|
C. C. Becker: McIntosh County German- Russian
Pioneer
By Dr. Gordon L. Iseminger, Department of History, University
of North Dakota, Grand Forks
North Dakota History, State Historical Society
of North Dakota, Bismarck, North Dakota, Summer 1983, Volume 50,
Number 3, Pages 4-13
When Christian C. Becker, his wife Carolina, and two-year daughter
Ottilia arrived in Mclntosh County, Dakota Territory, in the spring
of 1885, they found country, conditions, and circumstances very much
like those their countrymen had found when they arrived on the steppes
of South Russia five generations before. An almost uninhabited prairie
stretched to the horizon, broken only by the Fort Yates Trail that
meandered from old Fort Sisseton, through Ellendale, to the Missouri
River.
Opened for settlement in September, 1884, McIntosh County had only
390 inhabitants in 1885. A few were located in or near the single
small town of Hoskins, but most were settled on farms scattered
across the county. Becker settled on the Northwest quarter of Section
5, Township 129, Range 68, a few miles east of the present-day Ashley.
He boasted that he was the first to file on land in the township,
and he might well have been. Containing 1,008 square miles, divided
into 4,032 quarter sections available for entry, Mclntosh County
in 1885 had less than three people per square mile.1
Christian C. Becker was born on July 23, 1859, in Beresina, South
Russia, to Christian and Sarah Becker (nee Ley). Becker's parents
had both been born in Beresina and were prosperous farmers in this
German colony located just above the Black Sea. Young Christ had
a childhood typical of German-Russians. He worked on his father's
farm and attended school where emphasis was on the Bible and religious
instruction. Terms were arranged so as not to interfere with farm
work.
On January 22, 1881, Becker married Carolina Schlenker. She had
also been born in South Russia, in Borodino, on November 28, 1861.
Unlike most German-Russians who came to North Dakota from the Black
Sea area, Becker was not a farmer. At the time of his marriage,
he was a shoemaker.
Responding to manifestos of Catherine the Great and Alexander I
that offered them religious liberty, certain tax exemptions, exemption
from military service, and land, Germans from Alsace, Baden, Bavaria,
and Wurttemberg had left their homeland and established colonies
along the Volga River and above the Black Sea in South Russia. By
the time the first migration of German-Russians to the United States
began, some 300 mother colonies had been established. They in turn
had spawned almost 3,000 daughter colonies by the time of the Russian
Revolution in 1917.
In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the Russian government,
like governments in western Europe, was attempting to centralize,
consolidate, and unify the country. As a consequence, conditions
for Germans in South Russia changed. Beginning in 1871, the Russian
language had to be taught in German schools, records had to be kept
in Russian, and Germans were subject to military conscription. German-Russians
were dismayed. Assuming their rights and special position had been
granted for all eternity, they believed themselves to have been
wronged and began to consider emigration as an alternative to becoming
Russianized.
Just at the time German-Russians were considering leaving Russia,
millions of acres of land lying west of the Mississippi River in
the United States were opened to settlement under the Pre-emption,
Homestead, and Timber Culture acts. Almost providentially, America
also offered the very freedoms even then being denied to the German-Russians,
and there was no irksome compulsory military service in America.
News of the advantages to be gained by emigrating to America was
sent back to South Russia by German-Russians who had come to America
in 1873. Railroads, land companies, and other promoters also distributed
literature in South Russia. After the day's work was done, colonists
gathered in front of their houses or in the village street and talked
about the letters, newspapers, and pamphlets from America. Their
yearning, anxiety, and uncertainty were expressed in the gesture
of pointing to the sunset and exclaiming “Dort naus ist
Amerika!”' (Away out there is America!). America meant
land and opportunity. But it was also a long way off and it was
an unknown.
Tens of thousands of German-Russians left for America, Canada,
South America, and other destinations before emigration was cut
off by the outbreak of the Great War in 1914. Christ and Carolina
Becker made their decision to leave in the spring of 1885. It was
a painfully difficult decision to make. They had a small child and
very little money. The heartbreak of leaving home, family, and colony,
the anxiety of moving halfway around the world, and the uncertainty
involved with making a beginning in a strange country -- all were
expressed in the saying, "Auswandern ist der halbe Tod"
(Emigration is half a death).
Physical preparations for the trip to America were much easier
to make than the emotional. The Beckers' few personal belongings
were sold to raise money for passage. Clothing, bedding, kitchen
utensils, and hand tools were packed. Dried meat, bread crisped
in the oven, and scalded milk were prepared to provide food on the
trip.
