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Innovate ND Adds Retail Award Valued At $32,000
Bismarck State College adding campus police
ND swim meet agate
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Richland County deputy struck by drunken driver
Mike McCall resigns as Wahpeton football coach
Nice November
Trinity Titans Football
Saints Lose
Trinity Preview
Playoff Previews
ND regulators delay decision on Otter Tail rate increase to look at...
ND regulators delay decision on Otter Tail
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Here is the latest North Dakota news from The Associated Press...
ND electric settlement includes customer refund
Wahpeton zoo gets million dollar gift
SD historical society releases children's book
3A and 2A Football Match-ups
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Latest South Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Gaming board won't probe allegations
Gaming board won't probe allegations
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Jamestown attorney chosen for new ND judgeship
Hoeven: Entrepreneurs Will Fuel Our Future
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Bobcat to shut down in Bismarck Dec. 23
Tuesday's Scores
ND football polls
Thursday's Scores
Hoeven Announces Statewide Day of Innovation
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Beet truck driver accused of negligent homicide
Here is the latest North Dakota news from The Associated Press...
Tribe, gambling official disagree on firing
Tribe, gambling official disagree on firing
High school polls
ND Class AAA,AA football polls
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Here is the latest North Dakota news from The Associated Press...
Bobcat leases space at former floppy disk factory
Bobcat leases space at former floppy disk factory
Golf
State Golf
ND Class AAA,AA football polls
Latest South Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Judge dismisses tribes' lawsuit against pipeline
Judge dismisses tribes' lawsuit against pipeline
U-Mary Crowns 2009 Homecoming King & Queen
Truck rules suspended during beet season
Truck rules suspended during beet season
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
ND traffic deaths equal 2008 total
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Here is the latest North Dakota news from The Associated Press...
Victims in crash of cars, beet truck, identified
Winnipeg students paddling the Red River
Winnipeg students paddling the Red River
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
1 dead, 2 injured in Wahpeton afternoon crash
ND Polls
West Region Golf Invite
ND Class AAA,AA football polls
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Theater production puts focus on finances
ND Polls
Football polls
ND Class AAA,AA football polls
Latest South Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Here is the latest South Dakota news from The Associated Press...
Sisseton Wahpeton College gets $220,000 from USDA
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
Meth found at casino, 3 arrested
Man sentenced in Wahpeton for eavesdropping
Tuesday's Scores
Latest North Dakota news, sports, business and entertainment:...
High Red River levels threaten 1869 cemetery
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Comments Posted by KXNet.com Users in Wahpeton News Articles


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 3:36PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

Angie Dickinson (1931 - ) Famous American actress who is well-known for her role as Seargent Leann "Pepper" Anderson in Police Woman. Born in Kulm, ND


William H. Gass (1924 - ) Writer and philosopher. He wrote Omensetter's Luck and a book of short stories called In the Heart of the Heart of the Country. Born in Fargo, ND (no pic)


Peggy Lee (1920 - 2002) An American Jazz and Traditional Pop singer. She is also an Oscar nominated performer. Born in Jamestown, NDPeggy with Bing


Louis L'Amour (1908 - 1988) Author known for his vivid descriptions of frontier life. Born in Jamestown, ND

Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 3:05PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

Fort Union, North DakotaFort Union.


Fort Union Trading Post was the principal fur-trading depot in the Upper Missouri River region from 1828 to 1867.


Fort Union Trading Post was established in 1828 by the American Fur Company. It was not a government or military post, but a business, established for the specific purpose of doing business with the northern plains tribes. This trade business continued until 1867 making it the longest lasting American fur trading post.


The fort had visits from various people who became well known during the fur trade period. Names like, George Catlin, Karl Bodmer, John James Audubon and prince Maximilian. Tribal leaders came from many of the nations that traded here at Fort Union as well. A variety of jobs by skilled workers made up many of the duties done at here.


The people, places and stories are a large part of the make up when looking at Fort Union during its historic period. With the help of local citizens and agencies, the site was acquired by the National Park Service in 1966. After three archaeological projects, reconstruction of the bourgeois house was completed in 1987, followed by the walls and bastions in 1989 and finishing the trade house in 1991.

Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 1:53PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

Boston Custer served as Forage Master for the 7th Cavalry under his older brother G. Custer. 


On Jun 25th Boston was at the rear with the pack train.  Boston had heard that George Custer had requested ammunition, and for Benteens troops for an impending large battle.  Boston passed by Benteen's troops and joined Custer's main column as they moved in for attack.  If Boston had stayed with the pack train he would have most certainly servived.


Boston was killed on Last Stand Hill.  Like the others a marble marker rests approximately where the body was found.  Later exumed and burried at Woodland Cemetary , Monroe, Michigan.

Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 10:07AM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

Tom Custer


Tom Custer after the civil war was commishioned to the 7th Cavalry who served under his brother and rode to his death along side his brother George Armstrong Custer at The LIttle Big Horn. . 


Contrary to public belief, George Custer was not mutilated, however he was striped and laid in a semi sitting position with one arm over the top naked body of a stack of naked soldiers..  His hair was not long, to ride on the trail in long hair was more of an inconvenience.  He wore his hair short, and in pictures you can see that George Custer's hairline was recedeing.   It made for a very poor scalp.  It was not out of respect that GC's was not scalped.


Tom however, was mutilated and missing his heart.  It seems Tom himself had arrested "Rain-in-the-Face" for murder back at Ft Lincoln, but Rain-in-the-Face escaped vowing to eat his heart.


They may have died in Montana but the ride started out from here.

Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 9:14AM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

                               SITTING BULL'S GRAVES


Fort Yates, North Dakota vs. Mobridge, South Dakota


Sitting Bull was a pain-in-the-butt to the 19th century White Man. Neither North nor South Dakota wanted him while he was alive. However, attitudes have changed, and SB's progeny have acquired property and clout. Now Sitting Bull is prime real estate in the Dakotas, 110 years too late for him to appreciate it.


Two towns on either side of the Dakota border claim to have Sitting Bull's bones. Which to believe?


Fort Yates Sitting Bull GraveNorth Dakota site.


Fort Yates, North Dakota, has the sickle of history on their side. In 1890, Sitting Bull was "accidentally" shot in Fort Yates and he was buried near the spot. However, Fort Yates loses points for presentation. The dirt road leading to the grave site is marked by a sad, hand-painted sign nailed to a wooden post. It lists precariously toward a gully. The grave itself is at the far end of a small, dusty parking area. It's covered by a thick slab of concrete and a big rock. You will be the only one here, guaranteed - - if you can find it.


Is Sitting Bull still in this grave? Not according to the folks downriver in Mobridge, South Dakota.


Mobridge freely admits that they drove to Ft. Yates in 1953 and stole Sitting Bull's bones. They dug up the grave with a backhoe and scurried back across the border before Ft. Yates had finished breakfast. Ft. Yates snorts that all Mobridge got were some horse bones, or maybe the bones of a White Man (chuckle) who was buried on top (Sitting Bull, they say, was buried deep in quicklime so that he would rot quickly). Ft. Yates installed the slab of concrete and the big rock afterward, to ward off any other bonesnatching 'burgs.


Mobridge could care less. Whatever bones they got they encased in a steel vault embedded in a 20-ton block of concrete, then buried the whole thing on top of a very visible bluff overlooking the Missouri River. They built billboards directing tourists to the site and erected a granite pillar over it, topped by a seven-ton bust of Sitting Bull, executed by Mr. Designer Of South Dakota's Big But Will Never Be Finished Crazy Horse Mountain Face Statue Out By Mount Rushmore, Korczak Zoilkowski. Nyah-nyah, North Dakota.


The reason for this squabbling eludes us, since the Mobridge site is just as empty as the one in Fort Yates. But a dead celebrity is a dead celebrity. And the Dakotas ain't Hollywood.The reason for this squabbling eludes us, since the Mobridge site is just as empty as the one in Fort Yates. But a dead celebrity is a dead celebrity. And the Dakotas ain't Hollywood.


 Sitting Bull's Grave.
Sitting Bull's Grave, Mobridge, South Dakota.


Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 9:00AM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.
Ayr, North Dakota - Town Trapped in Time

A few years ago (5+/-)I was in North Dakota on business and had a Sunday to myself. There wasn't a lot to do in Fargo so I started driving west on interstate 94. I headed north at some point and came upon a very small town called Ayr. (About 20 miles from Fargo) It really was a non descript town and I was just going to turn around and leave. I turned the rental car left onto the next street I came to and thought I'd driven into the Twilight Zone. It was as if I'd entered a turn of the century town. There was an old gas station, one room school house, barber shop, fire station, general store, train station etc.


But they were all restored and in excellent condition. I parked my car and wandered around for a while when an older gentleman named Keith Johnson came out of a house, He had done all of this work himself. He bought the buildings and moved them to Ayr and restored them. It was a hobby for him. I'm guessing that he probably donated these buildings to the Frontier Village in Fargo by now...but if he didn't and they are still there in Ayr it's an amazing site to see. [Ray Gomes, 06/09/1999]

Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 8:54AM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

CONT


World War II










Bloch, Orville Emil



Army



Big Falls, WI



Streeter, ND














**Gurke, Henry



USMC



Neche, ND



North Dakota



Korea










**Keeble, Woodrow Wilson



Army



Waubay, SD



Wahpeton, ND



Vietnam










**Hagen, Loren Douglas



Army



Fargo, ND



Fargo, ND













Fitzmaurice, Michael John



Army



Jamestown, ND



Cavour, SD













 

**Pendleton, Jack James



Army



Sentinel Butte, ND



Yakima, WA



Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 8:51AM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

 


NORTH DAKOTA MEDAL OF HONORS cont.












