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Saturday marked the anniversary of when a Dakota town
was tricked out of its status as a capitol. By the 1880s, Dakota Territorys
population was concentrated in very separate regions. In the far north,
Pembina was made up of fur traders, trappers, hunters and mixed bloods.
In south-central Dakota, Pierre was outfitting thousands
of miners who were illegally flooding into the Indian-held Black Hills
and populating around Deadwood. Farther north, Bismarck was the main supply
point for military posts, Indian Agencies, and the lucrative Montana trade.
Yankton, the capitol, was in the far southeast corner;
with its lawyers and legislators, it was the most aristocratic. The towns
commerce was suffering from a number of floods, and trans-shipment trade
was shifting away from Yankton to Sioux Falls and Bismarck.
Meanwhile, the Northern Pacific railroad wanted the capitol
moved onto their line at Bismarck, where it would benefit from land-grant
sales. The general population also thought the capitol should be more
centrally located, but Yankton had no intentions of letting that happen.
In 1883, a capitol removal bill was finally pushed through
under the corrupt governorship of Nehemiah Ordway. Nine men had to organize
in Yankton within 30 days to select a new site. They would each be paid
$10 a day for their services, and they had absolute authority in choosing
the new location. The appointed commissioners came from all over the territory,
including Deadwood, Fargo, Brookings, Bismarck, Redfield, and Vermillion.
One was the infamous Alexander McKenzie, Burleigh County Sheriff and cohort
of Governor Ordway. McKenzie had a tight network, called the McKenzie
gang, who were firmly in the pockets of railroad interests.
The people of Yankton were furious when they learned
of the bill. They had been able to stop previous attempts to move the
capitol, and they were ready to do it again by force if necessary.
They organized to keep the nine men from convening in
Yankton, including posting guards around the edges of town and locking
any buildings where a meeting could take place.
It became rumored that the nine men were going to meet
in Yankton on March 30th, and the editor of the Dakota Herald urged citizens
to place your hen roosts under lock and key, and clear your clothes
lines before dark to rid the town of any potential meeting places.
But March 30th came and went, and the nine-man commission didnt
materialize.
On April 3rd, all was quiet through the night. Then,
as the sun was coming up, a locomotive pulling a coach eased slowly into
Yankton. Inside, the nine commissioners quickly chose its officers. Then,
having legally organized for business, the train rolled back out of town.
As it passed the pickets on the edge of town, the engineer blew his whistle,
and the towns guards knew theyd been outsmarted.
Over the next three months, commissioners visited the
towns that had submitted formal bids. In southern Dakota, they considered
Aberdeen, Huron, Mitchell, Ordway, Pierre and Redfield. In northern Dakota,
they considered Bismarck, Odessa and Steele. On June 1st, the commission
cast their ballots in Fargo. After 13 ballots, Bismarck was finally chosen.
Yankton put up a fight, but Governor Ordway and his son promptly relocated
to Bismarck... and that was that.
(Source: The Story of North Dakota by Erling Rolfsrud;
1963)
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