The bulk of German-Russians left South Russia from Odessa on the
Black Sea, traveled by rail to Bremen, the Hansa port in northern
Germany, and took passage on a steamship to New York. The Beckers
sailed from Bremen on the Ems on April 19, 1885. Passage
cost them $45.00 apiece from Odessa to New York. No fare was charged
for children traveling with their parents.
After a voyage lasting nine days, the Beckers landed in New York
and boarded a train for the trip to Dakota Territory. They arrived
in Scotland, in southeastern Dakota Territory, on May 22, little
more than a month after leaving their home in South Russia. They
were met in Scotland by Daniel Boettcher, a friend of the family.
After seeing so many strange things since leaving Russia and after
hearing so many different people speaking foreign tongues, it was
comforting to hear a familiar voice and the familiar words, “Ich
freue mich Sie zu sehen “ (I am glad to see you).
Boettcher helped Becker buy a wagon, a yoke of oxen, a cow, and
some supplies and to arrange the trip to Ipswich, the closest one
could get by rail to McIntosh County until Eureka was established
in 1887. In Ipswich, Becker bought a cookstove for $16.00, but had
to mortgage the cow to pay for it. From Ipswich, the Beckers left
by oxen and wagon for Mclntosh County. The trip took two days.
For land-seeking German-Russians, McIntosh County had much to offer.
Because the county was outside the Northern Pacific Railroad land
grant, all of its more than four thousand quarter sections could
be taken up by settlers under the terms of the Pre-emption, Homestead,
and Timber Culture acts.2 Rich soil covered
the county in depths ranging from twenty to forty-eight inches and
was advertised as being capable of producing fifteen to thirty-five
bushels of No.1 hard wheat to the acre. Blue joint, buffalo, and
slough grass was abundant and would provide good grazing and winter
feed for live-stock. The land was gently rolling and was watered
and drained by numerous springs and creeks. Good water for stock
and household use could supposedly be found at shallow depths. Lying
just north of the latitude of the city of Odessa in South Russia,
McIntosh County -- except for its winters -- had a similar climate.
In short, McIntosh County was very much like the Russian steppes
from which the German Russians emigrated. In addition, settled country
surrounded the county on all sides and three railroad lines were
surveyed through it.3
The Beckers arrived too late in the season to break any sod or
plant a crop the first year, but they were busy all summer nevertheless.
Hay had to be put up for the livestock and for fuel, and a house
had to be built.
In Ellendale, Becker purchased a few pieces of lumber from which
to make window frames and a door, but the rest of the house was
constructed from sod. Nina Farley Wishek remembered that the Becker
house, in which she lived and taught school, was “the typical
building of our McIntosh foreigners, sod, plastered inside and out
with a native clay, and consisting of two rooms.”4
The floor was dirt, but was packed so hard it could be swept with
a soft broom.
Until the house was completed the Beckers lived for several months
in the wagon box which had been lifted from its wheels and placed
on the ground. The canvas cover offered some protection from the
rain and sun, but their living quarters were cramped and uncomfortable.
The cookstove was set up on the prairie, and dry slough grass was
twisted and used for fuel.
In his typical German-Russian house, Becker, who had learned the
art of brickmaking in Russia, built a typical German-Russian stove
of stones and sun-baked bricks. Clay was used as mortar. When completed,
the stove was about four feet wide, five feet long, and six feet
high. It was built into the partition between the two rooms so that
it would warm both.
The foundation for a “Russian” stove was prepared by
wetting and packing the soil until it was hard and smooth. Then
the stove's outer walls of stones were built up to a height of three
feet, leaving the inside of the stove open. Over this opening a
wide plate of iron was laid that nearly covered the opening except
for a place at one end for the flue. On this plate the bread was
placed for baking, or the food for cooking. From some discarded
wagon wheels he found on the prairie, Becker stripped the iron tires;
these he cut, pounded flat, and used as the plate.
The outer walls of the stove were then continued to a height of
six feet. Passages were left for the smoke and fire to flow about
the baking compartment and out the chimney. The chimney was constructed
from sun-dried clay bricks. In the side facing the kitchen, Becker
made an opening twelve by sixteen inches and fitted it with a door.
Through this door the stove was fired.
Such stoves were fueled with twisted hay, straw, reeds, or dried
manure and needed to be filled only twice a day -- once in the morning
and once in the evening -- to keep the houses comfortable. Bread
baked in these stoves was noted for its taste and texture and often
was the only food available.
