Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63)

(13) The stages started out of Jamestown over the 1st Ave. South bridge, known then as the Mill bridge and from the top of. the south bluff took a course for the mouth of Beaver Creek where the postoffice of E. A. Tarbell was located 1881, then it ran on the west side of the river to Grand Rapids. T...

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Published: North Dakota State Library 2014
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Online Access:http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/ndsl-books/id/6276
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record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection North Dakota State University (NDSU): Digital Horizons
op_collection_id ftnorthdakotastu
language unknown
description (13) The stages started out of Jamestown over the 1st Ave. South bridge, known then as the Mill bridge and from the top of. the south bluff took a course for the mouth of Beaver Creek where the postoffice of E. A. Tarbell was located 1881, then it ran on the west side of the river to Grand Rapids. This trail later crossed the Dewey bridge, ran southeast up the bluff near the Fisher home and almost straight southeast past old Homer No. 3 school, then on past the northeast comer of Danners treeclaim and to Ypsilanti, where Wm. H. Colby established P.O. 1882. Chas. Avis was one of the drivers on the Concord stage that was used on the triweekly run, older pupils of No. 3 can remember the four horse stage passing the - old school house in those days. The teacher used to send a pupil out to flag the stage and start off letters to her "beau" and avoid having such messages pass thru the hands of curious local people. One of the old coaches of the Benjamin line was abandoned at the Glaspel farm in the edge of Jamestown and fell to pieces, Harry Miller, a garage man, resurrected it and had it rebuilt and it was on display a number of years but it was finally lost to the community in 1949 when some Minnesota parties secured it and shipped it away. A bit of this old stage road still shows in the school house yard where old No. 3 stood on the northwest corner of section 27; overgrown with grass and weeds but still plain to those of us who knew where to look. It will probably out last the few old timers who saw it in the days when the bright painted stage rolled and rattled past in a cloud of dust. With the establishment of the Bush and Corwin farm just south of Homer, in the spring of 1879, a road was laid out to Jamestown. It ran north two miles from the main set of buildings, to the southeast corner of section 29; diagonally across the east half of that section to the Wrights buildings, to the center of the section (20) thence northwest to the section corner and north to the Dewey bridge. This was a well traveled road for many years and was used by people traveling from the south, Adrian, Montpelier and settlers along the way. This Montpelier trail crossed open prairie much of the way from the top of the Montpelier bluff, northwest past Chas. Pauls place and joined the Corwin road near the corner of section 29. In the late eighties and the nineties hundreds of settlers from the older states, Iowa, southern Minnesota and South Dakota trailed past; on this road looking for the Mouse riverloop. All sorts of vehicles; prairie schooners, open wagons, buck boards, or horseback; driving herds of cattle and horses, and trailing farm machinery. Most of them watered at the Wrights well which was close to the road and many camped nearby over night; some wanted horse feed, milk for babies, vegetables, or information about roads and land. All that is past now, a closed chapter in the history of Homer. The land is closely cultivated and the trails that cut cross country the shortest distances are plowed up, travelers now follow section lines on graded and graveled roads. Scanned with a Zeutschel Zeta book scanner at 300 dpi. Edited with Multi-Page TIFF Editor.
format Text
title Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63)
spellingShingle Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63)
title_short Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63)
title_full Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63)
title_fullStr Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63)
title_full_unstemmed Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63)
title_sort homer township in the eighties (t. 139-r. 63)
publisher North Dakota State Library
publishDate 2014
url http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/ndsl-books/id/6276
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.320,-64.320,-65.907,-65.907)
ENVELOPE(-80.700,-80.700,51.150,51.150)
ENVELOPE(-61.567,-61.567,-64.367,-64.367)
geographic Dewey
South Bluff
The Bluff
geographic_facet Dewey
South Bluff
The Bluff
genre Beaver Creek
genre_facet Beaver Creek
op_relation homertownshipstutsmanco1950
http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/ndsl-books/id/6276
op_rights North Dakota County and Town Histories Collection, North Dakota State Library.
