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Minot was officially founded in 1886, the year Mark Twain
wrote Huckleberry Finn, the Statue of Liberty arrived from France, Geronimo
surrendered, and Coca-Cola went on the market.
Because it grew so fast, Minot soon became known as The Magic City.
And, like all lively railroad towns, Minot developed a respectable part
of town and a not-so-respectable part of town. In one section were about
45 brothels, saloons and dance halls, and in another were orderly houses
and churches, with the first Mass being celebrated in 1884.
Early on, the seedier residents garnered quite a bit of attention. On
August 27th, 1887, three of the six men elected to the City Council were
saloon owners, and Minot quickly became a wet city
despite the citys first murder having taken place in a saloon less
than three weeks earlier.
On August 8th, a two-bit cowpoke named Roxy Queal borrowed about $35 from
a Grand Forks card shark named Shang Foster. Queal told Foster he had
a dead sure poker game, and hed repay not only the 35
dollars but also a share of his winnings.
Jack Stoughton, Shang Fosters friend, told the Grand Forks Plaindealer:
The money was given [to Queal], and instead of entering on the dead
sure game he bought some articles of wearing apparel with a portion
of it, and used the balance to get on a roaring drunk.
According to Mark Timbrooke of the Ward County Historical Society, Foster
found out what happened to the money he loaned to Queal and caught up
to him in Doyle and Lynchs Saloon.
They fought, and Foster warned Queal to pay him back, or a graveyard
would be started in Minot with him.
Stoughton said the deadline was 4 oclock that afternoon. With the
money gone, and the whiskey probably still doing its job, Queal took the
bull by the horns. That afternoon, he borrowed a revolver, found Foster
in the White Elephant Saloon, and shot him point blank in the face. Queal
then walked to the bar, so the story goes, and slugged down a drink before
heading for the woods.
Timbrook says Queal ran and hid in the Minot railroad yards, and Deputy
Sheriff John Swanston found him in the woods along the Mouse River and
arrested him. Queal was held for trial but escaped from the Burlington
Jail. He was recaptured the following spring in what is now the state
of Washington and was returned to Minot. Apparently, Judge William Francis
believed Queal shot Foster in self-defense, because he gave him only four
years for manslaughter.
But thats only part of the story. Shang Foster was buried in the
old North Hill Cemetery, where the Minot Airport is now located. Later
that night, a local doctor and a druggist dug him up and brought him back
into town. Then, they submerged Fosters body in a large vat of water
and boiled off his fleshy remains, which as the story goes
they buried in a side street.
Several days later, people passing by a local dentists office noted
a fresh, new, human skeleton hanging in the window. In that era, it was
common for medical people to obtain skeletons for medical study
although in this case, it seems it was more for display.
Either way, if things had gone as Shang Foster threatened that
his adversary would end up in the graveyard it would have been
Roxy Queals bones hanging in that window, not his own.
Sources: Baker, Marvin. It all started in the 1880s. Minot
Daily News. 16 Jan, 2005.
Grand Forks Plaindealer. 10 Aug, 1887.
Timbrook, Mark (Ward County Historical Society). 2004-05.
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