Duration | April 1885 to May 21, 1889 |
---|---|
Location | Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota, US |
Cause | Expansion of the Minneapolis and St. Louis Railway |
Outcome | Madison, Minnesota as Lac qui Parle County seat |
Lac qui Parle County, in Minnesota, United States, had two battles for its county seat during the 1800s. The first was between Williamsburg and Lac qui Parle Village. The second was between Dawson and Madison which culminated in the county courthouse being stolen and a case being brought to the Minnesota Supreme Court. [1]
After the establishment of Lac qui Parle County in 1871 by the Minnesota Legislature, a dispute over the county seat almost immediately erupted between Williamsburg (now a ghost town) and Lac qui Parle Village. In 1872, Lac qui Parle Village was declared to be the county seat. [1] The county board met in the hotel and post office building of Lac qui Parle Village from 1871 to 1875, then in a rented space in the local general store until 1883 when a new wooden frame courthouse was built. [2] This courthouse was 30 by 40 feet (9.1 by 12.2 m) and two stories high. [3] [4]
In 1884, the Minneapolis and St. Louis Railway was built through the county, but bypassed Lac qui Parle Village. This stunted the community's opportunities for future growth. Two new towns were founded in 1884 along the railway's route, Dawson and Madison. In April 1885, Dawson and Madison sparked a new battle for the county seat. Residents of both towns petitioned the county board for the relocation of the county seat and an election was scheduled for November 1886. During the year and a half before the election, the Dawson Eagle and the Madison Press, newspapers representing their respective towns, entered an editorial battle on issues like the county seat and their subsequent rivalry, spurred on by local business leaders, which continued until the 1900s. [1] The animosity and actions between the two cities was called a "county seat war" by various newspapers at the time. [5] [3] [6] [7] [8]
On November 5th 1886, Madison was chosen as the new county seat by 1,173 votes to 703. [9] [10] When the results were announced in Dawson, a county officer issued an injunction against moving county records from Lac qui Parle Village to Madison. [1]
On November 12th, 150 men and 40 teams of horses from Madison violated the injunction. [11] They secretly rode to Lac qui Parle Village during the night, [2] broke into the courthouse around 2 am, seized county records from a brick vault, and stole the safe of the county treasurer. [12] [13] It was at this time the burglars began the process of physically moving the courthouse to Madison, [1] [ dead link ]15 miles (24 km) away. [14] [15]
Moving the courthouse took nearly a week due to a blizzard. [16] The courthouse was taken secretly, [2] and was described as a "kidnapping". [14] While the courthouse was being moved, those that were hauling it stopped for lunch near a school. While the courthouse was left in position near the school, students entered and took cookies from inside the building. [17] On the way to Madison the courthouse, which was being pulled on four large trucks, [18] sank into a quagmire and got stuck. [19] The courthouse did make it to Madison, however. Once the journey was completed, the courthouse was placed on its present site, which had been offered for this purpose by the Madison Townsite Company as an attempt to persuade voters to choose Madison as the county seat. [1]
When it was realized that the courthouse was being moved, a telegram was sent from H. Steinarson, the county auditor, to Governor Lucius Frederick Hubbard: "The county records are being removed to Madison, and the court house [ sic ] is being torn down while injunction is served upon the county officers not to let anything be moved. Business suspended. What shall I do in the matter?" The governor sent back a reply: "The county attorney and sheriff will be able to secure obedience to the law and the courts." [20]
A legal battle ensued, culminating in the case being heard by the Minnesota Supreme Court in September 1887. The court ruled that the law under which the county seat election was held was unconstitutional. County records were then moved back to Lac qui Parle Village under a court order. [21] [1] In 1888, residents elected Jacob F. Jacobson, a Madison citizen who had helped drag the courthouse to Madison, [16] to the Minnesota House of Representatives, [22] hoping he would enact a law allowing for the county seat to be changed. [21] Jacobson was successful, and on May 21, 1889, Madison was officially approved as the county seat of Lac qui Parle County. [1]
A new county courthouse was built in 1899, [2] which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1] On June 21, 1899, a cornerstone-laying ceremony was held. Animosity over the dispute lingered—when representatives from Maxwell Township (which is closer to Dawson than Madison [23] ) were invited to attend the ceremony, the township replied: "Lay your own cornerstone!" [24] [1]
Johannes B. Wist used the episode of the theft of the courthouse in The Rise of Jonas Olsen, [25] a serialized fictional column in Decorah-Posten , which has since been published as a book in English, translated from the original Norwegian. [26]
Yellow Medicine County is a county in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Minnesota. Its eastern border is formed by the Minnesota River. As of the 2020 census, the population was 9,528. Its county seat is Granite Falls.
