History of Anoka County and the towns of Champlin and Dayton in Hennepin County, Minnesota, Part 6

Author: Goodrich, Albert M
Publication date: 1905
Publisher: Minneapolis, Hennepin Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 372


USA > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Dayton > History of Anoka County and the towns of Champlin and Dayton in Hennepin County, Minnesota > Part 6
USA > Minnesota > Anoka County > History of Anoka County and the towns of Champlin and Dayton in Hennepin County, Minnesota > Part 6
USA > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Champlin > History of Anoka County and the towns of Champlin and Dayton in Hennepin County, Minnesota > Part 6


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"We do not pretend to pay our taxes, and we don't know where the money is coming from to buy the next sack of flour."


When such was the condition of the well-to-do, the situation of the poor may be imagined. Happy the man who could get together cash enough to buy a pound or two of brown sugar, a little salt and a box of matches. Correspondence between relatives lingered for months for want of postage stamps. Wheat was browned as a substitute for coffee. As for tea, it might as well have stayed in China.


Ammi Cutter came to the rescue and began cautiously to give out groceries in exchange for farm products. Other grocers followed haltingly.


Ten thousand dollars in city and county scrip was issued in St. Anthony and Minneapolis: but it disap- peared like rain in the ocean. The state of Minnesota was admitted to the Union in 1858, and immediately found itself without funds and unable to pay orders on the treasury. State orders went down to twenty-eight cents on the dollar. Unpaid orders on the Anoka town treasury were quoted at thirty-two cents. The governor


87


GINSENG.


of Minnesota refused to call the legislature together, and the session of 1859 was accordingly missed because there was no money to pay the salaries of members and officials.


Slowly a little coined money began to appear. French five-franc pieces circulated at eighty-four or eighty-five cents. A little Mexican silver began also to be seen. Ammi Cutter finally succeeded in making some arrange- ments for coin, and paid approximately fifty cents a bushel in gold for wheat at Anoka during the winter of 1857-8. For wheat sown by hand and cut with a cradle. this price was very low, but there was no danger that the farmer would find his money on the list of "rejected" the next time he came to town.


GINSENG.


About 1858 the discovery was made that the Big Woods contained in considerable quantities a plant known as ginseng. Moreover, this wonderful plant could be traded for groceries and even sold for good coined money. Boys whose time had heretofore been counted nearly worthless had been known to make as much as two dollars a day digging "sang," as it was popularly called. There was a grand exodus to the woods, and a knowledge of the appearance of the plant having been acquired, sacks were brought into service and the tall timber scoured in all directions.


The next year digging ginseng became a regular busi- ness, and in consequence gold found its way into many a home where it had long been a stranger. Boys and women became very successful diggers. Agencies for the purchase of the plant were establishd at Minnetonka in Hennepin county, Rockford in Wright county, and


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HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.


Watertown in Carver county. Considerable quantities of the root were also purchased in Anoka. The price sank to eight cents a pound for washed "sang" and six cents for unwashed, but even at these rates boys and women made what seemed to them excellent wages, and even men often found the work a very convenient thing to fall back on. In the spring of 1860 the "sang" hunters were once more out in force, and there was reported to be abundance of money at hand to pay for all the roots they might find. The fall of that year P. Sheitlin of Minneapolis shipped forty tons of ginseng to New York. Up to 1863 ginseng digging held its place as a valuable industry.


CHAPTER VIII.


THE LAST INDIAN BATTLES.


About 1851 Henry C. Miller joined Pierre Bottineau and other hunters in the region stretching out along Coon and Rice creeks and over toward the St. Croix valley. In this border land between the two great Indian tribes game was very abundant, even after the white . people had built considerable towns within an easy day's walk. About 1856 Mr. Miller one day secured a four-ox team from U. W. Hank and hanled forty buck deer into St. Paul in one load. It was a marvelous sight even for those days, and a great shout went up from the residents of the capital city when the load appeared in the market. It sold for $400.


It was perhaps a little later than this that a party of half a dozen squaws from a Chippeway camp near by appeared at the home of Mr. Powell on Coon creek and wanted to trade pumpkins for hay for their ponies. The squaws had the pumpkins in sacks which they carried on their backs and, when the lot was deposited it made quite a pile of pumpkins. Mr. Powell told them they might take what hay they could carry in exchange. But he had forgotten that the squaw is the Indian's beast of burden. The delegation proceeded to the stack to which they had been directed, and when each in turn had been buried under a horse load of hay and been lifted upon her feet by the others, they staggered off single file with pretty nearly the whole stack. Mr.