Kinne, John Baxter



Army



Beloit, WI



Fargo, ND













Longfellow, Richard Moses



Army



Logan County, IL



Mandan, ND













 

Ross, Frank Fulton



Army



Avon, IL



Langdon, ND













Sletteland, Thomas



Army



Bergen, Norway



Grafton, ND



World War I













 

Bradley, Jr., Willis Winter



Navy



Ransomville, NY



North Dakota













**Smith, Fred E.



Army



Rockford, IL



Bartlett, ND













**Wold, Nels T.



Army



Winger, MN



Minnewaukan, ND



World War II
Reply...

Posted by kx viewer on Nov 29 2009 8:42AM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

 
















17 Medals of Honor are Accredited to North Dakota





  • The last US ARMY Medal of Honor action occured on August 17, 1971 when Special Forces Lt. LOREN HAGEN of Fargo was killed in his moment of valor.





"For Conspicuous Gallantry and Intrepidity in Action At the Risk of Life Above and Beyond the Call of Duty"




















































Spanish-American War   

Carter, Joseph Edward



Navy



Manchester, England



North Dakota


Philippine Insurrection

Anders, Frank Lafayette



Army



Fort Lincoln, DAK



Fargo, ND


 

Boehler, Otto A.



Army



Germany



Wahpeton, ND


 

Davis, Charles P



Army



Long Prairie, MN



Valley City, ND


 

Downs, Willis H.



Army



Mount Carmel, CT



Jamestown, ND


 

Jensen, Gotfred



Army



Denmark



Devils Lake, ND< Reply...



Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 6:51PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

John Colter cont.


Follow-up to Sheldon's historic tale:


Continued encounters with the Blackfoot eventually drove Colter to give up trapping and with his proceeds from the fur sales he moved to New Haven, Missouri where he purchased a farm. In 1810 he married a woman named Sallie. However his quiet life as a farmer would not last.



In 1812 the United States declared war on Great Britain, and Colter enlisted. Fighting under Nathan Boone, he died while in service for his country. However, after such an eventful life, he died, not by the hand of the British soldiers or the many Indians he encountered in his travels, but by jaundice. After his death, his remains were shipped back to Missouri to his wife. However, Sallie was unable to provide a proper burial. Leaving him lying "in state" in their cabin, she soon moved into her brother's home.


Amazingly, John Colter's body continued to lie in the cabin for the next 114 years, the house slowly falling to ruins around him. In 1926, the land on which the cabin once sat was being cleared and during the process his bones, as well as a leather pouch portraying his name, was found. Afterwards, his remains were gathered and buried on a bluff in New Haven that overlooks the Missouri River.


 


 


Added June, 2005


Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 6:49PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

John Colter cont.


Blackfoot WarriorThe Indians now took Colter, stripped him, and began to talk about how they would kill him. At first they were going to put him up as a mark to be shot at, but the chief, desiring to have greater sport, asked Colter if he could run fast. Colter understood enough of their language to tell him that he was a very poor runner, although he was one of the swiftest runners among the hunters. Then the chief took him out on the prairie a few hundred yards and turned him loose to run for his life. The Indians gave their war-whoop and started after him. Colter ran straight across an open plain toward the Jefferson River six miles away. The plain was covered with cactus, and at every jump the bare feet of the naked man were filled with cactus thorns. On Colter ran, swifter than he had ever before run in his life, with those hundreds of Blackfoot warriors after him. He ran nearly half way across the plain before he dared to look back over his shoulder. He saw that he had far outrun all the Indians except one who carried a spear and was not more than a hundred yards behind him.

A faint hope now rose in Colter's heart, but he had run so hard that blood gushed from his nose and covered his body. He ran on until within a mile of the river, when he heard the steps of the Indian with the spear close behind him and, turning his head, saw he was not more than twenty yards away. Colter stopped suddenly, turned around and spread out his arms. The Indian, surprised, tried to stop also, but was so exhausted that he fell to the ground and broke his spear. Colter at once picked up the point of the spear and with it pinned the Indian to the earth. He then ran on while the other Indians came up to their dead comrade and yelled horribly over his body. Colter, using every moment, soon gained the shelter of the trees on the bank and plunged into the river.


