipeing to carry water to his buildings and pastures. 

Four years ago a tornado destroyed his barn, thereupon 
a new one was erected, 64 by 64 and 16 foot posts, and in 
the summer of 1908 he erected a new house 32 by 32, two 
stories, with concrete cellar under the whole house, six 
rooms on the first floor and five on the second, and a garret 



370 



with three large dormer windows, where four more rooms 
could be finished if needed, to which, another year, steam 
heat and all modern improvements are to be added. 

Mr. Loy is deeply interested in public affairs, especially 
on educational lines; has held several school offices. He 
has twice been nominated for county sheriff, and once for 
county treasurer, receiving more than the party vote, but 
the county being overwhelmingly republican, and he, a 
democrat, failed of election. 



FRANCIS M. RAMSDELL, son of William and Mary 
A. (Nixon) Ramsdell, was born August 18, 1862, in Osage, 
Mitchell county, Iowa, and removed with his parents to 
Moody county. South Dakota, in 1879, and in April, 1884, 
located on the north-east quarter of section 7, township 117, 
range 71. 

On December 25th, 1883, Mr. Ramsdell was united in 
marriage to Miss A. Laura Smith, who was born in Bata- 
via, Jefferson county, Iowa, on January 18, 1868. To them 
have been born six children, viz: William Francis, born 
December 18, 1884; Claud Leonard, born October 27, 1888; 
Sarah Leone, born December 14, 1892; John Wesley, born 
July 5, 1896; Delia Estella, born July 21, 1898, and Earle 
Vern, born August 19, 1907. 

In addition to his homestead right, Mr. Ramsdell has 
located a tree claim entry upon the adjoining north-west 
quarter of the same section, which subsequently he proved 
up, giving him three hundred and twenty acres of v-aluable 
land. In the fall of 1891 Mr. Ramsdell moved with his 
young family to Moody county, but in the fall of 1893 he 
returned to his home in this county, happy and contented 




FRANCIS M. RAMSDELI. 




MRS. LAURA RAMSDELL 



375 



to again become a resident of central South Dakota. Here he 
remained satisfied with his farm life until the fall of 1902, 
when he being- the republican candidate, was elected to the 
oihce of register of deeds for Faulk county, the require- 
ments of his office necessitating the removal of his fami- 
ly to Faulkton. In 1904 Mr. Ramsdell was re-elected to 
the same office, rendering in all four years of faithful and 
successful service. For the better opportunit}- of educating 
his children, he continued his residence in his pleasant and 
commodious home at the county seat, and is now one of 
the successful business men of Faulkton. 



A. M. STRACHAN was born in in S.cotland, June 17, 
1850, and immigrated to the United States of America 
in 1880 and located in the state of Illinois. In 1883 he 
moved to Faulk county, South Dakota, and located upon 
the south-west quarter of section 14, township 119, range 
67 where he resided until 1896 when he located upon his 
tree claim on the south-east quarter of section 19, town- 
ship 119, range 66 where he now resides. 

Mr. Strachan was married in Kalmarnock, Ayrshire, 
Scotland, to Miss Catherine Walsh, on September 25, 1873. 
To them have been born four children, viz: Samuel, born 
at Kalmarnock, Scotland, September 1, 1874; Jane, born at 
Kalmarnock, March 2, 1877; Jessie M., born at Kalmar- 
nock, May 22, 1879 and Thomas W., born at DeVoe, 
Faulk county. South Dakota, December 26, 1891. 

Mr. Strachan is a practical mechanic and has worked 
at his trade as contractor and builder in connection with 
carrying on his farm. He was one of the early settlers of 
Faulk county to be contented with the amount of land he 



376 



could successfully improve. He has built up a good home 
with a well cultivated farm and is counted among our suc- 
cessful and prosperous pioneer farmers. 

Mr. Strachan always took a great interest in public 
affairs and an active part in the county and state organi- 
zation. A particular interest in public schools and in se- 
curing an education for his children. 



JOHN A. BIXLER was born May 23rd, 1863, in 
Stevenson county, Illinois, where he resided until March, 
1894, he then removed to Faulk county. South Dakota, 
and located about three miles north of Orient. Nine years 
ago he secured his present home, two miles east of Faulk- 
ton, where he now resides. 

On April 8th, 1897, he was united in marriage to Mrs. 
Anna Del,app, of Yankton, South Dakota, who is now 
living. 

Mr. Bixler is engaged in stock farming, keeping on an 
average some two hundred head of neat cattle and is count- 
ed among our valuable and enterprising citizens. Mr. Bix- 
ler has serv^ed the count3' as county cattle inspector, is 
in politics a democrat and is to be commended for 
standing by his political convictions in a county that is 
overwhelmingly republican. 



THOMAS PURCELL was born in Somerset, Penn- 
sylvania, August 15, 1837. He was of Irish descent. 
Subsequenth' he went to Medina, New York, where he was 
employed until his enlistment in the 28th New York In- 
fantry, to serve in the rebellion, on May 22, 1861. On 
September 17, 1862 at the battle of Antietam he was seri- 



377 



ously wound2d in his head and on account of his wound 
was mustered out of service on June 2, 1863. 

After his recovery he served for three years as a 
government agent. Then he w^as a railroad conductor in 
the employ of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad on the run 
from Cincinnatti to Dayton. 

Mr. Purcell moved to DeKalb county, 111., and was 
among the first settlers in that county, where he was suc- 
cessful in farming and stock raising. In the fall of 1882, 
Mr. Purcell located land in Faulk county, and while he 
had interests that required his presence part of the time at 
Athol, Spink county, he held down the government land 
securing three valuable quarter sections under the then 
existing land laws. From 1885 up to the time of his death 
on September 22, 1900, he was one of the successful, pros- 
perous farmers and stock raisers of Faulk county. While 
Mr. Purcell was one of Faulk county's leading and pro- 
gressive farmers he was one of her reliable and active busi- 
ness men, taking an interest in the financial and political 
prosperity of our county. 

On December 23, 1863, Mr. Purcell was united in 
marriage with Miss Emma Kline of Frederick City, Mary- 
land, who proved a devoted wife and mother. To them 
were born seven children. Soon after the birth of the 
voungest in 1879, she was called to surrender all the care 
and responsibility of her family into the hands of her de- 
voted husband and take the journey to the unknown land 
from which none ever return, a duty which future events 
prove was well performed. After his family was grown up 
and several of them gone to hoihes of their own; the sum- 
mons came and the mortal was called to put on immortali- 



378 



ty. His children who were then Mrs. J. A. Winerd of 
Northville, (now of the state of Washington); Mrs. W. T. 
Jackraan, of DeVoe; Mrs. W. J. Price and Joseph T. 
Purcell of Fargo, North Dakota; Mrs. Nora McDearmon 
of Faulkton, Miss Maud Purcell now postmaster of 
Cresbard and Miss Ros? Purcell, of this city. 

While Mr. Purcell had large possessions both of per- 
sonal and real property, with valuable improvements, 

« 

which urtder his able management yearly become more val- 
uable, for some time his failing health became a constant 
admonition but neither his family, nor the members of the 
Phil. H. Sheridan G. A. R., of which he was an honored 
member, realized that the end was so near and not until 
the end came did his family, friends or the community re- 
alize the large place he had filled. 



WILLIAM B. VINTON was born March 11, 1852, in 
Wabash county, Indiana. Before his majority his parents 
removed to Kendell county, 111., and from there to Berrian 
county, Michigan. 

On July 2, 1872, he w-as tmited in marriage to Emily 
E. Colson, of Tama county, Iowa. There they continued 
to reside until 1884 when they came to Faulk county, Da- 
kota Territory. To them have been born seven children » 
viz: Elmer I.,Alvin J.. Floy M. , Frank S., Maude V., 
Charles S., and Willard D. 

On July 2nd, 1884 he filed a preemption claim on the 
north-east quarter of section 23, township 119, range 72. 
After proving up his preemption he used his homestead 
right on the north-west quarter of the same section and on 
the north-east (juarter of section fourteen in the same town- 



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381 



ship, he located a tree claim. After proving up his title 
to all the above government land, in 1892 they removed to 
Faulkton, on account of better advantages for educating 
their children and since that time have remained in the city, 
Mr. Vinton politically is identified with the republican 
party and alwaj^s takes an interest in local political affairs. 
He is a member of the Independent Order of the Odd 
Fellows. Mrs. Vinton is a worthy member of the Metho- 
dist Episcopal church in Faulkton. 



REV. J. K. FREELAND. Among the pioneer set- 
tlers of Faulk countv Mr. Freeland and his young wife oc- 
cupied an important position while holding down their 
homestead claim. They always had a good and encourag- 
ing word for everyone. It was in the summer of 1896 that 
I became more intimately acquainted with them, and learn- 
ed to appreciate their earnest purpose, and active work 
among the pioneer settlers of our new settlement and as a 
well deserved tribute, and to bring out one remarkable 
event with which they were connected, I incorporate this 
tribute of respect, in the history of Faulk county. They 
have long since removed from this state and are counted 
among the useful and influential educators of California. 
Among the many with wlrom I have been acquainted and 
with whom I have associated this young Free Methodist 
minister and his educated, christian wife holds no second 
place. 

Among the many that I located upon government land 
in 1884 and 1885, was Mr. and Mrs. We.stfall and their 
niece, upon claims adjoining Mr. Freeland's. After a 
time Mrs. Westfall, who was quite advanced in years, was 



382 



taken sick, and that she might receive better care and 
nursing-, she was removed to her niece's shanty which was 
almost within speaking distance. Subsequently I was sent 
for to transact some legal business for Mrs. Westfall and 
found her confined to the bed and unable to move or change 
her position without assistance. After performing the work 
for which mv presence had been requested and getting 
ready to leave I was requested by her niece to look at Mrs. 
Westfall's feet, and uix)n doing so found them swollen 
almost beyond recognition and from the toe nails extend- 
ing up into her foot, to my unpracticed eye. the blood had 
settled and dissolution had already commenced. While ex- 
plaining to the niece what I thought, she heard her aunt 
call and going to the bed received this, to her ren.iarkable 
request, that she "Send for Elder Freeland at once to come 
and pray for her recovery, and that she would get well." 
Her request was promptly granted. As soon as Mr. and 
Mrs. Freeland arrived they were told for what purpose 
their presence was requested. Subsequently Mr. Freeland 
told me that he then experienced one of the hardest strug- 
gles of his life; that as he believed her to be in a dying 
condition, if not already death struck, his first thought 
was that it w^ould be sacrilegious to pray for her recovery, 
but while endeavoring to frame appropriate words to ex- 
plain his position, it came to him as plainly as though 
audibly spoken, "it is not my faitli but liers." Instantlv 
he fell upon his knees and earnest and persistent pleadings, 
both by himself and Mrs. Freeland, went up to iMmighty 
Ood for the speedy recovery of the sick woman. Soon 

after the prayers were ended and they regained their seats, 

Mrs. Westfall turned upon her side facing them and said: 



383 



" I certainly feel a great deal better," and before night, 
Mrs. Westfall was out of bed and sitting in a cliair. After 
her husband had proved up on his homestead, she removed 
to Faulkton and subsequently returned to New York where 
she died. 

These facts coming under my personal knowledge and 
observation so impressed me that I have related them to 
both religious and irreligious, to the learned and to the un- 
learned, and after all that has or could be said pro and con, 
I believe it to be as really and truly a manifestation of the 
power of Almighty God as was ever performed by the 
lowly Nazarene, and worthy to be classed as one of the 
most remarkable incidents in the historv of Faulk county. 



OTIS A. SWIFT was born in Chautauqua county, state 
of New York, on September 15, 1857. His father, Jewel 
C. Swift, was a farmer and lived on the same farm from 
the time he was two years of age vuitil he was sixty years 
of age. He was of English descent and his grandfather, 
Jacob Swift, purchased the old farm and settled upon it 
when Chautauqua county was a wilderness. Mr. Swift's 
mother was of Irish descent, though the family came to 
this countrv several generations before she was born. Her 
father was a Baptist preacher. 

Mr. Swift was the second child in a family of four 
boys, and was reared on the old farm. He enjoved good 
educational advantages so far as they were supplied b\- the 
common free public schools of that day, and at the age of 
sixteen entered the Forestville Academy, and after a three 
year's course there, at tlie age of nineteen he taught his 
first term of school, nnd from 1876 to 1888 he taught evcr>- 



384 



winter, and during three years of that time he taught the 
entire year through. Until 1883 he was attending school, 
teaching school and farming. 

In March, 1883, he came to Dakota Territory, and from 
Mellette ti;aveled overland to F'aulk county, where he pre- 
empted the south-west quarter of section 30, township 120, 
north of range 67. He erected a board shanty and with 
his partner, John Day, broke fift>' acres of land and put in- 
to crop. Between them they owned a team, wagon, break- 
ing plow and harrow. Mr. Swift worked during the sum- 
mers on his claim and returned to New York during the 
winters, where he taught school. In 1885 he and his 
partner bought the south-west quarter of section 25, town- 
ship 120, range 68, and moved the shanty onto this land. 
At the time he took up his first quarter section and built 
the shanty, there were but three others in sight, and now 
within two miles eighty fine farm residences can be seen. 

Mr. Swift now owns five hundred and sixty acres of 
land^ two hundred and thirty of which are under cultiva- 
tion with a fine set of farm buildings, located only one 
mile from the new and growing village of Cresbard, an im- 
portant station on the Minneapolis & St. L,ouis railroad. 
Three hundred and thirty acres of unbroken prairie is de- 
voted to pasture, and though until 1892 he gave his atten- 
tion chiefly to grain growing, since that time he has 
turned his attention largely to stock. He has been keeping 

a good herd of neat stock, horses and sheep. With other 
pioneer farmers, Mr. Swift has had a full share of hard- 
ships and privations, failure of crops, fire and storms. In 
1889 he decided to remove to Mellette and accept a posi- 
tion as principal of the public schools of that city for two 
years. 



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Since his retvtrn to his farm, by the introduction of 
nearly four hundred artesian well, with their abundant flow 
of water into the county, preventing the possibility of an- 
other siege of drought and a better knowledge of the clima- 
tic conditions, success and prosperity have steadily followed. 

On March 27th, 1888, Mr. Swift was united in marri- 
age with Miss Julia H. Bryant. Mrs. Swift was born on a 
farm in Buchanan county, Iowa. Her father, N. B. Bry- 
ant, is a native of Ohio, of German descent and an early 
settler of the state of Iowa. Mrs. Swift is one of a family 
of four children and came to Dakota in 1885. To Mr. and 
Mrs. Swift have been born two children, viz: Clare, born 
July 22, 1880, and Martin, born October, 1892. 

In political views Mr. Swift is a republican, and takes 
an active interest in local affairs. He is widely known 
and respected throughout Faulk county. 



FREMONT YOUNG was born in Clearfield, Clearfield 
county, Pennsylvania, August 14th, 1861, and is the oldest 
of a family of fotir children, whose parents were John C. 
and Elizabeth (Brickley) Young, also natives of Pennsyl- 
vania and of German descent. By occupation the father 
was a lumberman in the east, but after the removal of his 
family to Iowa in 1872, he followed agricultural pursuits. 
Mr. Young's great grandfather, John A. Young, emigrated 
from Germany prior to the Revolutionary War and was one 
of the men who fought so b^a^'ely for the colonies in that 
conflict. 

On starting out for him.self at the age of nineteen 
years, I'Vemont Young entered the office of the Atlantic 
Telegraph at Atlantic, Iowa, to learn the printers trade 
and served a three year's apprenticeship. 



388 



In 1884 he came to Miller, Hand county. Dakota Ter- 
ritory, and was employed on the Miller Press until 1888. 
when he went to Huron, Beadle county, as a. foreman on 
the Daily News. After the failure of that paper in the 
fall of 1888 he came to Faulkton and worked on the Faulk- 
ton Record for one year. At the end of that time he and 
A. E. Evans purchased the Faulk County Democrat and 
changed the name to the Faulk County Republican . which 
they conducted for four years. Until the fall of 1897 Mr. 
Young; was identified with the publication of different 
papers in Faulkton. In 1897 he was appointed to the 
office of po.stma.ster at Faulkton, which office he filled for 
four years. ITpon his resignation, his wife, Eva M. 
Young, was appointed to fill the vacancy and is now the 
popular and successful postmaster in this city after five 
years service in that important position. 

On first coming to Dakota in 1884, Mr. Young took 
i:p a preemption and built an 8 by 12 shanty thereon, but 
sold his relinquishment. 

In 1889 Mr. Young wedded Miss Mary E. Kendall, 
who was born and reared in the state of Missouri, and is a 
daughter of D. F. Kendall, who was a farmer and an early 
settler in Faulk county. To them have been born two 
children, viz: Pearl J., now fifteen years old, and Madeline 
B., age twelve. 

In his political views, Mr. Young is a pronounced re- 
publican, and is now editor of the Faulkton Advocate and 
has always taken quite an influential part in local politics. 
He has served as delegate to numerous county conventions 
of his party, and was a delegate to the republican state 
convention in 1892. He was also elected alderman of 



389 



Faulkton that j^ear, and held that office five j^ears, resign- 
ing upon being appointed postmaster. 

Socially he is connected with the Knights of Pythias 
and the Ancient Order of the United Workman. 



C. C. MOUIvTON. The records of the lives of our 
forefathers are of interest to the modern citizen, not only 
for their historical value but also for the inspiration and 
example they afford, yet we need not look to the past; al- 
though surroundings may, differ the essential conditions of 
human life are ever the same, and a man can learn from 
the success of those around him if he will heed the 
obvious lessons contained in their history. 

One of the most successful men in Faulkton, South 
Dakota, was C. C. Moulton, and through his entire busi- 
ness career he was looked upon as a model of integrity and 
honor, never making a contract that he did not fulfill, 
and standing as an example of what determination and 
force, combined with the highest degree of business in- 
tegrity can accomplish for a man of natural ability and 
strength of character. 

Mr. Moulton was born in Hartford, Connecticut, De- 
cember 3rd, 1835, and was the son of Spencer and Cloe 
(Willingston) Moulton, the former a native of New Hamp- 
shire and the latter of West Springfield, Massachusetts, 
where their marriage was celebrated. Both were of Eng- 
lish descent and belonged to 'families which were founded 
in this country prior to the Revolutionary War, in which 
struggle some of the ancestors of our subject, on the ma- 
ternal side, took part. The father was a paper and powder 
maker bv trade, invented the machine for sifting powder, 



390 



used today, and was foreman in a powder mill at East Hart- 
ford, Connecticut, for some years. 

Mr. Moulton was next to the youngest in a family of 
twelve children and was principally reared in Springfield, 
Massachusetts. At the age of eight years he commenced 
attending the common schools of Boston, and remained in 
tliat city until twenty-five years of age, which time was 
devoted to the study of architecture with different con- 
tractors, as he was a natural builder. 

He then went to Springfield where he worked two 
years in the Wasson car manufacturing shops, and at the 
end of that time embarked in business on his own account, 
as a contractor and builder, being thus engaged in that 
cit>' for twenty-two years. The largest building he con- 
structed was the Barney & Berry skate factory at Spring- 
field. He made the plans for the reform school in Hamp- 
den county, Massachusetts. In July, 1861, he removed to 
Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he erected the Kocken- 
dall building, owned by H.W. Phelps, at a cost of six- 
teen thousand dollars and during his .stay there of two 
years he erected several other expensive buildings. 