Lac qui Parle County is a county in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Minnesota. As of the 2020 census, the population was 6,719. Its county seat is Madison. The largest city in the county is Dawson.
Dawson is a city in Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 1,466 at the 2020 census.
Madison is a city in and the county seat of Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota, United States, along the 45th parallel. The population was 1,518 at the 2020 census. It proclaims itself to be the "lutefisk capital of the USA."
The Lac qui Parle River is a tributary of the Minnesota River, 118 miles (190 km) long, in southwestern Minnesota in the United States. A number of tributaries of the river, including its largest, the West Branch Lac qui Parle River, also flow in eastern South Dakota. Via the Minnesota River, the Lac qui Parle River is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River, draining an area of 1,156 square miles (2,990 km2) in an agricultural region. Slightly more than two-thirds of the Lac qui Parle watershed is in Minnesota.
Lac qui Parle State Park is a state park of Minnesota, United States, near Watson. Lac qui Parle is a French translation of the native Dakota name, "Mde Lyedan," meaning "lake that speaks".
Minnesota State Highway 40 (MN 40) is a 72.723-mile-long (117.036 km) state highway in west-central Minnesota, which travels from South Dakota Highway 20 (SD 20) at the South Dakota state line near Marietta and continues east to its eastern terminus at its intersection with County State-Aid Highway 5 (CSAH 5) in Willmar.
Joseph Renville (1779–1846) was an interpreter, translator, expedition guide, Canadian officer in the War of 1812, founder of the Columbia Fur Company, and an important figure in dealings between settlers of European ancestry and Dakota (Sioux) Natives in Minnesota. He contributed to the translation of Christian religious texts into the Dakota language. The hymnal Dakota dowanpi kin, was "composed by J. Renville and sons, and the missionaries of the A.B.C.F.M." and was published in Boston in 1842. Its successor, Dakota Odowan, first published with music in 1879, has been reprinted many times and is in use today.
The Lac qui Parle County Courthouse, located at 600 6th Street in Madison, Lac qui Parle County in the U.S. state of Minnesota is a Richardsonian Romanesque style building featuring a high central tower, built in 1899 at a cost of $30,689.
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota. It is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map.
Buechner & Orth was a St. Paul, Minnesota-based architectural firm that designed buildings in Minnesota and surrounding states, including 13 courthouses in North Dakota. It was the subject of a 1979 historic resources study.
Lac qui Parle Mission is a pre-territorial mission in Chippewa County, Minnesota, United States, which was founded in June 1835 by Dr. Thomas Smith Williamson and Alexander Huggins after fur trader Joseph Renville invited missionaries to the area. "Lac qui Parle" is the French translation of the native Dakota name, "Mde Lyedan," meaning "lake which speaks". In the 19th century, the first dictionary of the Dakota language was written, and part of the Bible was translated into that language for the first time at a mission on the site of the park. It was a site for Christian missionary work to the Sioux for nearly 20 years. Renville was related to and had many friends in the Native community, and after his death in 1846, the mission was taken over by the "irreligious" Martin McLeod. The relationship between the mission and the Dakota people worsened, and in 1854 the missionaries abandoned the site and relocated to the Upper Sioux Agency.
The 1988 United States presidential election in Minnesota took place on November 8, 1988, as part of the 1988 United States presidential election. Voters chose ten representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
Lac qui Parle County Airport is a public use airport in Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota, United States. Also known as Bud Frye Field, it is located two nautical miles (4 km) southeast of the central business district of Madison. The airport opened in 2001 and it is owned by Lac qui Parle County and the cities of Madison and Dawson.
Lac qui Parle is a lake in Minnesota.
Lac qui Parle is an unincorporated community in Lac qui Parle Township, Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota, United States. Lac qui Parle Village is the county's first permanently settled community, starting in 1868.
Jacob F. Jacobson was an American businessman and politician.
The Dawson Sentinel is an English-language newspaper operating in Dawson, Minnesota. It was founded in December 1884 and is published weekly on Wednesdays.
Williamsburg, Minnesota is an extinct town, and the first townsite in Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota.
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