A little below was an island, at the upper end of which was a great raft of driftwood in the water. Colter dived under this raft and after some trouble got his head above the water between large logs which screened him from view. He had hardly done this when the Indians came down the river bank yelling like fiends. They hunted the shores, walked out on the raft of driftwood over Colter's head, pulling the logs and peering among them for hours. Once Colter thought they were about to set the raft on fire. Not until after dark, when the Indians were no longer heard, did Colter dare to venture from his hiding place. He swam down the river a long distance, and then came out on the bank. He was alone in the wilderness, naked, without a weapon and with his feet torn to pieces by the sharp cactus thorns. He was hundreds of miles from the nearest trading post on the Yellowstone, in a country of hostile savages. But he was alive and fearless and strong.


A week later he reached the trading post, sunburned and starving, but saved.


 


************



Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 6:46PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

John Colter.  Left the Corp of Discovery after the expedition returned to the Mandan Villages to trap beaver in the head waters of the Missouri.  In his run for his life he returned to civilization of storys widely unbelieved events and places it became to be called Colter's Hell.  We now call Yellowstone.  I thought he deserved mention since his heroing experiances started out in North Dakota.


Nebraska, when first made on the map, included all the country from the present Nebraska-Kansas line north to Canada. In this first Nebraska of the early days, in the part that is now Montana, there occurred the remarkable escape of John Colter.

John Colter was a trapper who crossed the continent to the Pacific Ocean with Lewis and Clark. On their way back, in 1806, Colter saw so many signs of beaver on the headwaters of the Missouri that he got leave of Captain Lewis to stay there and trap. This was in the heart of the country of the terrible Blackfoot Indians. Captain Lewis had killed a Blackfoot warrior who was trying to steal horses and from that time the tribe hated white men and killed them without mercy.   


                   




Colter knew all this, but he loved to trap and with another hunter named Potts he plunged into the wilds of the best beaver streams of the Blackfoot hunting grounds. The two men knew the great risk they ran and they knew also the ways of the Indians. They set their traps at night, took them up early in the morning, and hid during the day.


Early one morning they were softly paddling up a small creek in their canoe to take in some traps when they heard a trampling on the bank. Colter said, "Indians," and wanted to go back. Potts said, "Buffalo," and kept on. A few more strokes of the paddle and they were surrounded on both shores by hundreds of Blackfoot warriors who made signs to the trappers to come to them. Since they could not escape, Colter turned the canoe toward shore. As they came to land an Indian seized Potts' rifle, but Colter, who was a very strong man, wrested it from him and handed it to Potts. The latter killed an Indian with it, but was himself shot full of arrows


Blackfoot WarriorThe Reply...



Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 5:54PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

 Boris Karloff lived a year in Minot .


In 1909, Pratt travelled to Canada and some time later changed his professional name to "Boris Karloff". Some have theorized that he took the stage name from a mad scientist character in the novel The Drums of Jeopardy called "Boris Karlov". However, the novel was not published until 1920, at least eight years after Karloff had been using the name on stage and in silent films (Warner Oland played "Boris Karlov" in a movie version in 1931). Another possible influence was thought to be a character in the Edgar Rice Burroughs fantasy novel H.R.H. The Rider which features a "Prince Boris of Karlova", but as the novel was not published until 1915, the influence may be backward, that Burroughs saw Karloff in a play and adapted the name for the character. Karloff always claimed he chose the first name "Boris" because it sounded foreign and exotic, and that "Karloff" was a family name. However, his daughter Sara Karloff publicly denied any knowledge of Slavic forebears, "Karloff" or otherwise. One reason for the name change was to prevent embarrassment to his family. Whether or not his brothers (all dignified members of the British foreign service) actually considered young William the "black sheep of the family" for having become an actor, Karloff himself apparently worried they did feel that way. He did not reunite with his family again until 1933, when he went back to England to make The Ghoul, extremely worried that his siblings would disapprove of his new, macabre claim to world fame. Instead, his elder brothers jostled for position around their "baby" brother and happily posed for publicity photographs with him.


Karloff spent years testing the waters in North America while living in smaller towns like Kamloops, BC and Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. In 1912, while appearing in a play in Regina, Saskatchewan, Karloff volunteered to be a rescue worker following a devastating tornado. He also lived in Minot, North Dakota, for a year, performing in an opera house above a hardware store.


Due to the years of difficult manual labor in Canada and the U.S. while trying to establish his acting career, he suffered back problems for the rest of his life. Because of his health, he did not fight in World War I.



 

Reply...


Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 3:51PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

Charbonneau cont.