Mr. Moulton was joined by his family in Minneapolis 
in 1882 and in March of the following year came to Faulk 
county, Dakota Territory, to recuperate and locate his son, 
W. C. Moulton, on a farm. At that time Faulkton con- 
tained but one store and there was no railroads west of 
Redfield. All of his goods and supplies were hauled from 
Mellette, in Spink county, l)Ut in two weeks from the time 
he arrived at that place he had a six room house erected 
upon the land he had entered in Faulk county. 

For two years he engaged in agricultural pursuits, and 




R. L. DEAN, ROCKHAM, S. D. 



THE NEW YORK 
IpUBLIC LIBRARY 



A8TOR. LENOX 
yn nPHFOUND ATIONS 



393 



then removed to Faulkton where he had since made his 
home, being engaged in loaning money and looking after 
his property interests. Mr. Moulton had large interests in 
land and houses which together with his money interests 
required careful attention. , 

Out of sixty contractors in Springfield, Massachussetts, 
he and one other contractor were the only ones who sur- 
vived the panic of 1872, and were able to meet all their 
obligations. He still owns a block of tenement houses and 
a store building in that place, and for the past year the 
most of his time was spent in the east visiting and looking 
after his many interests. 

In 1862 Mr. Moulton married Miss Susan C. Chapin 
who was born in Warehouse Point, Connecticut, where her 
father, Henry Chapin, owned and operated the ferry be- 
tween Warehouse Point and Wirisor Locks, but later was 
in the boot and shoe business at Springfield, Massachusetts, 
where she was reared. Her early ancestors were among 
the Puritans who came to New England in the Mayflower 
in 1620. She is of the ninth generation, in descent from 
Governor William Bradford who was for thirty years 
governor of the Plymouth Colony. 

Of the children born to Mr. and Mrs. Moulton, only 
one, W. C. Moulton, is living. He is married and has one 
child, and was in the employ of the Great Northern rail- 
road at Pipestone, Minnesota, for more than twelve years, 
and is now located in the pleasant home upon his fine farm 
near Cresbard in this county. 

Since casting his first vote for John C. Fremont in 
1856, Mr. Moulton was a staunch supporter of the republi- 
can party and served as chairman of the first republican 



)94 



county convention ever held in Faulk county. For two 
years he was a member of the board of trustees of the state 
reform school and in the spring of 1898 was elected mayor 
of the city of Faulkton, an honor entirely unsolicited on his 
part. The reins of city government were never in more 
capable hands, as he was a public spirited and progressive 
citizens, willing to do all in his power for the public good 
of the community. 

He was a member of the Masonic order since 1864 and 
formerly affiliated with the Knights of Honor and the 
Knights of Pythias. At the age of eighteen he united 
with the Methodist Episcopal church, but since coming to 
Dakota Territory he was a member of the Congregational 
church. He took an active part in religious affairs, assist- 
ing in building the first church in Faulk county, and 
served as superintendent of several Sunday schools. His 
estimable wife also took an active interest in Simday 
school and church work, and on account of their sterling 
worth and many excellences of character, both were held in 
high regard. Mrs. Moiilton is past department commander 
of the Woman's Relief Corps of South Dakota. 

Mr. Moulton died at Springfield, Massachusetts, Mav 
26th, 1909. 



L. T. WIGHT was born July 29, 1838. He joined 

the Union Army in Company D., 17th Illinois. Volunteer 

Infantry and served three full years. In 1866 he married. 
Miss Julia Teachant of Cambridge, Illinois. Subsequent- 
ly he moved to Faulk county. South Dakota, where he has. 

since resided and is counted among our worthy citizens. 

9 



395 



EDWIN McCOMB was born October 4, 1840, in On- 
tario count s^ New York. In 1862 he enlisted in the Union 
Army, in Company F., 126th Regiment, New York Volun- 
tesr Infantry and remained in service until the muster out 
of the regiment in 1865. While serving in the eastern di- 
vision or army of the Patomac, he was wounded at Martins 
Ford in 1863. He experienced a full share of the work 
that made the record of that celebrated regiment. After his 
return from the army he married Miss Catherine Bruglen 
of Ontario county, New York. In 1882 he came to South 
Dakota and in the spring of 1883 located in what is now the 
town of Fairview in Faulk county, where he has since re- 
sided. He has lately sold his homestead for $6000.00 and 
is living with his sister near his old home where his wife 
died March 10, 1896. 

Mr. McComb has had the experience of the average 
pioneer settler. First hardship, privation and want, fol- 
lowed by abundant prosperity. He is a devoted Dakotian 
and interested in all that makes it one of the American 
Union of States. 



J. S. NEVINS was born February 26th, 1843, in the 
state of Vermont and enjoyed the advantages of the com- 
mon school education. Left Vermont in his childhood 
with his parents to reside in Wisconsin. From Wisconsin 
lie moved to the state of Iowa. After a residence of four- 
teen years in Iowa he came to South Dakota in the spring 
■of 1885 and located in Faulk county, in what is now the 
town of Sherman, about one mile from the present town of 
Onaka, where he has since resided. On January 1st, 1864, 
foe married Miss Margaret Kelley. To them have been 



396 



born two children, one of whom died in infancy; the other, 
Miss Mamie, now Mrs. Wm. Crom, is now postmaster at 
the village of Onaka. 

Mr. Nevins has a farm of three hundred and twenty 
acres of valuable land, ninety acres of which are under culti- 
vation, good farm buildings, and well watered. He now 
keeps nine horses. Eighteen months ago Mr. Nevins left 
his farm and went into the livery business at Onaka, where 
he has a large livery barn and has just completed a fine 
residence. 

He has filled town offices and was for four years one 
of the board of county commissioners from the third com- 
missioner district of Faulk county. Mr. Nevins is counted 
among the best and most influential pioneer settlers. 



MR. JOSEPH M. YOUNG was born in Iowa in 1873. 
At his majority he left Iowa for Kansas. 

In November, 1905, he married Miss Hannah Rey- 
nolds and to them has been born one child. He is now 
well established in the hotel business in the best hotel in 
Faulk county, at Onaka, and is doing a prosperous busi- 
ness and proving to the public that he is an experienced 
and practical hotel man,. 



JAMES F. NESTOR was born in Caledonic county. 
Minnesota, on the 20th of March, 1868. He came to 
Faulk county in June, 1884, and located on the north- 
east quarter of section 21, township 120, range 70, in the 
town of Enterprise. 

Mr. Nestor was married in July, 1903, to Mrs. Angerline 
Brenack of LaCrosse, Wisconsin. He is among the sue- 



397 



cessful pioneer settlers of Faulk county, has good farm 
buildings and farm machinery, eighteen horses, thirty-five 
head of neat stock and fifty hogs. 

He has served on the board of county commissioners 
for four years, and is counted among the reliable business' 
men of north-western Faulk count3^ 



ALLEN LAW was born in 1868 in Scotland and came 
to America with his parents in 1869 and located in the state 
of Maryland. In 1871 moved to Lacona, Iowa, and in the 
spring of 1886 removed to Faulk county. South Dakota and 
located in the township of Clark and when twelve years of 
age moved to what is now the town of Enterprise. On 
October 16th, 1901, he married Miss Anna Freitag who 
was born in Ireland. To them have been born three chil- 
dren, viz: Allen Jr., Robert and Donald, 

Mr. Law has one quarter section of land with good 
farm buildings, adjoining the townsite of Carlyle. He has 
twelve horses, twenty-five head of neat stock, ten hogs, 
and is counted among the enterprising and successful pio- 
neer farmers of north-west Faulk county. 



GEORGE G. RILEY was born in Wisconsin, July 30, 
1863, and came to Mellette, in South Dakota, in 1882 and 
after a few months visited Faulk, Edmunds and Browm 
counties. Mr. Riley has seen much of central South 
Dakota with which he has been pleased . He was in Brown 
county six years and came to Onaka in July, 1907. 

In 1888, Mr. Riley married Miss Addie May Moore 
and to them have been born eight children, viz: Maude, 
Grace, Blanche, Wesley, Ervin, Ora, Mabel and Ervia. 
Mr. Rilev is now doing a good livery business at Onaka. 



398 



HERMAN BERG was born in Germany on November 
18th, 1867, came to America in 1886, locating in the state 
of Iowa. Removed to Faulk county, South Dakota in the 
spring of 1893 and took a homestead on the north-east 
quarter of section 33, township 120, range 72, in the town 
of Sherman. 

'On October of 1896 he married Mrs. Kate Heil. To 
them has been born two children, twins. He has now ad- 
ded to his homestead another quarter section of valuable 
land. He has good farm buildings, and one hundred acres 
under cultivation. 

Mr. Berg has rented his farm and moved to Onaka 
where he has built the best house in that village. He also 
has a pool and billiard parlor and is doing a flourishing 
business. Mr. Berg's home is furnished with hot water, 
heat and all modern improvements. 



H. M. DAHL was born September 20, 1851, in Nor- 
way and emigrated to the United States in May, 1872. 
His first location was in Wisconsin. Subsequently he 
moved to Minnesota where he remained three years and 
then came to Faulk county, in April, 1885, and located on 
a homestead on the north-west quarter of section 29. town- 
ship 118, range 71, where he has since resided. Mr. Dahl 
has had a full share of hardships and privations in his. 
pioneer life, sharing his home with a brother, father and 
sister. The father has since died. 

With tlie changing years and changed conditions, 
prosperit\^ and comfort hav^e co-me, as it has to nearly all of 
the pioneer settlers of this country. He now is the posses- 
sor of 640 acres of valuable land, good farm buildings. 



)99 



twelve head of horses, eighty head of neat cattle, and good 
farm machinery. 

Mr. Dahl is one ef the most reliable and prosperous 
pioneer settlers of western Faulk county. He has been 
treasurer of the town of I^atham since its organization and 
is now road commissioner for that township. 



. SELWYN WHITNEY was born January, 1847, in Al- 
legany county. New York. At the age of 21 he went to 
Madison, Wisconsin. After a few years residence in Illi- 
nois and Kansas, he returned to Rockford, Illinois, where, 
on October 8th, 1874, he married Miss Louisa Weeks and 
to them have been born five children. 

After ten years residence at Rockford he again visited 
Iowa and Kansas, and made a five year residence at Bea- 
trice, Nebraska, but in in 1883 came to Faulk county where 
he has settled down for a permanent home. 

He is a citizen of the town of Elroy, is chairman of 
the board of supervisors and is also on the school board 
and is active in all public affairs. 

Mr. Whitney has one hundred and sixty acres of valu- 
able l^nd, eighty-five acres under cultivation and the bal- 
ance is an enclosed pasture of native grasses, 

Mr. and Mrs. Whitney have now five children living, 
•one is married, one son who he claims is a native Dakotian, 
born in 1888, the year of the terrible blizzard, January 14th 
of that year. He stands six feet and one inch in his stock- 
ings and weighs 190 pounds. 



J. H. WALLACE was the oldest of eleven children to 
grow up to manhood upon the old homestead in the Em- 



400 



pire state. Aiding in the work on the farm in the summer, 
and attending country school during the winter months. 
At the age of twenty-two he went upon the great lakes as a 
sailor and remained upon the water ten years, first as sec- 
ond, then first mate, and later as master of a vessel. In 
one storm upon Lake Erie, October 10th, 1880, the "Valen- 
tine" a three mast schooner upon which he was then sail- 
ing foundered about forty miles from Cleveland and went 
down. The crew left the vessel in a life boat, and after 
drifting about from one o'clock a. m. until five o'clock p. 

m. the next day, finally reached land six miles below Fair- 
port, Ohio. * 

At the age of twenty-eight Mr. Wallace was united in 
marriage to Miss Viola Graves who was born and reared at 
Madison, Ohio, and was educated in the common schools 
and in a seminary that has been turned into a home for the 
widows and nurses of the civil war. On the paternal side 
she is of English descent and the family can be traced back 
for eight hundred years. Her father was Corlton Graves > 
who was the owner of vessels and for many years sailed the 
lakes as mastsr both of sailing vessels and of steamers. 

His father's family consisted of fourteen children, sev- 
en sons and seven daughters, of whom four sons have be- 
come sailors, and lake captains. The subject of this 
sketch has but one child, Blanche Estella, who is now twen- 
ty-one years old. 

After his marriage Mr. Wallace purchased a farm near 
Madison, Ohio, though he occasionally made trips upon 
the lakes. His time was principally devoted to agricultur- 
al pursuits. He had an excellent farm with a stream run- 
ning through it and improved with fine buildings and ten 
acres of fruit. 



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Selling his place in the spring of 1S83, he came to 
Faulkton, in Dakota Territory, and took up a preemption 
in Faulk county. Previous to proving up, a man jumped 
his claim as a homestead and it went into lititagation where 
it remained for four years, Mr. Wallace being beaten in all 
the courts. Afterwards the homestead man left the claim, 
and after one year's absence Mr. Wallace filed on it as a 
homestead, 'having had possession of it for fifteen years 
prior to proving up. He also took a quarter section of land 
under the tree claim law which he proved up, all of which 
he has since sold. 

The same year of his arrival he embarked in the 
hardwara and farm machinery business in Faulkton in a 
little building 20 by 40 feet. To meet the growing demand 
of his trade, he had to seek more commodious quarters, 
and now occupies a building 75 by 150 feet, well stocked 
with staple and fancy groceries, and all kinds of hardware 
and farm machinery. 

During the early days the nearest railroad station was 
Athol, Spink county, a distance of thirty miles. At that 
time he also kept lumber, coal, flour and feed, and often 
had three or four teams on the road hauling supplies and 
one in constant use. In 1887 he also conducted a store at 
Millard, Faulk county, but his stock was destroyed by fire 
on the 4th of July, that year, with a loss of two thousand 
dollars. In the spring of 1886 he lost a house, granary, 
and five hundred bushels of wheat in the same way. This 
loss amounted to between five hundred and one thousand 
dollars. Notwithstanding the reverses he has steadily pros- 
pered in business since coming to Faulkton and is today 
one of the most substantial citizens of this city. He is a 



404 



straightforward, energetic and capable business man and 
carries forward to successful completion, whatever he un- 
dertakes. 

In his political views Mr. Wallace is a democrat and 
has served as a delegate to the conventions of his party. 
He has been prominently identified with everything calcu- 
lated to boom the interests of the town and county. The 
first Fourth of July celebration in Faulkton was held in his 
uncompleted storeroom which was the fourth building- 
erected in the new town. He was appointed postmaster 
under President Arthur's administration and filled that 
office from 1885 to 1888. He was one of the first county 
commissioners elected in Faulk county, and served in that 
position for one term . Religiously he is a member of the 
Congregational church, and socially is affiliated with the 
Masons. 

Mr. Wallace has his own peculiar business methods, 
in all his own business transactions. For forty-six years he 
has been his own banker, never having given a cheeky 
handling all his own money, keeping his own books and 
paying all his liabilities in cash, and in sixteen years,, 
prior to 1899, had taken in and paid out two hundred and 
fifty thousand dollars. He has never been sued or sued 
any man and has never been in court as a witness but once, 
never uses tea, coffee, tobacco or liquor. 



WILLIAM SPRINGATE THORN was born in Hills- 
dale county, Michigan, June 20th, 1857, where he remained 
with his mother until his marrriage, December 1st, 1880. 
His father gave up his life in the Union Army in 1864. 

To Mr. and Mrs. Thorn have been born five children. 



405 



Nina, now Mrs. Samuel E. Chapman of DeVoe; Wilford 
Springate, Montgomery C, Laura A., and Lester Price. 

Upon coming to Faulk county in the spring of 1886, 
he was located by the author of this history on a preemp- 
tion on section 19, township 118, range 72. As soon as 
he could prove up his preemption, he took a homestead 
and a tree claim, both of these he has proved up and now 
has three quarter sections of valuable land, upon which he 
resides, about one and one half miles west of the village 
of Seneca. One hundred and seventy acres of this land is 
under cultivation, the remainder is a fenced pasture of 
native grasses. He now has fourteen horses, fifty head of 
neat stock, all necessary improved farm machinery, good 
farm buildings, and his last year's crop in the granary. 

Mr. Thorn came to Dakota with less than one thousand 
dollars. Now he has property worth $25,000.00 and 
stands among Faulk county's prosperous and influential 
farmers. 



DANIEL W. PILLSBURY of Centerville, Faulk 
•county, was born in Canness, New Hampshire, on the 30th 
day of June, 1847. He was the only son of Jc^eph D. and 
Claracy (Abbot) Pillsbury. He lived thereuntil his enlist- 
ment in the 57th Illinois Regiment 'Volunteer Infantry, 
April 27th, 1861, for three vears. A re-enlistment in the 
veterans, extended his service until his final discharge, 
July 4th, 1865. After a residence in the state of Iowa for 
fifteen years, he came to this county and located upon the 
government land in township 118, range 67, which is the 
present town of Centerville. In the early years of pioneer 



406 



life, his was little or no different from the common ex- 
perience of those who early came to Faulk count}'. Hard- 
ships and privation was the lot of all. The years of failure 
of crops, the dry and hot wind, the repeated hail storms, 
the inexperience in combatting with new conditions, made 
one continuous struggle. The changing years brought 
change of conditions until prosperity has finally crowned 
his efforts, and at the age of sixty-one he stands among the 
happy, contented, prosperous farmers of Faulk county. 

Mr. Pillsbur}^ recognizes the fact that in union there is 
strength and has full companionship with his comrades in 
the Grand Arm 3^ Post of which he is an active member. 
He is also a member of the Royal Arch Chapter Free and 
Accepted Masons at Faulkton, South Dakota. 



ANDREW T. ERICSEN was born in the state of 

Wisconsin in 1862, of Norwegian parentage. In 1904 he 

located on a farm two miles east of Seneca. Was elected 

to a town office in 1905 and now holds the office of county 
justice. 

He is now in the restaurant business at Seneca. Mr. 

Ericsen was married to Miss Bertha Anderson in 1882. To 

them have been born eleven children, now attending the 

common schools at Seneca. 



WIL/IvIAM BELL is one of the early and active pio- 
neers of west Faulk county. Has always been interested 
in political affairs and may always bfe depended upon to do 
good, square and upright work. 

But for a most earnest protest much more would have 
been said of this active, rustling pioneer of west Faulk 
countv. 



407 



DOCTOR EDWARD ENSCH was born in Belgium, 
in 1846. Commenced his education in his native 
city, and after coming to the United States, studied in Chi- 
cago, Illinois. From there he located in Sioux Falls, 
South Dakota, and practiced his profession for a time with 
a good degree of success. In 1884 he came to Seneca, Faulk 
county and commenced the practice of medicine. Here he 
built a store, put in a stock of medicine together with gen- 
eral merchandise, and did a successful and profitable busi- 
ness, yet was alwa3'S ready to respond to a professional call. 

Dr. Ensch politically is a democrat and soon after 
Cleveland's election in 1886 was appointed postmaster at 
Ellisville. In 1885 he married Mrs. Cathernie (Deisch) 
Tescher, of Wisconsin, and with him she removed to Illi- 
nois, and from there to his new home at Ellisville. For 
two years this proved a pleasant and successful home. 
Upon the coming of the railroad to Seneca, he resigned 
his office as postmaster, packed up his goods, placed his 
store upon wheels and took a six mile journey to Seneca, 
where he was soon reestablished in a prosperous and 
successful business. 

