USA > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Dayton > History of Anoka County and the towns of Champlin and Dayton in Hennepin County, Minnesota > Part 7
USA > Minnesota > Anoka County > History of Anoka County and the towns of Champlin and Dayton in Hennepin County, Minnesota > Part 7
USA > Minnesota > Hennepin County > Champlin > History of Anoka County and the towns of Champlin and Dayton in Hennepin County, Minnesota > Part 7
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Quoka augustofar
To the Rusties of School Distinct To. One Quake County.
as Brammer 1 200 School district
to take effect medialets - they Ready.
CAPTAIN CADY'S RESIGNATION.
Capt. Cady resigned the office of school district treasurer upon taking command of his company. This document in Capt. Cady's hand writ- ing was discovered in a rubbish heap in 1904. The original is now in the possession of J. S. Cady Post, G. A. R. ( Reduced to about half size.)
Following is a roster of Company A :
Captain. John S. Cady, killed by Indians June 11, 1863. promoted sergeant.
Marcus Q.
Butterfield, promoted Captain. Second Lieutenant, Nathaniel Tibbetts, promoted First Lieu- tenant.
First Sergeant, Martin V. Bean. promoted Second Lieutenant.
Abbott, Hadley T., wagoner.
Atckison. Michael.
Austin, Julius D.
Ballard, Amos B., transferred to Third Minnesota Battery May 1, 1863.
Beck. William B., corporal.
Bird, Frederick T.
Bird, Jeremiah.
Brown, Charles A., corporal.
Brown. Nathan R., corporal. Brown. Albert.
Brockway Isaac D.
Catos. Wm. C.
Cheetham. Thomas J.
Clark. Josiah F., musician; pro- moted chief musician and transferred to Non-Com. Staff.
Clinch, Edward S .. corporal; First Lieutenant,
Clark, George A., promoted cor- poral.
Clough, Gilbert, detailed as or- derly. Cook, Joseph H. Cooper, John.
Cooper, William, wounded in
battle of Cedars.
Curial Nathan W., sergeant.
Damon. Albert B.
Donnelly, Hugh.
Downs, Joseph.
Eastland, Olaf.
Edwards, Wililam, sergeant; killed by Indians in Meeker county. Sept. 11. 1863.
Fogg. Frederick K .. promoted hospital steward.
Fuller. Eben E., wounded at Cedars. Gallagher, Patrick.
Gaslin. John W.
Gay, Walter D.
Gilligan. John.
Greer. George W.
Hancock, Charies 11.
104
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
Hathorn, Isaac N.
Mason, Timothy D., corporal.
Malverhill, John.
McCormick, Daniel W.
Heath, Alden B.
Henderson, George L.
Hollar, John A.
Hunter, John.
Ives, William P., sergeant; pro- moted first sergeant.
James, Alfonso.
Johnson, Christian.
Jones, James T.
Moses, Charles A.
Keyes, Hartwell C.
Mountain Benjamin.
Keene, Alvin H., musician.
Murphy, James F., corporal.
Lee, Thomas.
Nutter, Jarvis.
Leyerlv. Robert U.
Parker, Henry L.
Lyman, Thomas.
Payne, John.
Mansur, Henry.
Pemberton, Henry A.
-
COMPANY A, EIGHTH MINNESOTA REGIMENT. In the public square, Anoka, 1862. The old flour mill in the background. Photo. by Wm. H. Cook.
Pitman. Ira P. Pratt, Elias W., promoted ser- geant.
Robbins. Andrew B.
Rogers, David.
Scully, Michael.
Secoy, George J.
Seelye, William E.
Sevey, Warren T.
Shea, Charles.
Small, George M.
Smith, Freeman A.
Smith. George. Smun, John C.
Smith, Matthias, promoted cor- poral. Snider. Russell.
Snow, George T.
Snow, Orin. promoted corporal.
Starkey. John M.
Stiles. Clark T.
Strong, John H., corporal.
Taplin. Amos U., promoted cor- poral. Tibbetts, Joshua.
Tibbetts, James W.
Tilaen, Cassius M.
Twitchell, Louisville, promoted hospital steward.
