Old Rail Fence Corners
Реклама. ООО «ЛитРес», ИНН: 7719571260.
Оглавление
Various. Old Rail Fence Corners
Old Rail Fence Corners
Table of Contents
In Memoriam
Explanatory
The Book Committee
The Reason
OLD TRAILS CHAPTER
Minneapolis. LUCY LEAVENWORTH WILDER MORRIS
(Mrs. J. T. Morris) Mr. Eli Pettijohn—1841
Mrs. Missouri Rose Pratt—1843
Mrs. Gideon Pond—1843, Ninety years old
Captain Stephen Hanks—1844, Ninety-four years old
Mr. Caleb Dorr—1847, Ninety years old
Mrs. Mahlon Black—1848
Mr. James McMullen—1849
Mrs. James McMullen—1849
Dr. Lysander P. Foster—1849
Mrs. Silas Farnham—1849
General William G. Le Duc—1850, Ninety-two years old
Mr. Reuben Robinson—1850
Mrs. Samuel B. Dresser—1850
Mrs. Rufus Farnham—1850
Captain John Van der Horck—1850
Mrs. James Pratt—1850
Mrs. Mary Harrison—1850
Mr. William W. Ellison—1850
Mr. D. E. Dow—1850
Mrs. Elizabeth Clifford—1850
Mrs. Richard Chute—1851
Mr. Charles Bohanon—1851
Mr. Austin W. Farnsworth—1851
Mr. Elijah Nutting—1852
Mr. Charles Rye—1853
Mr. James M. Gillespie—1853
Miss Nancy Gillespie—1853
Mr. Isaac Layman—1853
Mrs. Mary Weeks—1853, Ninety years old
Mrs. Martha Thorne—1854
Mrs. Nancy Lowell—1854
Mrs. William Dow—1854, Little Falls
Mrs. William J. White—1854
Mrs. Paulina Starkloff—1854
Mrs. Anna E. Balser—1855, Ninety-four years old
Mrs. Mary E. Dowling—1855
Mrs. Robert Anderson—1854
Mrs. Wilder—1854
Mr. Warren Wakefield—1854
Mrs. Leroy Sampson—1854
Mrs. Anna Simmons Apgar—1854
Mrs. Newman Woods—1854, Excelsior
Mr. Chester L. Hopkins—1854, Hopkins
Miss Florinda Hopkins—Hopkins
Mrs. J. W. Ladd—1854
Mrs. C. H. Pettit—1854, Minneapolis
Mrs. Anna Hennes Huston—1854
Mr. Henry Favel—1854
Mrs. Rebecca Plummer—1854
Mrs. C. A. Burdick—1855
Mr. Peter Cooper—1855
Mr. Stephen Rochette—1855, St. Paul
Mrs. Stephen Rochette—1855
Mrs. James A. Winter—1855
Mrs. George E. Fisher—1855
Lieut. Governor Gilman—1855
Mrs. Austin W. Farnsworth—1855
Mr. Theodore Curtis—1855, Minneapolis
Mrs. Charles M. Godley—1856
Mr. Frank Slocum—1856
Mrs. T. B. Walker—Minneapolis
Mrs. Virginia Jones—1856
Mrs. Georgiana M. Way—1856
Mrs. Duncan Kennedy—1856
Major S. A. Buell—1856
Mrs. Jane Sutherland—1856.[3]
Mrs. Mary Robinson—1856
Mrs. Margaret A. Snyder—1856
Mrs. Helen Horton—1856, Minneapolis
Mrs. Mary Staring Smith—1856
Mrs. Mary Massolt—1856
Mrs. Anna Todd—1856
Mr. Edwin Clarke—1856
Captain Isaac Moulton—1857, Minneapolis
Mr. George A. Brackett—1857, Minneapolis
Mrs. C. A. Smith—1858
Major C. B. Heffelfinger—1858, Minneapolis
Mrs. Martha Gilpatrick—1858, Minneapolis
Mrs. Margaret Hern—1858
Mrs. Mary Ingenhutt—1858, Minneapolis
Captain L. L. McCormack
Mr. Charles M. Loring—1860
Dr. Stewart of Sauk Center
Mrs. J. M. Paine, Minneapolis
Miss Minnesota Neill
Mr. L. L. Lapham
ANTHONY WAYNE CHAPTER
Mankato. LILLIAN BUTLER MOREHART
(Mrs. William J. Morehart) Mrs. Margaret Rathbun Funk—1853
Mrs. Mary Pitcher—1853
Mrs. J. R. Beatty—1853
Mrs. A. M. Pfeffer—1858
Mr. I. A. Pelton—1858
Mr. John A. Jones
Mrs. Clark Keysor
Judge Lorin Cray—1859
Captain Clark Keysor
COLONIAL CHAPTER
Minneapolis. CARRIE SECOMBE CHATFIELD
(Mrs. E. C. Chatfield) RUTH HALL VAN SANT
(Mrs. S. R. Van Sant) Miss Carrie Stratton—1852
Mr. Irving A. Dunsmoor—1853
Mrs. Mary Pribble—1854
Mr. Frank G. O'Brien—1856
Mr. Michael Teeter—1857
Mrs. W. L. Niemann
Ex-Governor Samuel R. Van Sant—1857
REBECCA PRESCOTT SHERMAN CHAPTER
Minneapolis. MISS RITA KELLEY
MISS BEATRICE LONGFELLOW
Mrs. Delilah Maxwell—1855
Mr. B. F. Shaver—1853
Colonel A. P. Connolly—1857