Dr. Ensch is an active Mason and a member of the 
Faulkton Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons. Profes- 
sionally he is ready to attend to every call and to the poor- 
est patient is a ready and faithful attendent. 

The Doctor has made many warm and reliable friends 
and at sixty is an active, business and professional man. 



MRS. CATHERINE (DEISCH) ENSCH was born 
of German parentage in the state of Wisconsin, on October 
7th, 1855, where she enjoyed the advantages of a common 



408 



school education. At the age of eighteen she married 
Peter Tescher with whom nearly ten years of very happy 
married life, under the most favorable circumstances, were 
enjoyed. Five years after his decease a second marriage 
was contracted with Doctor Hnsch and her real pioneer life 
commenced. 

Mrs. Ensch has always been an active business woman. 
Her first husband left her with property and in comfortable 
circumstances and by careful and prudent management she 
has continued to look after her money matters with good 
success. 

In the community in which she lives, Mrs. Ensch has 
many reliable and confiding friends and all with whom she 
has social or business relations hold her in high estimation 
and respect. She has succeeded remarkably in adapting 
herself to the v^arions conditions with which she is sur- 
rounded. While at ElHsville the duties of the postoffice 
and the store were taken up and quickly mastered, and the 
store at Seneca has always received her careful attention. 
Within the last year she has sold out her store at Seneca 
and invested in valuable land property between Faulkton 
and Orient, and is in the situation with less care and re- 
sponsibility, to enjoy and see more of enjoyable relations of 
social life. 



JOHN ELEENBECKER was born October 8th, 1849, 
in Sauk county, Wisconsin. In 1868 his father mov^ed to 
Sterns county, Minnesota, where he resided until he came 
to this county in 1885. On the 11th day of March, 1885, 
he located in township 117, range 72, and in the following 
fall his family, consisting of his wife and five children, came 



409 



from Minnesota to EUisville to become permanent settlers 
in their new home. His wife's maiden name was Mary 
Fishback, whom he married in Minnesota in 1874- To 
them have been born nine children, seven of whom are now 
living, viz; John J., Peter, Mick. Frank, William, Au- 
gust, and Andrew. 

Mr. Ellenbecker has a farm of one hundred and sixty 
acres, one hundred and thirty acres of which are under cul- 
tivation. Fifteen years ago Mrs. EHenbecker died, leaving 
the young family to be cared for by their father. Through 
all these years his home has been maintained and the chil- 
dren well cared for. At the present time the youngest is 
in his eighteenth year. Three of the boys make their home 
with their father, the others have gone out to make homes 
for themselves, but all live in South Dakota. Mr. Ellen- 
becker has twenty-eight head of horses, forty-five head of 
neat stock and twenty-five hogs, and is counted among the 
well-to-do Faulk county pioneer farmers. 



MRS. LOUISA THORN was born in Providence, 
Saratoga countv, New York, November 6th, 1830, and 
lived to the years of womanhood in that state. In 1850 
she was united in marriage to Albert S. Thorn and in 1852 
moved with her husband to Hillsdale county, Michigan, 
where she for years experienced the difficulties of pioneer 
life. 

In July, 1861, Mr. Thorn enlisted in the army for the 
preservation of the American Union. He finished up his 
earthly career in January, 1862, dying in the army hospital 
at Lexington, Kentucky, Mrs. Thorn leaving her home 
and young children, hastened to join her husband at the 
hospital to soothe his dying hours. 



410 

After all was over Mrs. Thorn heroically returned to 
h^r lions an:l children and took up ths additional duties 
that her early widowhood placed upon her. With a family 
of five children, not a light or easy burden, in 1885 she 
. again started out to secure a home upon the Dakota govern- 
ment lands, to be followed by her now grown up and 
married sons, locating upon section 30, township 118, range 
72, Mrs. Thorn faithfully performed the duties of a home- 
steader, living alone in her "shanty upon the claim," a 
claim she yet owns and at present prices, worth nearly, or 
quite $5000.00. After proving up her homestead, she pur- 
chased a lot in the village of Seneca and moved her house 
upon it where she is now rounding out a well spent life. 



MRS. EMMA A. HOOPER, formerly from the state 
of New York, came to Faulk county in the spring of 1885 
with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Westfall. and was. 
located on a homestead, being a quarter of section 30 ^ 
township 118, range 72. 

Mrs. Hooper had a large experience in the loneliness 
and exposure of pioneer life. After proving up on her 
homestead in 1891, she married George W. Kline, who 
died in 1905, leaving her upon her former homestead, but 
in possession of considerable property. Mrs. Kline, who is, 
now irh independent circumstances,, resides in her beautiful 
residence in the village of Seneca. An illustration of her 
pleasant and commodious home may be found on page 179" 
in this history. 



JOHN A. DIXON was born in Iowa in 1877, was a 
graduate of Simpson College at Indianola^ Iowa, and was, 



411 



there engag^ed in the banking business, as a profession. Was 
cashier of the First National Bank of Coon Rapids, Iowa, 
until he came to Seneca, Faulk county. He was married 
to Miss Emma J. Monk on December 7th, 1899, To them 
has been born one child, Theodore, four years old, Mr, 
Dixon has been in Seneca for the last three years acting as 
cashier of the State Bank of Seneca, and is counted among 
the reliable and influential men of the county. 



ALEX C. RUDINE was born in Sweden, in 
1878, and came to America in 1885 and located in Hyde 
county. South Dakota. In 1906 he removed to Seneca, 
Faulk county, and engaged in banking, real ^tate, and 
insurance. He has been successful in business and is 
counted among the active business men of west Faulk 
county. 



ARTHUR J. EATON was born in Waukon, Iowa, in 
1883, of American parentage, and is a graduate of the high 
school and took a three year course at the Iowa State Uni- 
versity. For a time he was cashier of the State Bank of 
Seneca. On June 19th, 1907, he married Miss Lisle Mary 
Stewart of Waukon, Iowa. At the present time Mr. Eaton 
is engaged in the sale of lumber and coal at Seneca and is 
counted among the reliable, active business men of that 
town. 



WILLIAM KELLETT was born in the state of Indi- 
ana in 1843. In 1886 he located in Seneca and continued 
his employment on the farm until five years ago when he 
was appointed postmaster of that enterprising and growing 



412 



village. Mr. Kellett has taken great interest in public af- 
fairs ever since he came into the county and has had a full 
share of public affairs. He is now serving on his second 
term as postmaster to the entire satisfaction of the com- 
munity. 

In 1887 he married Miss Livingstone of Monticello, 
Iowa. To them have been born three sons and one daugh- 
ter. Two of the sons are active citizens of Faulk county, 
the daughter is married and her home is in Minneapolis, 
Minnesota, 



NELSON HAG AN, manager of the N. A. Hagan 
Land Company, was born in Norway, March 18th, 1870, 
and came to America. In 1893, he located in Faulk county. 
Mr. Hagan is one of the many men who have greatly pros- 
pered through their foresight and good business manage- 
ment. He owns six hundred and forty acres of valuable 
Faulk county real estate, three hundred and twenty acres 
in Potter county, and four hundred acres in the state of 
Minnesota. No man in Seneca has done more for the im- 
provement and upbuilding of that enterprising and prosper- 
ous village than Mr. Hagan. 

On the 12th day of October, 1902, he married Miss 
Capatora Harris of Mellette, Spink county. To them has 
been born one son, who is now in his sixth year. 

Mr. Hagan, in common with all the pioneers of this 
county, has had a full share of disappointments, hard.ships., 
and privations. Largely his property has accumulated 
within the last five years through the rapid increase in 
value of real estate, and his own good judgement in the 
management of his business aiTairs. 



413 



FRANK ARZT was born on February 17th, 1856, in 
Australia. In 1867 he came to America and located in 
Clinton county, Illinois In 1879 he came to Brook- 
ings county, South Dakota, where he remained until Sep- 
tember, 1888, when he came to Faulk county, and located 
on section 18, township 117, range 72 (EHisville), where 
he had a farm of three hundred and twenty acres. One 
hundred and sixty acres he has lately sold for $27.50 per 
acre and has now the best quarter section with good farm 
buildings, one hundred and forty acres of which is under 
improvement. He also has a house and six lots in the vil- 
lage of Seneca. He has twenty-five head of horses, twenty- 
five head of neat stock and has over five hundred dollar's 
w^orth of hogs. Also a fine lot of poultry, consisting of 
geese, turkeys, ducks and chickens. They have also raised 
for the last eight years an averags of over two hundred 
dollars worth of garden truck. Mr. Arzt is a firm believer 
in intense cultivation, his wheat averages 16 bushels, oats 
30 bushels and corn 30 or 40 bushels per acre. 

On November 11, 1877, he married EmilieMatzke, who 
was born in 1858 in Australia, and came to this country in 
the spring of 1877. To them have been born eight chil- 
dren, seven of whom are now living, viz: Emma, Joseph, 
Marion, Edward, Frank, Newi:on, and Emilie, two of whom 
are married. 



EMANUEL GOLDEN was born on the 7th day of 
August, 1827, near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and from 
that place was drafted into the Union Army in November, 
1862, where he served a full nine months, leaving a wife 
and six children behind him. 



414 



In 1864 he moved to the town of London in the state 

of Iowa and in the spring of 1883 he removed to Faulk 

county and took a homestead where he now lives. In 1896 

he left this state and moved to Missouri and remained three 

and one-half j^ears. Then returned to his old home in this 

county. Mr. Golden remembers distinctly of going to see 

the men lay the rails for the Baltimore & Philadelphia rail- 
road in 1836. 

He has seen much of pioneer life and now at the age 
of eighty-one years is apparently good for several years to 
come. 



CHARLES P. FORREST, of Orient, South Dakota. 
was born in Smithfield, Pennsylvania, and was one of .seven 
brothers. At a family reunion held at the home of L. W. 
Forrest, of East Smithfield, these seven brothers, the sons 
of Dana Forrest, who was a native of the state of Vermont, 
with the father and mother, were all present. Charles P. 
Forrest, of Orient, Faulk county was one of the number. 
These seven brothers all served in the Union army through 
the civil war, and strange to say. neither wounds nor death 
overtook them in that long and bloody struggle. 

The subject of this sketch is the fourth son of this re- 
markable family who gathered from their homes in the 
east, the extreme north-west and the middle west, to greet 
father and mother and each other with a real home greet- 
ing, forty-two years after the close of that terrible war. 
Mr. Forrest is one of our Faulk county pioneers that has 
succeeded in accumulating property and in helping to 
build up the prosperous and enterprising village of Orient. 
An illustration of his hotel and stable may be seen in 
this historv 



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ALEXANDER M. THOMPSON was born March 16, 
1846, in Whiteside county, Illinois, and remained there 
until 1870, when he removed from there to Madison county, 
Iowa. 

September 12, 1872, he married Miss Maggie E. Hart 
of that place. To them have been born three children, 
viz: S. Bell, Egbery A. and John A., the last of whom is 
a born Dakotian. In the spring of 1873 he removed to 
Hamilton county, Nebraska, and in September, 1884, to 
Faulk county, South-Dakota, and located in township 118, 
range 72. 

Mr. and Mrs. Thompson have succeeded remarkably 
W2ll in keeping the family together. All are living at the 
homestead, although the sons have separate financial in- 
tarests. Altogether they have 480 acres of land, and rent 
two sections more. They have 60 horses, 80 head of neat 
stock, 11 hogs, 500 sheep and 80 ducks, a fine set of farm 
buildings and 170 acres under cultivation besides the 
home and rented pasture. Mr. Thompson has had a full 
share of the privations and' hardships of the early Dakota 
pioneers and is now reaping the full reward of those who 
remained through years of drought and storm with failure 
of crops, while those less fortunate left this county without 
additional reward. 



PETER SCHMITT was born September 13, 1859, in 
Germany, and came to the United States the 26th day of 
March, 1881, and in March, 1886, came to EHisville, South 
Dakota and located upon the south-west quarter of section 
9, township 118, range 72, now Seneca and is now located 
on section 14 in the same township. Mr. Sdnnitt has ex- 



420 



perienced all the hardships of the average pioneer settler, 
but bj^ remaining here, and by hard work, he has now a 
320 acre farm, 160 acres improved and a good home. He 
has sixteen horses, seventy head of neat stock, thirty-five 
hogs, and all machinery necessary to carry on his farm. 

February 17th, 1890, he married Miss Ivcibrich and to 
them have been born the following children: Susanna, 
John, Gustave, Peter, Aloysius and Emma May. Mr. 
Schmitt is one of western Faulk county's most successful 
farmers. 



F. E. HATFIEED was born Oct. 15th, 1846, in Rush 
county, Indiana, and received all the advantages of our 
American common schools. He was seventeen years old 
when with his father and family he removed to Mahaska 
county, Iowa, where he lived until the spring of 1885, 
when he removed to what is now the town of Elroy, where 
he remained until the fall of 1906. 

In October, 1866 he married Miss Samantha I. Dusen- 
berry, of Mahaska county, Iowa. To them have been 
born four children, only one of which, Harry D., who is 
interested in business with his father is now living. 

For the last two years Mr. Hatfield has been engaged 

in conducting a hardware and machinery store in the vil- 
lage of Seneca, F. E. Hatfield & Son, proprietors. 

Mr. Hatfield has been interested in public affairs and 
in the advancement and prosperity of Faulk county. For 
six years he served the county as commissioner from the 
third commissioner district. 



421 



MATTHEW J. JARVIS wasborn in Baraboo, Wis., on 
May 14, 1850, of English parentage. Moved with his par- 
ents to Columbus, Ohio, when he was about two years old 
and came west with them in 1859 to Richland City, Wis- 
consin. He afterward moved to and lived at Madison, 
Sun Prairie, Richland Center and Cazenovia, Wisconsin. 
At the latter place he learned the millers trade and always 
worked at it until he came west in the spring of 1880. 

On Christmas Day, in 1876, he was married to Abbie 
Ann Hall, at Reedsburg, Wisconsin. To them w^ere born 
five children: Matthew J., S. Hall, Annette, Lucretia and 
Maggie Belle, the last dying in infancy. 

In February, 1880," he shipped from IvaValle, Wisconsin 
to Tracy, Minnesota, that being as far as trains ran that 
spring, although the track was laid as far as Volga, South 
Dakota. From there he drove overland to Pipestone, Min- 
nesota, and from there to Mitchell, South Dakota, where 
he arrived ahead of the railroad. From there he went to 
Huron, helped lay out the townsite, and on July 4th, 1880, 
read the declaration of independence the first time it was 
ever read in Beadle county. 

In August, 1880, he moved to Redfield and built the 
first house there, then known as the Jarvis house, now as 
the New Central House. Was joined by his wife from 
Wisconsin, about September 1, with his two boys and 
there on the townsite of Redfield, alone, they put in that 
hard winter of 1880 and 1881, living on wheat ground 
in a coffee mill and antelope meat. 

He was the chairman of the first convention ever 
held at Redfield, sent the first express and received the 
first express ever received at that office. 



422 



. On August 21, 1883, moved to his farm in this county 
and has ever since resided in the county. 

Mr. Jarvis located government land in this county on 
the first day of August, 1883. On November 9th, 1883, 
was appointed on the first board of commissioners to per- 
fect the organization of the new county, and since that 
time has been actively identified with the social and politi- 
cal affairs of Faulk county. Since leaving his farm and 
removing to Faulkton he has been engaged in the drug 
business, owning a drug store and doing a general land 
business. For the last four years he has owned a hotel in 
Faulkton. He has been mayor of the city for four years. 



DR. ABBIE A. JARVIS (nee Abbie Ann Hall) first 
saw the light of day at Shanzerville, Ohio, on September 
16, 1853. She was born of mixed parentage, her father 
being a North Carolinian and her mother Pennsylvania 
Dutch. She moved from Ohio in 1855 with her parents to 
Sauk countv, Wisconsin and was educated in the common 
and high schools of her day. 

She was united in marriage to Matthew J. Jarvis on 
Christmas Day, 1876, at Reedsburg, Wisconsin. Came to 
Dakota Territory with her husband in 1880, and put in the 
winter of 1880 and 1881 at Redfield a year before there 
was. another house on the town site, living on wheat ground 
in a coffee mill and antelope meat. 

To this union have been born five children, M. J.. 
Jarvis, Jr., S. Hall Jarvis, Annette, Lucretia and Belle^ 
the latter dying in infancy. In 1883 they moved from 
Redfield to a farm in Faulk county with their family. In 
the winter of 1888-1889 they moved to Faulkton, where her 



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husband went into business. In 1890, with a family of 
four children, and after going through all the hardships of 
a frontier life, she commenced to read medicine and in 
1898 graduated fourth in her class from the Women's Med- 
ical College of the Northwestern University of Chicago. 
After taking a full four years course she returned at once 
to Faulkton, where she has ever since had her full share of 
practice and she believes the confidence and respect of the 
people of the county. 

Mrs. Jar vis has been a resident physician of several 
benefit associations, and has been honored with the election 
of vice president of the State Board of Pharmacy. She is 
a worthy member of the Eastern Star and of the Methodist 
Episcopal church. 



JOSEPH H. HAYS was born at Dakota, Stephenson 
county, Illinois, October 27, 1862. Died at Faulkton, 
South Dakota, October 13, 1908- 

His father, who was a veteran of the Mexican War, 
died when the deceased was 12 years of age and he being 
the oldest boy of the family was left to assume, with his 
mother, the responsibility of managing family affairs. He 
remained at home until he was married. His mother died 
in 1895 at her home in Illinois. 

On November 29, 1883, the dg'ceased was married to 
Lizzie Fahs, also of Dakota, Illinois. In the fall of 1884 
he came to South Dakota to procure a home. He filed on 
a homestead in western Faulk county and in the spring of 
1885 he moved on same and lived there for about eight 
years. In the fall of 1892, he was elected sheriff of Faulk 
county in which capacity he served four years. He has 



426 



been a resident of Faulkton since his election to this office. 
He leaves a wife and three sisters, Mrs. Margaret 
Mitchell, of Dakota Illinois; Mrs. Mary Lambert, of Green- 
wood, Wisconsin; Mrs. Lottie Powless, of Detroit, Michi- 
gan; and two brothers, James G., of Akron, Iowa, and 
John L., of Galena, South Dakota, to mourn his loss. 

The deceased was a menfber of the Masonic, K. P., 
M. B. A., D. of H. and A. O. U. W. societies. He was 
also a member of the official board of the M. E. church. 

Mr. Hays remained a citizen of Faulkton after his 
election to the office of sheriff. At the expiration of his 
second term he engaged in the live stock and butcher busi- , 
ness, later purchasing the Western Telephone Exchange. 

