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Todays story is about Joe Albert, who lived in
the Belcourt area during the first part of the 20th century. In February
1940, he was interviewed by WPA workers in Williston as part of the Federal
Writers Project for North Dakota, and authors William Sherman, Paul Whitney
and John Guerrero later included his story in their 2002 book, Prairie
Peddlers: The Syrian-Lebanese in North Dakota.
Joe Albert came from Syria in 1901 and settled in the Turtle Mountains,
where he married a young French and Chippewa woman. Many Syrian North
Dakotans were peddlers back then, taking their wares from town to town
and from farm to farm. Joe tried the life of a salesman at first, too,
running a grocery store and renting out boats on Fish Lake.
But thats not where his heart was he wanted to be an entertainer.
Joe was small, just a little over five feet tall, but he was very muscular
and amazingly strong. Using nothing but his bare hands, he could straighten
horseshoes, bend coins, and wrap steel bars around his thighs. Wherever
he performed his strong man act, he drew appreciative audiences,
and soon he decided it was time to leave the grocery business behind.
Joe got his own tent and took his act on the road, sometimes working solo
and other times as part of a traveling circus. With the stage name, the
Terrible Turk, he performed throughout North Dakota and other
Midwestern destinations. One part of his routine included wrestling the
strongest local man for money, and in another, he wrapped a rope around
his neck and under his arms, and challenged audience members to pull (but
not jerk!) on the rope in a sort of tug of war.
He also had a special harness with ropes he would attach to the rear ends
of two different cars; he would position himself between the two and tell
them to try to drive away in opposite directions. Instead of ripping him
in two, the cars merely spun their wheels. He was also known to pull a
freight car down a railroad track all by himself.
For a period of time, one of Joes friends dyed his body and turned
himself into a half-man, half-animal. As part of Joes act, this
wild man preformed from inside a cage, screeching, leaping
and throwing dirt at the audience.
Then, Joes act became quite a bit more exotic; he started adding
real animals. He had one sometimes two bears that he would
wrestle. He didnt muzzle them, so this act became a real crowd pleaser.
He also had a white goat that could tiptoe on bottles and a hairless
Mexican dog that did a high-wire act. Also in the menagerie was
a costumed monkey; the little fellow would tip his hat and
then pester the audience for money with his tin cup.
The authors of Prairie Peddlers state, In 1997, Ahmed Kamoni, in
a Valley City...interview, remembers that Joe Albert would overnight
at his fathers farm in Kidder County. On one occasion, Joe housed
his bear and monkey in the Kamoni barn. Ahmed said that when the sun arose,
the Kamoni horses and cattle were no where to be seen, they were
scattered all over the county.
Unfortunately, Joes wife died young, leaving him with four children
to raise. With one of his next three wives, he later moved to Oregon,
where he continued performing his marvelous feats. Nobody knew Joe Alberts
date of birth, but some said he must have been almost 100
when he died in Oregon City during the 1950s.
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