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On this date in 1940, for the first time since 1899, the Post Office
of Fayette in Dunn County had a new postmaster. Isabelle French was born
in Augusta, Maine in 1858 and came to Dakota Territory in 1881 to marry
Frank Little whom she had known back in Maine. In 1896, with financial
help from a friend and partner from Minnesota, they moved to Dunn County
where they established a ranch in the rolling hills, with the nearest
neighbors over ten miles away. It was a thrilling experience for a polished,
dignified lady from the East to leave the costal, forested hills of her
home and come to the windswept grasslands of western Dakota.
However, it was quickly discovered that their ranch was a convenient stopping
place on the route to Dickinson for supplies for other local ranchers,
so an inn and store was soon erected to accommodate the many travelers.
When local cowboys complained that there was no mail in the area, Isabelle
petitioned for a local post office and President McKinley appointed her
the first postmaster. The name Fayette was chosen to honor Franks' partner
from St. Paul, Dr. Fayette D. Kendrick.
The creation of a post office was of major importance in the sparsely
populated areas of the state for it offered a central location for nearby
ranchers and farmers to congregate, get their mail, and for local government
to operate. Twice a week a one-horse buggy brought in the mail from Dickinson.
Due to the sparse population of the area, Fayette never developed much
beyond the buildings erected on the Little Ranch and Frank opened a land
office in Dickinson where he spent much of his time while Isabelle ran
the ranch, post office and store. Like most country stores, the Fayette
Mercantile Company carried everything that could be needed for ranch life,
freighting in the materials from the railroad in Dickinson.
On February 9, 1940, Isabelle would have reached the mandatory retirement
age of 82 so she reluctantly turned over the job, in name only, to Miss
Anna Fisher but remained active until her death on June 7, 1946. Over
the forty-one years things had changed very little at Fayette. Anna, who
had worked for the family since 1905, assumed her duties in the same sod
building built in 1900.
By Jim Davis
Sources:
Dauntless Dunn,: Stories of Some of Its Earliest Settlers, 1970.
The Killdeer Herald February 1, 1940 Page 1.
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