Fuel, livestock feed, and building materials were readily obtainable
on the prairie, but not so the food to sustain human life. Among
the greatest problems facing immigrants newly arrived in Dakota,
especially those with little or no money, was providing food for
themselves until the first crop could be harvested. What money Becker
had brought with him had been spent for the oxen, wagon, cow, and
stove. He had planted no crop in 1885 and would harvest none. Yet
food had to be found for the winter of 1885-86.
German-Russian men often wore Russian sheepskin coats, the Schafpelz,
or Pelz, as they were called. The long, curled, dark astrakhan
was on the inside and the tanned yellowish hide was on the outside.
They were long and heavy and homely in appearance, but in them men
could endure the most intense cold. Many German-Russians brought
these coats to America and those settlers who knew what to expect
during Dakota winters coveted them for the protection they afforded
against the bitter cold. The Beckers had brought a number of Pelz
with them from Russia, and Becker prudently traded the coats for
wheat; when ground into flour, it provided the family with bread
until a crop could be harvested.
Becker also tried to find work so that he might earn money with
which to purchase supplies for the winter. But the area around him
was so undeveloped and so sparsely settled that no jobs were available.
Finally, in early September, he was hired on a threshing rig. He
worked for three weeks at $2.00 per day and board. He slept in barns
or in straw stacks.
And, like others for whom they were almost the only source of income
during the early years, Becker collected buffalo bones. When German-Russians
arrived in Mclntosh County, the buffalo were gone, but their bones
lay thick on the prairie. The bones could be picked up, taken to
a town on the railroad, and sold or exchanged for supplies. The
bones were shipped east to make carbon black used in refining sugar.
The price of bones fluctuated, and declined in later years, but
Becker was paid $10.00 per ton for the nearly six tons he hauled
to Ellendale that first fall.5
By the time winter arrived, the Beckers had acquired few possessions
besides the wagon, oxen, cow, and cookstove. Some dishes had been
purchased in Ipswich and a few were given to them. Using only a
saw, hammer, and knife, Becker fashioned a trunk, table, benches,
and bed from rough lumber. In Ellendale he bought a small kerosene
lamp for thirty-five cents, the only lamp the family used for many
years. With his buffalo-bone money Becker bought a clock and a kitchen
cupboard. And they had their land and their sod house. It was a
beginning, and, as a German-Russian proverb expresses it, “Aller
Anfang ist Schwer” (All beginnings are difficult).
But, Gerrnan-Russian beginnings in Dakota were particularly difficult
because German-Russians were different -- different in speech, dress,
mannerisms, and culture -- more so than any other immigrant group.
A practice that struck other settlers as strange, for example, was
that German-Russian women worked in the fields and in the barns.
And German-Russian women bore many babies. Families with ten, twelve,
fifteen, or twenty children were not uncommon. In busy times, such
as seeding and harvesting, it seemed that they could scarcely spare
the time to deliver their babies. Carolina Becker, for example,
gave birth to a baby girl in the shade of the hayrack while in the
hayfield. Leaving her newborn baby in the care of an older daughter,
Mrs. Becker then returned to work helping her husband put up hay.
German-Russians also encountered on the prairie situations to which
they were unaccustomed. Indians are an excellent example. A large
proportion of German-Russians in both Dakotas lived near reservations
and were unnerved by the sight of Indians and by rumors that they
were on the warpath.
Also fearsome was the loneliness experienced on the prairie. True,
German-Russians had come from the steppes of South Russia and, true,
the Russian steppes were much like the Dakota prairies. But there
was a difference. In Russia they had lived in villages. In Dakota
the nearest neighbor was often miles away. Many experienced feelings
of despair and “To the Homeland I would like to go”
was a song frequently sung during the early years. When asked by
Nina Farley Wishek whether he was content in America or regretted
leaving Russia, C.C. Becker replied “Ach Gott, yes, I wish
I was back in Russia.”6
Another serious problem, especially during the first years, was
the lack of farm machinery to break and till the stubborn prairie
sod. It was the fortunate settler indeed who could boast of owning
more than a yoke of oxen, a wagon, and a breaking plow. In partnership
with Christoph Nitschke and Frederich Wahl, with whom he had come
from South Russia, Becker owned a mower and a hayrake.7
Threshing the first year was done by having the oxen tread the grain
from the straw on a threshing floor, but in subsequent years threshing
machines were used.