Walker, Thomas S.
Weaver. George D.
Webb, Thomas E.
Wiley Henry H., promoted cor- poral.
McDonell, John, transferred to Third Minn. Battery May 1,
1863.
Mclaughlin, Charles E.
McClellan, Acton.
Mckenzie, Benjamin.
Merrill, Abraham A., sergeant.
Morton, Thurman W.
Heath, Albert H., corporal; pro- moted sergeant.
CHAPTER IX.
RETURNING PROSPERITY.
Recovery from the panic of 1857 was more rapid than from any similar convulsion since the settlement of the West. Energies which had long been wasted in land speculation were quickly turned into productive channels. Crops in Minnesota were generally poor in 1858, but in Anoka county they were above the average. and after the harvest of 1859, the economic pinch had largely passed.
According to the census returns, Anoka county in 1859 produced 34,734 bushels of potatoes, 40,411 bushels of corn, 8,762 bushels of wheat, 9,917 bushels of oats, and 315 bushels of rye. This bountiful crop placed the people generally in a fairly prosperous condition once more. The secession of southern states brought an- other financial flurry in the fall of 1860 and there were a number of business failures in the west, but the trouble was of short duration and hardly reached the mass of the people. Coin disappeared a second time with the advent of the greenbacks in 1861, but this occasioned no economic disturbance save a rapid rise in the cost of commodities.
On the night of May 31, 1863, a serious fire occurred at Anoka. The fire started in the shoe store of Colbath Brothers from the upsetting of a lamp. George C. Col- bath and Thomas G. Henderson, who were in the store at the time were so badly burned that Colbath died soon after, and Henderson carried the marks of the conflagra- tion to the day of his death. Adjoining buildings were
106
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
saved, but Colbath's store and contents were destroyed. This disaster was made the more serious by the fact that Colbath was county treasurer at the time, and most of the books and papers of his office were destroyed. The county commissioners appointed H. L. Ticknor as his successor, and so well did the latter succeed in adjusting
GEORGE W PUTNAM.
the accounts that no complaint was ever made of his settlement of the matter. The office of the Anoka Re- publican was badly damaged and the paper came to an end. The forms and most of the type were saved how- ever. The bed of the old press still does duty in the Union office as an imposing stone.
107
FARMING IN ANOKA COUNTY.
About 1857 George W. Putnam started a store near the present site of the Lincoln mill. He afterward en- gaged in the hardware business, and for many years was county auditor.
Following is a war-time market report, published in the Anoka Star, Jan. 28, 1865 :
Flour, per barrel. $8.00 to $8.75: wheat. per bushel, $1.00 to $1.25; corn. $1.00 to $1.10; oats, 75 cents; potatoes, 50 cents; beans, $2.75 to $3.00; hay, per ton. $8.00 to $10.00; wood. per cord. $3.00 to $5.00; salt, per barrel. $7.00; eggs, per dozen, 30 cents; butter, per pound, 25 to 30 cents; tea, per pound. $1.50 to $2.00; vinegar. per gallon, 50 to 80 cents; hams. per pound, 15 to 20 cents.
FARMING IN ANOKA COUNTY.
The banner crops of 1859 consisted largely of pota- toes and corn, but the high price of wool tempted many into sheep raising the next year, and there was a ten- dency to return to the raising of wheat, which had been the main crop before the panic. The census enumerators were able to find only fifty sheep in the county in 1860. In 1870 the number had risen to 1745. In 1866 the Col- orado beetle, better known as the potato bug, made its appearance for the first time, and the following year the potato crop was badly damaged by the pests. Children were sent out to knock them off the vines with sticks, and they were gathered in pails into which hot water was poured. In 1867 a few venturesome people tried poisoning the bugs with Paris green, but others shook their heads over this treatment, and feared the potatoes would also be poisoned and rendered unfit for food. The idea got abroad that the bugs themselves were also poi- sonous. The bugs never disappeared like the grasshop- pers, and the problem of fighting the pests was renewed year by year. By 1869 the potato crop of the county had fallen to less than half the amount of ten years previous, while the wheat crop had tripled in quantity. Gradually
.