Colonel Levi Longfellow—1851
MINNEAPOLIS CHAPTER
CAROLINE ROGERS SHEPLEY
(Mrs. O. H. Shepley) FLORENCE SHEPHERD LITTLE
(Mrs. F. W. Little) MARY SHERRARD PHILLIPS
(Mrs. Alonzo Phillips) Mrs. Helen Godfrey Berry—1849
Abner Crossman Godfrey—1849
Major Benjamin Randall—1849
Miss Sara Faribault
Mary Sherrard Phillips—1854
WENONAH CHAPTER
Winona. JEANETTE THOMPSON MAXWELL
(Mrs. Guy Maxwell) Mr. H. L. Buck—1854
Mrs. Harriet Gleason—1854
Mrs. Bradley—1854
Mr. Oliver K. Jones—1857
Mrs. Arabella Merrit—1859
KEEWAYDIN CHAPTER
Minneapolis. MISS MARION MOIR
Mrs. Gideon Pond—1843
Mrs. E. R. Pond—1843
Mrs. John Brown—1852
ROCHESTER CHAPTER
BELLE BOYNTON WELCH
(Mrs. E. A. Welch) MISS IDA WING
Marion L. Dibble—1855
Mr. M. G. Cobb—1857
Judge Lorin Cray—1859
Mr. M. R. Van Schaick—1860
Mrs. Conrad Magnus
Mrs. Orin Pike—1864
MONUMENT CHAPTER
Minneapolis. MARY FRANCES PARTRIDGE
(Mrs. M. E. Partridge) ANNA MACFARLANE TORRANCE
(Mrs. Ell Torrance) Mrs. Mary E. Partridge—1854
Judge Loren W. Collins—1852
CHARTER OAK CHAPTER
Faribault. MISS STELLA COLE
Mr. Elijah G. Nutting—1852
Mr. J. Warren Richardson—1854
Mrs. Henry C. Prescott—1855
Judge Thomas S. Buckham—1856
Mrs. Rodney A. Mott—1857
Mrs. Kate Davis Batchelder—1858
Mrs. John C. Turner
JOSIAH EDSON CHAPTER
Northfield. EMILY SARGENT BIERMAN
(Mrs. C. A. Bierman) Mr. C. H. Watson—1855
Mrs. Augusta Prehn Bierman
Mrs. Ann Alexander
Mr. J. W. Huckins
Mrs. C. W. Gress—1855
Mr. Alvin M. Olin—1855
Mrs. Pauline Hagen
Mrs. Catherine Meade
GREYSOLON DU LHUT CHAPTER
Duluth. MARIE ROBERTSON KEITH
(Mrs. Chas. Keith) Mr. Glass—1848
Mr. John W. Goulding of Princeton
Mrs. Colbrath
CAPTAIN RICHARD SOMERS CHAPTER
St. Peter. MISS EMILY BROWN
Mrs. Mary B. Aiton
Dr. A. C. Daniels
Mr. Z. S. Gault
Mr. J. C. Bryant
Mrs. Nancy Kiethley Bean
Mrs. Mary Davis Fenton
NATHAN HALE CHAPTER
St. Paul. GRACE RANDALL LYMAN
(Mrs. G. C. Lyman) GERTRUDE KAERCHER
(Mrs. A. B. Kaercher) Mrs. Frederick Penny
Mr. James Clark of St. Peter
DAUGHTERS OF LIBERTY CHAPTER
Duluth. FRANCES ANGELINE POOLE WOODBRIDGE
(Mrs. W. S. Woodbridge) Mrs. Nettleton
Mrs. W. S. Woodbridge
ST. PAUL CHAPTER
MISS K. MAUDE CLUM
Mrs. Martin Jay Clum
Mr. August Larpenteur—1843, Ninety-three years old
INDEX
Отрывок из книги
Various
The A. B. C's. of Minnesota History
.....
I returned to Illinois in the summer of '43 and threshed. In the Fall I returned and built a house for Gideon Pond. It was a wooden house where their brick house now stands.
In 1844, I was building a mission building at Traverse. An Indian came in one day and told me there was a very sick man about twenty miles away at his camp. I went back with him and we brought the white man to the mission. After he was better, he told me that he was one of six drovers who had been bringing a herd of three hundred cattle from Missouri to Fort Snelling. They had lost their compass and then the trail and wandered along until they found a road near what is now Sauk Center. There they met a band of Sioux. The Indians killed a cow and when the drovers remonstrated, they killed one of them and stampeded the cattle. The drovers all ran for their lives. Two of them managed to elude the Indians, and took the road leading east. Our man was one, the other was drowned while crossing the river on a log raft, the rest were never found. Many of the cattle ran wild on the prairies. The Indians used often to kill them and sell the meat to the whites. One of the claims at Traverse de Sioux was for these cattle from the owners of the herd.
.....