Lacking money with which to purchase farm machinery, enterprising
German-Russians improvised. At first they used short, rough logs
bound together to work the plowed land, break up the lumps, and
prepare a seedbed. Becker and his neighbors soon devised a better
method. The butt ends of tree branches were secured between two
two-by-fours that were bolted together. Large stones were laid on
the branches to make a heavy drag and fastened to the two-by-fours
was a doubletree to which the oxen or horses were hitched. Such
an implement was moderately effective in working the soil, but it
demanded infinite patience, stubbornness, and perseverance on the
part of the farmer. The stones fell off and the branches wore out
and had to be replaced frequently.
Sleds were another necessary piece of equipment. They were often
the only possible of transportation when the prairies were drifted
over with snow. During the winter of 1886-87, Becker used his sled
and oxen to haul groceries from Ellendale to the store at Hoskins.
He was paid $1.00 per hundred pounds and during the winter earned
$100.00.
The three greatest hardships faced by Mclntosh County German-Russians
were droughts, prairie fires, and blizzards. All were forces greater
than they and against them they had almost no defense.
Years of insufficient moisture were not uncommon on the Drift Prairie
where many German-Russians settled, but 1890 was the worst drought
year in the memory of Becker and other Mclntosh County pioneers.
For months no rain fell. Because the prairie grass did not grow,
there was a shortage of summer grazing and a lack of hay for winter
feed and for fuel. If grain was sown, the kernels did not sprout.
With no crop, there was no money with which to buy supplies for
the winter. Some men walked as far as Jamestown to find work on
threshing rigs and were paid as little as $1.00 per day. A few scattered
buffalo bones remained, but it sometimes took a week to pick up
a wagonload and the price had dropped to $2.00 per ton.
That no crop had been harvested in 1890 meant that there was no
seed wheat for the 1891 planting. The county commissioners took
steps to provide seed for those needing it, but Becker and his neighbors
preferred to help themselves. They had heard of a George Joos near
Jamestown who had seed wheat for sale. They were reluctant to ask
for seed when they had no money with which to pay for it, but Becker
agreed to be the spokesman for his neighbors and they agreed to
do his fall plowing while he was gone. Becker made the long trip
to Jamestown and arranged with Joos to buy a carload of seed wheat
on credit. Joos also agreed to pay the freight to Edgeley, the nearest
the grain could be taken to Ashley by rail. Crop yields were good
in 1891, and Becker and his neighbors paid Joos $1.00 per bushel
for the wheat he had sold them the year before and also reimbursed
him for the freight costs to Edgeley.
Severe droughts were to be dreaded, but they occurred infrequently.
Prairie fires were a constant menace, and although they usually
occurred in the fall—often in October—they could break
out any time. German-Russians had fought prairie fires on the Russian
steppes, but they were unprepared for those they experienced in
North Dakota. The prairie grass was five to six feet tall in places
and so thick it was matted. Fires roared through the dry grass like
thunder and could be heard burning at night from ten to fifteen
miles away. As a fire increased in size and as its heat became more
intense, it began to generate a fierce wind and often moved so fast
it could outrun a horse. They were almost impossible to check and
sometimes ran for miles, burning everything in their paths. During
the early years, there were few plowed fields, graded roads, or
railroad embankments to serve as barriers to the spread of the fires.
The prudent built firebreaks around their haystacks, grainstacks,
and buildings by plowing parallel furrows a few feet apart and burning
the grass on the intervening strips. But burning wisps of hay, cow
chips, or other materials were tossed ahead of the flames, and fires
sometimes leaped across firebreaks fifty and sixty feet wide. A
large fire could leap across a stream of water.
Settlers fought fires with wet sacks and blankets and on occasion
stripped off coats, jackets, and overalls and used them to beat
out the flames. Very large fires were sometimes fought by skinning
a cow or horse and pulling the green hide, flesh side down, over
the flames from ropes tied to two horses. A man rode on the hide
to give it weight and in this way the fire was smothered. Others
followed behind to extinguish the smaller flames. People became
exhausted fighting fires that threatened that threatened to consume
their possessions, buildings, livestock, feed, and often their very
lives.
Among the worst of the many prairie fires that occurred in Becker's
neighborhood was one in 1889 that burned out of control until it
left not a green spear of anything for miles in all directions.
The fire generated a strong wind that enabled it to leap firebreaks
thirty feet wide and lift bundles of grain from the grainstacks
and toss them about as if they were wisps of straw. Buildings, livestock,
feed, crops, machinery—all were burned. Among the few houses
spared were sod houses and many of them suffered damage to their
roofs. Many people died.