108
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
improved methods of applying Paris green came into use, and by 1879 the potato crop had reached 68,000 bushels, which nevertheless was not much of a showing when compared with 121,000 bushels of corn and 94,000 bush- els of wheat raised the same year.
In 1882 there came to Minnesota from Maine, a
REUEL I .. HALL.
young man whose advent was a matter of great moment to the people of this and other counties of the Northwest. He went to work at lumbering on the Medway river in the northern part of the state, and while there became acquainted with a man of means and unfolded to him a plan which had long been forming in his mind. The
109
FARMING IN ANOKA COUNTY.
young man was Reuel L. Hall, and his monied friend was C. F. Leland. Having interested Mr. Leland in the matter. Mr. Hall returned to Maine, where he had already acquired a knowledge of the method whereby starch could be extracted from potatoes. With consid- erable difficulty he obtained new facts and figures per- taining to the business, and at that time formed the plans of the factory which he afterward built in Anoka on the bank of Rum river.
When returning from Maine to Minnesota, he stopped in Boston to talk over with the largest starch dealer in the United States, the advisability of engaging in such an enterprise in Minnesota. This firm handled nine- tenths of all the foreign and domestic starch used in this country. Much to his surprise, these Boston men threw cold water on his project, and among other things, said that there was all the potato starch being manufactured that could be sold, and further stated that western po- tatoes did not contain sufficient quantities of starch to warrant starting such a business. But Mr. Hall knew the method of testing potatoes for starch, and his tests convinced him that the starch was there, and that he could get it out.
Shortly after his return to Minnesota, the firm of Leland & Hall built at Anoka, in the summer of 1886, the largest potato starch factory in the United States, and the first in the West, at a cost of $25,000. Then Mr. Hall's troubles began. With a large plant on his hands and in a community not accustomed to raising potatoes in large quantities, the result was that the fac- tory lay practically idle the first two years, and not until the third year did it have anything like a decent run. This crop, while not a large one, convinced those who planted
/
IIO
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
that the potato crop, even at factory prices, paid much better than any other crop raised. From that time on, Mr. Hall had no trouble in securing acreage. When this fact became fully demonstrated, the value of land doubled and in some instances trebled in price. The large pro- duction of potatoes through this section, brought in ship- pers from all over the country, thereby giving the farmers two chances for marketing their fields of potatoes.
Two years later, Mr. Hall built a factory at Monti- cello, and within a year or two, one at North Branch and one at Harris, Minnesota. All of these factories proved successful and of great benefit to the farmers-so much so that people from other localities investigated and built factories. There are now over twenty factories in the West, as a direct result of Mr. Hall's enterprise ; consequently potato raising has become a large business in the West and is increasing every year.
The potato crop of Anoka county has jumped from 68,000 bushels in 1879 to 421,000 in 1889 and to 717,000 in 1899. It was probably close to the million mark in 1904.
Anoka county potatoes have become famous for their excellent eating qualities, and have been shipped to ev- ery state in the Union, meeting with a ready sale every- where.
RECLAIMING MARSH LAND.
About 1884 the first public ditch was constructed in Anoka county. The work was done under a recent act of the legislature, permitting the cost to be assessed against the benefitted property. O'Connell Twitchell of Centreville, who had lately been a member of the board of county commissioners, was its principal champion, and finally succeeded in persuading the board to order
III
RECLAIMING MARSH LAND.
the ditch. It was in the western part of Centreville, and was known as the Penouc ditch.
There was a large tract of low, marshy land running through the eastern part of the county, too wet to raise hay to any extent and practically worthless. Soon after the completion of the Penouc ditch Montgomery & Mor-
JAMES T. ELWELL ..
ley bought a considerable amount of this land and be- sought the commissioners to order more ditches. A few ditches were ordered, and some land reclaimed. But it was not until James T. Elwell became interested in the matter that any great amount of progress was made. Mr. Elwell had had some previous experience with drain-
II2
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
ing wet land. He had some years before platted several additions to Minneapolis upon land which had been waste land until he put in some miles of box drains and drain tile.