Mr. Hays sustained a great loss in the big fire on 
March 20, 1905, when his market and telephone office were 
consumed in the flames. Three hours after the fire he was 
doing business. He at once took action looking to the 
erection of the Haj s block, an illustration of which ma}^ be 
found in this history. He soon after sold out his meat 
market and devoted his attention to the building up of his 
telephone business. The Faulkton exchange was being 
constantly enlarged and improved and rural lines run in 
every direction from Faulkton. It ' was his ambition to 
build up a telephone system here covering all the central 
and western portions of the coimty and rebuilding the 
Faulkton system and improving it until there was none 
better in the .state. Then he would take life a little easier- 
He had planned for himself and wife a trip to California 
where they would spend the coming winter and enjoy a 
much needed rest. He finished his life's work. His tele- 
phone system, rural and city, was extended, improved and 



427 



enlarged just as he wanted and his ambition was satisfied. 
He had commenced arranging for his much needed vacation 
and winter trip to California, when he was suddenly and 
without warning stricken by the grim reaper, Death, and 
the vacation and rest, which he so much felt the need of, 
proved to be the long rest — the long sleep which must come 
to all. His work was done.' How many pass off this stage 
of action with their work finished? Mr. Hays completed 
his work because he had a purpose in life and lived to it. 
He toiled late and early. He had no family except his 
wife. They had plenty. 

As a citizen and business man Mr. Hays had no 
superior. Faulkton has sustained great losses by fire and 
otherwise but none can be compared to the loss through 
the departure of Mr. Hays. He was successful in all that 
he undertook. He always prov^ed the right man in the 
right place in whatever position he was placed. He al- 
ways took much interest in national and state politics and 
was more or less active in local politics. He was always 
foremost in all public enterprises. His energy, earnest- 
ness and clear perception were always great factors in any 
cause that he championed. His judgment was sought by 
many in affairs of life. No worthy person ever appealed 
to him in vain for assistance. His heart was an open book 
to all who knew him — simple, frank, kind and just. His 
heart was always in the right place — in his work, in his 
words, in his every action and thought. He was especially 
kind to children, never passing one on the street, though a 
stranger, without a cheerful word and a smile. This of 
itself was an index to his character. He never sixjke evil 
of anyone and could always see some good in everybody. 



428- 



If he ever had hatred in his heart he never let it come to 
the surface sufficient for anyone to find it out. 

As a friend he was perfect if such is possible in man. 
His friendship was true as steel and pure as unalloyed gold. 
Among all his strong characteristics his faithfulness to a 
friend was the strongest. 

His life was a very active one from boyhood days. 
His capital with which he built his successful life was 
honor, ambition, energy and industry. While he did not 
live to enjoy the fruits of his labor as he had planned, yet 
his life is a good example to those just taking up the re- 
sponsibilities of character building for themselves. 



MRS. LIZZIE (FAHS) HAYS was born April 18, 
1863, at Dakota, Illinois. On November 29, 1883, she 
was united in marriage to Joseph H. Hays. In the spring 
of 1885 her actual pioneer life commenced. Located upon 
a homestead nearly twenty miles from any railroad town , 
she, with her devoted husband, with patience and persever- 
ance, met the lonliness and privations that became a part of 
their new life, ever looking forward to better and more 
satisfactory conditions and making a persistent and untiring 
effort to attain them. One after another who had located 
claims near them and who they had counted on to help 
build up a prosperous community proved up their claims, 
mortgaged them, and left the country, until they were 
left comparatively alone. For more than seven long years 
she stood by her devoted husband in building up a home 
and a reputation, that prepared the way for larger useful- 
ness and better opportunities for financial success, and not 
to be forgotten more satisfying and enjoyable social sur- 



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433 



roundings. Sixteen years of almost uninterrupted pros- 
perity, a most desirable home and home surroundings, 
largely relieved from care and responsibility, there seemed 
but little more to be sought or desired. On the morning 
of October 13, 1908, she awoke to a new experience. The 
companion of her youth, the guide and support of mature 
years, was suddenly and unexpectedly removed. That 
darkness and desolation, that none can realize save those 
who have passed through the deep and turbid waters, be- 
came a reality in her life. The quiet, careful and business- 
like manner in which Mrs. Hays took up and is managing 
the various business affairs and large moneyed interests, 
has no doubt lightened her pathway, by giving no time to 
look upon the dark waters through which she was com- 
pelled to pass. 



CAPTAIN CALEB HOLT ELLIS was born November 
18th, 1825, in the town of Weld, in the then county of 
Oxford, state of Maine, where he resided with his parents 
until he was twelve years of age, attending the common 
schools. Among his early teachers were Dr. Fondice 
Barker and one or two of that renowned family of Abbotts. 
Nature was lavish of her gifts to that immediate vicinity. 
A beautiful sheet of water two miles wide and seven miles 
long, teeming with shining mountain stream trout, sur- 
rounded by broad intervales and table land extending to 
the very foot of high mountains with lofty peaks, made a 
landscape sublime in grandeur, well calculated for lasting 
impressions for coming years. In 1837 his parents mov^ed 
to Sangeville Village, in Piscataquis county, where for 
nearly six years he enjoyed the advantages of one of the 



434 



best common and high schools of that daj-. Then, in his 
eighteenth year, after six days journey, weary and sore 
footed, he was transferred to another school, one of toil, 
privation, exposure and hardship, in the wilderness, in the 
then territory of Northeastern Maine, in the lumber woods, 
on the rivers driving lumber, in the mills, clearing land of 
its vast growth of timber; ten long years of constant toil, 
ten years of constant physical training, as looked back 
upon through subsequent years, ten years of most valuable, 
physical, moral and intellectual discipline; ten years of 
actual well rounded physical manhood. 

In the winter of 1854 he was granted a local preach- 
er's license by the Fort Fairfield Quarterly Conference of 
the Methodist Episcopal church and in June of that year ap- 
pointed preacher-in-charge of the Western and Topsfield 
circuit in the East Maine conference of that church, and 
the following year was reappointed to the Wesley and 
Northfield charge, and in 1856 to the Franklin, Sullivan 
and Gouldsboro circuit. At Sullivan there was an ex- 
tensive revival and many conversions which made it neces- 
sary to form a new circuit of Sullivan and Gouldsboro, and 
Hancock was added to the Franklin charge. At the end 
of this year (1857) he was appointed to the East Macheas 
charge where he preached until the opening of the Civil 
War. He then received the appointment of Chaplain in 
the Eleventh Regiment, Maine Volunteer Infantry and was 
attached to the second brigade of General Casey's division 
of Keyes' corps, Army of the Potomac and was stationed 
on Meridian Hill, Washington, D. C, in the winter of 
1861 and 1862, but joined McClellan at Fortress Monroe 
and took part in the .first Peninsular campaign. At the 



435 



time that regiment was ordered south Mr. Ellis lay sick 
with typhoid fever at the Chesepeake general hospital. He 
subsequently resigned the chaplaincy and gave his time 
and influence in enlisting men for the Union army. In the 
winter of 1864 he was requested by Governor Coney of 
Maine to assist in the organization of the 31st Regiment 
of Maine Volunteer Infantry. In this enterprise he was 
more than successful, having secured men in excess of a 
full quoto for his company. The 31st joined Burnside at 
Annapolis, Maryland, and participated in the memorable 
Battles of the Wilderness and Spottsylvania and in the 
rapid "On to Richmond." On the 7th of June, 1864, 
after the bloody battle of the second and third of that 
month, while in command of the picket line Captain Ellis 
received a shell wound in his left breast, causing paralysis 
of the left side, and was by the division surgeon declared to 
be in a dying condition. 

This ended his army service. The following October 
he was discharged from the Annapolis hospital for total 
disability. It was nearly three years before he was able to 
lay away his crutches and resume work in the minist- 
ry. From that time on there has been suffering to 
interfere with an active business life, at times so severe as 
to compel him to abandon employment and seek climatic 
changes. In 1876 he was compelled to ask for a super- 
numerary relation in the Michigan annual conference of 
the Metnodist Episcopal church and flee to the gulf coast 
of Texas, and again in March, 1882, to seek the high alti- 
tude and clear bracing atmosphere of South Dakota, and 
again after an absence of nearly twenty years, to seek new 
life and energy in the far famed Dakota climate. 



436 



Captain Ellis is proud of his Puritanic ancestry, trac- 
ing back by seven distinct lines to Plymouth Rock. His 
Great Grandmother Ellis was Sarah Bradford, the fifth 
generation from William Bradford, who came in the May- 
flower to Massachusetts Bay in 1620. She married Freeman 
Ellis, the third generation from John Ellis of Sandwich, 
who married Elizabeth Freeman in 1645. Governor Wil- 
liam Bradford was for thirty-one years, in all that the title 
implies, at the head of the Plymouth Colony. Lydia Ful- 
ler was the daughter of Isaac Fuller, a Revolutionary 
hero and the fifth from Doctor Samuel Fuller, deacon in 
Mr. Robinson's church in Holland and surgeon and phy- 
sician of the first church in the Plymouth Colony. In 
1800 she married Freeman Ellis of Hartford, in the dis- 
trict of Maine, son of Freeman and Sarah (Bradford) Ellis 
of Plympton, Massachusetts. 

Not only in the Bradford and Fuller lines, but through 
Richard Warren, Francis Eaton, Edward Doty, Francis 
Cook and Stephen Hopkins, he traces in unbroken lines 
his ancestry to that heroic band that in 1620 laid the 
foundation of civil and religious liberty on the bleak New 
England shore. 

Captain Ellis again and again in South Dakota found 
a most wonderful health resort. After a winter of great 
suffering, "in March. 1882, he came to Beadle county and 
located at Wessington, which was followed by greatly im- 
proved health, and again in August of 1907, with wonder- 
ful results. 

On January 14, 1849, Captain Ellis married Lydia 
Hains, daughter of Jo.seph Wingate and Mary (BriggsV 
Hains, of Fort Fairfield, Maine, who was born in Hollowell, 



^t^ 



^{0^^ 



ai">^'' 






t\u 



ptN 



fOUf 



439 



Maine, April 12, 1829. To them were born seven chidren, 
viz: Ada lanthe, who died at Brazoria, Texas, in 1876; 
Allie Leroy, who died in infancy; Arthur W., of Faulkton, 
South Dakota; Ernest Almond, who died at Nashville, 
Michigan, in 1870; Olin Howard, now of Hillsdale, Michi- 
gan; Mellie May, now Mrs. Howard Kipi^, of Fort Fair- 
field, Maine, and Adelbert lyincoln, who died in infancy. 
Mrs. Ellis died at EUisville, Faulk county, July 7, 1886, 
Captain Ellis subsequently married Mrs. Francis E. Rich- 
ard, of Fort Fairfield, Maine, who died in that village in 
May, 1894. There was another marriage August 6, 1895, 
to Mrs. Lottie H. Ehrlich, of Boston, Massachusetts. Mrs. 
Ellis died at Fort Fairfield, January 22, 1907. 

Now in his eighty-fourth year he, after a most serious 
breakdown in the winter of 1907, is again active and vigor- 
ous for one of his age, and finds real enjoyment in literary 
work. 



ALBERT GOODER was born on September 9, 1860, 
in Racine county, Wisconsin, enjoying the advantages of 
our American commom public schools. In the year of 1883 
he located on the laud he now occupies as a home. To this 
land he has added three more quarter sections, and has now 
under improvement over four hundred acres. Mr. Gooder 
has fine farm buildings, an illustration of his house will be 
found in this history. 

For the last ten or twelve years there has been steady 
advancement. In the spring of 1891 Mr. Gooder went to 
the Pacific coa.st and took a look at the far famed lands of 
the state of Washington, but after seven months of experi- 
ence be returned and decided that Faulk county, South 



440 



Dakota, was good enough for him. On March 1, 1885, he 
married Miss Ada M. Estee, of Belleville, Wisconsin. To 
them were born three children, viz: Grace M., Mable E., 
and Harold G. In addition to carrying on his farm and 
caring for his home interests, he has served as county treas- 
urer in Faulk county, four years. Mr. Gooder has only 
twenty head of horses and about the same of neat stock, 
depending largely on mixed farming, with land under the 
best cultivation. 

Mr. Gooder would not consider $40.00 an acre a 
reasonable price for his land, and is one of the Faulk coun- 
ty pioneers that is thoroughly satisfied with his immediate 
surroundings, being located only one mile from the rail- 
road station of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad 
at Orient. 



GEORGE J. JARVIS of Faulkton, South Dakota, is a 
native of the Buckeye state, having been born at Columbus, 
Ohio, March 26, 1843. He is of English ancestery, his 
parents, George and Sarah Jarvis, the former of whom was 
born at Staffordshire, England, and the latter at Brockel- 
hurst, Sheffield, England. 

In 1849 his parents removed from Franklin county, 
Ohio, to Baraboo, Wisconsin, the trip being made in a 
prairie schooner, a very popular mode of travel for emi- 
grants in those days. They were lost for a day upon the 
Illinois prairie. At night they were able to locate them- 
selves fourteen miles north of Chicago. There were no 
railroads at that time running into or out of Chicago. In 
February, 1851, the family returned to Ohio, but after re- 



441 



maining there five years, they returned to Wisconsin and 
engaged in farming. 

On July 26, 1861, when eighteen years and four months 
old the subject of our sketch enlisted as a private in the 
3rd Battery Wisconsin Artillery, and served through the 
term of his enlistment in the army of the Cumberland. 

After his return from the army he engaged in farming. 
In 1867 he engaged in the milling business. In 1875 he was 
admitted to the bar and actively engaged in legal practice 
until 1881, when he removed to Minnesota. 

In August 1883 he came to Faulk county, Dakota 
Territory, and took advantage of the liberal United States 
land laws, and while residing upon his land and faithfully 
complying with the laws in improving the same, he active- 
ly engaged in the practice of his profession. 

In 1895 he w^as elected county judge for Faulk county 
to which office he has been re-elected up to the present 
time and is now faithfully and successfully serving his 
seventh term . 

Judge Jarvis is a republican in politics. He is popu- 
lar with the common people, especially with his comrades in 
the Grand Army of the Republic. 

He is an active and influental member of Phil. H. 
Sheridan Post No. 72, at Faulkton, South Dakota, and of 
the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. 

Judge Jarvis was united in marriage to Miss Diantha 
M. Nichols, a native of Somerset, Ohio, and to them have 
been born the following children: Nellie A., born April 
26, 1866; George L., born October 2, 1867; Harry J., born 
April 24, 1879; Fred W., born May 14, 1872, and S. Belle, 
born December 2, 1874, 



442 



JOHN W. HAYvS was born on May 26, 1844, in the 
town of Scotland, county of Albany, in the state of New 
York. In 1864 his father removed to' Rensselear county, 
New York, and in 1868 to Spottsylvania county, Virginia. 
On April 11, 1866, he was united in marriage with 
Miss Frances Walker of Rensselear county, New York, 
and to them were born six children, viz: Charles N., Will- 
iam ly., John R., who died in infancy; Charlotte E., Jose- 
phine J., and Mary Frances. 

After remainifig in Virginia for a little over three 
years, Mr. Hays moved to W^ashington, D. C, where he re- 
mained one year and then removed to Newark, N. J., then 
in 1884 he came to Faulk county and in June of that year 
located a presmptiononth2 north-east quarter of section 18, 
township 119, range 69. He also secured a quarter section 
under the tree claim law. In the fall of 1891 Mr. Hays 
removed to the city of Faulkton where he has since resided, 
yet continued to carry on his farm until 1902, and is yet 
the possessor of 320 acres of Faulk county land. 

Ever since coming to this county he has taken an ac- 
tive interest in local political affairs, especially along the 
educational lines. For nearly ten years he has held the 
office of justice of the peace. Mr. Hays is an outspoken, 
unqualified, prohibition prohibitionist and the fact that this 
was at that time a no license county, determined his loca- 
tion here. Since 1902, in addition to his official duties, he has 
been actively engaged in buying and selling real estate and 
in insurance and collections. 

Mr. Hays made no mistake in coming to Faulkton, 
where he has a pleasant home and is the owner of other city 
property. Financially the future is abundantly provided 



443 



for, with a well established, paying business. He is count- 
ed among our reliable trustworthy citizens. 

At his country's call, at the breaking out of the Civil 
War, hs was prompt to respond. On May 4th, 1851, he 
enlisted at Syracuse, New York, in Company H.,Four- 
teenth New York Volunteer Infantry, two years and during 
that time was engaged in seventeen battles and at the ex- 
piration of his term of service, in 1863 he again enlisted in 
Company L., New York Cavalry, better known as "Scotts 
Nine Hundred," where he served until mustered out at the 
end of the war. 

Mr. Hays through a long line of ancestry has a co- 
mingling of Scotch Irish and French blood that became 
Americanised long before the Revolutionary War, in which 
his great grandfather took an active part, as did his Grand- 
father Martin on his mothers side of the house, in the war 
of 1812 and 1814. 



CHRISTOPHER MERTENS was born in South Ger- 
many, February 13th, 1843. He came to the United States 
of American in 1867 and located at Dunkirk, in the state of 
New York, where he engaged in the manufacturing of boots 
and shoes for one year, he then removed to Two Rivers, 
W^isconsin, where he carried on the same business. Two 
years later he removed to Algona, Kossuth county, Iowa, 
and engaged in farming and remained six years. He then 
came to Minnesota and located in Blue Earth county and 
■engaged in the insurance business. 

He was united in marriage with Miss Genevieve Gei- 
ger, July 29th, 1868, and to this union was born five child- 
ren, viz: John, born July 16th, 1869; he graduated from 



444 



Hamline University, Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1903, mar- 
ried Miss Alberta Galispia, came to South Dakota and com- 
menced the practice of medicine atlvcbanon, Potter county, 
the same year, where he now resides and enjoys a suc- 
cessful practice; Elizabeth, born December 22nd, 1870, 
died August 24th, 1871; Clara, born July 18th, 1872. she 
married Samuel Brown of Faulk county, November 6th, 
1889, and died January 7th, 1903, leaving three children; 
Emma, born March 26th, 1874, she married John Galla- 
gher, June 4th, .1902, they now reside at San Antonio, 
Texas: Eouisa, born February 22nd, 1877, she was united 
in marriage in Minneapolis, Minnesota, August 26th, 
1906, to William Simon, who was born February 16th, 
1869, at St. Charles, Minnesota, and came to Faulk county 
in 1889 and located at Faulkton, where he has been em- 
ployed in the meat market up to the present time. 

Mr. Mertens continued in office and representing some 
of the most reliable insurance companies and collecting 
agencies in the United States, until his removal to Faulk- 
ton in 1888. After Mr. Mertens came to this county he 
continued to work at his trade as a boot and shoe maker 
for two years, at which time he was elected to the office he 
filled in Minnesota, that of justice of the peace, and to 
which he continued to be re-elected until the time of his 
death, at his home in Faulkton, South Dakota, on Sunday 
morning, October 20th, 1905, aged sixty-two years, eight 
months and sixteen days. Mr. Mertens was educated in 
Germany, graduating from a military school and serving 
for a time in the German army. After completing his ser- 
vice in the army he was educated for the ministry of the 
Catholic church, but on account of doctrinal difficulties 



445 



he never entered the church. He was a member of the In- 
dependent Order of Odd Fellows, holding his membership 
at Gettj-sbiirg, in Potter county, and has represented his 
lodge at the grand lodge meetings of the state. He was a 
lover of art, music, and philosophy and had read and thought 
much upon these subjects. He was a kind and loving hus- 
band and father, a good neighbor and an honest man, and 
the entire communitj- sympathized with the family in their 
loss. The funeral service was conducted from the Methodist 
Episcopal church, Rev. McBeth preaching the sermon and 
the Odd Fellows having charge of the burial service. The 
burial was in the Faulkton cemetery. 



