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Morton County
Region 3
    1 Mrs. Nancy Hendrickson, Mandan
    2 Miss Palma Friestad, Mandan
    3 Mr. Nels Porsberg, Mandan
    4 Mrs. Mary Schafer, Bismarck
    5 Mrs. Julia Massey, Mandan
    6 Mrs. John Stading, Bismarck
    7 Mrs. Jennie Beers, Bismarck
    8 Mr. and Mrs. Louis Tokach, St. Anthony
    9 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Haider, St. Anthony
    10 Mr. Ernest Keidel, Mandan
    11 Mrs. Alice Conitz, New Salem
    12 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Friese, New Salem
    13 Mr. and Mrs. Nels Pederson, Brien
    14 Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Barstad, Almont
    15 Mr. Pete Thorson, Almont
    16 Mr. August Ketterling, Hebron
    17 Mr. H.J. Bahr, Glen Ullin
    18 Mr. Fritz Leutz, Hebron
    19 Mrs. Edith Skjolvich, Almont
    20 Mr. Art Olin, New Salem
    21 Mr. and Mrs. Ulrich Buchli, Hebron
    22 Mr. Kurt Krauth, Hebron
    23 Mr. Lyle Dawson, Flasher
    24 Mr. Matt Schmidt, Flasher
    25 Mr. Carl Metzger, Bismarck
    26 Mr. and Mrs. George Heidt, Mandan
    27 Pauline Meher Diede, Hebron
    28 Charles J. Cadoo, Mandan
    29 Anne Bucklin, Mandan
    30 Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Carlson, Mandan
    31 Isadore and Margaret Smith, Lake Metigoshe
    32 Charles Grantier, Mandan
    33 Mrs. Agnes Schmidt, Mandan
    34 Mrs. Agnes Aronson, Rural Mandan
Portions of the following interviews apply to Morton  County:
    Bert Gwyther, #10, Sioux County
    Mrs. Rae Matthes, #17, Ransom County
    Hans Madsen, #5, Richland County
    Esther Rosenau, #13, Burleigh County
    Dr. P. W. Friese, #15, Burleigh County
    Joe Robidou, #21, Burleigh County
    C. L. Robertson, #7, Stutsman County
Tape #1
    Mrs. Nancy Hendrickson
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Family history
    078 – Her parent’s homestead
    093 – Homesteaders in the Mandan area
    130 – Her parent’s homestead; Family history
    141 – Negro homesteaders in the area
    173 – Reading material in their farm home in the early  1900’s
    197 – Negro homesteaders; Family life
    221 – Sources of fuel
    239 – Gardening
    252 – Wildlife in the area in 1900
    283 – Fishing in the Heart River; Floods
    308 – Birds in the area in 1900
    344 – Her homestead and the tree nursery she started
    390 – Death and burial of a homesteader’s baby; Burial of  people before cemeteries existed
    460 – A traveling pastor who visited homesteaders; Early  churches
    490 – Preserving food
    555 – Slaughtering and dressing pigeons and poultry
    604 – Bartering at grocery stores during the early 1900’s
    632 – Early transportation methods – horses, motorcycles,  bicycles
    727 – Her land holdings
    764 – Rural schools
    838 – Sowing and threshing grain by hand
    879 – Raising poultry; Planting corn and potatoes
    938 – SIDE TWO
    955 – Keeping milk cows in Mandan
    990 – Rattlesnakes
    008 – Social life and recreation
    025 – Relations with Indians; Frank Fisk
    123 – Her hobby of photography in the early 1900’s
    174 – Supporting herself and her mother; Family history
    209 – Photographing animals
    319 – Making a living during the 1930’s; Gardening
    345 – Sewing and making clothes
    400 – Her father’s carpentry work and the homestead
    428 – Early Mandan
    469 – First telephone system in the area
    509 – Doctors and early medical care
    550 – The Medora Hotel
    587 – Neighborliness of people, formerly and presently
    619 – Family life in the early 1900’s
    703 – Comments on strip-mining coal
    717 – Gathering buffalo bones
    816 – Buffalo in Roosevelt National Park, 1910-1920
    861 – Her marriage
    880 – End of interview
    Comment:  This is  an informative interview throughout.   Mrs. Hendrickson’s most vivid recollections are of her photographic  work, wildlife, and homestead life.