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HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.


Powell presently discovered that he had the bad end of the bargain, and started after them shouting :


"Come back! you've got too much !"


But the only answer was, "Kaw-win," and a pro- testation in forcible Chippeway idiom that a trade is a trade.


At one time Mr. Miller, in company with two young men named Walker, pitched his tent in what is now Ham Lake at the fork of Coon creek. A party of a score or so of Sioux appeared in the neighborhood and offered to pay liberally in venison for permission to stay in the camp and hunt. The white men were at first somewhat afraid of their guests, and took turns keeping watch at night, but later they grew accustomed to their presence, and took their accustomed sleep. After about three weeks the Indians hung up their venison and said they did not want to hunt any more. One of them told Miller he could have the venison and they would take the hides to tan. He then asked if there were any Chip- peways near, and Miller told him there were some near Coon lake. Two of the Sioux jumped on ponies and rode north at full speed, and in about an hour and a half came back, saying that they had killed a Chippeway. There were twenty or twenty-five Sioux, and they became much excited and soon rode away, shouting the war whoop. A large company of Chippeways soon appeared and made inquiries. On being told that the Sioux had gone south, they immediately started in pursuit, but the Sioux got across the Mississippi just below St. Anthony Falls, and after firing some shots across the river at each other, the Chippeways returned, not daring to cross, as it was Sioux territory on the other side, and they did not know how many there might be there. The dead


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THE LAST INDIAN BATTLES.


Chippeway was buried on Coon creek with Indian cer- emonies, a speech being made by a chief.


A fight between Sioux and Chippeways took place in the fall of 1857 just over the line of Bethel in Isanti county. There were some forty or fifty warriors on each side, and the Chippeways were the victors. For a num- ber of years thereafter the Chippeways used to assemble on the spot and celebrate their victory by hanging up a white flag, to which were attached some knickknacks made of cedar wood and painted with blood. Around this they performed their ceremonies, and then went away, leaving the flag to flutter until it should be de- stroyed by the wind and the little cedar blocks be blown away or abstracted by relic-hunting white boys.


In the spring of 1858 occurred the last battle in Min- nesota between the Sioux and Chippeway tribes. The aggressors were the Mille Lacs Chippeways, who were still smarting under the defeat of 1854. About 150 of them came down Rum river to Anoka. Here they held a war dance on the east bank of Rum river at about the foot of Harrison street. The white boys turned out in large numbers to view the spectacle as if it had been a circus performance, little thinking in what deadly earn- est the Indians were.


The next day the red men went their way, and no more was thought about the matter until it was learned that there had been a battle. Early on Thursday morn- ing, May 27, 1858, the Chippeways appeared opposite the Sioux vilage, not far from the town of Shakopee, on the Minnesota river. A Sioux was sitting on the bank of the stream fishing. Presently a Chippeway was seen skulking in the brush, and creeping-creeping slowly toward the lone fisherman. Suddenly a shot was fired.


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HISTORY. OF ANOKA COUNTY.


the war whoop sounded, there was a moment's struggle, the body of the Sioux tumbled into the river, and a bloody scalp was waved defiantly in the air. The Sioux warriors gathered in haste and made a rush for the ferry boat for the purpose of crossing to avenge their dead comrade. They surrounded the ferryman, and he obeyed their commands in terror. The Chippeways lay in ambush, but feared to fire on the boat for fear of killing the white man. The instant the boat touched the bank the Sioux scattered into the brush and the battle began. About ten o'clock the Chippeways withdrew. Three Chippeways were killed in the fight and one died near Lake Minnetonka. Seven of the wounded arrived at St. Anthony that night, where their wounds were dressed by white physicians, and the next afternoon they were placed on board the steamboat Enterprise for trans- portation to Anoka. Meanwhile those uninjured arrived on foot and held another war dance on the spot where the previous dance had been held. The chief explained the particulars of the battle, and vaunted the prowess of himself and his followers, in his own tongue, and an in- terpreter explained the purport of the speech to the as- sembled crowd. Only a few words of his speech have been remembered.


"Them Sioux," he said, "creeped round just like snakes in the grass."


The next day the Chippeways took up their march for Mille Lacs, accompanied by all the wounded who were able to walk. They procured dinner from M. S. Seelye, and Mrs. Seelye made gruel for one of them who had had the greater part of his tongue shot away.


