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Dakota Datebook
April 21, 2004
"Chaffee"
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The post office of Chaffee, North Dakota, was established
on this day in 1894, two years after Chester Fritz was born there. The
railroad had named a station on the site Rita, but in 1894,
it was renamed to honor Eben Chaffee, who had promoted the site.
The history of Chaffee is actually shared by two other
ND towns, Sharon and Amenia. Eben Chaffee moved to Dakota in 1875 and
built a 28,000-acre bonanza-farm near Casselton. It was an operation of
the Amenia-Sharon Land Company, named for Chaffees hometown of Sharon,
CT, and for partner John Reeds hometown of Amenia, NY. They bought
the land from the Great Northern Railroad, and the town of Amenia served
as their headquarters.
Ebens son, Herbert Chaffee, went to Oberlin College,
where he met Carrie Toogood, a fellow student in the Conservatory of Music.
They got married in 1887 and moved back to North Dakota to take over the
family business. Their first child was born almost exactly nine month
after their wedding day.
Herbert turned out to have a gift for management. Under
his reign, the Chaffee operation expanded, and at its zenith, included
42,000 acres of farmland, 34 grain elevators, a grain-trading business,
dozens of smaller company-owned businesses and three company towns
Amenia, Sharon and Chaffee.
Herbert or Bert felt he was only scratching
the surface. He bought out the remaining company investors within six
years and regularly worked a 72-hour work-week.
Meanwhile, Carrie became a competent manager for their demanding household,
which grew to include six children. She became known as a decision maker
one who faced lifes problems head-on. Despite the enormous
demands on her time, she also gave voice lessons to area children.
Twenty-five years after they married, Bert and Carrie
took a European vacation. It was 1912, and their return voyage began from
Southampton they were traveling first class aboard the Titanic.
Three days later, the ship went down and Herbert was lost. If his body
was recovered, it was never identified. He was only 46 years old.
Carrie survived and was picked up by the Carpathia on
Lifeboat #4. One of her fellow 36 passengers was the newlywed second wife
of John Jacob Astor, one of the wealthiest people in U.S. history. Madeleine
Astor was 19, pregnant and, like Carrie, suddenly a widow.
Back in North Dakota, Carrie used the backbone for which she was known
to take an active role in managing the Land Company. She also became known
for her work with charities and became a charter member of the American-Chinese
Education Committee in Canton, China. She died in Amenia on Independence
Day, 1931.
Various family members tried to jointly keep the farm
going, but there was constant disagreement. Finally, in 1922, the company
was dissolved and its assets sold off.
By that point, the town of Chaffee had reached its population
high of 126. In 1966, the post office was closed, and the town became
a rural branch of Wheatland. Amenia, often misspelled as Armenia, and
Sharon, the largest of the three towns, have maintained their post offices.
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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