German-Russians had experienced in South Russia almost all the
natural disasters they would face in Dakota—drought, prairie
fires, cyclones, hailstorms, grasshoppers, and gophers—but
not blizzards. Winters in the area immediately north of the Black
Sea were mild. Grapes could be grown and wine produced. Farmers
could be in their fields in February.
Even were it not for the numbing cold, a number of circumstances
combined to make winters in North Dakota miserable and dangerous.
Prairie fires in the fall burned off much of the grass. There were
few farms, trees, graded roads, or railroad embankments to prevent
the snow from drifting. It drifted across the bare prairie in the
slightest breeze until it came up against haystacks, buildings,
or other man-made objects. Sod houses were built low to the ground
and snow often drifted over them until only the chimneys were visible.
Snow drifted over the tops of the barns, sometimes to such depths
that steps had to be cut down to the doors to allow the livestock
to get out. Sometimes the snow was so deep that feed and water had
to be lowered through holes cut in the barn roofs and the livestock
had to spend weeks in their cramped quarters. Drifting snow covered
the wells to such depths on occasion that water could be obtained
only by melting snow. Weary of trying to keep paths shovelled through
the snow, homesteaders sometimes dug tunnels connecting their houses
with the other farm buildings. Such tunnels might be as many as
ten feet beneath the surface of the snow.
Under the best of circumstances, Dakota winters were severe. They
were even worse if they set in early or lasted too long into the
spring. Livestock feed was fed up before pasture was available.
Fuel stocks were depleted. Flour was used up. Many lives were lost
in attempts to secure additional livestock feed, fuel, or food.
C.C. Becker remembered the winter of 1888 as the worst. According
to Bismarck weather bureau records, minimum temperatures for January,
1888, averaged sixteen degrees below zero, and the month remained
for many years the coldest January on record. The lowest mark recorded
in Bismarck was thirty-seven degrees below zero on January 14. It
was forty degrees below zero at Ashley. There was a heavy snow cover.
Aggravating the cold was a three-day blizzard that struck early
in the morning on January 12. The blinding snow was driven by winds
that were in excess of fifty miles per hour, and at one point the
thermometer fell to forty degrees below zero. The storm claimed
the life of Christ Kaul, one of Becker's neighbors. Returning to
his home after having checked on his parents who lived just west
of him, Kaul lost his way. He walked all afternoon and into the
night until he found an abandoned sod house in which he sought shelter,
but in which he froze to death. Searchers traced Kaul's footsteps
and concluded that he had passed between his house and barn during
his wanderings. He had been unable to see them because of the swirling
snow.8
Struggling against the elements and wresting a living from the
rock-studded prairie sod left settlers little time for anything
else, but they did not neglect entirely the things of the spirit.
Christ Becker was a leader in establishing both the school and the
church in his neighborhood.
Nina Farley Wishek's first teaching experience as a young, unmarried
woman was in schools held in German-Russian communities. Aware that
the German-Russians spoke no English, she was certain that living
among them would resemble being stranded on a desert island. She
was tempted, however, by salaries of $30.00 to $32.00 per month
and by, to use her word, the “adventure.” And it was
an adventure. Wishek spoke no German and her pupils spoke no English.
Communication was difficult and progress was slow.
Nina Farley Wishek taught the 1886-87 term in the first school
to be organized in Becker's neighborhood. Becker was on the school
board, the school was held in his two-room sod house, and Wishek
lived with the Beckers. She was paid $30.00 per month in warrants.
Parents purchased their children's school books at Tony Bjornson's
drug store in Hoskins. The Beckers kept to themselves in the kitchen,
and school was held in the living room, which was also the bedroom.
Becker thought Wishek was attempting to teach her pupils too much,
but she preferred this criticism to the one that she was teaching
them too little.9
While living among the German-Russians, Wishek observed that they
were innately religious and strict in the observance of the Sabbath.
Churches were often established and built before schools, and more
money was spent on churches than on schools. Mission work had begun
in 1884 in the area ten miles southeast of Ashley, and St. James
Lutheran Church, the oldest church in the Ashley Lutheran Parish,
was organized in March, 1889, by a Reverend Zapf. C.C. Becker was
a charter member. That same year the first building was erected,
at a cost of $650.00. Members did most of the work themselves.
Mission work was also begun by the Lutherans in what was known
as the Jewell parish east of Ashley by a Reverend Bruun about 1890.