On August 14, 1805, Charbonneau struck Sacagawea during a domestic argument, and was told to stop by Clark. This one incident has led to Charbonneau's reputation as a "wife beater," although it was the only time during the expedition that this type of behavior was noted. Coupled with the rape incident described above, however, Charbonneau seems to have been a sometimes violent person with little regard for women. His consistent record of marrying Indian girls under age 16 also makes one wonder about a possible need to exhibit power over women. On October 27, 1805, at the "Fort Rock Camp" at the Dalles, Oregon, it was noted in the journals that Clark had to reprimand Charbonneau "about his duty," a statement which was not elaborated upon but perhaps referred to camp chores or guard duty.



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Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 3:47PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

Toussaint Charbonneau


Charbonneau is famous today because he married an Indian woman named Sacagawea. The journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition include an outline of Sacagawea's story. Sacagawea was a Lemhi Shoshoni born near the Continental Divide, probably near modern Tendoy, Idaho, about 1788. By listening to Sacagawea's own account, Meriwether Lewis estimated that at the age of twelve she was captured by a Hidatsa raiding party near the Three Forks of the Missouri in western Montana, and taken prisoner. The Hidatsa party brought her back to their village, Awatika (now known as the Sakakawea site at Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, near Stanton, North Dakota). It was there that she was taken by Toussaint Charbonneau as his wife, along with another captive young Shoshoni, whose name may have been Otter Woman. By the summer of 1804 Sacagawea was married to Charbonneau; she was probably about sixteen years old, and soon became pregnant with her first child. Charbonneau was mentioned before Sacagawea in the Lewis and Clark Journals, when the expedition reached the Mandan Villages in October 1804. On November 4, 1804 Toussaint Charbonneau was signed on as an interpreter for the coming journey, along with one of his Shoshoni wives, Sacagawea. Sacagawea could speak the Shoshoni and Hidatsa languages, and many historians have speculated that Charbonneau was hired by Lewis and Clark only after promising that he would bring one of his Shoshoni wives along. This was important because Lewis and Clark needed someone who could speak the Shoshoni language, for they needed to trade for horses with the Shoshoni in order to cross the Rocky Mountains. Sacagawea could translate Shoshoni, her native tongue, to Hidatsa, her adopted language. Charbonneau was needed to translate the Hidatsa words of his wife to French, which in turn several men on the expedition could then translate to English for Lewis and Clark.  


By November 11 Charbonneau and both his Shoshone wives were living in the explorer's camp; when the soldiers finished building Fort Mandan, the Charbonneau family moved in along with the other expedition members. During the winter, Charbonneau acted as a go-between, reporting the rumors and innuendo British North West Company fur traders who lived in the Mandan villages were spreading about Lewis and Clark. There were obvious tensions between the national and mercantile interests of the United States and those of Great Britain, and these were played out in microcosm on the Upper Missouri during the winter of 1805. On January 20, 1805, one of Charbonneau's wives, perhaps Sacagawea, was ill. This would not have been unusual, since she was less than a month away from giving birth. William Clark reported that he ordered his slave "York to give [her] some food & tea at different times. . . " On February 11, 1805 the young Indian woman gave birth to a healthy baby boy, Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, at Fort Mandan. Sacagawea was attended by Meriwether Lewis during the birth; Clark was off on a hunting expedition, and Charbonneau was not mentioned at all in the journal entry. In fact, another interpreter at the fort, Rene Jusseaume, played a larger role in Sacagawea's labor than her own husband!



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In March 11, 1805, Charbonneau began to complain to the captains about the terms of his engagement with the Corps, which included the provisions that he would have to do manual labor and stand guard duty like the privates. The next day he quit, telling the captains that he would not go with them to the Pacific. A week later, on March 17, 1805, the standoff between the captains and the testy Charbonneau ended when he apologized for his behavior and asked to be accepted back into the Corps for the western journey. The following evening Charbonneau was once more enlisted as an interpreter.


On the outbound journey along the Missouri, Lewis, Clark, York, George Drouillard, Charbonneau, Sacagawea, and the baby shared a tipi each evening. In the estimation of many Lewis and Clark historians, Charbonneau exhibited cowardice when one of the expedition's boats, called "the white pirogue," nearly capsized on May 14, 1805. In his defense it has been pointed out that he was an interpreter, not an experienced boatman, and that he probably did not know how to swim. It is usually noted, however, that his wife kept a clear head in the emergency, whereas he panicked. Sacagawea picked many valuable articles up out of the water, saving them for the expedition.


On August 14, 1805, Charbo Reply...



Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 3:17PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

 


  OUR 1st GUIDE  Commonly spelled 3 different ways to the people around here Sakakawea is pronounced  Saw Kaw Kaw weea.