About 1886 Mr. Elwell purchased 8500 acres of Montgomery & Morley's land in eastern Ham Lake. He then purchased from the Great Northern and St. Paul & Duluth railroad companies and the Jay Cooke estate all the lands which they owned in the towns of Linwood, Bethel, Columbus and Ham Lake. He next purchased from Parker & Johnson about 6000 acres in Blaine, and various other pieces which connected these various tracts. He succeeded in getting the intervening lands to such an extent that his properties were all connected. In all he acquired 52,700 acres. About 200 miles of ditch were then constructed.
At his own expense Mr. Elwell built a road in an air line eight miles long, connecting his Oak Leaf stock farm in Ham Lake with his Golden Lake stock farm in Blaine. It was made with a ditch on each side and is still known as the Elwell Grade. Part of the work was done in the winter so that it could be more easily han- dled. It was all let by contract to the lowest bidder, and cost about $1000 a mile. It served to demonstrate the feasibility of an air line road through a country full of marshes.
Not only. was Mr. Elwell's land reclaimed from the bog, but ditches multiplied rapidly, and vast tracts of adjoining lands, and wet lands throughout the county were drained and made productive. A large part of the towns of Linwood, Columbus, Ham Lake, Bethel and Blaine have been benefitted in this manner.
Mr. Elwell placed extensive buildings on his two great stock farms and built miles of barbed wire fence.
113
EDUCATION.
Most of the land has been disposed of, but Mr. Elwell still retains between 2,000 and 3.000 acres. The total amount invested by him was about $625,000.
Many air line roads have been constructed in Anoka county since the Elwell grade was made.
EDUCATION.
The first school in Anoka county was a private school taught by Miss Julia Woodman (Mrs. Hamm) during the winter of 1853-4. It was kept in the "old" Company Boarding House, which stood on Van Buren street just east of Second avenue. This building was afterward moved out on Main street and was for years in use as a barn in the rear of Charles Church's residence. It should not be confused with the "new" Company Boarding House, which was built somewhat later and stood on the present site of the Anoka National Bank.
The next winter ( 1854-5) there was no school in the village, and the older pupils repaired to Nathan Shumway's house in the town of Ramsey, where Miss Sarah C. Bowen (Mrs. Moses Brown, Minneapolis), kept a private school. During the summer of 1855 a school was kept by Sarah Lufkin in a small building on the southwest corner of Van Buren street and Third avenue. This building was afterward used as a dwelling.
In the fall a larger and more substantial building was erected jast south of the present library building and about opposite the front door of the present court house. This building was ready for occupancy early in Decem- ber, 1855, and became known later as the Third Avenue School House. The first teacher was George W. Smiley. There were forty-five or fifty pupils, more than half of whom are still living within the state. How the flame
II4
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
of interest awakes when that school is mentioned to one of its old-time attendants! These were some of them: Hannah Robbins, Andrew B. Robbins (Robbinsdale, Hennepin Co.), John Robbins, Orin Smith, William Smith, Emily Smith (Mrs. Alfred Whitten), Ada J. Smith (Mrs. George Fairbanks), Matthew F. Taylor, Loretta Smith (Mrs. Chase, Princeton, Minn. ), Smith (Mrs. Frank Brown), Freeman A. Smith, Lucia Fuller (Mrs. T. F. Pratt), Sophronia M. Taylor (Mrs. M. S. Hutchins), Alexia A. Taylor, Sabin Rogers, Alice Ford (Mrs. Angus McLeod), - Ford (Mrs. Dem- arest). Edwin Soper, John Soper, Alonzo Hayden (killed in the terrible charge of the First Minnesota at Gettys- burg), Melissa Hayden (Mrs. Prentiss Hills, Spokane, Wash.), Emily Thorndyke (Mrs. S. O. Lum, Minneapo- lis), Charles Thorndyke, Irenas Atkinson, Columbus Lamb, George Tourtelotte, Daniel King, Helen Ripley (Mrs. George Hills), - Cundy (Mrs. Graham), - Cundy, Frank Randolph, - Randolph (daughter of WV. G. Randolph), Alice Frost (Mrs. William E. Cun- dy), Howard Lufkin and his sister Lufkin, Char- lotte Rogers, Kate Rogers, Horatio Larned, Lois Clarin- da Twitchell, John Mayall, Sarah Mayall.
