|
On this day in 1933, the Governor of North Dakota sent
out North Dakota National Guard troops to prevent an agency of the Federal
government from carrying out its business in the state. Not surprisingly,
the Feds were not pleased, and took some immediate countermeasures, striking
back where it hurtsin the pocketbook. The Marines were not needed.
The governor? William Langer
deservedly known as Wild Bill.
The Federal agency? The Seventh Federal Land Bank District of the Regional
Agricultural Credit Corporation, based in Minneapolis. Caught in the scuffle
were the North Dakota Guard, acting on orders from the Governor, and county
sheriffs, acting on behalf of the Federal Land Bank. These guys had weapons,
but fortunately both sides knew using guns was not going to help the situation.
The issue of course was foreclosure on farm mortgages. This was in the
middle of the Great Depression. Many people were unable to make payments
on their loans, so the lenders were attempting to cut their losses by
taking back the farms and selling them to the highest bidder. Typically,
the sales were conducted by a county sheriff on the steps of the county
courthouse.
Governor Langer, who was a champion of the people, especially the downtrodden,
declared a moratorium on foreclosures. The Federal Land Bank ignored the
moratorium and scheduled sheriffs sales anyway. On April 17th, Governor
Langer took the bold step of sending guardsmen to halt sales in Jamestown,
Fessenden and Lakota. All were Federal Land Bank foreclosures, and in
each case when confronted by the Guard, county officials complied with
the governors order and stopped the sale.
The action must have raised some eyebrows and dropped some jaws in Minneapolis
and Washington. But the Governors hand was no match for the cards
the Federal Land Bank was holdingnamely millions of dollars in pending
loans and disbursements to other North Dakota farmers.
In defending itself from its own citizens, the Federal Governments
response was swift and effective.
Within hours, on orders from Washington, the Federal Land Bank in Minneapolis
stopped all payments to North Dakota. An official stated, Our instructions
are that no loans are to be made to North Dakota in view of the moratorium
on debts by the governor of that state.
Perhaps hoping the Federal Land Bank would back down, the governor then
wired North Dakotas congressional delegation in Washington, asking
them to investigate the source of the order and the identity of
the Minneapolis official. He said he would withhold further comment until
he hears from Washington.
In the end, Langer maintained the moratorium, but exempted foreclosures
by the federal government and its agencies.
Written by Russell Ford-Dunker
Sources:
Guardsmen Ordered to Halt Two Sales Scheduled Monday, The
Bismarck Tribune, 17 April 1933, p.1.
Government Orders Further Payments in State Stopped The Bismarck
Tribune, 17 April 1933, p.1.
Robinson, Elwyn B. History of North Dakota. University of Nebraska Press:
1966 p 405.
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
|