JOHN F. LUKE was born November 21st, 1854, in 
Dodge county, Wisconsin. In 1883, on March 29th, he 
came to Faulk county and was located upon the north-west 
quarter of section 24, township 120, range 68, and subse- 
quently proved up under the United States homestead law. 
He also took a tree claim in section 23, adjoining his 
homestead and after proving it up located his buildings on 
the tree claim, where he now resides. 

On March, 1884, he was united in marriage to Miss 
Magdaline M. Schiveickhard. To them have been born 
six children, as follows: John D., Minnie, Sarah, Nellie, 
Belle and Jessie. 

Mr. Euke, in common with all of the pioneer settlers, 
experienced the hardships and privations of pioneer life, 
hail, storm and drouth producing their destructive effects, 
but amid all loyally remained and is now reaping his re- 
ward, having added to his two quarter sections, two more, 
and now he has a 640 acre farm^ with good farm buildings; 



446 



twenty horses, twentj^ head of neat stock, twenty hogs, and 
all farm machinery, and a good artesian well, reaching 
water at a depth of 160 feet. Mr. Luke has a house and 
six acres of land in the young and thriving village of 
Cresbard. 



REV. A. A. WOOD, pastor of the Congregational 
church of Faulkton, was born in Scott township, Wiscon- 
consin, April 28th, 1854. He spent his boyhood days on a 
farm. On the death of his father in 1866 the farm was 
sold and the family moved to Milwaukee. Here the author 
(jf our sketch spent four years as an employe in the rolling 
mills of that city, after which he went to Oberlin, Ohio, 
where he began a seven years' course of study — three in 
the academy and four in the college proper — graduating in 
1882 with A. B. degree. After spending three years in 
the capacity of Superintendent of schools, he began a 
theological course in the Boston University, graduating in 
1888 with the S. T. B. degree, having previously received 
the A. M. degree from Oberlin college. On graduating in 
theology he immediately returned to Wisconsin where he 
began the work of a Methodist minister, uniting with the 
Wisconsin M. E. conference in the fall of that year. 

On December 18th, 1889, he was imited in marriage to 
Miss Sarah Philpot of Milwaukee, who is still his popular 
and helpful companion. After a few years in the active 
work of the ministry that ever present thirst for knowledge 
for a broader education became so overmastering that he se- 
cured a leave of absence from the conference, releasing him 
from the active work for a season, with the result that he 
at once began at the University of Chicago, an extended 




RKV. A. A. WOOD 






A8TOR- tE 



NOX 



TILD 



EN 



PO^jNDa_20N9_ 



449 



course of four years in philosophy, psychology and kind- 
red studies leading to the Ph. D. degree. 

Mr. Wood enjoys the honor of having worked his way 
through the entire fourteen years of college and university 
study. 

The impression grew upon him that he was better 
adapted to the independence of the Congregational fold; 
hence in the fall of 1899 he secured from the Wisconsin M, 
E- conference the customary "certificate of location" with 
which, and other credentials, he united with the Congre- 
gational denomination in the spring of 1900. 

On January 2nd, 1909 he received a unanimous call to 
the pastorate of the Faulkton church, and entered upon 
his work January 31st. . 

He brings to the Faulkton field an extraordinary 
scholarship^ a large and successful experience in the minis- 
try. 



WILLIAM M. EDGERTON. M. D., is a leading phy- 
sician and surgeon of Faulkton and has met with most 
wonderful success in the practice of his chosen profession. 
He was born in Mantorville, Dodge county, Minnesota, 
May 27j 1870, and is a worthy representative of a promi- 
nent and distinguished family, being a son of Hon. Alonzo 
J. Edgerton. The Doctor's great-grandfather aided the 
colonies in their struggle for independence as a soldier of 
the Revolutionary war, and was taken as a prisoner to 
Montreal, Canada. The gvandfather, Lorenzo Edgerton, 
was a farmer and contractor in New York state through- 
out life. 

Alonzo J. Edgerton, the Doctor's father, was reared 



450 



in Rome, New York, and there prepared for the legal pro- 
fession. In 1856 he removed to Dodg-e county, Minnesota, 
where he engaged in practice until the Civil war broke out. 
In 1862 he raised a company, and the following two years 
were spent on the frontier fighting Indians, but the remain- 
der of his service was in the South. He was finally mus- 
tered out in 1867 with rank of brigadier-general. He was 
always a ver\' popular and prominent man, and in 1880 
was appointed senator from Minnesota by Governor Pills- 
bury. After holding that position for one year he was 
appointed chief justice of Dakota Territory in 1881, and in 
the spring of the following year he and his family took 
up their residence in Yankton. In 1886 they removed to 
Mitchell, where he engaged in the practice of law until 
appointed United States district judge by President Har- 
rison in 1889, when he located at Sioux Falls. He died 
in that city, in August, 1896, honored and respected by all 
who knew him. 

Dr. Edgerton is the sixth in order of birth in a family 
of seven children. He attended .school in Yankton, and 
later the high school of Mitchell, from which he was 
graduated in 1889. For two years he was a student in the 
State University at Vermillion, South Dakota, and was. 
graduated from the South Dakota Agricultural College in 
1893, with the degree of B. S. In the fall of that year he 
entered the medical department of the State University 
of Minnesota, where he was graduated in the spring of 
1896, with the degree of M. D. For one year he was 
engaged in practice at Claremont, Minnesota, but in March^ 
1898, opened an office in Faulkton, and has established 

himself in a large and paying practice, which is constant- 



451 



ly increasing. He is a very progressive physician, and his 
skill and ability are widely recognized. 

In December, 1896, Dr. Edgerton led to the altar Miss 
Alta Andrews, who was born in Wisconsin and educated at 
Vermillion, South Dakota. Her father, A. A. Andrews, 
is a prominent citizen of Faulkton and owns a valuable 
farm in the northeastern part of the county. The Doctor 
and his wife have a son, Carl Alonzo, born November 29, 
1898. 

The Doctor is one of the most popular and influential 
citizens of Faulkton, and is now serving as mayor of that 
city and also as county physician. Politically, he is iden- 
tified with the republican party, and socially, affiliates 
with the Masonic fraternit}^ the Knights of Pythias, the 
Modern Woodmen and the Modern Brotherhood of Ameri- 
ca. His wife is an active and piominent member of the 
Congregational church of Faulkton, and both occupy an 
enviable position in the best social circles of the com- 
munitv. 



CAPTAIN H. A. HUMPHREY was among the first 
settlers of Faulk county, and one of the most successful 
workers for the advancement and upbuilding of society. 
He was editor and publisher of the Faulkton Times, one of 
the best and most reliable newspapers ever published in 
Faulk county. The Times was an outspoken, indepen- 
dent and reliable exponent of the various questions, that 
entered into the upbuilding of moral, social and political 
standing of the young and important county. Earnest in 
his efforts to advance the interests of the conununity and 
keep in toucli with the upbuilding of Faulkton. 



452 



Captain Humphrey and his inestimal)le companion 
were important co-workers in lifting life's burdens, cheer- 
ing life's pilgrimage and in bringing together and build- 
ing up a social, congenial and happy community, out of 
the early pioneer settlers from different states and com- 
munities, that had, without any reference to each other, 
decided to make Faulk county their future home. Per- 
sonally he was an independent thinker and an outspoken 
worker; his intelligence, and the further consideration 
that he was usually on the right side, compelled his recog- 
nition as a safe, reliable and successful leader. 

He was appointed b}- Territorial Governor Ordway 
one of the commissioners to perfect the organization of 
Faulk county. In whatever position or public work to 
which he was called, the duties were ably and conscien- 
tiously performed, until his leadership, as voiced through 
the Times, became acknowledged by a large following, not 
only in Faulk county but in other parts of the state. 
No reliable history of the struggle for county organization 
and statehood can be written without Captain Humphrey 
occupying a large and important place. With statehood 
assured, a looking forward for political preferment became 
the order of the day. 

Watertown claiming the governorship, the Black Hills 
a United States senator, and Canton, Sioux Falls and 
Yankton claiming the other senator and one representative 
to congress, public, or rather political attention, was turned 
toward the northern portion of the state and particularly 
toward Faulk county, and also toward Captain Humphrey,, 
as the man for the important place. 

Before the campaign had far advanced Hon. John A. 



453 



Pickler, arother Faulkton man, developed so much strength 
that little real work was done by Captain Humphrey's 
friends, and at the convention to elect delegates to the state 
convention, county pride and political policy decided them 
in giving Major Pickler their entire county delegation, and 
he was triumphantlv nominated for congress at the con- 
vention . 

Major Pickler' s friends realizing that Captain Humph- 
rey would feel disappointed and that he would not give 
him the hearty support that his home paper would be ex- 
pected to, a move was made to buy the Times. This move 
succeeded and the Times became a Pickler organ. 

And here we have always thought that Captain Hum- 
phrey made the mistake of his life, so far as political 
preferment and advancement was concerned. If Captain 
Humphrey had said to the party that had been selected to 
negotitate for the Times, "no, the Times is not for sale, it 
is a republican paper and will give the most hearty support 
to the republican ticket, especially to our townsman and 
fellow citizen, Major Pickler," the writer of this sketch is 
in a position to know, that while some particular plans 
might have been upset and political disappointment fol- 
lowed, the assurance would have been accepted and Captain 
Humphrey been in line for political preferment, with an 
open door to the highest office within the gift of the people 
of South Dakota. 



BUTLER IvAMBERT was born May 8th, 1858, in 
Lafayette county, Wisconsin. His parents were living on 
a farm w'here he assisted in making a living and attended 
the public schools, remaining at the home of his birth and 



454 



boyhood until twenty-three years of age. At that time he 
came west with Robert Young, arriving in Faulk county 
on the nineteenth day of August, 1882, and took possess- 
ion of unsurveyed public land by driving a stake and nail- 
ing a board to it, upon which notice of possession was 
posted. In about one month he returned to his former 
home in Wisconsin for a car load of supplies, including a 
team, which was shipped to Ashton, in Spink county, the 
nearest railroad point, having left the young man who came 
with him to hold posession of the land and look after their 
interests. The land in the meantime having beep surveyed, 
a shanty was built across the line in which they were able 
to hold down their claims, being on section 22 and section 
21, in township 119, range 67. At the time of settlement 
the nearest neighbor was nearly five miles away. This was 
on the last of October, 1882, and in December nearly all 
the land in sight was held by squatters rights, although 
the land had not yet come upon the market. About this 
time Mr. Abbott settled at DeVoe and established a board- 
ing tent until he could erect a home to accomodate the new 
coming settlers. That winter Mr. Abbott and the subject 
of this sketch were the only ones to have teams, by which 
communication could be kept up with the railroad station. 
In February the land having come into market a re- 
turn trip to the Huron land office was made to file on their 
land. Mr. Lambert was able to add to his preemption a 
tree claim, which he held until 1887, subsequently in 1885 
he filed his homestead right on the south-west quarter of 
section 20, township 119,^ range 67. Nine years ago he 
sold his homestead for his present place of business in this 
city where he has since been engaged in harness making. 



455 



On November 22, 1887, he was united in marriage to 
Miss Nellie E. Moulton, who was born November 22, 1869, 
in Allegan county, Michigan and came to Faulk county 
with her parents, who settled near I,aFoon, on the 24th 
of April 1883. To them have been born three cnildren, 
viz: Furness W., born the 28th of January, 1889; Bessie B., 
born April 12th, 1897; Ervin B., born November 14th, 1905. 

Mr. Eambert is one of the successful business men of 
our citj', owning his place of business and a fine home with 
modern improvements, and is free from debt. 



EPHRIAM COLE was born August 10th, 1854, in 
Starksborough, Vermont. When two years of age his par- 
•ents moved to Dodge county, Wisconsin, where he made 
his home until he came to Faulk county, Territory of Da- 
kota, in March, 1883, and located upon what proved to be 
township 120, range 68j where he resided until 1891, when 
he purchased a farm near the city of Faulkton, being the 
north-west quarter of section 15, township 118, range 69^ 
with his farm residence within eighty rods of the center of 
the city of Faulkton. Upon his present location Mr. Cole 
has erected a fine set of farm buildings, a house at a cost of 
$3,000. In addition to his home of 160 acres of improved 
land he has 480 acres in thetownship where he first located. 
In addition to his regular farm machinery he has a full out- 
fit of steam plow machinery. 

In 1874 Mr. Cole was united in marriage to Miss Ey- 
•dia Downey, who was born in Syracuse, New York, and 
-died in Faulkton, South Dakota, on the 19th day of March 
1903. A second marriage was contracted with Miss Louise 
Johnson, of Colorado. To them have been born one child 
JUeona, who was born December 19, 1906.. 



456 



Socially Mr. Cole is a member of the M. B. A. , the 
Workman, and the Degree of Honor, and carries insurance 
in all but the Degree of Honor, with accident insurance 
in the Woodman. Politically Mr. Cole is a republican. 



SHELDON J. STEELE was born at Suspension Bridge, 
New York, in 1858. In 1873 his parents removed to Albion, 
Michigan, and in 1883 he immigrated to Dakota Territory, 
locating in Faulk county, exercising a squatters right north 
of LaFoon, the government survey not having been made 
at that time. In 1887 Mr. Steele removed to Faulkton and 
engaged in the livery business. In 1890 he was appointed 
deputy sheriff in which office he continued to serve until 
1892, when he was appointed postmaster for Faulkton un- 
der the Cleveland administration. In the spring of 1897 
Mr. Steele resigned the office of postmaster in favor of Fre- 
mont Young who was immediately appointed, he removing 
to LaFoon township in this county, where he has since re- 
sided and been engaged in farming. 

In June 1883 the subject of our sketch entered nito 
the marriage relation with Miss Marie Shelton, who had 
just arrived from her home in Springton, Michigan, this 
being the first marriage in Faulk county. After the brief 
period of a few months on the 31st of December of that 
year, that happy union wdiich had been entered upon with 
fond expectation of years of mutual enjoyment, came to a 
sad and sudden end, the cold and relentless hand of death 
was laid upon the young wife, and she was removed to the 
unknown land from which none return. 

On the 30th of October, 1887, Mr. Steele contracted a 
second marriage with Miss Mary Truesdell, of Millville, 



457 



Iowa. To them have been born ten children, viz: Albert, 
William L., Anne Florence, Walter S., Claud, Ella, Clif- 
ford, Gladys, Mary and Ethel. 

Politically, Mr. Steele is fully identified with the demo- 
cratic part}' , and is one of our successful farmers. 



ANDREW BOLLER. Everywhere in our land are 
found men who have worked their own way from humble 
beginnings to leadership in commerce, the great productive 
industries, the management of financial affairs, and in con- 
trolling the veins and arteries of traffic and exchanges of 
the country. It is one of the glories of our nation that it 
is so, and it should be the strongest incentive and encour- 
agement to the youth of the country. Prominent among 
the self-made men of Faulkton is the subject of this sketch, 
a well known undertaker and furniture dealer. 

He was born in the town of Hohenthengen, Baden, 
Germany, November 28, 1856, and on both sides is de- 
scended from highh- respected old German families. His 
father, Andreas Boiler, was a farmer and cattle dealer by 
occupation. Our subject, who is the fourth in order of 
birth in a family of six children, attended the .^-chools of 
his native town until twelve years of age, and completed 
his education by a four years course in a high school in 
Switzerland. At the age of sixteen he entered a store to 
learn the mercantile business, for which privilege he had to 
pa>- two hundred dollars, and the only compensation he 
received during his three years' apprenticeship was his 
board. P'or five years thereafter he engaged in clerking in 
his native land, and in the fall of 1880 sailed for America. 
Oji landing in New Yoik he proceeded at once to Iowa, 



458 



but not finding employment during the mouth spent in 
that state, he cams to Yankton, South Dakota, in December, 
1880, though he had to pawn his watch to get the money to 
bring him here. He made his home in that city for four 
years, working in a soda water factory most of the time, 
and in a furniture store for nine month. 

In 1884, Mr. Boiler married Miss Carrie Klimisch, 
who was born in Germany but was reared in this country. 
Her father, Anthony Klimisch, was a farmer in Yankton 
county. The children to our subject and his wife are Fred, 
now twenty-four years of age; Andy, Carrie, May, Bertha, 
and Adelaide. 

Soon after his marriage in 1884, Mr. Boiler went to 
Highmore, South Dakota, where for a year and a half he 
conducted the National Hotel. At the end of that time he 
returned to Yankton, where he remained during the winter 
of 1885-6, and the following spring went to Redfield to 
take charge of a hotel, to which he gave the name of 
National. After six months spent at that place he came to 
Faulkton in the fall of 1886 and established a furniture 
store in a building 24x40 feet. He has had to enlarge his 
stock to meet the demands of his growing trade and has, 
also added to his building, making it 46x60 feet, and ha.s 
many modern improments in his store, including a Kimball 
elevator. When he makes the contemplated repairs, he 
will have the largest and finest store in the town. He does. 
purel\- a furniture and undertaking business and receives a 
liberal share of the public patronage. Besides his business, 
property he owns one of the best residences in Faulktort 
and a half section of land in the eastern part of the county 
"for which he has refused fortv dollars an acre. 



459 



Mr. Boiler is an ardent republican in politics, and has 
taken part in municipal and county affairs, serving as 
nia3^or one term and as alderman for eighteen years with 
credit to himself and to the entire satisfaction of his con- 
stituents. Socially, he is a member of the Knights of 
Pythias, the Ancient Order of United Workmen and the 
Modern Woodmen of America. 



AMON L. AlvLEN was born December 3rd, 1847, in 
Harrison county, Ohio, when three years old his parents 
moved to Iowa, in the spring of 1851, and located in the 
town of Washington, where he enjoyed a happy home and 
farm life until the spring of 1882, when a removal was 
made to western Iowa and a location in Pottawattamie 
county, where he resided and engaged in farming until 
1902, when he took advantage of selling at the higli price 
that Iowa land commanded at that time and removed to 
Faulk county. South Dakota, and invested in five quarter 
sections of valuable prairie land in the township of Myron, 
seven miles north-east of Faulkton, where his son resides 
and is making it more valuable. 

On March 8, 1872, he was united in marriage to Miss 
Maria A. Maxwell, of Wa-ihingtoii, Iowa, and to them 
have been born two sons, viz: Isaac Sheldon, and R. lycroy, 
who are both married and with families, reside in Faulk 
county. Since coming to this county Mr. Allen has re- 
sided in Faulkton and been engaged in mechanical work. 

Mr. Allen sold his Iowa farm for $110 per acre and 
bought Faulk county land for $22 per acre, and now after 
.six years ownership and experience with Dakota land and 
climate^ luis no land to sell, but if he wanted to sell he 



460 



would not consider $40 per acre a reasonable price for the 
farm. In addition to his farm land he bought a small 
house and stable with four lots, upon a desirable resi- 
dence street in the city. In the summer of 1908, he erect- 
ed practically a new house of twelve rooms, with all modern 
improvements, and is now in a situation to enjoy, with his 
devoted companion, the reward that industrv, intelligence 
and good judgment has secured. 



