Frank L.
Anders Papers, 1822-1965 (Mss 1417)
Scope and Content
The Frank Anders papers consists of six series: Correspondence, Public
Utilities, the Lucky Strike Coal Company, the Board of State Capitol Commissioners
concerning the construction of the North Dakota Capitol, the Missouri River
Diversion project, and Subject files.
The Correspondence Series is arranged by subject and chronological thereunder.
That on public utilities concerns a proposed water plant at Bemidji, Minnesota,
the Bismarck water department, construction work at Camp Grafton, N.D.,
a water plant at Clark, S.D., and the McClusky, N.D. water supply. Concerning
Fargo, N.D., there is correspondence on water problems, the building of
the new purification plant in 1911 while Anders was city engineer, later
correspondence when he was water commissioner and concerning flood control.
There is material on a proposal light and power plant at Mayville, N.D.
and of the plant built in 1928.
The Lucky Strike Coal Company correspondence deals with Mr. Anders' years
as receiver and manager of the bankrupt company and covers a variety of
matters such as legal issues, labor problems, equipment, finances, and
attempts to dispose of the mine (1921-1937). Letters from John Moses (later
governor), Judge J. M. Hanley, Judge J. L. Berry and Commissioner R. J.
Murphy are included.
The Board of State Capitol Commissioners correspondence covers Anders'
years as Secretary and deals with the organizing of the commission, the
selection of a site, architects and contractors, trips by the commission
to study other buildings, various suggestions from state officials on the
design, and numerous matters involving the construction of the building.
The correspondence on the Missouri Diversion concerns the early days of
its promotion and includes communications with the Missouri River Diversion
Association, Isaac Walton League, National Rivers and Harbors Congress,
Greater North Dakota Association, state officials and others.
The Public Utilities Series contains a large amount of material on Fargo
(1903-1954). There are the city's annual reports (1913-1916), and pouring
specifications and cement reports (1917). Concerning the sewer system are
blueprints on inlets, manholes, information on sewer sizes required, areas
of drainage, slope per thousand feet, and data on the streets and avenues.
There are diagrams showing discharge of pipes by Kutler's formula, charts
of rainfall intensity according to gauges at N.D.A.C., and U.N.D. (1912,
1915), and maps of sewer district 2762 and of the trunk system along the
Red River. Also included is data on R. T. Jacobsen's old elevations of
sewer grades, articles on Fargo sewers by Anders (1916), information on
a sewer system proposed by R. B. Blakemore (1916) and specifications for
a number of sewer jobs (1916). There is also a report on Fargo's street
lights (1909). Concerning Fargo's water supply, there are charts, graphs,
reports (1903-1911), and material on the new water purification plant which
includes the contractor's agreement (1911), blueprints of the plant and
of the Red River bottom, and reports and data on the operation of the new
plant (1912-1913). There are descriptions, reports, articles, and a booklet,
The Water Purification Plant at Fargo, North Dakota, by F.L. Anders, (1916)
on the new water plant. There is a scrapbook of clippings on Fargo's water
plant (1909-1917), and specifications for the water plant, an electricity
plant, and water mains (1911). Concerning the Water Department, there are
reports by R. B. Blakemore and F. L. Anders (1913-1917, 1930), and clippings
(1931-1936, 1954).
The material on Mayville, N.D. includes sketches, reports, and specifications
for a proposed light and water plant built in 1928. There is material on
other water systems in North Dakota, including Bismarck, Grand Forks, McClusky,
Minot, Mott, and Rolla (1909-1927). There are the North Dakota Board of
Health instructions for water and sewer systems (1920), and booklets on
damming in Eastern North Dakota (1907). There is the Sixth Biennial report
of the Water Geologist on Artesian Water (1933), and a report on a Water
Works Conference (1931). Concerning out-of-state utilities is material
on San Francisco and the Hetch-Hetchy Valley (1912), Waukegan, Illinois'
Water Works, specifications on a proposed water plant at Bemidji, Minnesota
(1918), information on Crookston, Minnesota's Water Works, and others in
Indiana, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Montana, and Tennessee (1910-1915). Also
included, is the Specification Digest form "Sweet's catalog" (1914), and
other advertisements and information.
The Lucky Strike Coal Company Series includes audits and balance sheets
(1920-1925). Also found are the By-laws, Articles of Incorporation, lists
of stockholders, minutes of director's meeting (1920-1921), and Gold Notes
(1921). There is an agreement with Northern Pacific Railroad (1929), a
lease agreement with Dakota Collieries (1931), and a loan agreement (1921).
