|
Yesterday, we brought you part one of the William Thornton
Montgomery story. William, better known as Thornton, was born into slavery
in 1843 on the Joseph Davis plantation in Mississippi; Thorntons
father was educated and was Joe Daviss personal business manager.
After the Civil War, the Montgomery men purchased the plantation, along
with Brierfield, which belonged to Joe Daviss brother, Jefferson
Davis, the Confederate President. The Montgomery men were highly regarded
and were leaders during the chaos that followed the end of the war.
The Montgomerys had run their own general store while enslaved
something that the Davis brothers encouraged. Now on their own, they got
their seed money literally from the bottom of the Mississippi
River in front of the plantation. Union gunboats had pursued a Confederate
gunboat, which threw its cotton bales overboard to lighten the load. The
Montgomerys snagged 5 or 6 of these bales from the river and sold them;
they got $1800, with which raised cotton.
In 1877, the elder Montgomery died in Jefferson Daviss 21-room mansion.
Four years later, the cotton market bottomed out, and the Montgomery brothers
sold the land back to Joseph and Jefferson Davis. It was an amicable agreement,
and they remained friends for many years.
Thornton headed north to Dakota Territory to raise wheat. Author Janet
Sharp Hermann writes, ...land was cheap and it was said that a man
was judged by his skill and industriousness rather than by the color of
his skin. By 1884 Thornton had settled south of (the) new Chicago, Milwaukee,
St. Paul, and Pacific Railroad(s). There, surrounded by Scandinavian homesteaders,
(he) prospered, enlarging his holdings from the original 640 acres to
1,020 acres.
The location of Thorntons bonanza farm was about 18 miles south
of Fargo near Christine and Walcott. Author Hiram Drache writes, During
his first winters in the area Montgomery lived at the European Hotel in
Fargo. When that building was razed and replaced by the Forte Hotel, he
purchased the lumber to build a large house for himself on his farm.
Hermann writes, Thornton was well satisfied not only with his financial
success but with race relations in the new region. He hired the Joseph
Hollands, white migrants from Wisconsin, to keep house for him and manage
the farm. They remained close friends after the Hollands left...to take
up a place of their own... An 1884 Fargo Argus article states that
Thornton Montgomery, a most worthy man, was asked to represent
Dakota in the Worlds Exposition at New Orleans.
Around 1888, Thornton built a grain elevator where the Milwaukee Railroad
crossed his land. Whenever the Hollands got off the train at his station,
Thornton would hitch up his team and take them to their farm. A general
store also operated there, and a small village formed, called Lithia.
A partnership with a Captain Hunt led to Thornton losing a
lot of money. Drache writes, ...it was his own kindheartedness that
hurt him most. He never was strict enough with his manager or his other
employees and they were extremely careless with his equipment.
Near the end of the 19th century, Montgomerys North Dakota venture
ended when he sold his farm and joined other Fargoans in a Canadian land
venture. When it failed, he moved back to Mississippi.
After World War I, he came back to North Dakota for visit. By now, he
was almost blind, but he still recognized the voices of old friends.
Montgomerys elevator closed in 1963 and was moved into Walcott during
the 1970s.
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
|