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Fort Buford - Splendid Isolation
Produced by Prairie Public Television, Fargo, North Dakota, 2003,
60 minutes
Fort Buford stood in splendid isolation at the confluence of the
Yellowstone and Missouri rivers in present day North Dakota for
almost 30 yearsfrom 1866 to 1895. This menacing sentinel guarded
an important transportation route that became a lifeline for federal
troops during the plains wars of the 1870s. In 1881, Native American
leader Sitting Bull surrendered at Fort Buford.
"Fort Buford Splendid Isolation" documents how the fort
grew in the three major building phases of its lifetime. Using modern
videography, historic photos, journal entries and reenactor footage,
it gives us a glimpse into what a soldier's life was like at a remote
western military fort in the mid to late 1880s.
This exceptional program takes you on a guided tour of the Fort
Buford State Historic site and visits the National Archives in Washington,
D.C.
Major funding is provided by the State Historical Society of North
Dakota through a grant from the National Historical Publication
and Records Commission and by the members of Prairie Public. Visit
www.DiscoverND.com for more
information about historic Fort Buford and other activites of the
State Historical Society of North Dakota.
Fort Buford - Splendid Isolation
VHS is $25.00 plus Shipping & Handling
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Permission
to use any images from the GRHC website may be requested
by contacting Michael
M. Miller |
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