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Dakota Datebook
February 26, 2004
"Nancy Hendrickson"
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Today is the birthday of a sweet-spirited woman, Nancy
Hendrickson; she was born in 1886 in a house built of cottonwood by Nancys
Swedish father, Sone Christenson. They homesteaded on the Heart River
where, just 10 years before, the 7th Cavalry crossed on their way to the
Little Bighorn.
Nancy was the only one of Christensons six children
to be born in America. She later homesteaded an adjoining quarter of land,
and her little claim shack is now on display in the Heritage Center museum
in Bismarck. Nancy lived on that ranch until the year she died at age
92. Even her education took place there, with school being held for 10
children in the front room every other winter. Nancy married twice, and
both husbands moved in with the rest of the family, but by 1970, she had
outlived them all.
Nancy was barely over 5 feet, but she had a great curiosity,
was energetic and was a voracious reader. When she died in 1978, her library
included copies of the Mandan Pioneer going back more than 100
years; she also owned every copy Life Magazine that had been published
up til that time appropriate, because newspapers later played
a major role in Nancys life.
Nancy didnt get to nearby Mandan until she was
nine years old. Then, she got a white gelding called Two Bits, which she
kept for 22 years, and her horizons started to expand. Around 1915, she
got a motorcycle, and the world opened up even farther.
Nancy had a hobby of sketching animals, which took an
unforeseen turn when, at age 14, she bought a Kodak box camera
one of her first purchases she ever made. Her subjects could now be caught
in real life. She dressed her farm animals in clothing and constructed
little props to mimic human situations. In one photo, a cat lounges in
a rowboat, while another tugs on the oars. In another, a cat and a rabbit
sit side-by-side playing a duet on a toy piano. Two dogs are dressed for
going out on the town one is in a polka dot dress and feathered
hat, while the bulldog wears a fedora and a suit and tie. Others include
animals doing chores.
While photographing costumed animals is
quite common today, Nancy was breaking new ground back then, and she soon
gained national attention. She built a darkroom in her cramped house,
where she did all her own developing and printing. Under the pseudonym,
P.C. Bill, she published a series of post cards, and then a number of
her pieces made it into notable publications like the Minneapolis Tribune,
the Denver Post and the New York Times.
Money from her photography helped carry
her family through the Great Depression, but when World War II made photography
materials became scarce, Nancy had to instead rely on the ranch for a
living.
Writer Ted Upgren described Nancy at age 91: Her specialty is lifestyle.
Though she herself may not be conscious of it, others are. Her unbending
loyalty to her Heart River Valley heritage, her mockery of Father Time,
and her rather successful avoidance of the developed establishment...
is her adopted way... (Shes) unwilling to turn her back on the peaceful
valley that has been her whole life and move to the city where some say
she would be so much more comfortable.
Nancy Hendrickson's "Kitty Flying
an Airplane "


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