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In the spring of 1890, William Regcraft found some bones
while digging a ditch on his uncles farm, one mile from Highgate,
Ontario. A hardware merchant named William Hillhouse bought the bones,
and he and his uncle, John Jelly, also bought the right to continue excavating.
What they found was almost an entire skeleton of an Ice-Age mastodon,
relative of the modern elephant.
Hillhouse and Jelly cleaned the bones and strengthened
them with two layers of hot white glue. The one and only tusk, described
as a perfect beauty, was dropped and broken in two places.
After it was repaired, they offered R.A. Essery $50 to take the mastodon
out on tour. Essery headed toward Winnipeg, putting up posters that read,
A Monster Unearthed! Do not fail to see the Highgate Mastodon!
A review by the St. Thomas Evening Journal read, ...the cavity in
the head from whence the fire of a mastodonic eye...is almost large enough
to admit a mans head.
Between 1890 and 1892, Essery died somewhere out west,
and Hillhouse and Jelly lost track of what they called The Worlds
Greatest Wonder. Then, Hillhouse received a handbill from his niece
in Neche, ND, revealing it was now being displayed by a Mr. Thompson and
Mr. Glover.
The bones then wound up in storage at the Bibb Broom
Corn Co. in Minneapolis. After some time, the company sold them to Harry
Dickinson, a Great Northern Railroad fireman, to recoup unpaid storage
costs. Harry shipped them by rail to his fathers home in Barnesville,
MN, and they exhibited the mastodon around Minnesota and the Dakotas for
the next several years.
Around 1898, a Buxton physician, James Grassick, saw
the show and later bought the mastodon for $10, and in 1902, he loaned
the bones to UND for display. A week later, the Grand Forks Herald published
an article about it, and three days later, UND received a letter from
William Hillhouse claiming rightful ownership. Grassick quickly sold the
bones to UND for $100, and when attorneys came after him soon after, he
told them he no longer owned them.
It was 49 years before the mastodon surfaced again. UND
history professor Elwyn Robinson wrote to the State Historical Society
to say a mastodon had been discovered in an attic on campus, and it was
shipped to the Historical Society and placed in a storage building.
Early in 1991, plans were being made for a permanent
exhibit at the ND Heritage Center titled The First People: North Dakota
Prehistory. Committee members were wishing they had a nice reconstructed
megafauna, like an ancient bison or mammoth for the display. Collections
curator Mark Halvorson asked if a mastodon would do, at which point the
chief archaeologist started laughing, saying, Will a mastodon do?
Yeah, thatd be nice! Halvorson replied, OK, Ill
pull our mastodon. Paleontologist John Hoganson said, You
have a mastodon!? Halvorsen said, (Yeah, out) beside the 61
Lincoln Continental in the warehouse.
Museum director C.L. Dill said, I know Ive
seen this lower jawbone we have in a crate, but Ive never seen anything
else.
It had been more than a quarter century since a mastodon
had been reconstructed anywhere in the world, but after bouncing around
in crates for a hundred years, the ancient Highgate Mastodon was on its
way to having itself put back together. It now proudly stands near the
entrance of the Heritage Center Museum.
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