Tape #2 Miss Palma Friestad
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Family history
    090 – The size and use of her parent’s homestead land
    110 – Sources of water on the homestead; Buffalo trails
    146 – Family history
    154 – Her schooling
    164 – Wildlife during the early 1900’s
    180 – Other homesteaders in the area
    194 – Her education; Teaching and working for the Mandan  Pioneer
    221 – Nationalities in early Mandan; Reasons for some of  the immigrants coming to North Dakota; Account of an English homesteader and  his wife from India
    293 – The “grit” of homesteaders
    343 – Harmon, ND (former town north of Mandan)
    375 – Frederick Gerard, first homesteader in Mandan
    414 – Account of a Mr. Henry, a trapper near Ft. Lincoln
    435 – Anecdote about Pierre Verendrye
    476 – Early Mandan businessmen
    518 – Stories about the first white children born in  Mandan and Morton County
    555 – Relations between Indians and homesteaders
    584 – First M.D. in Mandan and early businesses
    619 – The Inter-Ocean Hotel in Mandan; Other early  buildings
    640 – Construction of the NPRR; Chinese workers
    689 – First wheat shipped out of Mandan
    710 – Construction of railroad branch line
    715 – Fort McKeen; Sitting Bull’s visits to Mandan and  his death and burial
    785 – Organization of Morton County and its temporary  annexation to Burleigh County
    855 – Early Mandan; Fight over the name of the village;  Trial of the Marquis de Mores; First County Courthouse in Mandan 
    954 – SIDE TWO
    961 – Early businessmen in Mandan; The Mandan town herd  of milk cows
    112 – The Kent murder in early Mandan
    144 – Telegraph and telephone service in Mandan; The  city’s population at various periods and its early history – businesses, civic  clubs, and important events
    288 – Account of a woman who died in a blizzard
    344 – Her father’s support and later opposition to Bill  Langer
    395 – Her father’s farming methods
    427 – Threshing
    436 – Social life and recreation
    473 – Harmon, ND
    483 – The average size farm in 1910
    515 – Farming during the 1930’s; Gardening and preserving  food
    552 – Her mother’s sale of farm produce in Mandan; The  Mandan flour mill
    634 – Anecdotes about her Norwegian mother
    674 – Her opinion of coal development
    735 – End of interview
    Comment:  Miss  Friestad read much of this information from old newspapers
Tape #3 Mr. Nels Porsberg (Oliver County)
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Family history
    032 – Farming in the 1930’s
    047 – Family history; His parents homestead near Center
    069 – His schooling
    091 – Grasshoppers and drought in the 1930’s
    101 – Farming and crop yields from 1915 to 1930
    119 – His parent’s homestead; Farming with horses; Early  farm machinery
    137 – Threshing time
    220 – Neighborliness and cooperation of people, formerly  and presently
    244 – Towns where they sold grain; Hauling grain with horses
    310 – Early gas tractors
    336 – Organizing the Nonpartisan League; His admiration  for Langer
    408 – The Farm Holiday Association; Program of the NPL
    445 – His opinion of North Dakota politics in general
    472 – Farmers’ opinions of the grain trade in the early  1900’s
    502 – Problems of organizing farmers; The Farmers Union
    568 – Farmers’ discontent over freight rates and grain  speculators
    619 – Sources of farm income during the 1930’s
    675 – His wife’s family history
    724 – SIDE TWO
    736 – Raising a family during the 1930’s; Social life and  baseball games
    804 – Account of an abandoned town in Oliver County
    822 – Early motorcycles and automobiles
    845 – 32 volt wind chargers; Early telephone system in  Center, ND
    886 – Family history
    896 – Shopping in Center and New Salem; Selling grain
    909 – Feeding and selling cattle in the 1930’s
    947 – Nationalities and churches in the Center area
    976 – Size of the average farm in 1920; Opinion of large  farms
    030 – His opinions of coal development
    061 – Reflections on North Dakota and on natural resource  development
    142 – End of interview
    Comment:  This is  an informative interview throughout.  Mr.  Porsberg is articulate, has a good memory, and expanded upon the topics  outlined above.