In 1896 Bruun started a preaching station in Ashley. Worship services
were held first in private homes, then in the schoolhouse, and finally
in a room in the courthouse. Zion Lutheran Congregation was organized
on September 25,1903. By this time Becker had moved to Ashley and
became a charter member of this congregation as well as of St. James.
The first church building was completed in 1904 at a cost of $2,000
and dedication services were held in May.10
Before any church buildings were built or congregations organized
in Becker's neighborhood, however, worship services were held in
his home. People came to the services on foot, on stoneboats, in
wagons, even on hayrakes. Pastor Frederick Brey from Leola, in present-day
South Dakota, was the first pastor. He was supported by the synod
because the parishioners could not afford to pay him a salary. They
did, however, give him money or gifts, depending on what they could
afford. On those Sundays when Brey could not lead the worship services,
Becker conducted them, reading the Bible, leading the prayers, and
reading from a book of sermons.
In yet another area Becker provided leadership. When McIntosh County
was organized in 1884, Hoskins was the county seat. The "courthouse"
was in the same building that served as claims office, law office,
post office, hotel, and store. Early in 1885, after proving up on
his claim, John H. Wishek moved his claim shack into town and county
business was then transacted in that building. When the county seat
was moved to Ashley in 1888, Wishek's former claim shanty was also
moved and continued to serve as the courthouse. The building also
housed sleeping quarters, a bank, the post office, and the office
of the McIntosh County Republican, a newspaper published
in both English and German.
Although additions were built at various times, the building became
increasingly crowded. Christian Becker believed that McIntosh County
could do better by itself and began to promote the construction
of a courthouse building. No county funds were available for construction,
however, and the county was already bonded over its $9,000 limit.
In May, 1894, Becker called a meeting for the purpose of raising
money and planning construction. The meeting was held in front of
Gulack's implement shop and Becker presided over the gathering while
standing in a wagon box. His plan was simple: if each of 800 farmers
contributed $2.00 to the project, the $1,600 raised would be enough
to design and construct a courthouse. When his plan was put to a
vote, his listeners cast their votes by moving to one side or the
other of the open area in front of the wagon. All were in favor
of Becker's plan except those farmers from the northwest corner
of the county who preferred to have the county seat located closer
to their farms. Because Ashley was the county seat, however -- and
the only town in the county at the time -- there was no other choice.
Becker had prepared a subscription list, and Gottfried Heinrich
was the first to sign. Heinrich and six others were selected to
collect subscriptions in the county.
Two bids were submitted for the construction of the new courthouse,
one by Herman Hardt for $1,600 and one by a Mr. Huber of Eureka
for $1,500. The lower bid was accepted. More than enough money was
collected; the contractor and all bills were paid in cash.
The building was first called "The Farmer House" because
the farmers of the county had built it and they owned it. In 1902,
the structure was deeded to the county, free of debt and with enough
money to pay for a coat of paint. Later enlarged and remodeled,
it served as McIntosh County courthouse until 1919 when it was replaced
by a brick structure.11
Unlike thousands of his countrymen who remained on the land, Becker
left the farm ten years after arriving in McIntosh County. In the
fall of 1894 he was elected Judge of Probate Court, an office he
held for two terms, and in May, 1895, he moved his family into a
new home he had built in Ashley. In 1901 he was elected to a term
as County Treasurer. Becker prospered in Ashley. The addition of
a second story in the summer of 1904 made his house one of the largest
and finest residences in town. In the spring of 1908, cement sidewalks
were laid on his property.12
By the time Becker completed his term as County Treasurer, pioneering
days in McIntosh County were over. In December, 1901, Ashley had
telephones linking the First State Bank, Rogers Lumber Company,
the courthouse, and the residences of C.C. Hammond and G.O. Gulack.
