North Dakota Institute for
Regional Studies
North Dakota State University Library
Fargo, ND 58105-5599
(701-231-8914)
Mss
309
James B. Power (1833-1912)
Papers,
1872-1930. 8 boxes
Biography
James Buel
Power was born August 20, 1833 at Stockport, New York, the son of William H.
and Catharine A. (Buel) Power. The family shortly thereafter moved to
Pittsfield, Massachusetts where Mr. Power attended the local schools. In 1849 he began his railroad life as a
ticket and freight clerk at Port Jervis, New York on the New York and Erie
Railway. In 1851 Mr. Power accepted a
position in the Civil Engineering Department of the St. Louis and Pacific
Railroad as chairman of its preliminary survey. In 1852 he was transferred to its St. Louis and Iron Mountain
road in Missouri. In 1856 he accepted a
position as civil engineer in charge of work on the Susquehanna division of the
New York and Erie Railway. On March 25,
1857 he married Helen Amelia Buckhout of Newburgh, New York. They had four children, George, Charles, J.
A. “Allie”, and Clara. In 1857 they
came to Waseco County, Minnesota where Mr. Power worked as an engineer and
surveyor. In 1861 he was appointed
Chief of the Land Office in the Auditor’s Office of Minnesota and in 1862 Mr.
Power became Deputy State Treasurer. In
1867 he was appointed Chief Draftsman in the U.S> Surveyor’s Office in St.
Paul. Mr. Power remained there until
being appointed the first Land Commissioner of the Northern Pacific Railway in
1871 and in 1873 its General Agent for the Minnesota and Dakota division. In 1875 he became Land Commissioner for the
Road. During this period Mr. Power
helped promote the purchase of land for the bonanza farms in the Red River
Valley because of the 1873 depression.
In 1875 he himself bought 6,000 acres near Leonard, North Dakota calling
it the Helendale Stock Farm. In 1881 he
became the Land Commissioner of the St. Paul and Manitoba (Great Northern)
which he resigned in 1885 to become Secretary/Treasurer of the South St. Paul
Stockyards. But due to ill health he
resigned this position shortly thereafter and moved to his farm in North Dakota
to retire, living there permanently after 1890. Mr. Power was appointed director of the North Dakota Board of
Agriculture in 1887, and in 1890 on the Board of Trustees of the newly
established North Dakota Agricultural College, Fargo. Also in 1890 Mr. Power was appointed by the State Board of Public
Lands as special agent to select lands inuring to the state by the Enabling
Act. In 1893 he became Acting President
of the North Dakota Agricultural College until 1895, and in 1897 he served in
the North Dakota House of Representatives.
Mr. Power continued to live on his farm until his death on December 16,
1912. He was buried at St. Paul,
Minnesota.
Scope and Contents
The Power papers consist of correspondence, financial and
legal papers, and subject files. The
correspondence consists almost exclusively of Mr. Power’s letterpress books of
out-going correspondence from 1873-1903.
They are very complete and document his career fully during this period
with the Northern Pacific and Great northern Railways, the North Dakota
Agricultural College and his business and farming interests. All fourteen volumes are indexed, and quite
legible with several having been transcribed including the 1878 and the
1890-1894
volumes. These correspondence volumes
provide good insights into the early settlement and rise of bonanza farms in
the Red River Valley. There is some
incoming correspondence, but it is extremely scattered. The letters for 1953 to 1957 are from family
members, related to the donation of the papers and reminiscences. The financial records are various loan
agreements, property tax statements and miscellaneous receipts, mainly from
1872 to 1894. They are by no means
complete but give an indication of the varied business activities and property
holdings of Mr. Power. The legal
material includes property deeds and land abstracts for his and other lands,
and legal briefs form several court cases in North Dakota, related mainly to
conflicts in property ownership. The
miscellaneous legal documents include mortgage papers, power of attorney,
foreclosure, affidavits of publication, and sheriff’s certificate of sale. The subject files are not extensive but do
contain various speeches of Mr. Power including: wheat, cattle, prohibition,
business, and for commencements. Other
items include pencil scale drawings of the Helendale farm home and a few
abstracts of Helendale Township, Richland County board minutes. The newspaper clippings include copies of
obituaries of Mr. J. A. “Allie” Power, and articles written by James B. Power
about him.