93


POLITICAL.


POLITICAL.


One of the early acts of the first territorial legislature, which convened in 1849, was the organization of eight counties, viz. : Ramsey, Benton, Washington, Itasca, Wabasha, Wahnata, Mahkahto, and Pembina. Rum river was the dividing line between Ramsey and Benton counties, and hence the territory now embraced in Anoka county was partly in each. In 1856 Sherburne county was detached from Benton, and that portion of territory lying east of Sherburne county and west of Rum river was also detached and became a part of Ramsey county. By an act of the Territorial Assembly passed May 23, 1857, so much of Ramsey county as is embraced within the following described limits, was organized into a separate county, to be called Anoka county :


"Beginning at the southeast corner of section thirty- six, township thirty-one, range twenty-two west ; thence west on the township line between townships thirty and thirty-one, to the middle of the Mississippi river ; thence up said river to the township line between ranges twenty- five and twenty-six ; thence north along the Boundary line between the counties of Ramsey and Sherburne to the south boundary line of the county of Isanti; thence east along the boundary line between the counties of Isanti and Ramsey, to the boundary line between the counties of Chisago and Ramsey; and thence south along the boundary line between the counties of Ramsey, Chisago and Washington, to the place of beginning." The seat of justice was fixed at Anoka.


On the same day an act was passed creating the county of Manomin. This county was identical with the présent town of Fridley.


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HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.


The governor appointed as the first board of com- missioners of Anoka county, E. H. Davis, J. P. Austin and Silas O. Lum. These commissioners met at Anoka June 30, 1857, and appointed the following county offi- cers : Sheriff, James C. Frost; treasurer, James M. McGlauflin; coroner, Joseph C. Varney. At another meeting July 6, 1857, Daniel Robbins was appointed assessor for district number one, Francis Peteler for district number two, and S. L. Guice for district number three. The county contained but three election precincts : St. Francis, Columbus and Anoka. Eight townships were created : Anoka, Watertown, Round Lake, Bethel, Columbus, St. Francis, Oak Grove and Centreville. The name of Watertown was soon after changed to Dover and a little later to Ramsey.


A TILT WITH KING ALCOHOL.


Temperance sentiment was very strong in Minnesota in territorial days. The first territorial legislature (1849) passed a prohibitory liquor law, but this act was nullified by the supreme court on the somewhat extraordinary ground that it had been submitted to the people, and that congress had vested the law-making power in the legislature and not in the voters of the territory. After this decision was promulgated public drinking saloons began to manifest their existence in various parts of the territory. When the sheriff of Nicollet county seized a quantity of liquor, and was arrested and put upon trial for this act, public sentiment showed itself very strongly in his favor. At Faribault two barrels of whiskey were destroyed by citizens in April, 1855. A saloon was wrecked at Winona, and two others destroved at Man- kato during the same year, by residents of those places.


95


A TILT WITH KING ALCOHOL.


The indignation which greeted the establishment of the "Empire Saloon" in Anoka by Daniel D. Dudley in the spring of 1858 can readily be imagined. It was located on west Main street on the lot west of the "Shu- ler building." A public meeting was called to meet in the school house on the 5thi of April to discuss measures for ridding the town of the intruder. Speeches were made by various citizens, some advocating moral suasion, and others advising a resort to force. in case of the failure of milder means. A committee of seven was appointed to wait on the saloon keeper and learn whether he could be induced to close his establishment. This embassy failed to produce any result, and a month later resort was had to heroic measures. A vigilance committee with · faces disguised broke in the door with a heavy timber (or a tamarac pole as some say) on the night of May 6th and seized, gagged and bound Dudley as he lay asleep cn a sofa. They then proceeded to break open casks and bottles, and very soon the liquor merchant's stock in trade had all been spilled in the street.


Dudley swore out warrants for the arrest of James McCann, A. P. Lane, Benjamin Shuler and eight or ten others, charging them with the destruction of his property. His attorneys were J. B. Sanborn of St. Paul and -- Lawrence of Minneapolis. The case came on for trial before R. M. Johnson. justice of the peace. The prisoners had been allowed to go on their own recog- nizance, and great difficulty had been experienced in getting them all together again at one time, causing nu- merous delays and postponements. When the trial finally began A. P. Lane made a vigorous plea against reopen- ing the case, and the proceedings dragged intolerably. Finally Benjamin Shuler got on his feet and made a


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HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.


motion to adjourn, which motion he proceeded to put to a vote of the spectators. The astonished justice rapped for order, but Shuler declared the motion carried, and the crowd, including the prisoners, filed out of the court room. Attorney Lawrence looked stern and Attorney Sanborn was convulsed with laughter, but the proceed- ings had been effectually broken up and do not appear to have been resumed.


