Prairie Public Television - North Dakota Public Radio NPR PBS
Prairie Public Television - North Dakota Public Radio Search
Prairie Public
productions
PBS shows

PBS NPR
 Programs/Schedules - Radio Features 
 

 

Dakota Datebook
November 12, 2006
"Related Receiver"

 

 


 

A young North Dakota telegraph operator received his “own tragic message” on this day in 1913. Seventeen-year-old George Wood was working as the telegraph operator in Page, North Dakota when the strange coincidence occurred. Wood moved to Page from St. Paul, Minnesota two years earlier, and had not been able to make it home to visit his family during that time.


On the evening of November 12, Wood received a message telling of a dreadful shooting in St. Paul, in which a husband shot himself, his wife, and his baby grandson. The message asked for the return of the couple’s son to the city, as all three victims were being hospitalized. Wood was so caught up in the content of the message that he failed to recognize the victims’ names as those of his own parents! Not until Wood reached the end of the telegraph did he recognize the name of the sender as that of his older brother, Henry; fortunately, all three relatives survived the tragic events.


Source:
Fargo Forum and Daily Republican (Evening ed.), November 13, 1913: p. 2.
-Jayme L. Job

 

This text and audio may not be copied without securing prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.

Dakota Datebook is a project of North Dakota Public Radio, in partnership with the State Historical Society of North Dakota, with funding from the North Dakota Humanities Council. Hosted by Merrill Piepkorn, written by Merry Helm, and produced by Bill Thomas.

North Dakota Public Radio is a service of Prairie Public Broadcasting in association with North Dakota State University and the University of North Dakota.

Newsroom   About   Support PPB   TV Schedule   Radio Schedules   Education   Community/Events   Online Store   Contact Us

Privacy Policy   Pressroom