Tape #4 Mrs. Mary Schafer
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Family history; Her parent’s homestead south of  Mandan
    086 – Early settlers in the area south of Mandan
    095 – Recollections of early Mandan
    111 – Her education and work as a teacher in Mandan
    137 – Preserving food
    160 – Recollections of early settlers and of Indian  “scares”
    202 – Early school teachers
    214 – Her marriage and children
    226 – Making a living during the 1930’s; Teaching school
    248 – Changes she has seen in Mandan; Leading businessmen  in Mandan
    265 – Family history; Her brother’s work in the Mandan  roundhouse
    303 – Thoughts on North Dakota and her life in the rest  home
    316 – Neighborliness of people, formerly and presently
    335 – Her husband’s bar, “Henry’s Place,” in Mandan
    364 – Nationalities in Mandan
    373 – Her schooling in Mandan
    392 – Sewing and tutoring to make money during the 1930’s
    405 – Stores and businesses in early Mandan
    421 – Milking cows; Ice boxes; The ice wagon
    450 – Sources of fuel for heating
    467 – Early telephone system in Mandan
    490 – Raising children during the 1930’s
    517 – Memories of Langer’s speeches; The flu epidemic of  1918
    559 – Her recent life in the rest home
    591 – Her opinion of coal development
    624 – Harsh winters; Getting to school
    660 – Disciplining pupils, formerly and presently
    675 – Activities at Mandan High School in the early  1900’s
    690 – The Pioneer Daughters organization
    716 – End of interview
    Comment:  Mrs.  Schafer has a good memory but does not volunteer information very freely. Her  responses to questions are very brief, making this interview somewhat choppy.
Tape #5 Mrs. Julia Massey
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Nationalities in the Mandan area; Irish settlers
    035 – Family history; Her father’s work on the steam  boats on the Missouri and his homestead south of Mandan; Anecdote about her  mother’s fear of Indians
    122 – Sources of wood for log buildings and for fuel; Her  father’s dray line and sand business and his work on the NPRR
    162 – Family history; Her sister’s death
    172 – Crossing the Heart River; Home-made footbridge;  Floods; Her husband’s death by drowning in the Missouri River in 1917
    221 – Raising children after her husband’s death; Her  work on the NPRR as a freight agent
    270 – Her mother
    290 – General description of early Mandan, its trading  area, and the flour mill
    341 – Shipping freight out of Mandan to small towns in  North Dakota
    360 – Her father’s and husband’s cement and sand business
    399 – Her courtship and marriage
    415 – The Welsh dairy near Mandan
    428 – Her experience as a school teacher at Ft. Lincoln  school and at Ft. Rice; Account of people who dismantled buildings at Ft.  Lincoln for the lumber after the Fort was abandoned
    489 – Gardening and preserving food
    556 – The Mandan town herd; Livery stables
    615 – Early hotels and grocery stores in Mandan
    645 – Happiness and neighborliness of people, formerly  and presently
    679 – Social life and recreation; The American Emerson  Institute
    704 – Family history; Her work for the NPRR
    815 – Her husband’s work as a Maxwell car salesman in  Mandan
    884 – Steam engines and threshing machines
    919 – Making a living during the 1930’s; WPA projects
    037 – “Blind Pigs” in Mandan; Home brew
    086 – Neighborliness of people, formerly and presently;  Social life, The Chautauqua
    202 – Chinese settlers and Negroes in early Mandan
    316 – Rivalry between Mandan and Bismarck
    325 – Early Mandan stores and businesses
    348 – Relations between whites and Indians
    380 – Midwives in Mandan; Early churches and priests
    420 – Neighborliness of people; Nationalities in Mandan;  Street lighting in early years
    538 – Fires in Mandan; The flu epidemic of 1918
    575 – Dust storms during the 1930’s; Water wells in  Mandan
    640 – Morale during the 1930’s
    677 – Hard times; Family history
    701 – Her opinion of coal development
    747 – Story of meeting Theodore Roosevelt
    780 – The County Fair in early Mandan
    859 – End of interview
    Comment:  This  interview contains considerable historical information about Mandan, but it is  scattered throughout the tape.  Her memory is excellent.