The following summer (1856) the school was taught by Miss Lizzie Putnam.
The first county superintendent of schools appears to have been William B. Greene, who died Dec. 13, 1865, while in office, and the county commissioners appointed Rev. Moses Heath, a Baptist clergyman, as his successor. The next superintendent was Rev. A. K. Packard, who was appointed about 1867 by the county commissioners. He was succeeded some two years later by Rev. Moses
115
EDUCATION.
Goodrich. His successor was Rev. J. B. Tuttle, who served one term, and then Mr. Goodrich again became superintendent, and served continuously until his death Dec. 18, 1880. His son George D. Goodrich succeeded him and served until 1887. Since that time county su- perintendents of schools have served as follows: S. C. Page, 1887 to 1889: A. B. Clinch, 1889 to 1893 : George
REV. MOSES GOODRICII.
D. Goodrich. 1893 to 1897: L. P. Storms, 1897 to 1899; George D. Goodrich since 1899. There are now sixty . eight school districts in the county, employing about ninety teachers.
The winter of 1856-7 the teacher of the school at Anoka was a Mr. Payne, a retired Presbyterian ininister. A later teacher was Sewell A. Waterhouse. After the organization of Anoka county in the summer of 1857 the
II6
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
village of Anoka west of Rum river was placed in an- other district and a school house built not far from the Mississippi river, which became known as the "Robbins School." In 1866 this building was purchased by John S. McGlauflin and converted into a dwelling. It is still standing on west Main street. About 1858 Rev. Lyman Palmer started a private school in some rooms of the St. Lawrence Hotel, and a lady whose name is thought to have been Tiffany started a school about 1860. Many of her pupils enlisted when the Civil War broke out. Then came Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Alling, who kept a school for girls in the Shuler Building from 1862 to 1864 and perhaps later. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Greene kept a pri- vate school later-also in the Shuler Building. In the summer of 1866 Miss Loretta Smith (Mrs. Chase ) taught in the Robbins school.
In 1866 the two districts at Anoka were united and joined in the construction of a four-room school house, which was known in after years as the Irving school. This building was the only school house in the village for six years, and was in continuous use until 1904, when it was moved away to make room for the new high schcol building. The old Third Avenue School House was sold to H. L. Ticknor, who moved it to the back of his store, where it was finally destroyed by fire.
R. B. Abbott was the first principal of the Irving school, and Miss Sophonia Taylor ( Mrs. M. A Hutch- ins) was in charge of the primary room. Miss Taylor was the first normal school graduate in the county, hav- ing graduated from the Winona normal school.
The next year ( 1867-8) all four rooms were in use for the first time. Mr. Abbott was retained as principal. the grammar department was in charge of Miss Lucia
EDUCATION.
Fuller, the intermediate department was taught by Miss Loretta Smith and the primary department by Miss So- phronia Taylor.
The next principal was Mr. Gilson and his assistants were Miss Jennie Powell, Miss Taylor and Miss Smith. Next came Robert D. Carvill as principal, with Miss Mary Powell, Miss Romans, Miss Alice Jordan and
IRVING SCHOOL, ANOKA.
Built in 1866. Removed in 1904. Photo. by Ralph Bruns. Miss Brown. as assistants at different times. Succeed- ing principals and superintendents were James H. Gates. R. D. Carvill again, D. W. Sprague (afterward account- ant at the University of Minnesota ), James II. Gates, J. H. Cummings, Mr. King. M. A. Stone. Z. M. Vaughn. J. HI. Torrens, and the present superintendent. Frederick I Sperry.
118
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
Josiah F. Clark was the first teacher of vocal music north of St. Anthony. He taught the first singing school at Anoka in the winter of 1856-7.
CRIME.
The first person known to have been killed by a white man in Anoka county was the Chippeway Indian struck
JOSIAH F. CLARK.
on the head with a paddle by Antoine Robert in 1850. This homicide was unintentional.