Sacajawea was twelve years old in 1800, when her people were camped along the three forks of the Missouri River in their buffalo hunting territory when a band of Minnetaree Indians attacked them. They killed men, women and children. They captured all the female that were living and four boys. Sacajawea's mother was killed, and Sacajawea was one of the children captured and made prisoner by the Minnetarees. Now we know them as the Hidatsas. Because of this atrocity in her life, she ended up in the annals of history.


It was in the Hidatsa village that Sacajawea was held a captive and eventually purchased by a French trapper trader, Toussaint Charbonneau. It was for four years that she was held a captive. And in the winter of 1804, she had the opportunity to come home. A group of white men were going to her country. They hired Toussaint Charbonneau as an interpreter and she had no choice but to go along. And now we know it was an opportunity for her to come home.


So it was on August 11 th, 1805, these four men encountered Agaidika warrior, who was on a horse and he was dressed differently from the prior tribes they encountered. He had buckskin, and what was unique was that he had hair locks on his breech cloth.


So it was in august of 1805 that Sacajawea returned to her people with the Lewis and Clark expedition. She shared her cultural knowledge with Meriwether Lewis and three men that were proceeding ahead. She gave them advice on how to approach our people, the protocol you approach our people.


T he first thing they did when they saw this warrior was to take a blanket and throw it up in the air three times. This meant “We're not here to harm you.” They started approaching him and showing him gifts, and all Native tribes do that gift giving.


During this time when Lewis and Clark were coming through, we were doing a transition to our buffalo hunting in present-day Montana we had to be very careful. Not only would we be there in that buffalo hunting territory. So would be the Blackfeet and the Hidatsas, other tribes, our traditional enemies. They were out there too, and they were willing to attack for our horses. And so during this time period, we would ally with the Flatheads, and sometimes the Nez Perces, to protect ourselves. And so that's why this scout, this Agaidika warrior, was sent ahead to do reconnaissance.


And eventually these four men proceeded on. They made contact with an elder woman and a young girl. They were on the ground digging. They were out getting roots. The young woman saw them and ran away.


And so what this elder did was, she got on her knees and bowed down. And then the young girl stayed with her and was willing to suffer the consequences with her grandma. So she bowed down, put her arms around her grandmother and was waiting for more likely their demise. And instead what Lewis did was take this elder by the hand, pick her up, and gave her gifts.


And then the next thing he did that was very important, very significant, was putting the sacred paint of our people on the elder's face. (l) it's a red, sacred red paint. It was put on her forehead, on the side of her face across her cheeks. I asked a elder what this meant and they told me it that it meant that person that was doing that was blessing that person. And so that was noted in the journals.


The chief, the leader of the people, with about sixty men, came riding up and the elder woman, the young woman, were able to tell them what happened, and most importantly was what they did to them, the sacred paint ceremony. You know, our people have never seen white men. Never.


Who were they? Spirit beings sent? Where are they from? So it was something unusual for them, for our people to encounter these people that were giving them items that they have never seen. And this prevented the demise of these four men. These guys would have been killed immediately had they not known what to do.


A nd so eventually, they had a pipe ceremony. And the pipe ceremony is also sacred. With pipe ceremonies you're determining if these people, you're testing their integrity. And they're committing their words to all the different beings of the mother earth. In the journals they mention a two feet circle they made on the floor of the lodge. And in the center they built a fire. And when they pray, our people pray to the four directions with the pipe. And then they put the pipe towards the mother earth and up to the heavens, praying to the creator.


What Lewis was doing when he was participating in the ceremony he was committing himself with a vow. They immediately put up a lodge when they encountered him. It is because they wanted to see this man's integrity, his heart, his trustworthiness, to see if he was a worthy man. He was committing himself not only to these people, but to all the spirit beings and to the higher creator, and then to mother earth. And we know Lewis didn't understand what he was getting himself into.


That ceremony was done and right afterwards on August 17 th, 1805, Sacajawea was reunited with her people. In Montana across from Lemhi pass, where present-day Clark's reservoir is, this is where Sacajawea encountered her people. And this is what Clark had to say when she saw her people. She danced for a joyful site.


She couldn't speak English. So how she communicated to him was through sign, Indian sign language. She said, “I am a Agaidika Shoshone.“ And she said, “This is my nation.” And she said, “These are my people.”


When she was walking on Mother Earth, she was able to identify who she was. And then she was reunited with a childhood friend that escaped from the Minnatarees, or the Hidatsas, and came back to her people.


And on that same day, she was reunited with her brother. And this was documented in the journals too. It was written by Lewis. And this is what he had to say:


“Shortly after Captain Clark arrived with interpreter Charbonneau and Indian woman, who proved to be the sister of the chief, proved to be the brother of Sacajawea.”