Box Folder
Biographical
material and inventory 1 1
Correspondence
1873-1924 2
1954-1957 3
Letterpress
book, Oct. 1873 - Sept. 1876 (index) 4
Letterpress
book, July 1876 - June 1877 (index) 5
Letterpress
book, Sept. 1877 - May 1878 (index) 6
Letterpress
book, May 1878 - Dec. 1878 (index) 7
Letterpress
book, Dec. 1878 - Dec. 1880 (index) 2 1
Letterpress
book, Dec. 1880 - April 1882 (index) 2
Letterpress
book, April 1882 - March 1885 (index) 3 1
Letterpress
book, March 1885 - Oct. 1890 (index) 2
Letterpress
book, Oct. 1890 - Sept. 1894 (index) 4 1
Letterpress
book, Sept. 1894 - April 1897 (index) 2
Letterpress
book, April 1897 - May 1899 (index) 5 1
Letterpress
book, April 1891 - April 1898 (index) 2
Letterpress
book, April 1898 - Jan. 1903 (index) 3
Financial
Records
Loan
contracts, receipts, 1885, 1890, ca. 1925 6 1
Miscellaneous
receipts, 1874-1883, 1910 2
Property
tax statements, 1872-1883, 1910 3
Property
tax statements, 1880-1882 4
Property
tax statements, 1883-1886, 1888, 1894 5
Property
tax statements, 1927-1930 6
Legal
Material
Abstract of
titles, 1876, 1882, 1895, 1803 7
Legal
Briefs - Power vs. Larabee, 1890-1891 8
Legal
Briefs - Power vs. Bowle, 1890-1893 9
Legal
Briefs - Power vs. Kitching, 1901 10
Legal
Briefs - Power vs. New England Investment Company, 1904 11
Miscellaneous
documents, 1874-1879 12
Miscellaneous
documents, 1880, 1883, 1885-1886, 1890-1892 13
Property
deeds, 1876-1885 14
Argument of
Demurrer - N. P. Railroad Co. vs J. B. Power, et al., 1880s 24
Subject
Files
Farm home
building plans 15
Helendale
Township Board minute abstracts, 1888-1895 16
Livestock
registration certificates, 1921-1930 17
Newspaper
clippings 18
Newspaper
clippings 19
Speeches -
Cattle 20
Speeches -
General 21
Speeches -
Prohibition 22
Speeches -
Wheat 23
Letterpress
Book Transcriptions
May 1878 -
Dec. 1878, p. 1-50 7 1
May 1878 -
Dec. 1878, p. 51-100 2
May 1878 -
Dec. 1878, p. 101-150 3
May 1878 -
Dec. 1878, p. 151-200 4
May 1878 -
Dec. 1878, p. 201-250 5
May 1878 -
Dec. 1878, p. 251-302 6
April 1882
- March 1885, incomplete 7
March 1885
- Oct. 1890, incomplete 8
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 1-50 9
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 51-100 10
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 101-150 11
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 151-200 12
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 201-250 8 1
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 251-300 2
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 301-350 3
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 351-400 4
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 401-450 5
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 451-500 6
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 501-550 7
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 551-600 8
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 601-650 9
Oct. 1890 -
Sept. 1894, p. 651-706 10
Sept. 1894
-April 1897, incomplete 11
April 1897
- May 1899, incomplete 12
Jan. 1887 -
April 1891, incomplete 13
SEPARATIONS RECORD
The following non-manuscript items were removed from the James B. Power
papers and have been sent to the section indicated.
Maps (Institute map collection)
College
Place addition to Casselton, Dakota.
Power’s
addition to Casselton