Today in North Dakota History
July 24, 1935 |
A rock cairn topped by a granite cross was dedicated atop Butte St. Paul, close to Bottineau, near the spot where Father George A. Belcourt had erected a wooden cross in 1850 to thank God for deliverance from a severe storm. A 50-acre state historic site has been established on the butte. |
July 24, 1946 |
John H. Longwell was appointed seventh president of North Dakota Agricultural College, now North Dakota State University. |
July 25, 1901 |
Cando, the seat of Towner County, was incorporated as a city. |
July 25, 1940 |
A new Walsh County Courthouse was dedicated at Grafton. |
July 26, 1895 |
Pierre Bottineau, famed pioneer scout for whom Bottineau County was named, died at Red Lake Falls, Minnesota. He was born near the present site of Manvel, son of a French voyageur and Indian woman, and is reputed to have been the first son of a white man born in what now is North Dakota. |
July 26, 1907 |
A post office was established at Bowman. |
July 27, 1885 |
Thirty five convicts were transferred from the Dakota Territory Prison at Sioux Falls to the prison at Bismarck, which later became the North Dakota State Penitentiary. They were the first inmates at the new prison. |
July 27, 1901 |
Elmer Ellis, who was to become president of the University of Missouri, was born in McHenry County. |
July 27, 1902 |
North Dakota's first permanent white settler, Charles T. Cavileer, died. |
July 27, 1913 |
The site of old Fort Rice was dedicated as a North Dakota state park. |
July 27, 1942 |
A World War II Army Signal Corps training program for enlisted men was established at the University of North Dakota. In the next 14 months, some 1,000 men were trained. |
July 27, 1954 |
President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed legislation authorizing establishment of Grand Forks and Minot Air Force bases. |
July 27, 1920 |
The first contract for construction of the Liberty Memorial Building, on the Capitol grounds in Bismarck, was let. |
July 27, 1864 |
General Sully's forces attacked the Sioux in the Battle of the Killdeer Mountains. The battle ended two days later with the complete rout of the Indians, 150 of whom were killed, and the destruction of all the Indian equipment, including 200 tons of food and shooting of 300 dogs. |
July 28, 1919 |
The Bank of North Dakota opened for business at Bismarck. |
July 28, 1864 |
About 150 Indians and five soldiers were killed in the Battle of the Killdeer Mountains. The Army force was led by Brigadier General Alfred H. Sully. |
July 28, 1884 |
Nearly half of the infant city of Devils Lake was destroyed by fire. |
July 29, 1886 |
The North Dakota Press Association was formed by a group of editors on an outing at Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. |
July 28, 1888 |
Lee S. Elmer was lynched at Wahpeton. |
July 29, 1839 |
The Jean Nicollet Survey Party reached the Devils Lake area, after coming overland from Fort Pierre and up the James and Sheyenne River valleys. The escort was headed by John C. Fremont. |
July 29, 1919 |
Eight people were killed and about 40 injured and property damage estimated at $300,000 was caused by a severe windstorm that hit Williams and Divide counties. |
July 29, 1937 |
The North Dakota Board of Administration fired four faculty members and three administrators at North Dakota Agricultural College, leading to the loss of its accreditation for political meddling and eventually to the establishment of the North Dakota Board of Higher Education. |
July 30, 1919 |
The Grand Forks post of the American Legion was organized. |
July 30, 1898 |
The First North Dakota Infantry reached Manila Bay aboard the transport Valencia during the Spanish-American War. |
July 31, 1899 |
The First North Dakota Volunteers sailed from the Philippines for the United States, a year and a day after their arrival at Manila Bay. |
July 31, 1906 |
The Nelson County city of Michigan was incorporated. |
July 31, 1959 |
The Maltese Cross cabin of Theodore Roosevelt was acquired from the State of North Dakota and moved from Bismarck to Medora as an attraction at the Theodore Roosevelt National Memorial Park. |
July 31, 1955 |
Monthly oil production in North Dakota topped the one million barrel mark for the first time with 1,000,154 barrels produced. |
August 1, 1929 |
Fort Buford State Park near Williston was dedicated, with Gen. Hugh L. Scott, a former Indian fighter, delivering the main address. |
August 1, 1938 |
Dr. Frank Eversull became the sixth president of North Dakota State University. |
August 1, 1961 |
The North Dakota School for the Blind was re-established in Grand Forks after the closing of the old school at Bathgate that was originally opened in 1908. |
July 31, 1872 |
Fort Ransom was abandoned with the completion of the railroad to Jamestown. |
August 1, 1965 |
The former Ellendale State College became an extension center of the University of North Dakota. |
July 31, 1916 |
Linton, the seat of Emmons County, was incorporated. |
August 1, 1894 |
The Grand Forks City Council approved purchase of a half block of land for the city's first water filtration plant, the first such plant in North Dakota. It was established after the city's drinking water had been blamed for a large number of deaths the same year. |
August 1, 1893 |
Vice President Adlai Stevenson visited Grand Forks briefly while on a western tour. |
August 1, 1893 |
The North Dakota Soldiers Home opened at Lisbon with Colonel W. W. McIlvain as commandant. |
August 1, 1894 |
Barbers of Grand Forks raised the prices of shaves to 15 cents and of haircuts to 25 cents. |
August 2, 1893 |
George Hutchings of Ransom County became the first person admitted to the State Soldiers Home at Lisbon. |
August 2, 1894 |
About 40 buildings, covering four city blocks at LaMoure, were destroyed by fire. |
August 2, 1898 |
The Walsh County village of Hoople was incorporated. |
August 1, 1872 |
The second Yellowstone Survey expedition headed west from Fort Rice under General Thomas L. Rosser, with the escort commanded by Colonel D.S. Stanley. There were several Indian attacks in western Dakota and eastern Montana. |
August 3, 1856 |
William B. Purcell, U. S. senator from North Dakota 1910-11, was born in Flemington, N. J. |
August 3, 1881 |
Valley City was incorporated as a village. |
August 4, 1950 |
First potato flake plant in North Dakota is established at Grand Forks. |
August 5, 1917 |
North Dakota National Guard units mustered into military service for the World War I combat duty. |
August 6, 1919 |
State Mill and Elevator Association purchased mill at Drake. |
August 7, 1965 |
The first Minuteman Missile in the northeastern North Dakota was installed in its underground silo near Inkster.- The first Minuteman Missile in the northeastern North Dakota was installed in its underground silo near Inkster. |
August 8, 1823 |
Major Stephen H. Long marked the international boundary at Pembina, putting that community and its 350 inhabitants under the jurisdiction of the United States. |
August 9, 1890 |
Governor Frank A. Briggs died at Bismarck. |