And that's the lineage that I come through.


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Posted by kx viewer on Nov 28 2009 10:56AM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

            . The badlands.



"Nothing could be more lonely and nothing more beautiful than the view at nightfall across the prairies to these huge hill masses, when the lengthening shadows had at last merged into one and the faint after-glow of the red sunset filled the west." Theodore Roosevelt.


 


From the fertile Red River Valley of the east, abundant with oceans of wheat, to the vast plains and rolling hills, to the Missouri plateau and Badlands of the west, there is majesty in the open land of North Dakota. There is majesty in the skies of the day, and there is majesty in the stars of the night.


North and South Dakota were one territory until 1889. Dakota was named for the Dakota, Sioux tribe which lived in the region. Dakota is the Sioux word for "friends" or "allies."


The Peace Garden State (Official)


This name commemorates the International Peace Garden on North Dakota's border with Manitoba, Canada. The International Peace Garden was dedicated on July 14, 1932. The nickname was made official by the North Dakota legislature in 1957.


Land of the Dakotas


This nickname recognizes the Dakota tribes of North Dakota. The Dakota are also referred to as Sioux.


The Sioux State


Similar to "The Land of the Dakotas," this name recognizes the Sioux or Dakota people of North Dakota.


 


The Roughrider State


This nickname was used to promote tourism in the state in the 1960s and the 1970s. It references Theodore Roosevelt's short-live excursion into the cattle ranching business in North Dakota. On a buffalo hunting trip to the North Dakota Badlands in 1883, he was moved to purchase an interest in the Chimney Butte Ranch, also known as the Maltese Cross Ranch. After the tragic deaths of his mother and wife on the same day in 1894 and after the 1894 Republican convention in June, Roosevelt headed back to North Dakota to seek some peace and solitude. He purchased another parcel of land, located about 35 miles north of Medora, and named it the Elkhorn Ranch. Roosevelt's ranches were run by others as he spent most of his time in the east. His last visit to the Elkhorn Ranch was in 1892 and by 1898 he had sold all his holdings.


The Flickertail State


This nickname references the Richardson Ground Squirrel (Spermophilus richardsonii) of North Dakota. This squirrel flicks, or jerks, its tail while running and just before entering its borrow. The Flickertail March, by James D. Ployhar is North Dakota's official state march.


The Great Central State


North Dakota is sometimes called "The Great Central State" because it of its location in the center of the great western Wheat Belt.



 

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Posted by kx viewer on Nov 27 2009 10:26PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.

 


                                         Marquis de Morès cont.

 


While the Marquis was in jail during his trial for the killing of Riley Luffsey (for which he was later acquitted), he wrote a letter to Roosevelt on September 3, 1885 that expressed concern that Roosevelt’s hunting guide and friend Joe Ferris had been “very active against me and has been instrumental in getting me indicted,” and asked “Is this done by your order?” Roosevelt had not acted against the Marquis, but the threat of violence implied in the Marquis’s letter must have been discomforting to Roosevelt. The disagreement being settled in a duel was a very real possibility. TR wrote back, “Most emphatically I am not your enemy; if I were you would know it, for I would be an open one…” The firmness and openness of the response cooled tensions between the two giants of Medora as the Marquis backed out of any direct confrontation with Roosevelt.


While the Marquis's influence on Medora has been lasting, his attitudes and actions, in many ways, serve to highlight how popular Theodore Roosevelt was by comparison. The Marquis tended to use his wealth to inflict his will on people whether or not they agreed with him. He founded his own rival town and was one of the first in the area to put up barbed wire fences. On the other hand, Theodore Roosevelt tended to reflect concern for the area and its people. He organized Medora’s first Stockmen’s Association and his commitment to justice was shown through his fair dealings with locals and his role as a deputy sheriff. The Marquis de Morès’s legacy is not that of a sinister antagonist to Roosevelt, but of a bold dreamer and a man who, despite his aristocratic and European background, in many ways encapsulated the spirit of the Wild West.


The State Historical Society of North Dakota operates the Chateau de Mores State Historic Site, located near the entrance to Theodore Roosevelt National Park’s South Unit in Medora. The site is composed of three separate parts: the Chateau de Mores, De Mores Memorial Park in downtown Medora, and Chimney Park.  The Chateau de Mores site includes a visitor center, museum, and guided tours of the Marquis's home. De Mores Memorial Park features a statue of the Marquis.  Chimney Park, where a picnic area and ruins of the abbatoir are located, stand as a quiet reminder of the Marquis's unfulfilled dreams.


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Posted by kx viewer on Nov 27 2009 10:21PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.