NO KNOWN COPYRIGHT
To request a copy or to inquire about permissions and/or duplication services, contact the Digital Initiatives department of the North Dakota State Library by phone at 701-328-4622, by email at ndsl-digital@nd.gov, or by visiting http://library.nd.gov
_version_ 1766374041452544000
spelling ftnorthdakotastu:oai:cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org:ndsl-books/6276 2023-05-15T15:41:10+02:00 Homer Township in the eighties (T. 139-R. 63) 2014-01-23 image/tiff http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/ndsl-books/id/6276 unknown North Dakota State Library homertownshipstutsmanco1950 http://cdm16921.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/ndsl-books/id/6276 North Dakota County and Town Histories Collection, North Dakota State Library. NO KNOWN COPYRIGHT To request a copy or to inquire about permissions and/or duplication services, contact the Digital Initiatives department of the North Dakota State Library by phone at 701-328-4622, by email at ndsl-digital@nd.gov, or by visiting http://library.nd.gov Text 2014 ftnorthdakotastu 2017-12-14T10:20:08Z (13) The stages started out of Jamestown over the 1st Ave. South bridge, known then as the Mill bridge and from the top of. the south bluff took a course for the mouth of Beaver Creek where the postoffice of E. A. Tarbell was located 1881, then it ran on the west side of the river to Grand Rapids. This trail later crossed the Dewey bridge, ran southeast up the bluff near the Fisher home and almost straight southeast past old Homer No. 3 school, then on past the northeast comer of Danners treeclaim and to Ypsilanti, where Wm. H. Colby established P.O. 1882. Chas. Avis was one of the drivers on the Concord stage that was used on the triweekly run, older pupils of No. 3 can remember the four horse stage passing the - old school house in those days. The teacher used to send a pupil out to flag the stage and start off letters to her "beau" and avoid having such messages pass thru the hands of curious local people. One of the old coaches of the Benjamin line was abandoned at the Glaspel farm in the edge of Jamestown and fell to pieces, Harry Miller, a garage man, resurrected it and had it rebuilt and it was on display a number of years but it was finally lost to the community in 1949 when some Minnesota parties secured it and shipped it away. A bit of this old stage road still shows in the school house yard where old No. 3 stood on the northwest corner of section 27; overgrown with grass and weeds but still plain to those of us who knew where to look. It will probably out last the few old timers who saw it in the days when the bright painted stage rolled and rattled past in a cloud of dust. With the establishment of the Bush and Corwin farm just south of Homer, in the spring of 1879, a road was laid out to Jamestown. It ran north two miles from the main set of buildings, to the southeast corner of section 29; diagonally across the east half of that section to the Wrights buildings, to the center of the section (20) thence northwest to the section corner and north to the Dewey bridge. This was a well traveled road for many years and was used by people traveling from the south, Adrian, Montpelier and settlers along the way. This Montpelier trail crossed open prairie much of the way from the top of the Montpelier bluff, northwest past Chas. Pauls place and joined the Corwin road near the corner of section 29. In the late eighties and the nineties hundreds of settlers from the older states, Iowa, southern Minnesota and South Dakota trailed past; on this road looking for the Mouse riverloop. All sorts of vehicles; prairie schooners, open wagons, buck boards, or horseback; driving herds of cattle and horses, and trailing farm machinery. Most of them watered at the Wrights well which was close to the road and many camped nearby over night; some wanted horse feed, milk for babies, vegetables, or information about roads and land. All that is past now, a closed chapter in the history of Homer. The land is closely cultivated and the trails that cut cross country the shortest distances are plowed up, travelers now follow section lines on graded and graveled roads. Scanned with a Zeutschel Zeta book scanner at 300 dpi. Edited with Multi-Page TIFF Editor. Text Beaver Creek North Dakota State University (NDSU): Digital Horizons Dewey ENVELOPE(-64.320,-64.320,-65.907,-65.907) South Bluff ENVELOPE(-80.700,-80.700,51.150,51.150) The Bluff ENVELOPE(-61.567,-61.567,-64.367,-64.367)