Five years later, in 1906, the new telephone directory listed thirty-eight
phones in Ashley.13 Although they were still
so new they attracted attention, steam traction engines were being
used for plowing, and John Geiszler had a gasoline threshing engine
on display at his implement shop where he handled the Case line
of farm machinery. Calculations were made easier in the County Auditor's
office with the installation of a $350 Burroughs adding machine,
and housewives no longer needed to spend hours stooped over scrubboard
and washtub. The Cash Bazaar advertised One-Minute Washers—"The
machines that save time and make washing easy." John H. Wishek's
new automobile arrived from Bismarck on May 14, 1909, and caused
a sensation on Ashley's streets.14
C.C. Becker was a German-Russian, but in many ways did not fit
the stereotype that grew over time to characterize people of that
ethnic heritage. German-Russians, for example, were supposedly possessed
by a land hunger. In the late 1930's, Becker stated on his Historical
Data Project questionnaire that he had emigrated to Dakota because
he wanted land and that he settled on a quarter section in Jewell
Township in 1885. In 1894, however, he sold this land to Gottfried
Heinrich for $900 (there was a $350 mortgage on it). Becker subsequently
bought land on the outskirts of Ashley, on which the Ashley airport
is now located, but did not farm. He clerked in Ashley stores, such
as the Cash Bazaar; worked in banks in Ashley, Linton, and Merricourt;
and had an interest in the Merricourt bank and in the Union State
Bank in Ashley. 15 When interviewed by the
WPA Field Worker for the Historical Data Project, Becker had retired,
and he and his wife were making their living weaving rag rugs. No
land hunger here.
Another aspect of the German-Russian stereotype was their alleged
aversion to politics and office-holding. Their experience in Russia
taught German-Russians to distrust politicians and government officials.
Russian officials were outsiders in the German colonies and they
were often heavy-handed and venal. Politics was outside the community
and, because foreign, to be avoided.
In 1894 Becker was elected McIntosh County Judge of Probate, an
office he held from 1895 to 1901. He then served a term as McIntosh
County Treasurer. In May, 1904, Becker represented McIntosh County
Republicans at the State Republican Convention in Fargo where he
was a member of the Committee on Permanent Organization. Also in
1904, and again in 1908, Becker was elected Chairman of the McIntosh
County Republican Central Committee. It indicates Becker's position
in Republican circles that he and his wife were invited to accompany
Senator Porter J. McCumber on a trip to Canada in 1903.16
Little aversion to politics and office-holding here.
Another supposed characteristic of German-Russians was that they
disliked free public education and compulsory-attendance laws. Becker,
however, served on the first school board organized in his district,
and the first term of school was held in his sod house. Becker always
stressed the importance of acquiring an education and told his children
that because schooling in America was free they should take advantage
of it. All of his eight children attended high school. Of his six
daughters, Ottilia, Emma, and Lydia were teachers in McIntosh County
rural schools or in the Ashley school system.17
No dislike of free public education and compulsory-attendance laws
here.
Among the best-known characteristics of German-Russians is that
they held fast to the mother tongue. While in Russia they refused
to learn Russian and when in America they resisted learning English.
On his way to Dakota Territory, however, Becker purchased for twenty-five
cents a book published by the German Society of New York entitled
Ahn 's Amerikanischer Dolmetscher -- Ahn's American Interpreter.
With this book Becker taught himself English (and from it his English-speaking
grandchildren later learned German), and, against the wishes of
his wife, taught his children English. Ten years after his arrival
in Mclntosh County, Becker was elected to a county office. Records
were written in longhand, in English. Becker's acquaintances remember
that he claimed to be able to speak six languages. No clinging to
the mother tongue here.
C.C. and Carolina Becker had eleven children, three of whom died
in infancy. They celebrated their golden wedding anniversary on
January 22, 1931. Mrs. Becker died on December 10, 1945. Becker
died on February 19, 1953, at the age of ninety-three. He was survived
by one son, six daughters, two sisters, twenty grandchildren, twenty-four
great-grandchildren, and four great-great-grandchildren.
Christian C. Becker was a McIntosh County German-Russian pioneer
who successfully made the transition from the Russian steppe to
the North Dakota prairie. He learned English, sent his children
to public school, participated in politics, and held public office.
But his funeral service was read in German.
Reprinted with permission of North Dakota History.
|
|
| The family of Christian C. Becker:
(Back row) Emma, Annetta, Ottilia, Lydia; (Center) C.C. Becker,
Carolina Becker; (Front) Enoch, Hulda, Otto, Viola. –
Courtesy Gordon L. Iseminger |
A German immigrant from Russia proudly
models his pelz. Originally published in an 1986 edition
of Harper’s Weekly, the photograph is reproduced from
Richard Sallet, Russian-German Settlements in the United
States (1974). – Courtesy North Dakota Istitute for
Regional Studies, Fargo. |
|
|
| Nina Farley Wishek’s Along
the Trails of Yesterday: A story of McIntosh County included
this picture of a typical homestead house. The building, made
from a clay brick and stone, has a thatched roof. –Courtesy
Gordon L. Iseminger |
An important tool for the new German
immigrant from Russia was Ahn’s American Interpreter,
published by the German Society in New York. Christian C. Becker
purchased his copy in 1885 en route to Dakota Territory. –
Courtesy Gordon L. Iseminger |
|
|
| The land office in McIntosh County
became a focus for German-Russian landseekers. Agent John H.