Dudley cautiously recommenced business at the old stand and continued to serve his patrons until May II, 1859, when his saloon caught fire and was burned to the ground. John S. McGlauflin's house which stood twelve feet west had the siding all burned off on the exposed side and was only saved by extraordinary efforts on the part of the citizens. The site of the burned saloon remains vacant to this day. No one doubted that the fire had been set purposely. Dudley's wrath was terrible. He is said to have sworn that he would burn the town. Two months later, on the 14th of July, the Methodist church, then nearing completion and awaiting its steeple and some inside furnishings, was totally destroyed by fire. Many members of the Methodist denomination had been active in their opposition to Dudley, and some of his associates were believed to have set fire to the church in retaliation.


But the war was not yet over. Dudley moved into the barn on the rear end of his lot, and began selling whiskey in jugs. Some time later he was arrested on a charge of stealing from Thomas Dailey a hog which had just been butchered, and stayed in jail several months awaiting the next session of the district court. At the trial his attorney, Mr. Sanborn, made the plex that he had already served a sufficient sentence even


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BEGINNING OF THE CIVIL WAR.


though he should be found guilty, and he was accordingly discharged.


Notwithstanding these interruptions Dudley resumed operations again. Then his uncle died, and Dudley put in a claim against the estate in the shape of a note osten- sibly signed by the deceased. Instead of having his claim allowed, Dudley was placed under arrest, charged with forging the note. With public opinion at white heat. the chances were all against the prisoner. What the character of the evidence was does not fully appear, but he was bundled off to state's prison without much delay. After his release he visited the town, apparently with the intention of again taking up his residence therein ; but friends pointed out to him the hostile reception he would certainly receive, and recommended other fields of labor. He finally took their advice and gave up the contest.


For a considerable time thereafter any traffic in in- toxicants which may have gone on was conducted with a good deal of secrecy, and it was a number of years before any one had the temerity to open a public saloon in Anoka.


BEGINNING OF THE CIVIL WAR.


Immediately after his inauguration President Lincoln called a conference of the governors of loyal states to consult upon the measures to be taken for the preserva- tion of the Union, and when the news of the firing upon Fort Sumter was received Governor Ramsey was in Washington. The president decided to issue a call for 75,000 troops. Gov. Ramsey immediately offered a reg- iment of Minnesota men, which was promptly accepted, and he telegraphed to Lieutenant Governor Ignatius


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HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.


Donnelley and also to Ex-Governor Willis A. Gorman the substance of his offer. Gorman, who was a Mexican War veteran, was in Anoka attending the session of the district court, which was being held in the "Shuler build- ing." When the telegram reached St. Anthony it was placed in the hands of a messenger who carried it on horseback with all speed to Anoka. A recess of the court was taken, Gorman addressed the assembled peo- ple, and called for volunteers. Aaron Greenwald was the first to record his name, and in all probability he was the first man in America to volunteer for the defense of the Union under the president's call. James W. Groat and five others were enrolled at the same time. Josias R. King and others signed a similar paper agreeing to enlist at a meeting in St. Paul on the evening of the same day.


Marcus Q. Butterfield, an Anoka attorney, made an attempt to organize the volunters at Anoka and vicinity into a company. He secured the services of Francis Peteler, a Mexican War veteran then living at Round lake, as drill master, and the men were drilled in the St. Lawrence Hotel. The company was not accepted, but Aaron Greenwald, James W. Groat, Thomas D. Hen- derson, Alonzo C. Hayden, William E. Cundy, Matthew F. Taylor, Charles Leathers, James Mahoney and others joined other companies of the First Regiment.


Soon after the departure of the First Regiment Mr. Peteler obtained permission from the Secretary of War to organize a company of sharpshooters from among the Minnesota frontiersmen. The test of membership was five shots off-hand at 125 yards. Captain Peteler chose as his first lieutenant Benedict Hippler, of Dayton, who had served several years in the German army. The


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BEGINNING OF THE CIVIL WAR.


men were drawn from all over the state. Owen Evans from the Quaker settlement in Bethel went into the com- pany as a corporal and became its captain before the close of the war. James A. Kerr, and his two brothers, Wil- liam S. and John, Henry C. McGaffey, David P. Craig and Joseph Pierce were also members.