A man was shot at Columbus on election day about 1858, but recovered.
In January, 1860, Michael Durgin, who kept a saloon at Pleasure creek, was killed by two hunters named
119
CRIME.
Tripp and Dumphy, who accused him of stealing their furs. Both went to the penitentiary for a few years.
Dec. 26, 1874, Louis Bleau was stabbed and killed at a dance in the town of Centreville. His assailant served several years at Stillwater.
In June, 1875, P. M. Daly of Burns was shot and killed in his field by a neighbor, who was sentenced to the penitentiary for life.
On Sunday evening, May 27, 1900, a terrible trag- edy occurred at the home of William Wise in the town of Grow. While members of the family were sitting around a table they were repeatedly fired upon through a front window with a Winchester rifle and a shot gun loaded with buck shot. Willie Wise, aged seven, was instantly killed. Eliza Wise, the mother, was shot sev- eral times through the body and died two days later. William Wise, the father, was pierced by probably thirty buck shot, but survived in a crippled condition, and has steadily improved during the past four years. Joseph Wise, aged eleven, was shot through the right lung and lost two fingers, but recovered. Two daughters, Eliza, aged thirteen, and Martha, aged fifteen, were in another room, and were uninjured.
The authorities made strenuous efforts to fix the re- sponsibility for the murder. After following up various clues, two young men who had been keeping company with the girls were arrested and charged with the crime. At the trial Eliza and Martha Wise testified that they had agreed with the two young men that their parents should be killed so that they might inherit the farm and a sum of money in the bank, after which they were to marry the two young men. The jury found the defendants not guilty.
I20
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
In November, 1904, a saloon at Columbia Heights was the scene of a hold-up, in which a nine-year-old boy named Freddie King was killed by the robbers.
CHAPTER X.
CITY OF ANOKA.
Two abortive attempts were made to incorporate the City of Anoka. The first act authorizing incorporation was passed by the legislature in 1858, but the charter was rejected by popular vote. A charter authorized by act of March 5, 1869, met with a like fate. and it was not until March 2, 1878, that the city was set off from the township of the same name.
The first city election was held March 12, 1878. and resulted as follows: Mayor, George W. Church ; clerk, John S. McLeod; treasurer, H. E. Lepper; Justices of the peace. W. W. Fitch and E. S. Teller ; allermer. L. G. Browning, J. H. Pierce, D. H. Lane, D. C. Dunham, A. Davis, H. N. Seelye ; constables, Norman MeLcan and George Geddes.
POSTOFFICE.
The first postoffice in Anoka county was established at Itaska in May, 1852. But Itaska dwindled after the bill to move the capital failed, while Anoka grew. It was inconvenient to get mail at Itaska. During the fall of 1853 Mr. Larned used to get the mail at St. Anthony and bring it up in his hat. Some time that winter ( 1853- 4) a postoffice was established at Anoka and George W. Branch was named as postmaster. His successors to the present time have been: R. M. Johnson. E. H. Davis, J. C. Frost, S. M. Varney, George Colbath, G. A. Jenks, M. Q. Butterfield, R. C. Mitchell, S. P. Star- rett, Mrs. Johnson, R. M. Taylor .. J. A. Foote, James
I22
HISTORY OF ANOKA COUNTY.
C. Frost, J. A. Foote, T. M. Ryan, Mrs. T. M. Ryan, I. A. Caswell.
FIRE DEPARTMENT.
A volunteer fire company was formed in 1857, and a few years later was incorporated under the name of "Protection Hook and Ladder Company No. I." A hook
OSCAR L. CUTTER.
and ladder truck was built by members of the company. The year 1877 was a disastrous year for conflagrations, and immediately after the incorporation of the city in the spring of 1878, the fire department was reorganized, and steps were taken looking toward the purchase of more modern apparatus. A steam fire engine was bought
123
CITY OF ANOK.A.
and arrived Oct. 3, 1878. After the big fire of 1884 a chemical engine was added. The first officers of the city fire department were: Chief, O. L. Cutter; first assistant, R. M. Lowell; second assistant, L. H. Bruns.
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