Wiskek stands third from the right -- From Nina Farley Wishek,
Along the Trails of Yesterday: A Story of McIntosh County. Courtesy
Gordon L. Iseminger |
Known as the “Farmer House,”
the first McIntosh County Courthouse was built by subscription
after a 1984 meeting led by C.C. Becker. The courthouse served
until 1920. –Courtesy Gordon L. Ipseminger |
|
|
| With C.C. Becker as a charter member,
the Zion Lutheran Church was organized in 1903 in Ashley. The
photograph first appeared in Nina Farley Wishek’s Along
the Trails of Yesterday: A Story of McIntosh County. –Courtesy
Gordon L. Ismenger |
After C.C. Becker was elected County
Judge of Probated in 1894, he assisted with preparing wills,
as this document drafted in 1895 indicates. The spelling of
many words suggests greater familiarity with German than with
English. Note that the maker of the will, Barbara Nies, signed
by making her mark. – Courtesy Gordon L. Isminger |
1.) “The Dakota Territorial Census of 1885,” Collections
of the State Historical Society of North Dakota, IV (Fargo, N.D.:
Knight Printing Co., 1913), pp. 369-72; Resources of Dakota,
1887 (Sioux Falls, [S.]D.: Argus-Leader Co., 1887), pp. 418-19. Unless
noted otherwise, material for this article was taken from the files
on German-Russians compiled by the Historical Data Project located
at the State Historical Society of North Dakota in Bismarck, and data
about ethnic settlement patterns in North Dakota, see William C. Sherman,
An Ethnic Prairie Mosaic: Atlas of Rural North Dakota (Fargo;
North Dakota Institute of Regional Studies, 1983), esp. pp. 42-43,
48-51.
2.) North Dakota Blue Book, 1919 (Bismarck Tribune Company, 1919),
p. LV.
3.) From the first issue of the McIntosh County Herald,
November 12, 1884, and reproduced in the Ashley Tribune,
June 1, 1933; Harper’s Weekly, July 11, 1896 p. 690.
Many pioneers later criticized the glowing descriptions of McIntosh
County and its agricultural potential because no mention had been
made of the stones that lay so thick on the land. Claims that one
could plow a straight furrow for a mile without hitting a rock were
later recognized as being ridiculous. Almost every acre had to be
cleared of rocks before it could be farmed, and many farmers cleared
by moonlight the land they intended to plow the next day. Also not
mentioned was the incessant wind, reputedly so strong, according
to the disenchanted, that sheep had been known to have been blown
against the side of a barn and held there until they starved to
death.
4.) Nina Farley Wishek, Along the Trails of Yesterday: A Story
of McIntosh County (Ashley, N.D.: Ashley Tribune, 1941), pp.
168-69.
5.) See LeRoy Barnett, “The Buffalo Bone Commerce on the
Northern Plains,” North Dakota History, 39-1 (Winter,
1972), pp. 23-42.
6.) Wishek, p. 235.
7.) Ashley’s Golden Jubilee, 1888-1938, pp. 148-49.
8.) Wishek, pp. 187-90.
9.) Ibid, pp. 180- 82.
10.) Ibid, pp. 158-61; Ashley’s Golden Jubilee,
1888-1938, p. 55.
11.) Wishek, pp. 339-43; the replacement courthouse, designed
by the St. Paul firm of Beuchner and Orth, is listed on the National
Register of Historic Places.
12.) Ashley Tribune, July 1, 1904; May 22, 1908. As County
Treasurer, Becker in 1904 issued 612 warrants for 198,890 gopher
tails on which bounty was paid totaling $3,877.80 Only in Ward County
were more bounties paid on gopher tails than in McIntosh County
during the spring of 1904 would have filled two large boxcars. Ashley
Tribune, May 20, June 10, 1904.
13.) Wishek, p. 338; Ashley Tribune, December 7, 1906.
14.) Ashley Tribune, April 19, May 10, August 2, 1907;
May 21, 1909.
15.) Wishek, p. 271; Ashley Tribune, May 27, 1908; Platbook
of North Dakota (Rockford, Ill.: W.W. Hixson & Co., n.d.).
16.) Ashley Tribune, January 6, 1905; May 20, 27, October
28, 1904; March 13, 1908.
17.) Ibid, March 11, June 3, December 2, 16, 1904.
|