Tape #6  Mrs. John  Stading
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Family history and her parent’s homestead; Some  accounts of South Russia
    112 – Nationalities in the Glen Ullin area
    138 – Buildings on the homestead; Home-made bricks
    188 – Attending a rural school
    245 – Appearance of the Glen Ullin area about 1910; Harsh  winters
    304 – Family history; Anecdotes about hard times,  1910-1920
    367 – Threshing with horsepower; Her father’s blacksmith  work
    382 – Gardening on the homestead and preserving food
    451 – Fuel sources; Coal mining by farmers
    481 – Account of Eagles Nest, ND
    491 – Her parent’s move to Hebron and work in the livery  stable; Her impressions of early Hebron
    546 – Nationalities in Hebron; The Hebron brick works;  Community activities
    649 – Coal mines near Hebron; The brick works
    730 – Her parent’s home in Hebron; General description of  early Hebron
    737 – SIDE TWO
    814 – The flu epidemic of 1918; Death of her father;  Medical care
    869 – Making a living for the family after her father’s  death; Her work in an M.D.’s office, in a store in Hebron, and as a housemaid
    018 – The Shaftner ranch near the Knife River and other  ranches in the area
    038 – Family history
    054 – Her courtship and marriage
    094 – Social life and entertainment; Church activities 
    194 – Neighborliness of people, formerly and presently;  Family life; Sledding and sleighing; Churches in the Glen Ullin area
    385 – The Hebron brick works; How bricks were once made
    472 – End of interview
Tape #7 Mrs. Jennie Beers
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Family history
    066 – First impressions of North Dakota; Relations with  Indians
    083 – Her schooling
    090 – Harsh winters and poor crop years; Her parent’s  farm; Family history
    130 – Her schooling
    145 – Description of the area north of Mandan in the  early 1900’s; Early settlers and cattle ranchers in the area
    198 - Buying supplies; Sources of water on the homestead;  Gardening and cooking
    293 – Threshing with horsepower machines; Early farming  methods
    350 – McGillick’s store in Mandan; Selling butter; Her  annual trip to Mandan; Fourth of July celebrations
    400 – Early settlers in the area; Family life; Children’s  games and toys
    445 – Her parent’s farm and their sources of income
    544 – Preserving food; Working with horses
    580 – Hired men on their farm
    621 – Her courtship and marriage
    701 – Train service from Mandan to Bismarck
    733 – SIDE TWO
    737 – Her husband’s family history; Their marriage
    771 – The flu epidemic of 1918
    780 – Her husband’s well-drilling company
    800 – Her children; Raising a family during the 1930’s;  Morale during the Depression
    856 – Her husband’s well-drilling business in Bismarck
    882 – Neighborliness of people, formerly and presently;  Family life
    912 – Sources of fuel; Coal mines near Mandan
    952 – Her father’s support for the NPL
    970 – Social life; The Bohemian Hall near Mandan
    015 – Wildlife during the early 1900’s
    026 – Early settlers in the Mandan area
    160 – Early automobiles
    222 – Her impressions of Bismarck in 1919
    240 – Her automobile trip to Iowa in 1916
    285 – Family life; Cost of renting a home in Bismarck in  1919
    322 – Recollections of Nancy Hendrickson in rodeos
    432 – End of interview
Tape #8 Mr. and Mrs. Louis Tokach
    000 – Introduction
    021 – His family history; His parent’s homestead near St.  Anthony; Purchasing supplies for the homestead and preserving meat; Making  sauerkraut and pickles
    252 – Wildlife in the area during the early 1900’s;  Wintering horses on open range; Raising horses and farming with horses
    302 – Size of farms during the early 1900’s
    317 – Description of Schmidt, ND; Purchasing supplies in  Mandan and selling cream, butter, and eggs in St. Anthony
    367 – Harsh winters; His schooling
    440 – Threshing
    487 – Making hay
    510 – Relations between whites and Indians
    556 – The Morton County Fair; Raising and selling hogs
    619 – Expansion of his father’s homestead
    635 – His work as a mail carrier
    655 – Prohibition, bootlegging, and home brew
    720 – His work as a rural mail carrier and his store and  bar in St. Anthony
    765 – Businesses and prominent people in early St.  Anthony; The 1930’s in St. Anthony
    871 – Social life in St. Anthony
    898 – Nationalities in the St. Anthony area; Social life  and baseball
    942 – SIDE TWO
    011 – Family life in former years; Name day parties