JOSEPH h. GRATER was born in vSwitzerland, June 
26, A. D., 1842, and when twenty-nine years of age he im- 
migrated to the United States and located in the city of Buf- 
falo, state of New York, where he resided until 1885, when 
he came to Dakota and located in Turner county, where he 
rented a half section of land, and commenced farming with 
one yoke of oxen. At that time he was in such straight- 
ened circumstances, that he had to borrow money to pa_\- 
for the oxen. His farming enterprise was a success, but 
on April 2nd, 1889, prairie fire wiped out all his posessions, 
causing a loss of more than two thousand dollars. Ten 
days after the fire, he purchased, all on credit, a quarter 
section of land on which he had to erect a house and barn. 
The first year on the farm the crop was nearly a total fail- 
ure, the second year it was only a little better, and the 
third year was a bumper crop, which enabled hihi to pay 
all his debts and buy two more quarters of land. In 1893 
Mr. Grater sold his farm for twenty-two dollars per acre, 
and in the fall of that year removed to Redfield. in Spink 
county, where he bought six hundred and forty acres of 
prairie land, erected a house and barn,, and commenced 
improving his farm. After nine years upon his Spink 



461 



county farm he sold liis LaiJ for #8,000 or $12.50 per acre. 
He next moved to Faulk county, iu 1932, and bought 
twelve hundred and eighty acres of land six miles south- 
west of Faulkton, for five dollars and thirty cents per acre. 
He had to build a house and two barns and make improve- 
ments at a cost of about eight thousand dollars. Three 
years ago Mr. Grater sold 480 acres of unbroken prairie at 
fifteen dollars per acre, $7,200. In 1908 the remainder of 
his land was sold for $35.00 per acre, amounting to thirty- 
two thousand dollars. 

He immediately bought a half section of prairie land 
two and one half miles from Faulkton, a barn was erected, 
an artesian well 1280 feet deep, was put down, with an ex- 
cellent flow of water. 

In the spring of 1909, one of the best farm residences 
in Faulk county, at a cost of about five thousand dollars, 
was erected. 

In 1868, Mr. Grater was united in holy matrimony 
to Mi.ss Anna Mary Buchlman, who was born in Switzer- 
land. To them have been born twelve children, viz: Joseph 
lyeo, who died at the age of seventeen years and seven 
months: Rosa M., who is proprietor of the Gem Hotel 
in the city of Faulkton; Joseph, who died when nineteen 
months old; Edward Lewis, William Joseph, Anna Mar\-, 
Clara Amelia, George, Gertrude, John, who died in 
infancv; Frank Alovsius and Agnes Theresa. 



REV. ERNEST HOLGATE, the subject of this 
sketch, was born in England in January, 1879, and was 
•educated in the common and high .schools of that countr\-. 
In 1898 he commenced his studv for the ministr}- and in 



462 



1901 he was appointed assistant pastor of the First Metho- 
dist church of Brighton, England, where he continued to 
serve until his departure for America in October, 1903. 

The Dakota Annual Conference of that year, while he 
was upon the Atlantic ocean on his way to the United 
States of America, appointed him to the pastorate of the 
Letcher Methodist church. At the next session in 1904, 
he was appointed to the Methodist Episcopal church in 
Chamberlain, and in 1905 to his present pastorate in 
Faulkton . 

October 3d, 1903, three days before he sailed for 
America, he was united in holy matrimony with Miss Mary 
Hartley of Burnlay, England. To them have been born 
three children, viz: Clare, Everett and Francis. 



HON. S. WESIvEY CLARK was born December 28th, 
1872, at Plattville, Grant countv, Wisconsin, of English 
ancestry. His father, Samuel P. Clark, was born in the 
state of Vermont, and his mother Lizzie O. (Hunting- 
ton) Clark was born at Liverpool, England. 

The family moved to Dakota Territory, in July, 1882, 
and located in township 118, range 66, in Faulk count\'. 
There were only four other families in the county at that 
time, their nearest neighbor being three miles distant. Mr. 
Clark, Sr., stood among the most active and influential of 
Faulk county pioneers. A post office was promptly estab- 
lished and he became the first postmaster. A legal township 
organization was effected. Both the postoffice and town 
ship were named after the subject of this sketch, (Wesley). 

In 1890 both Mr. and Mrs. Clark, Sr. on account of ill 
health, went to California where they made their permanent 



463 



home and where Mrs. Clark died in 1906, and the follow- 
ing year Mr. Clark, while east on a visit, died at Glenwood, 
Wisconsin . They were both buried at San Jose, California. 

The subject of this sketch, then in his eighteenth 
year, was left in this county to look after their property in- 
terests, and enjoy the school advantages that had been built 
up in the new town of Wesley and subsequently finished 
his education at the college, at Redfield, where he has since 
made his home. 

In 1887 he was admitted to the bar as a practicing at- 
tory; in 1900 he was elected states attorney of Spink 
county and served four years; in 1906, Mr. Clark was elec- 
ted attorney general of South Dakota and in 1908 he was 
reelected to that office. 



MRS. LOUISE BATTEEN was born in Germany. 
When only one year old her parents moved to Berlin, Wis- 
consin. In 1886, she married John Batteen and came to 
Faulk county. South Dakota, They located in what is the 
present township of Pioneer where she has since resided. 
On the 5th dav of October, 1904, Mr. Batteen died, leaving 
his wife Vv'ith eight minor children, two having died in in- 
fancy. Since that time Mrs, Batteen has administered on 
the estate, consisting of six quarter sections of land, to 
which she has since added three more, built a fine new 
house, and managed all her own business affairs. When 
they came to Dakota they were without any property. 
Now her 1440 acres of beautiful prairie land is all enclosed 
with good fences, and all but 400 acres under cultivation. 
With the experience of the average pioneer contending 
with drought and storms; climatic changes have brought 



464 



abundant prosperity. Her personal property consists in 
]iart of twenty head of horses, forty head of neat stock and 
fifty hog-s, three good buggies, with all farm machinery 
neccessarv to carry on her extensive farm interests. Mrs. 
Hatteen in addition to caring for her household affairs, has 
hauled grain to market, and is ever ready to a.ssist her 
sons, the oldest not yet twenty-one, to carry on the farm, 
and now without anv hired help. 



WILLIAM R. HALL was born Augu.st 1st, 1858, in 
Carthage, New York. When eight 3^ ears of age his parents 
removed to Wayne, Du Page county, Illinois, where he en- 
joyed the advantages of the public schools, until fifteen 
years of age, at which time his parents removed to Ser- 
geants Bluff, Iowa, where his home was until he was 
twenty-six years of age, employed in clerking, and em- 
ployed b\- the railroad company ona year on the Pacific 
coast. 

In 1884, he came to Faulk county, Territor\- of Dako- 
ta, and located on a homestead on the south-west quarter of 
section 8, township 118. range 69. After proving up his. 
homestead, Mr. Hall removed onto nis tree claim, being 
the north-east of section eighteen, in the same township, 
where he \-et resides. 

Mr. Hall is one of theearly pioneers that passed through 
sunshine and storm, through hard.^hip and pii\ations, that 
none but those who start out in pioneer life' can fully rea- 
lize; and now with his 480 acres of improved land, with a 
good set of farm buildings, and all necessary farm machinerv 
and a well stocked farm, is counted among the reliable, 
prosper cus ff.rmers of the county. 



465 



On February 13, 1883, Mr. Hall was united in marri- 
ag-e to Miss Lizze Wolf who was a resident of Sergeants 
Bluff, in the state of Iowa. 

To them have been born two children, viz: MayE., 
now^ Mrs. J.J. Champlin, who now resides in the state of 
Oregon; and William J., who is still residing on the family 
homestead. 

Mr. and Mrs. Hall are members of the Faulkton Congre- 
gational church, and he is a memberof -the Modern Brother- 
hood of America. In politics he is identified and in sym- 
pathy with the republican party. 



HENRY F. REED was born March 22, 1866, in How- 
ard county, Iowa, and in April, 1882, came to Faulk 
county, with his father, who located in what is now 
Pioneer township. In 1889 he filed on his present 
homestead in the town of Wesley, where he has resided 
ever since and has the longest continuous residence in 
Faulk county of any of its citizens. 

On January 26, 1893, he married Miss Margaret Hol- 
land formerly of Rochester, Minnesota, and to them have 
been born five children, viz: Henry E., Agnes E., E., Ger- 
trude, and Eouise Frances. 

Not only in his boyhood, but since his majority. 
Mr. Reed has known the struggles and privations of 
the pioneer settlers. For the last twelve years he has en- 
joyed a full share of McKinley prosperity. With his farm 
of 320 acres, all under cultivation, including hay land and 
pasture, he has made a success. With a happy home and 
each year increasing prosperity. Another four years along 
McKinley lines, and he will be satisfied. 



466 



REV. JOHN T. DAVIS was born at vSomersetshire, 
England, November 20, 1838. He came to New York in 
1846, and soon afterwards moved with his parents to Can- 
ada, in 1851. In 1856 he entered the ministry of the Meth- 
odist Episcopal church and for thirty-eight years he was 
actively engaged in the regular work, but in 1896 on ac- 
count of advancing years and impaired health, he was 
compelled to ask of the Hamilton conference, of which he 
was a member, a superannuated relation and retire from 
the active work of the ministry. 

Mr. Davis, having two sons residing in South Dakota,, 
decided to come to Faulk county and located at Orient,, 
where he and his estimable wife have since made their 
home. In April, 1909, fifty years after the>; were united in 
holy matrimony, they celebrated their golden wedding at 
their pleasant and happy home vvhich is located near the 
Methodist Episcopal church in the village of Orient. 



REV. ANSON HART ROB BINS was born in Bristol 
Connecticut, on November 23, 1837. When three years of 
age his parents moved to Peoria county, Illinois. 

In February, 1860. he went to Oberlin, Ohio, to per- 
fect his education for the ministry, graduating from the 
college in 1865, aud from the theological seminary in 1870.. 
During that time he served in the army of the Union for 
two years, going out as a private with a company of col- 
lege students and coming home as a first lieutenant. 

Mr. Robbins served in the pastorate in Ohio twelve years,, 
coming to Dakota Territory in 1882, where he continued 
in that work thirteen years. After twenty-five years iii' 
the active work of the ministry, he was conscious thnt his. 



467 



physicial condition demanded a change, he then came to 
Orient and accepted the position of assistant cashier in the 
Orient bank, but after one year was compelled to give up 
active, steady employment on account of failing health. 

On December 30, 1870 Mr. Robbins was married to Miss 
Lucy Kinnej^ and to them have been born five children, four 
of whom are now living: A son at Bozeman, Montana; an- 
other who is a graduate of Yankton college and two daugh- 
ters: Mrs. Edwin Gooder of Orient, and Mrs. Owen Jones, 
of Sisseton, South Dakota. 



WIIvLlAM McKAY was born in Scotland in 1858. 
In 1873 his parents emmigrated to the United States and lo- 
cated in the state of Minnesota. In 1885 he came to Da- 
kota Territory and located in Arcade township, Faulk 
•county. For the past seven years he has been general 
manager of the business of Conway Bros., at Orient in this 
county. In 1899 Mr, McKay was united in marriage with 
Mrs. Lorena Runnels of Red Oak, Iowa. To them have 
been born two children, Milton and Dorothy, aged respec- 
tively 17 and 14 years. 



SAMUEL E. CHAPMAN was born in Moskoka, On- 
tario, Canada, November 22, 1878. When eight years of age 
his parents moved to what is now the town of Wesley, in 
Faulk county, South Dakota. When nineteen years of age 
he commenced working from home and received his own 
wages. When twenty-one years old he filed on a home- 
..stead on the north-west cpiarter of section 30, township 
119, range 66 (now the town of Wesley). At the age of 
■.twent.y-fom- he married Miss Nina E. Thorn, who was 



468 



born in the town of Ransom, Hillsdale county, Michigan. 
To them have been born three children, viz: Laurene 
Eva, Maurice Edward and Helen Violet. 

In addition to his homestead he has two other adjoin- 
ing quarters of the same section, in all 480 acres, two 
hundred of which are under cultivation. Mr. Chapman 
has principally confined himself to mixed farming, making 
a specialty of raising hogs and now has fift}^ head, and has 
just disposed of twenty-five more. He has twenty horses, 
good substantial farm buildings, and a fine flowing artesian 
well with a water motor for grinding feed. This year's 
crop yielded 4000 bushels of small grain and' 100 tons of 
hay. He has all the necessary machinery to work his 
farm and is counted among the independent and reliable 
farmers in east Faulk county. 



THOMAS NESTOR was born in Eimerick, Ireland, 
in the year 1826. At the age of eighteen he came to the 
United States and located in Kentucky, where he remained 
for five years. He then came to Caledonia, Minnesota, 
where he married Miss Elizabeth McNevin, and resided in 
that town until June 16, 1894, when he removed to Faulk 
county, South Dakota. Uncle Tom, as he was familiarly 
known among his friends, would change sorrow to gladness 
with his jolly and kind disposition. With his family he 
was one of the first settlers located in Enterprise township. 
He drove overland from Athol in Spink county, forty miles 
from the railroad station and eighteen miles from the post- 
office. At night the ceyotes could be heard in all directions 
and by day the antelopes were seen wandering over the 
prairies. All went well until June 10th, 1898, when his 



469 



companion, the mother of his children, the youngest only 
two years old, passed on before to the great beyond, leaving 
husband and children lonely and desolate. 

His happy genial disposition served him in these hours 
of sadness. Uncle Tom cheered up the best he could and 
kept his four boys in his bachelor home until 1903, when 
James and Thomas married and moved into their own 
homes. 

James married Miss A. M. Brenneck, of La Crosse, 
Wisconsin, and Thomas Jr. married Miss Tena Titgen and 
left uncle Tom still batching, with the two younger sons, 
John and George, until July 10, 1907, when death came 
and took the one that had always been depended upon to 
cheer in the hour of sadness. He was laid to rest in Hoven 
cemetery, leaving four sons to mourn their great loss, 
James at Carlyle, Thomas on his farm and John and George 
■on the old homestead. 



ELIvEF IvOKEN was born March 26, 1885, in Norway 
and emmigrated to the United States in 1872, and located in 
Wisconsin in July, 1873. 

In 1879 he removed to Hancock county, Iowa, and in 
1883 he moved to Faulk county. South Dakota. He now 
resides in Pulaski on his farm of 320 acres of valuable land' 
150 acres under cultivation, with good farm buildings, and 
farm machinery, nine horses and twenty head of neat cat- 
tle. 

Mr. Loken married Miss Carrie Guttenburg, and to 
them have been born three children. She died in 1887 and 
a second marriage was contracted with Miss Ida Olson in 
1889.. To tbem has beau born five children. Mr. Loken 



470 



is one of the successful pioneers who experienced the hard- 
ships of the early settlers of this county and now enjoys 
the prosperity that has come to them in later" years. 



CORNELIUS HOGEBOOM was born in the state of 
New York in 1857 and with his parents came to the state 
of Wisconsin when about three years of age and to Faulk 
county in the spring of 1883, since which time he has been 
a continuous resident of the township of Hillsdale, Faulk 
county. On December 16th, 1877, he married Ermina 
Hammond at lyimoncase, Wisconsin. To them have been 
born two children, William and Thomas P., both of whom 
are married, William H., to Miss Emma Findeis and Thom- 
as P., to Sadie Janes. William H., now resides in Hills- 
dale and Thomas P., in the town of Zell. - 

To William H., and Emma (Findeis) Hogeboom two' 
children have been born, viz: Clayton and Cornelius. 

Mr. Hogeboom has not only experienced the hardships 
and privations of pioneer life, but his reward is that pros- 
perity which has come to so many of our Faulk county 
farmers. He is now one of our independent, retired farm- 
ers, pleasantly located in the village of Rockham. 



WILIvlAM BYRNE, who is one of the representative 
farmers and stock growers of Faulk county, where he is 
the owner of a large and valuable stock ranch, is a native 
son of the great north-we.st, and has exemplified its pro- 
gressive spirit in a marked degree, gaining success through 
his well directed efforts in connection with the industral 
developments of South Dakota, where he has maintained his 
home for the past twenty- five years, so he is entitled to be 
counted among the pioneers of Faulk county. 



471 



Mr. Byrne was born in Allamakee, county, Iowa, on 
the eighteenth of September, 1861, and is a son of Law- 
rence and Delia Byrne. William Byrne was raised on the 
homestead farm where he was born, and received his edu- 
cation in the excellent public schools of Iowa. He con- 
tinued to be associated in the management of the home- 
stead until 1882, when the property was sold and he then, 
with his mother and other members of the family, came to 
Dakota Territory. They passed the winter of that year in 
Turner county and the spring of 1883, came to the new 
county of Faulk, where each of the family entered claims 
on government land. The subject of this sketch took a 
preemption claim six miles east of Orient and one mile 
from the Miranda station, on the Chicago and North West- 
ern Railroad. Miranda is his postoffice address. He at 
once commenced the improvement, to which he has con- 
tinued to add until nearly one thousand acres are under im- 
provement, being devoted to the raising of wheat, oats, 
corn, barley and hay. He is giving his attention to the 
raising of high grade stock. His place has an excellent 
supply of pure water which may be secured at a depth of 
about sixteen feet upon any part of the ranch. Two years 
ago Mr. Byrne added to his valuable property by the erec- 
tion of a fine residence with all modern improvements. He 
has also a herd of fine horses. Politically he is in accord 
with the principles and policies of the republican party and 
fraternally identified with the Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows and Knights of the Maccabees. 

On the 15th day of May, 1895, Mr. Byrne was married 
to Miss May Paul, who was born in Muscatine, Iowa, 
being a daughter of August Paul, who removed from that 



472 



state to Dakota Territory- in 1884, locating in Faulk county » 
where he remained until 1894, when he removed to the 
state of Virginia, where he resided for several years, but is 
now a resident of Faulk county again. He is a native of 
Germany as is his wife, whose maiden name was Bertha 
Shulz. To Mr. and Mrs. Byrne have been born six child- 
ren, viz: Paul, Raymond, Theodore, I<eanard, John and 
Robert. 



I^LLSWORTH S. SECKNER, was born in New York,. 
December 14, 1861. In 1865 his parents moved to Wis- 
consin and in 1878 they removed to the .state of Iowa, and 
remained in that state until his removal to Dakota Terri- 
tory, in 1884. Mr. Seckner located near the county line 
between Hand and Faulk counties and was counted as one 
of the EUisville settlement. There were hardships and 
privations without number, but amidst them all he never- 
lost faith in Dakota. He now has 320 acres of as. fine land 
as can be found in central South Dakota and in addition is 
renting three quarter sections. He has under fence three 
hundred acres. On his own land he has four fine wells of 
pure water, at a depth of 50 feet, with good farm buildings,, 
forty head of neat stock, fourteen horses, and fifty sheep. 
Mr. Seckner has everything to satisfy the average Dakota 
citizen. In 1886 Mr. Seckner was united in marriage 
with Chloe Miller from the state of New York,, and enjoys. 
a happy home. 



HENRY CHAPMAN was born in England. July 3„ 
1842, and came to Canada in 1877, and to P'aulk county 
in 1887, locating iu what is now the town of Wesley, where 



473 



he took a homestead, to which he has added three more 
quarter sections. In addition to this valuable farm prop- 
erty he has added valuable town property. When he came 
to Faulk county he was comparatively a poor man. In 
April, 1905, on account of better climatic conditions, he 
removed to California with abundance of this world's 
goods to meet all reasonable worldly demands. 