 






“I shall be the richest financier in the world!”  - Marquis de Mores


 



Marquis de Mores

The Marquis de Mores



Antoine Amedee Marie Vincent Manca de Vallambrosa, more often called the Marquis de Morès, was an entrepreneurial Frenchman and a key player in the North Dakota badlands in the 1880s, coincident with Theodore Roosevelt’s ranching days. The Marquis was as well known for grandiose moneymaking schemes as for his skill as a rifleman. His wife, Medora Von Hoffman, the daughter of a wealthy Wall Street banker of German descent, was the source of his wealth. Using the wealth of the Von Hoffmans, he founded a meatpacking industry on the Northern Great Plains that resulted in lower prices and higher quality meat being shipped to market.


On April 1, 1883, the Marquis de Morès claimed a six square mile area of Little Missouri riverbottom and founded the town of Medora, which he named after his wife. He founded his town intentionally close to the lawless settlement of Little Missouri as an affront to its unwelcoming residents. He built a slaughterhouse, or abbatoir, where cattle and other livestock could be slaughtered, dressed, and loaded onto refrigerated rail cars and shipped to markets in the east. As his economic theory went, cattle that came straight off the range to slaughter would be of higher quality than those who lost significant weight while being driven long distances and then shipped live by train to the Chicago stockyards. Additionally, his business would save money because he could ship the dressed meat directly to market. The business intended to capitalize on the booming cattle ranching industry in the Dakota Territory in the 1880s. For a variety of reasons, including a lack of attention by the Marquis as he continually looked for new investments and his legal troubles stemming from a deadly shootout, the de Morès meatpacking empire never saw its full potential before it closed in 1886.


The Marquis de Morès and Theodore Roosevelt were two men with extraordinarily large personalities, and, although relations between them were generally cordial, they occasionally clashed. Twice, they had disagreements over land rights, and once Roosevelt backed out of the sale of some of his cattle when the Marquis lowered the price per pound from the agreed upon 6¢ to 5.5¢. While the Marquis was in jail during his trial for the kill Reply...



Posted by kx viewer on Nov 27 2009 6:46PM
In Article: Interesting People and Facts of North Dakota.




MAGIC SIOUX


How the Sioux disappeared in front of General Sully's army:  Before the skirmish:


Two years earlier, in 1862, a civil war broke ot in minnesota.  The Sioux had had enough broken promises from the Uninted States.  In return for their land,  Uncle Sam had promised them food or money.  But the good supply dried up and the money bags were empty.  They wer getting nothing and nothing woldn't do any longer.


The Sioux revolted in what they considered a civil war.  If they couldn't have the promises made to them, they wanted the return of their hunting grounds.  However, in order to get back the land, the'd have to fight.  They proved they were ready to do this with a series of raids in which hundreds of white Minnesotans were killed and hundreds more captured.


It was at the base of Takahouty, translated as the place where they kill deer, where Sully found 110 different bands of Indians consisting of 5 to 6000 warriors , with their women and children.  We call this place today the Killdeer Mountains, not really mountains, the Killdeers are rugged hills jutting 600 feet above the prarie.   It was at the top of these hills that early ay Indians had a base of communications.  THey would send smoke signals that could be seeen by tribe members throughout the area.


There is a cave in these hills, called Medicine Hole, that was regarded as sacred.  It was from here, the Indians believed, that the first buffalo walked out onto the parairie.  Whe buffalo became scarce,  Indians were said to climb to the hole and ask the Teuronka to come out.


The Hidatsa believed that Medicine Hole was one of the gathering places of the "Spirits of the butte."  The spirits would hold ceremonies here with the spotted owl providing the singing.


Medicine Hole got it's name because it appears to emit a fog on cold morning. Tose standing at the opening of the cave, today, can feel currents of air come from its mouth.


 Although little explored because of its narrowness, in 1870 an expedition descended  far into the cave and found several passages. One expedition reported a passage that took them to a large cavern room.  In 1914, a man descended 100 feet and ran out of rope.  At 60 feet he recorded the air became extremely cold.  In 1957 a group headed by Lyle Davison with 6 boys went down 175 feet, here  they were prevented from going any further because they ran into piles of rocks blocking passages.  Rocks tossed down by visitors over the years. Many who visit feel inclined to drop a rock .  What is really down there ?  There is a story about a fossilized dinosaur's head in one of the caverns that is blocked off with rocks.


This is how the Sioux escaped, the theory is that the Sioux went down into Medicine Hole and follwed a known passage and escaped though a network of underground caverns that opened up into the Badlands.


Credence is given to this theory because, a week later, Sully's troop spotted some known members of that same band traveling west of the killdeers.

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