    044 – Their marriage and children; Raising a family  during the 1930’s
    058 – Sources of water and fuel; Coal mines in the area
    119 – Flu epidemic of 1918; Home remedies for illnesses;  Midwives in the area and early medical care
    192 – The Nonpartisan League’s popularity in the area;  Bill Langer; His father’s work as a NPL organizer
    275 – His service as Morton County Assessor and County  Commissioner
    319 – His opinion of coal development
    358 – Their children
    399 – His first automobile
    412 – Obtaining electrical service; Wind chargers
    426 – Her schooling; Her family history and their  homestead south of Mandan
    500 – Her work as a housemaid; Family history
    567 – Comments on early Mandan and businesses
    590 – Butchering hogs and preserving meat; Home remedies  for illnesses; Early medical care and doctors; Midwives
    704 – Morale during the 1930’s; Diet of people in the  1930’s; Rationing during WWII
    764 – Social life in early St. Anthony; Community halls;  Dances; Churches and religion
    820 – End of interview
Tape #9 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Haider
    000 – Introduction
    020 – His family history and his parent’s homestead;  Early farming methods and machinery; Threshing
    103 – Early settlers in the St. Anthony area
    126 – His education and the Catholic church he attended;  Early priests at the St. Anthony Catholic Church
    181 – His parent’s homestead; Log buildings; Family  history
    200 – Threshing with horsepower and steam rigs; Grain  prices and the purchasing power of a dollar in the early 1900’s; Good and poor  crop years
    316 – Their marriage and children; The flu epidemic of  1918
    333 – His farm; Gardening and butchering; Making  sauerkraut
    415 – Early telephone service to farms
    464 – Preserving vegetables
    470 – Her family history and their homestead south of St.  Anthony; Rural school teachers
    610 – Her parent’s farm; Selling cream and eggs in St.  Anthony
    670 – Her parent’s annual trip to Mandan; Hauling grain
    729 – SIDE TWO
    731 – Support for the Nonpartisan League in the area
    758 – Shopping in Mandan; The 1930’s; Feeding cattle in  the 1930’s
    793 – Sources of fuel – Wood and coal; Local coal mines
    812 – Generating electricity with a Delco plant
    825 – His first tractor
    846 – Social life
    865 – Travels through the area by Indians and horse  traders in the early 1900’s
    893 – County agents; Improved grain varieties
    927 – End of interview
    Comment:  Mr. and  Mrs. Haider tended to give brief and general responses to questions.  Their recollections of threshing are the most  informative portions of the interview.
Tape #10 Mr. Ernest Keidel
    000 – Introduction
    020 – Family history; His father’s homestead south of  Mandan
    080 – Nationalities in the area and their religious sects
    100 – Family history; His schooling and rural schools in  general
    211 – Local coal mines
    259 – Construction of sod and log houses; Stealing lumber  from Fort Lincoln
    307 – Mandan’s trade area in the early 1900’s – includes  an account of a murder; Supplies that homesteaders purchased
    405 – Gardening and preserving food; The flour mill in  Mandan and New Salem; Fish peddlers
    487 – Railroad service in Mandan
    515 – Missouri River floods in Mandan
    578 – Negro families in early Mandan
    598 – Account of a murder near Mandan in 1898; The Kent  murder
    628 – Railroad freight service
    691 – The end of open range in the Mandan area; Pasturing  cattle
    742 – White relations with Indians in the early 1900’s
    802 – Land use in the early 1900’s; Early farming  methods; “Wrong side up” story; Crops planted in the early 1900’s
    940 – SIDE TWO
    984 – Planting crops and gardens by the moon phases;  Changes in farming methods and machinery
    065 – Threshing time; Steam engines
    128 – Large cattle ranchers in the early 1900’s;  Improving livestock breeds
    169 – County agents help to farmers; Farmers’ resistance  to the agent’s suggestions
    282 – Early electrical plants on farms; 32 volt milking  machine systems; Obtaining REA lines to the farm
    366 – Telephone service in the 1920’s; The telephone  system in Mandan
    426 – Support for the Nonpartisan League among farmers;  Opposition to Women’s suffrage
    494 – Rural churches in the area; The old Catholic church  in St. Anthony
    580 – Changes in religious observance and belief since  the early 1900’s
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