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Dakota Datebook
May 7, 2004
"Josephine Kills Grinnell"
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Today marks the anniversary of George Grinnells
death in 1888. Born in Maryland, he served as a spy for the Army of the
Potomac, then ventured west with a military wagon train to Fort Berthold.
There, he made a living as a woodhawk, selling firewood to
river steamers.
Grinnell quickly learned about women of convenience
and took an Indian woman for his wife. Unfortunately, many white men were
abusive to their Indian wives, expecting them to serve and submit without
question or complaint. Grinnell was one of these men.
The other person in our story is Josephine Malnourie,
who was born in 1857 in Like-a-Fish-Hook village. Her mother was Beaver
Woman, a Hidatsa, and her father was a Frenchman who owned a trading post
at Fort Berthold. Josephines Hidatsa name was All-Goes-Out.
Josephine was strong-willed and intelligent. When she
was 19, she wanted to study at the Hampton Institute in Pennsylvania,
but her mother was against it. So Josephine left in the middle of the
night; she was one of the first students to leave the reservation to pursue
higher education.
After three years of schooling, she returned to Fort
Berthold. She caught George Grinnells eye, and he soon discarded
his first wife to marry Josephine. The couple moved to Williston, where
Grinnell ran a saloon. To his chagrin, Josephine refused to be submissive,
and, after some years, their relationship became poisonous.
One winter day, for example, the couples young
son wandered away from the house, and when Josephine couldnt find
him, she ran to the saloon for help. Grinnell saw it as an opportunity
to look tough, and he refused. And in a testimony of his true character
Grinnell threatened to kill anybody who helped Josephine find his
missing child.
Luckily, there was someone willing to risk it. George
Newton, a buffalo hunter, got up and said, No kid is going to die
out in this cold if I can help it. Newton walked out, found the
little boy, and returned him to his mother. Grinnells humiliation
made him all the more dangerous.
By their 7th year together, the couple had three boys
and a baby girl. Grinnells pattern of abuse had escalated, along
with his drinking. One day he came home and started beating Josephine
while she was holding her baby. Josephine managed to get out of the house
and run to a field where men were plowing, but Grinnell got on his horse
and came after her.
He tried to hit her with the butt of his gun, but he
was too drunk. He fell off the horse onto his wife and baby.
The farmers were afraid to interfere because of Grinnels
gun Josephine was on her own. The couple struggled... then Grinnell
fell silent. Around his neck, he wore a leather thong with a sliding knot.
Josephine had strangled him with it.
Few people were saddened by his passing. In fact, a few
days later, a coroners jury gave its verdict: George Grinnell came
to his death through an act of Almighty God, by the hand of His agent,
Josephine Grinnell.
Well, Gods 31 year-old agent took her
children back home and settled in Elbowoods. To her great credit, All-Goes-Out
did more than just survive... she thrived. And she realized her dreams
for her children. She died in 1945.
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prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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