WILIvIAM H. MCAI.LEN was born July 11, 1857, 
at West Chazy, New York. His first business engagement 
was with O. K. Wood & Co., as a traveling salesman, 
where he was actively engaged for eight years. In the 
meantime he had taken up his residence in Wisconsin, 
where he resided until 1883, when he removed to Faulk 
county, Territory of Dakota, where he located government 
land, and where he has since resided. In addition to carry- 
ing on his farm, Mr. McAllen has been engaged in selling 
farm machinery. 

His farm embraces all of section 15, township 119, 
north of range 68, west. He has 360 acres under fence 
for pasture and the remaining 280 acres are under cultiva- 
tion. He has an extra good set of farm buildings, all nec- 
cessary farm machinery, sixty head of neat stock and nine- 
teen head of horses. 

In July 1896, he was united in marriage to Miss Min- 
nie Matatty of Aberdeen, South Dakota. To them have 
been born five children, viz: Delia, Isabella, Viola, Frances, 
and Hubert. 



AMON C. VOSS was born in Indiana June 8, 1858, 
and remained in that state until the year 1885, when 



474 



he removed to Faulk county, South Dakota. On 
December 12, 1869, he married Miss Sarah F. Hawkins a 
native of Indiana. To them have been born six children, 
viz: Mary V., who in 1892 married Aaron Peck and resides 
in Canada, West; Lorenzo A., who is married and lives in 
this county; Chas. S.,w^ho is a resident of this county; 
Earl E., who resides in Bowman, North Dakota; Inez I., 
and Roy E., who are at home with their parents. 

Mr. Voss has a farm of 480 acres, 200 acres under 
cultivation, good farm building-s, all necessary farm ma- 
chinery, twenty head of horses and forty-five head of neat 
stock. His home is two and one-half miles from a railway 
station. After twenty-three years residence in this coun- 
ty, today he stands among the happy, satisfied, and con- 
tented Faulk county farmers. 



A. F. PAGEE is one of the worthy pioneer citizens 
of Orient, having located there in 1883. He has had a 
large share of the hardships of pioneer life. He is now- 
well established in a good paying business and counted 
among the reliable, prosperous, business men of that town. 



H. G. WEIDEMAN came to Orient in 1887, where he 
has had a continued residence up to the present time. Mr. 
Weideman is now in the emploj^ of the Conway Bros, in 
their extensive merchandise business in that village. 



ELVIN W. FORD was born May 30, 1857, in Fulton 
county, Ohio. In the spring of 1883 he came to P^aulk 
county, South Dakota, and located in what is now the town 
of Union, and exercised his homestead right upon the laud; 



475 



he now lives upon; to this quarter section he has added two 
more. Upon his farm of 480 acres of v-aluable land Mr. 
Ford has seen all sides of Dakota life. First came failure 
of crops, disappointment, hardship and a struggle for ex- 
istence. The last and hardest was when his entire crop 
was destroyed by hail. Financially no progress was made 
for the first ten or twelve years. On June 2nd, 1884, he 
was married by Judge Hardy at LaFoon, to Miss lyunetta 
Smith, who was born in Hillsdale, Hillsdale county, Michi- 
gan. 

Mr. and Mrs. Ford have the honor of being the first 
couple married in the newly organized county of Faulk, if 
not by the newly appointed j udge. To them have been born 
four children, viz: Grace M., Hazel M., Glenn F., and 
Harold M. Mr. Ford has 160 acres of lan4 under improve- 
ment. He has fifteen head of horses, thirty head of neat 
cattle, and ten hogs. His new bouse now completed, an 
illustration of which is to appear in this history is equal to 
the best in the county. Mr, Ford has served on the board 
of county commissioners and is an active member of the 
school board. 



EDWARD FORD. Near and almost adjoining this 
valuable home and farm is another beautiful farm home 
■owned and occupied by Mr. Ed ard Ford another son of 
the Buckeye state (a brother) who was born in October, 
1859. Mr. Ford was away from home on business which 
prevents a write up of which any pioneer might be proud. 



CARE STRASBURG was born in Germany in 1851 
L-and came to America in 1873 and located in the state of 



476 



Wisconsin. In 1876 he was married and moved to Arcade 
township in this county. In 1895 he removed to Hillsdale 
township where he now resides. 

Mr. Strasburg now has 400 acres of well improved land, 
with good farm buildings and is an independent and reli- 
able Faulk county farmer. 



HENRY SCHAEFER was born in Muscatine, Iowa, 
in 1862. And in 1883 became a citizen of the town of 
Zell, in Faulk county, South Dakota, where he has since 
resided. 

In 1900 he married Amelia Rose of Miranda, in this 
county. He now is the possessor of 640 acres of Faulk 
county real estate which with his improvements is easily 
worth forty dollars per acre. Mr. Schaefer may be count- 
ed among the contented, well to do, reliable Faulk county 
farmers. 



CHARLES E. YORK came to Faulk county in 1883, 
and located in what is now the town of Welsey, with a full 
share of Dakota experience. Mr. York has acquired a half 
section of Dakota land, good farm buildings, two hundred 
and sixty acres under cultivation, and is one of the ex- 
perienced and reliable citizens who has faith in Dakota 
lands and well understands the advantages and importances 
of keeping abreast with the successful enterprising Dakota 
pioneer farmer. 



WILLIAM E. FINLEY was born in Guernsey county, 
Ohio, on July 24, 1869 came to South Dakota in the spring 
of 1892, and November 16, 1893, married Miss Clara A. 



477 



Larson, of Dodgeville, Wisconsin. Mr. Finley escaped 
much of the hardships and disappointments of the earliest 
settlers. At the end of two years he filed a homestead on 
the land where he now resides and to this quarter sec- 
tion he has added five more, and now owns 1000 acres of 
the best of Dakota soil worth forty dollars per acre. Five 
hundred acres under cultivation. A good artesian well, 24 
horses, fifty head of neat stock and fifty hogs. Here is an- 
other $40.00 per acre farm all acquired before the fortieth 
mile stone is reached. 



MRS. BERTHA KERN was born in Germany in 1864. 
Her maiden name was Bertha Kiemp. In 1886, she came 
to Faulk county, and that fall, married James Kern. To 
them have been born nine children, viz: Annie, who is 
married to Otto Luch and lives in Reed City, Michigan, 
Herman, Robert, Otto, Frank, Emma and Bertha. Eight 
years ago they located upon their present home farm, 
-consisting of of 480 acres of valuable land. Two hundred 
and twenty-five acres under cultivation. She has extra 
fine farm buildings, all improved farm machinery, eight- 
•een horses, forty head of neat stock, and twenty hogs. 
Mr. Kern died about two years ago. Since that time Mrs. 
Kern has, with her sons, had remarkable success in carry- 
ing on the farm. The oldest son is less tnan twenty years 
of age, yet with the mother's aid and guiding hand., the 
farm receives the best of cultivation as shown by the abun- 
dant yield. 



HENRY KORUPP was born in Germany, January 6., 
1852j and came to Wisconsin in 1880. He came to J^'aulk 



47S 



county on October 26, 1885. He married Miss Ida Kahn, 
who was born of German parentage, in the state of Wis- 
consin. To them have been born six children, four of 
whom are now living. Hulda, is married to William Wag- 
ner, a resident of the township of Myron, in this county; 
Leo, Florence and Alone, who are yet a part of the family 
circle. 

Fifteen years ago Mr. Korupp purchased one quarter 
section, a part of his homestead. Here the drought, the hot 
winds and hail destroyed the crops, the cold stormy win- 
ters, the scarcity of fuel to keep warm, made one continu- 
ous struggle. But a heroic effort was made and today there 
is a change of conditions. To that quarter section he has 
added four more and erected a fine set of buildings. Four 
hundred acres are under cultivation, all necessary farm ma- 
chinery, fifteen fine horses, and fort}^ head of neat stock 
and twenty hogs, help to keep up the fertility of his well 
improved farm. 



JOHN M. McGRATH was born September, 1857, at 
Elgin, Illinois. When six years of age his mother died, 
leaving three children, himself and one sister, (Mary A.) 
older than himself, and one younger, (Sarah) of whom he 
has lost all knowledge. The famih^ with which he made 
his home moved to Fort Dodge, Iowa. When eighteen 
years of age he went to Cedar county, Iowa, and his home 
was in the state of Iowa until he came to Faulk county, in 
1885. 

Mr. McGrath married Miss Martha I. Golden of Ce- 
dar county, Iowa, December 9, 1880. To them have been 
born six children, five of whom are now living, viz: Emej-y 



479 



E., Alvin E., Edna A., Alta M., and Elsie V. Emery E. 
married Miss Dora Cloutier, July 17, 1901, and to them have 
been born four children. Alvin E- married Miss Olive 
Smith July 21, 1909. 

Mr. McGrath's other children are yet at the family 
home in Pulaski township in this county, where he removed 
with his family in January, 1885. When he came to this 
county he had very little of this world's goods, but after 
coming he had a full share of the hardships and privations 
of pioneer life. And in 1892 he was $800.00 in debt and 
not a dollar above what was required to support his family. 
But since that time there has been steady and growing pros- 
perity. All debts have been paid and he now owns a farm 
of four hundred and seventy acres, three hundred and 
thirty of which are under cultivation and the remainder in a 
well fenced pasture; and one of the best set of farm build- 
ings in Faulk county, only three and one half miles from a 
railroad station. The best of modern improved farm ma- 
chinery, ten head of horses, thirty head of neat stock and 
seventy-five hogs. Few, if any of the first .settlers of this 
county, are in better circumstances with more desirable sur- 
roundings. Mr. McGrath has not only found time for the 
accomplishment of much results, but has served on the 
board of town supervisors twelve years and is at the pres- 
ent time chairman of the board, as well as chairman of the 
township school board. 



R. JUNGWIRTH was born in Austria, in 1866, came 
to this country and settled at Oshkosh, Wisconsin, where 
he remained three years; from there he came to Faulk 
county and settled in Zell in 1885. Since that time he has 



480 



been in the employ of the Chicago & Northwestern rail- 
road company nearly nineteen years. For the last two and 
one-half years he has been in the saloon business. 



FRANK BRUGGE MAN, the son of Frang- and Cath- 
erine Bruggeman was born in Germany in 1877 and came 
to this country with his parents in his childhood. In 1883 
he came to this county and settled at Zell^ and for the last 
five years he has been engaged in the sale of general mer~ 
chandise and is doing a prosperous business. 



PHILIP KOLEGRAFF was born in Germany in 1856. 
When about two years of age his parents came to America 
and located in Monroe county, Wisconsin^ where they re- 
mained until he was twenty-two years of age. From there 
he removed to Wabasha county, Minnesota, where he mar-^ 
ried Miss Mary Demming in 1878. In the spring of 1884 
he came to Zell in this county. To tliem have been born 
six children,, viz: Frank, Edward,, William^ Mary, Lucy 
and George. Frank died when thirteen years of age; Edi- 
ward was married to Annie Harder and to them has been 
born one child, Clarence, who is now three years old. Mr. 
Kolegrajf has experienced all the ups and downs of pioneer 
life. No man can tell him of the failure of crops ^ drought,, 
or hail, of the privations and hardships experienced by the 
average Faulk county farmer,, yet he had the courage to- 
remain and is now reaping his reward. With 1,200 acres, 
of rich prairie land and two sets of good farm buildings, 
with thirty-five head of horses, and a good supply of neat 
stock, with a full supply of farm machinery, the tax col- 
lector always finds him ready to meet his share of the pub- 
lic expenditures.. 



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ANDREW SIME was born July 5, 1860, in Norway, 
and came to the United States in 1882. . Came to Dakota 
and settled in Moody county, and in 1885 took a homestead 
in Faulk county and the following years made his perma- 
nent residence here. 

In 1886 he married Miss Bertha Wonge, who was born 
in Norway in 1858. To them have been born six children, 
viz: Arthur, Annie, Ed, Belle, George and Clie. Mr. 
Sime has 640 acres of land, 300 acres under cultivation, the 
remainder in a fenced pasture. 

A new house was built last year at a cost of $3000.00, 
his barn built four years ago at a cost of $1000.00 and all 
necessary outbuildings for ft first class farm home. He is 
within easy distance of Millard on the Chicago, Milwaukee 
& St. Paul Railway, Wecota on the Minneapolis & St. 
Louis Raihvay, and Faulkton on both the Chicago & North- 
Western and the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railways. 
All of this property has been acquired since coming to 
Faulk county and together with his twenty head of horses, 
fifty head of neat stock and twenty head of hogs, could not 
be bought for less than $25,000.00. 

Mr. Sime is surrounded by a number of Scandinavian 
neighbors and is one mile from an English school, and 
has not only a good desirable home but surroundings 
where he can enjoy a happy life. 



A. B. CLIFFORD was born March 16th, 1849, in 
Van Buren county, Michigan. Engaged in farming and 
telegraph operating. In 1886 he removed to Faulk county 
:and located in what is now the town of DeVoe. In 1880 
lie married Miss Kate B. Blacknian, of Muscatine, lowy. 



484 



To tliem has been born one son, Perry, who is now seven- 
teen years of age and in his second year in the Aberdeen 
high school. Mr. Clifford is one of our successful enter- 
prising pioneer farmers. 

He has one section of valuable land one mile south of 
the DeVoe postoffice, 380 acres under cultivation and the 
balance in a well fenced pasture of natural grasses. His 
house has an acti!al value of $3500.00 and he has all neces- 
sary farm buildings and farm machinery. He has fourteen 
head of horses, ninety-four head of neat stock. The ac- 
tual cash value of his posessions, all of which has been ac- 
cumulated since coming to this county, cannot be valued at 
less than thirty- five thousand dollars. 



JACOB GABLER was born in Germany, October 28,. 
1850. When about two years old his parents emigrated to> 
the United States and located in the stats of New York. 
After -ten years residence there they removed to the state 
of Wisconsin. In the spring of 1883,, he came Faulk coun- 
ty, South Dakota. 

In 1870 he married Miss Katie Wagner, of Wisconsin. 
To them have been born eight children, viz: John, Mary, 
Anna, Emma, Zetta, Lizzie, Henry F., and Olive, all of 
whom are living in South Dakota. 

Mr. Gabler has 480 acres of land in the town of Emer- 
son, three miles from a railroad station,, three hundred acres- 
under cultivation the remainder an enclosed pasture. Ex- 
tra good farm buildings, all farm machinery, twenty-two. 
thousand dollars would not be an offer worth considering.. 
Mr. Gabler is in the strictest sense a worthy pioneer settler, 
who, has^een all sides of Dakota life. 



485 



ARTHUR W. ELLIS, son of Caleb H. and Lydia E. 
(Haines) Ellis, was born at Fort Fairfield, Aroastook 
county, Maine, June 7th, 1852. When he was about fif- 
teen years of age his parents mov^ed to the state of Michi- 
gan, where his home was until 1883 when he moved to 
Beadle county, Territory of Dakota. In 1886 he moved to 
Ellisville, Faulk county and in 1891 he located in Faulkton 
where he has resided until the present time. 

On October 14th, 1877, he was united in marriage with 
Mrs. Hannah Bates, of Camden, Hillsdale county, Michi- 
gan. To them was born one daughter, Mabel Winnefred 
Ellis, whose death occurred at Clinton, Iowa, July 4th, 
1908, jxist twelve days after her marriage. On April 18th, 
1895, there was a second marriage, to Mrs. Nellie L. War- 
ren, of Faulkton, South Dakota, where they have sincere- 
sided at their pleasant home on Ninth Avenue. 

Mrs. Warren was born November 6th, 1858, in Ober- 
lin, Ohio, where she grew up to womanhood, and enjoyed 
the advantages of the Oberlin celebrated schools. After 
her marriage to Mr. Warren, of Sandusky, Ohio, on Janu- 
ary 27th, 1881, the}^ resided in that city until their removal 
to Spink county, the spring of 1886. From this union there 
-was born, November 8th, 1884, .one son, Ralph E. Warren, 
who has grown up to manhood in this city. 

Socially Mr. Ellis is a member of the Independent 
Order of Odd Fellows and the Knights of the Maccabees 
and Mrs. Ellis is a member of ths Ladies of the Maccabees 
and the Rebekahs, the ladies organization of the order of 
Odd Fellows. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis are members of the 
Methodist Episcopal church. 



486 



NORBECK & NICHOLSON CO., a popular and so- 
ciable business firm at Redfi.eld, Spink county, South Da- 
kota. 

Peter Norbeck is a native born Dakotan, thirty-nine 
years old, who has the confidence and respect of his fellow 
citizens. He has not only been successful in business, but 
has taken an interest in public affairs. He is now a mem- 
ber of the state legislature. 

Charles L. Nicholson the junior member of the firm, 
came with his parents to Dakota Territory from Chicago, 
Illinois, when eight years old. Mr. Nicholson is now 
thirty-six years old. For the last seven years this firm 
has been engaged in drilling deep artesian wells, and in 
manufacturing and handling well drilling supplies. They 
were the first to introduce the cheap artesian wells into 
Faulk county. When they came into the county to drill 
wells, there was only one flowing well in the county, and 
that was the old Faulkton city well, which had cost about 
$8,000 and had never been a success. 

What is true of Faulk county, is true of the state; they 
have been the pioneers in the artesian well business, or 
rather were the first men to put the artesian well business 
in the reach of the people, making a price that the settlers 
could afford to pay, thus making it possible for them to 
utilize the life-giving force, not only for drinking purposes 
but for power. 

The liberal policy of this enterprising firm is clearh'^ 
demon.strated b}^ the rapid increase of wells in this county,, 
there now being nearly four hundred of them which are 
bringing vast quantities of pure sparkling water to the sur- 
face, not only a blessing to man and beast, but completely 



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489 



changing atmospheric conditions, transforming a semi-arid 
region with its drought and hot winds, with faihire of crops, 
to ideal homes, abundant harvests and many times doubling 
the price of land, above what it was worth under former 
conditions. 



WILLIAM H. RICE was born at Waupaca, Waupaca 
county, Wisconsin, June 26th, 1858, and resided there un- 
til 1890, when he came to South Dakota, locating at Faulk- 
ton, where he published the Faulk County Record for about 
three years in connection with M. P. Springer. In 1896, 
lie moved back to Wisconsin, returing toP'aulkton, again in 
1900. In 1906 he purchased the Faulkton Record and has 
been identified with its publication ever since. 

On April 24th, 1893, he was married to Miss Emma 
R. Oertel, of Waupaca, Wisconsin, and to them has been 
born one child, Grace, now fifteen years of age. 

Mr. Rice is of American parentage, his father., Henry 
H. Rice, having been born and raised in Chautauqua coun- 
ty. New York, and a great grandfather was a surgeon in 
the revolutioriary army. • 

Socially Mr. Rice is a member of the Odd Fellows and 
Knights of Pythias. Politically he has always been identi- 
fied with the republican partv and is at the present time 
chairman of the Faulk county republican central committee. 



HENRY METZ %vas born in Germany, February 18, 
1846 and came to the United States with liis parents locat- 
ing in the state of Illinois. 

He was but fifteen years of age at the time the Civil 
W.ar commenced, yet he had an honorable war record. Hf 



490 



was among the early settlers of Faulk county and took an 
interest in social and political alTairs. In politics lie was 
an earnest and devoted friend and an able and honest oppo- 
nent. In the campaign that culminated in the admission 
of South Dakota as a state, Mr. Metz was an intelligent 
and active worker, and an influential leader among his 

German fellow citizens. In his death the community in 
which he lived experienced a serious loss. 



