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A large ceremony was conducted near Tower City, North Dakota on this
day in 1927. The ceremony was part of a commemoration honoring General
Henry Hastings Sibley. The dedication of a bronze tablet marking the spot
where General Sibley and his men camped during the United States Dakota
War of 1862 served as the highlight of the ceremony.
The Dacotah chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, stationed
in Fargo, selected the site to lay the commemoration tablet. The Daughters
held the ceremony to mark the historic site in accordance with the National
Daughters of the American Revolution guidelines. Local patriotic organizations
helped the Daughters plan and organize the event, which included a picnic
lunch, singing, music, several speakers, and the dedication of the plaque.
General Sibley, in addition to being the first governor of Minnesota,
endured a remarkable military and political career on the Northeastern
Plains. After the massacre at Acton, Minnesota, Sibley was charged by
the United States Government with finding and returning the assailants,
many of whom had fled to North Dakota. Later on, Sibley became instrumental
in many of the treaties that the government made with several Plains Indian
groups.
General Sibley, along with 6,400 men, stopped near Tower City to camp
for the night on a return trip to Fort Snelling from Bismarck. The boulder
that organizers placed the bronze tablet on was taken from the farm of
B. L. Burnham from Wheatland, North Dakota. Mr. Burnhams father
was a member of the Sibley expedition that traveled across the state sixty-four
years earlier. Eight additional sons and daughters of Sibleys soldiers
attended the event. Honorable Smith Stimmel, a former member of President
Abraham Lincolns bodyguard, gave the invocation for the dedication
ceremony. Later, children of the Daughters of the American Revolution
scattered flowers around the stone and bronze marker, and along the trail
that Sibleys men had marched down over sixty years before.
-Jayme L. Job
Source:
Fargo Forum and Daily Tribune (Morning ed.). August 7, 1927: p. 7.
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