LIEUTENANT COLONEL FRANCIS PETELER.


This company was expected to form Company F of the First U. S. Sharpshooters, but having reached Wash- ington Oct. 10, 1861, the commanding officers were so greatly pleased with them that they were mustered in as Company A of a Second Regiment, of which Cap- tain Peteler became Lieutenant Colonel.


L.of C.


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HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.


In August, 1862, came the news of a terrible mas- sacre by Sioux Indians in the frontier counties of Min- nesota. August 19 an attack was made on New Ulm, but the Indians were beaten back. The same night Judge Flandrau arrived in the town with over a hundred armed volunteers, and vigorous preparations were made for the defence of the place.


On the 20th, 21st and 22d of August furious attacks were made on Fort Ridgeley, but the Indians were re- pulsed. By this time Little Crow, who was in command of the hostile Sioux, had augmented his force to about one thousand warriors, and on the 23d made a second attack on New Ulm, but was again repulsed.


Meanwhile the whole population of southwestern Minnesota had been murdered or had fled to the larger settlements eastward. Bands of Sioux too small or lack- ing the desire to kill, penetrated as far east as Wright and Hennepin counties, helping themselves to goods and provisions abandoned by panic stricken settlers.


Little Crow had dispatched embassies to the Sioux bands of the far west and even to his old time enemies, the Mille Lacs Chippeways, with the word that now or never was the time to strike for the recovery of their lost hunting grounds. What the response of the Chip- peways might have been, had New Ulm fallen, no man can say. At all events the younger Chippeways were excited and quarrelsome, and it was from this direction that Anoka county was principally exposed to attack.


Settlers in St. Francis, Oak Grove and Bethel hastily removed their families to Anoka and Minneapolis. Im- agination hid a hostile savage behind every tree and thicket, and many ludicrous spectacles were presented in the precipitate flight. One settlement in Grow was


IOI


THE EIGHTH REGIMENT.


forgotten, and its people only heard of the outbreak after the greater part of the county had been depopulated. The news reached them while a hunting party of Chip- peways were in the vicinity, and they beat a hasty retreat to Anoka. At Dayton the people crowded upon a flat boat in such numbers that it could not be pushed off, which was probably a fortunate circumstance, as it would doubtless have sunk, if it had ever reached deep water with such a load.


After the first fright was over the people began to return to their homes, but in most communities they assembled nightly in the strongest log house, and posted guards while they slept.


THE EIGHTH REGIMENT.


In the fall of 1862, John S. Cady, a man who had greatly endeared himself to the people of Anoka county, began to organize a company of volunteers in response to a fresh call from the government. This company was destined to become Company A of the Eighth Regiment. Major Hippler, of Colonel Peteler's Sharpshooters, was secured as drill-master, and rapid progress was made in putting the company in condition for service. Before the regiment had been mustercd in, its several companies were hastily sent to the frontier to protect the settlers against the Sioux, and were occupied in patrolling the western counties until the spring of 1864. In this service the captain of Company A lost his life.


At the time of his death Captain Cady was accom - panied by Edward S. Clinch and Elias W. Pratt. The Indians had stolen some horses at Silver Creek in Wright county, and a detachment of Company A had followed their trail to Kandivohi lake. Herc several of them were overtaken by Captain Cady and his two companions. In an effort to escape, one of them galloped through an


IO2


HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.


exposed spot clinging to the further side of his horse. As he passed, the Sioux fired under the horse's neck, killing Captain Cady instantly. A return fire hit the horse in the jaw and made him unmanageable, but the Indian escaped by jumping into the brush. Clinch and


CAPTAIN JOHN S. CADY. Co. A, Eighth Minn. Regiment.


Photo. by Wm. H. Cook.


Pratt brought the body of their dead captain back to Anoka.


In May, 1864, the Eighth Regiment was mounted for the purpose of taking part in an expedition against


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THE EIGHTH REGIMENT.


the Sioux. The regiment marched to the Missouri river, where it joined General Sully's command. A severe battle took place at Killdeer Mountain, and then the Indians were pursued through the Bad Lands and into Montana and Wyoming, and thoroughly whipped and demoralized. In October the regiment was ordered south, and saw a great deal of severe service before the close of the war.




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