FRED H. POTTER was born in the state of New 
York in January, 1864. He came to South Dakota in 1889 
and located at Hitchcock, Beadle county and worked in the 
flour mill there for one and one-half years. In August, 
1891 , he went to Mellette and build and ran a roller process 
flour mill in which he installed an electric light plant and 
ran it by artesian power He closed out his business at 
Mellette in 1901. In 1907 he located in the new and en- 
terprising town of Cresbard in this county and engaged in 
the hotel business in which he has been very successful. 



F. E. CLARK was born January 17, 1850, in Hart- 
ford, Connecticut and came to Faulk county, South Dak- 
ota, in August, 1883, locating in what is now the town of 
Pioneer. 

Mr. Clark married Mi.ss Kate Avery in Cresco, Iowa, 
in June, 1880 and to them have been born five children. 
He now resides on his original homestead, which he took 
in 1883. Eike others he had hardships and privations, but 
ten years ago the tide turned and prosperity followed. He 
now has a well cultivated farm, a good set of farm build- 
ings and contentment, happiness and perfect satisfaction 
with his surroundings have followed. 



491 



CHRISTIAN GREENER was born May 24, 1842, in 
Germany. In 1852 his parents immigrated to the United 
States and remained in the city of New Orleans for one 
year, then removed to St. Eouis, Missouri, and from there 
to Dubuque, Iowa, where he remained with his parents 
until he was fifteen years of age. Then another move was 
made to Lancaster, Grant county, Wisconsin, where he re- 
sided until 1880. In that year he moved to Blue Earth 
county, Minnesota and after a three years residence there, 
in 1883 came to Dakota Territory, locating in Hand county. 
In the spring of 1891 Mr. Greener became a resident of 
Faulk county and located in Faulkton where he has since 
resided. 

On October 5th, 1866, he was united in marriage with 
Miss Albina E. Taylor of Lancaster, Wisconsin, and to 
them have been born seven children, viz: Edward E., who 
died in his ninth year; Charles T., who is married, has a 
daughter seven years old and resides in Faulkton; Carrie, 
who married Frank Benning and resides in Hand county, 
South Dakota, with a family of six children; Annie May, 
who died in infancy; Ednah V., who married Robert Cor- 
hett, of Hand county, South Dakota and moved to Port 
Arthur, Texas. In 1905 she died leaving three children; 
Grace, who was born after they removed to Dakota, is 
married to Levi Hurd and resides in Hand county. South 
Dakota and is the mother of one child; and Wilber Liu- 
coln who is yet at home attending the Faulkton city schools. 

In 1853 Mr. Greener enlisted in Company E. First 
Wisconsin Cavalry and was mustered out at the end of the 
war. He is a member of the Phil Sheridan Post, Grand 
Army of the Republic at Faulkton. Mr. and Mrs. Greener 



492 



are members of the Faulkton Free Methodist church 
and are considered among our most reliable christian 
people. 



C. B. CHAMBERS, was born in Lancaster county,. 
Pennsylvania,, June 19, 1S49. His father, Abraham Cham- 
bers, a native of the same county and. state, was born De- 
cember 12, 1819. He was an iron smelter by trade, follow- 
ing farming the last active years of his life. Subsequently 
he came to Faulk county. Territory of Dakota, and made 
his home with the subject of this sketch, where he died. 
He was a descendent of Abraham Chambers who served in 
the Revolutionary War on the American side, and his uncle 
General Robert Chamber was one of the founders of Cham- 
bersburg, Peiinysylvania. The mother of our subject, Ann 
Mary (Atkinson) Chambers, was a native of Pennsylvania,. 
of English ancestry. Her father,^ John Atkinson, was born 
at Kendall, England, and was a son of R-obert Atkinson. 
He came to America, when a bOy,, previous to the Revolu- 
tionary War. 

The subject of this sketch was the second son in a 
family of seven children, and was reared in Indianapolis, In- 
diana,, where the family had moved in 1854. His father 
and oldest brother entered the service in the Union Army 
in the Civil War from Indiana. The subject of this, sketch 
attended the city schools at Indianapolis, and at. the age of 
seventeen years left home and went to Iowa, where he 
hired to his uncle and remained with him two years. His 
father then moved to Iowa,, and this son went into partner- 
ship with him, and engaged in farming in Green county, un- 
til 18.83, when he came to Dakota Territory and squattfi.d: 



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on the north-west quarter of section 7, township 120, north, 
range 66, west. He later filed a tree claim on other 
land and filed a homestead on the south-east quarter of the 
same section. He erected a shanty 8x10 on the tree claim, 
but lived with neighbors across the road. 

His parents came to Dakota in the spring of 1884, and 
resided on section 10, township 120, range 67, where the 
subject of this sketch established a general store, and was 
also postmaster of the Roanoke postoffice for seven years, 
which was located at his store, while his father ran the 
mail route from Roanoke to Northville, in Spink county. 
In 1889 he permanently located on his homestead on sec- 
tion 7, township 120, range 66, and continued to flo busi- 
ness until 1894, since which time he has engaged in farm- 
ing, has been a dealer in real estate, justice of the peace, 
and notary public. 

When he located in Dakota in 1883, he had many ex- 
periences; among them, encountering swollen streams, 
while hauling his goods to his farm in the spring of 1884. 
His crops were hailed out in that year, and again in 1898, 
but they averaged ten bushels per acre. He had two teams 
and some farming machinery, when he started for Dakota 
and in 1899 owned six quarter sections of land, abou.t five 
hundred acres of which were under plow; he had a complete 
set of farm buildings, and raised wheat, cattle and horses. 
He had thirty-four head of stock on his farm, including 
one registered Percheron stallion named Black Diamond. In 
1900 he removed to Faulkton, and engaged in real estate 
business to which he has given his attention up to the 
present time. He has a residence in Faulkton, an illustra- 
tion of which may be seen on Page 493 of this history, Mr, 



496 



Chambers has a real estate office on eighth avenue and 
with his rented farms to look aft.er^ is doing an extensive 
real estate business. 



THOMAS EUGENE BICKEEL was bom at Myrtle,, 
Bon Homme county. South Dakota, December 28.th, 1881, 
and resided with his parents on a farm until 1891 when 
they removed to Tyndall, South Dakota, where the subject 
of our sketch received his education in the public and high 
schools of that city. When sixteen years of age he entered 
the Tyndall Register as an apprentice, and after serving 
two years on that paper,, accepted a position with The Bon 
Homme County News, another paper published at Tyndall. 
In 1891 he came to Faulkton and accepted a position with 

H. S. Koon, editor of the Faulkton Advocate, and a year 
later when this paper was sold to Fremont Young, was em- 
ployed as foreman until June, 1908, when he associated 
himself with W. H. Rice in the publication of The Faulk- 
ton Record, under the firm name of Bickell & Rice. 

Mr. Bickell is of English parentage,, his father G. I.. 
Bickell, having been born at Brandtford,. Canada, and his. 
mother at Banbury, England, the latter coming with her 
parents to the United States when only two years of age. 

On September 15th, 1909,. he was united in marriage- 
to Miss Rhea D. Griff ee, of Faulkton. 

Socially,. Mr. Bickell is a member of the Masonic order^ 
The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks and the 
Modern Brotherhood of America. Politically he has al- 
ways, been, identified witii the repubjicaa party.. 



497 



GEORGE A. MORSE was born October 4th, 1827, 
at Weston, near Boston, Massachusetts. The Morse family 
came to this country from London, England, in 1635, set- 
tling in Middlesex county, Massachusetts. 

Mr. Morse was born in one of the old family faim 
houses erected near the beginning of the last century, and 
lived upon the old farm until he was seventeen, when he 
was employed four years as a clerk in a store in Boston 
situated near the Old State House and Old South Church. 
On June 17, 1842, the completion of Bunker Hill monu- 
ment was celebrated, and Mr. Morse, then a fifteen year 
old boy, stood near the platform and heard Daniel Webster 
deliver his famous speech, and saw the one hundred and 
thirty-two aged soldiers of the revolution, occupying seats 
of honor on the platform. He heard speeches delivered 
in Old Faneuil Hall by Charles Sumner, William Lloyd 
Garrison, Wendell Phillips, Daniel Webster, Robert C. 
Winthrop, Rufus Choate, Father Matthew and other promi- 
nent men of that time. 

He was married September 12, 1.850, to Caroline Mer- 
rill, a teacher in the Dwight school in Boston, and they 
immediately left for their new home in Illinois, making 
the trip from Buffalo to Detroit on the old steams May- 
flower, crossing the state of Michigan by the Michigan 
Central, and thence by boat to Chicago, there being no 
railway into Chicago from the east at that time. 

P'or three years the family lived at Peoria and Gales- 
burg, Illinois, and in March, 1853, Mr, Morse went ahead 
•of the new line of railway, and became the first settler, and 
erected the first building in the city of Kewaunee, Henry 
'County , Illinois, now a ciiy of 12,000 inhabitants. He 



498 



was engaged in the farm machinery and grain business at 
Kewaunee until 1864, when he removed to Chicago and 
went into business with his brother Albert. He was in 
the Chicago convention that nominated Abraham Lincoln 
for president in 1860. 

In August, 1869, he again took up pioneer life, settling 
in the new town of Corning, Iowa, where he lived until 
1883. In the fall of 1876 he was elected to the Iowa legis- 
lature and reelected in 1878. On March 14, 1883, he came 
to Faulkton, South Dakota, when it contained onlj^ four 
buildings. 

With his two sons, Albert and Charles, he took up gov- 
ernment land five miles south of town. His first wife, 
Caroline Morse, died July 11, 1887, and on January 14, 
1891, he was married to Marietta Talcott, who survives him. 
He served two terms as mayor and was clerk of the school 
board from 1892, until his death, in 1905, and was also for 
several years president of the Faulk County Old Settlers 
Association. He was loved and esteemed b}^ a large num- 
ber of friends, who will mourn with his wife and children 
their sad loss. His four surviving children are: Albert W., 
president of the Security State Bank; Charles A., in the 
real estate business, at Knoxville, Tennessee; Mrs. P. M. 
Conklin, of Omaha, and Mrs. C. C. Norton, of Faulkton. 




JAMES M. DUNSMORE 



501 



INDEX 



Introduction 7 

Introductory .. 11 

State History _._... 16 

Faulk County 23 

County Organization — 32 

The First Settler 45 

Buffalo in Faulk County 48 

The Blizzard of January 12, 1888 52 

Faulkton . 61 

LaFoon 63 

DeVoe 64 

The Western Third of Faulk County ---- 66 

The Pioneer Settler 72 

The First Memorial Day 74 

New Social Relations 76 

The First Election 83 

New Postoffices 92 

The Donation of a Church Bell 93 

Veterans of the Civil War 97 

Grand Army Post 108 

Educational 103 

The Railroad 107 

Faulk County in 1908 101 

From County Commissioners' Record 115 

Faulk County by D. S. Smith 138 

Early History 144 

Town Organization In Faulk County 146 

Town Officers - _ 1 5 1 

Tlae Coming of the Railroads 161 



502 



The Town of Zell --172 

Seneca 181 

Future Growth 183 

Faulkton 185 

Social Organization 194 

Church Organization 215 

The Woman Suffrage Question --227 

The Faulk County Court House -256 

Old Settlers' Annual Picnic .261 

BIOGRAPHICAL. 

Artz, PVank 413 

Allen , Amon L. 459 

Bottum, Hon, Joseph H 281 

Byrne, Hon. Frank M. 286 

Bryden , David 337 

Bixler, John A. 376 

Berg, Herman 398 

Bell, William 406 

Boiler, Andrew 457 

Batteen, Mrs. Louisa 463 

Byrne, William 470 

Bruggeman , Frank 480 

Bickell, Thomas Eugene 496 

Chambers, C. B 492 

Clark, F. E. 490 

Clifford, A. B. 483 

Chapman, Henry 472 

Cole, Ephriham 455 

Clark, Hon. S. Wesley .462 

Chapman, Samuel E. -.467 

Chapman, Edward--1 362 

Cochrane, Lizzie M. .. .343 

Cornwell,, I.Allen 304 



503 



Dodds, William J. 357 

Deady, Thomas : --. 364 

Dahl, H. M. .-.._ , ..---398 

Dixon, John A .410 

Davis, Rev. John T. . 466 

Ericsen, Andrew T. _- 406 

Ensch, Dr. Edward ..407 

Ensch, Mrs. Catherine (Deisch)- 407 

Ellenbecker, John 408 

Eaton, Arthur J. 411 

Ellis, Caleb Holt 433 

Edgerton, William M. _449 

Ellis, Arthur W. .-485 

Faulkner, William G. 317 

Finlev, John H .---. 345 

Findeis, Adam ' 353 

Freeland, Rev. J. K.. 381 

Forrest, Charles P. 414 

Ford, Elvin W. 474 

Ford, Edward 475 

Finley, William E- . 476 

Griffee, Abraham D 309 

Garrick . Alexander 367 

Golden, Emanuel 413 

Oooder, Albert 439 

Grater, Joseph L ■ 460 

Gabler,, Jacob ---1 484 

Greener, Christian 491 

Harrington, John 350 

Hooper, Mrs. Emma A. 410 

Hagan, Nelson 412 

Hatfield, F. E. 420 

Hays, Jos2ph H. 425 

Hays, Mrs. Lizzie (Fahs) 428 

Hays, John W. 442 



504 



Humphrey, Captain H.A 451 

Holgate, Rev. Ernest 461 

Hall, William R - _-- .-464 

Hogeboom , Cornelius 470 

Johnston, James W. 340 

Jones, D. Roy 355 

Jarvis, Matthew J. 421 

Jarvis, Dr. Abbie A. 422 

Jarvis, George J. 440 

Jungworth, R 479 

Knapton, Robert 333 

Kellett, William 411 

Kern, Mrs. Bertha 477 

Korupp, Henry 477 

Kolegraff , Philip 480 

Latham, Hon. D. H. 315 

Lower, William H. 343 

Loy, Samuel . 368 

Law, Allen 397 

Luke, John F. 445 

Lambert, Butler 453 

Loken , EUef 469 

Miller, Hon. Alexander 33Q 

McDearmon, Merill S 359 

Moulton, C. C. 389 

McComb, Edwin 395 

Mertens, Christopher _. 445 

McKay , William 467 

McAllen, William H 473. 

McGrath, John M. 478 

Metz, Henry 489 

Morse, George A. _497 

Niemeyer. Carl 355 

Nevins, J . S . 395 

Nestor, James T. 396 



505 



Nestor, Thomas --_- ---468 

Norbeck & Nicholson Co. 486 

O'Neil, Patrick H. 289 

O'Neil, Mrs. Annie (Carline)--- 292 

Person, Frederick D. 349 

Pickler, Major John A. 267 

Pickler, Alice M. A 276 

Phelps, Arthur W. 360 

Pangburn, Frank A 361 

Purcell , Thorn as - - 3 76 

Pillsbury, Daniel W. -.-405 

Pagel, A. F. 474 

Potter, Fred H. ---490 

Roseland, Elias --346 

Roseland, Gabriel T 346 

Rush, Joel 353 

Reinecke, Henry W. - - ^ - - 326 

Rathbun, Dr. J. P. 368 

Ramsdell, Francis M. 370 

Riley, George G. --397 

Rudine, Alex C. --411 

Reed, Henry F. 465 

Robbins, Rev. Anson Hart -466 

Rice, William H. 489' 

Smith, Darius S — 335 

Sangster , Adam — 344 

Simmons, Rev. Thomas 297 

Simmons, Mrs. AnnaR. 298 

Seaman , Fred Andrew 308 

Sprague, Albert J. 316 

Shirk, John H. 823 

Stone, Orlando L. -323 

Stoddard, George H. 328 

Strachan, A. M 375 

Swift, Otis A '- 383 



506 



Schmitt, Peter 419 

Steele, Sheldon J. 456 

Seckner, Ellsworth S 472 

Strasbnrg, Carl 475 

Schaef er, Henry 476 

Sime, Andrew 483 

Thorn, Stephen F. --, 358 

Turner, James P 329 

Thorn , William Springate 404 

Thorn, Mrs. Louisa ---409 

Thompson , Alexander M. 419 

Vanmeerbeck, Oscar 364 

Vinton , William B 398 

Voss, Amon C 473 

Wilkinson , Henry 356 

Wight, h. T. . -394 

Whitney, Selwyn -399 

Wallace, J. H. 399 

Weideman, H. G. . -474 

Wood, Rev. A. A. 446 

Young, Fremont 387 

Young, Joseph M. 396 

York, Charles E 476 



ILLUSTRATIONS 



Along the Nixon River near Faulkton 39 

Baker, Mack, Residence 189 

Bottum, Hon. J. H. 283 

Bottum, Mrs. Sylvia G. 283 

Byrne, Hon. Frank M 287 

Chambers, C. B., Residence 493 

Catholic Parsonage, Zell 129 



507 



Congregational Church, Cresbard 209 

Congregational Church , Faulkton 220 

Catholic Church, Faulkton j»-^ 221 

Dean, R. I^. _.391 

Dunsmore, James M. 1 499 

Elevator at Cresbard _- .109 

Forrest House, Orient ---^ 416 

Forrest House Stable, Orient 417 

Faulk County" State Fair Ehibit, 1904 29 

Ford, Elvin W., Residence, 139 

Faulk County Court House 257 

Faulk County Abstract Building 305 

Faulkner, W. G. 320 

Faulkner, Mrs. W. G. -321 

Gooder, Albert, Residence 437 

Hotel and Business Block in Cresbard --119 

Harrington, John, Residence 199 

Hays, Joseph H 430 

Hays, Mrs. J. H. 430 

Hays Block, Faulkton 431 

Indian Carnival 49 

Jarvis, Mathew J. 423 

Jarvis, Dr. Abbie A 423 

Johnston, J. W., Residence 341 

Kline, Mrs. Emma, Residence --179 

Lehman, W. H., Residence 159 

Eower, W. H., Residence 99 

Latham, D. H. 312 

Latham, Mrs. Nellie A. 313 

Loy, Samuel, Residence -379 

Miranda Band 79 

Methodist Church , Cresbard 209 

Methodist Church, Faulkton - _ _ 221 



508 



Miller, Alexander, Draft Horses -331 

Moore, A. M., Residence 481 

New Ca'tholic Church, Zell . -_-_ -265 

Norbeck & Nicholson 487 

Old Catholic Church, Zell 264 

O'Neil, P. H. 294 

O'Neil, Mrs. Annie Carline 295 

Old Sod Shanty in 1888, S. F. Thorn 69 

Public School Building, Faulkton 231 

Person, F. D., Residence 251 

Pickler, Major J. A. 272 

Pickler, Alice M. A 273 

Pickler, J. A., Residence 279 

Queen City Hotel, Faulkton 401 

Residences in Cresbard 149 

Roseland, Elias, Residence 347 

Ramsdell, PVancis M 372 

Ramsdell, Mrs. I^aura 373 

Steam Breaker in Faulk County 59 

Sangster, Adam, Residence - 89 

Sisters' Convent and School, Zell 169 

Swift, O. A., Residence 241 

Simmons, Rev. Thomas 300 

Simmons, Mrs. Anna R 301 

The Author ' 9 

The Old Sod Shanty on the Claim 19 

Turner, Frank, Residence--- --365 

Wood, Rev. A. A. : 447 

Young, Fremont, Residence -385