There are papers of foreclosure, and receivership notices, inventories
(1922, 1927), a record of sales and expenses (1921) as well as reports
by F. L. Anders; P. J. Cahill, A. L. Farr, and others (1921-1930), including
financial, legal, and historical information on the company.
The Board of State Capitol Commissioners Series has material on the organization
of the Board, including clippings, reports, and a copy of H. B. No. 79
authorizing the new Capitol (1931). In regard to the selection of architects
and contractors are reports, speeches, submissions of qualifications and
clippings (1931). There is material from several inspection trips by commissioners,
George Bangs, Gen. Angus Fraser, Fred Conklin , and Secretary F. L. Anders
to Minnesota, Nebraska, Colorado, and Louisiana, with clippings, booklets,
reports, magazine articles, and post cards. There are also articles, reports,
and specifications on various public buildings. Included are clippings
on the old capitol covering the fire and also much historical information.
There is a report on the disposal of the fire debris, clippings on Jamestown's
campaign for the Capitol, and on the selection of the building site, also
clippings, programs, and reports concerning the ceremony of laying the
cornerstone (1932). In regard to the construction of the building, there
is the cube data (1932), clippings on the selection of the design (1932),
reports on elevators, on electrical roll calls, page calls and voting systems,
on brick vs. Limestone as facing material, and on heating and ventilating
including gas vs. Lignite coal, the Kolflat report on boilers and a discussion
of that (1934).
Also found are reports on light and power, furniture, marble work, wood
and stone finishing and the water supply, as well as progress reports and
charts (1932-1933), the Board's report to the Governor (1932), a report
on soil tests for the foundation (1931), and a questionnaire to state officials
for suggestions (1931). There are reports on specifications (1931), the
Specifications for General Work (1932), and Specifications for Mechanical
Work, (1932). Included is information for a souvenir publication, Secretary
Anders' final reports to the Board of State Capitol Commissioners (1934),
and clippings on the final work. In regard to the Legislature's investigation
of the Capitol Commission, there is a book of minutes of the hearings,
clippings, subpoenas, a report on concrete construction, the majority and
Minority reports in the Journal of the House, a reply by G. G. Bangs to
the charges, and a program for a satirical play by the Jamestown Lions
Club.
On the subject of labor, are included an opinion on minimum wages, (1932),
an article on wage cuts (1932), clippings on the labor strike during construction
(1933), and a pamphlet, "The Three Renegades of Labor". Among Anders' Annual
reports (1931-1933), are reports on architects' fees and travel expenses,
audits on the total cost of the building (1933-1934), a description of
work covered by various budgets (1932), Enabling Acts for building fund
certificates (1932, 1934), certificates of expenses and guarantees by Lundoff-Bicknell,
and listings of charges made for changes from Dearborn Electric. There
are several contract forms, a Book of Contracts, and the contracts and
budgets for general and mechanical work (1932). There are a number of financial
reports by auditor Lester Diehl (1932-1934), a list of railroad freight
costs, items concerning insurance coverage, notices of price changes and
notifications of extra charges or credit from Lundoff-Bicknell. Also included
are order slips to Lundoff-Bicknell and other contractors, certificates
of entitlement to payment, requests for payment requisition slips, statements
from Lundoff-Bicknell and a list of their unit prices (1932). Of special
interest are Books of Minutes of meetings of the Capitol Commission, March,
1931 to December, 1932; February to December, 1933; and December, 1933
to July 1934, as well as the Book of daily memorandums, April, 1933 to
August, 1934.
The Missouri River Diversion Series contains programs, articles and other
items from the Missouri River Diversion Association. There is a booklet
by Elwyn Chaudler, Missouri River Diversion in North Dakota, (1933), and
one by Earl Buell, Drought Relief by Flood Control (1933). From the National
Rivers and Harbors Congress there is a directory to agencies in various
states having jurisdiction in water matters, programs, addresses, bulletins,
and reports (1930-1934). Also included are numerous newspaper articles
on Missouri Diversion with visits by Secretary of War Hurley, Patrick Fleming
and President Roosevelt (1929-1934). There are the preliminary reports
on the Missouri River Dam and Diversion in North Dakota by State Engineer,
Robert Kennedy (1928), and the Report on Missouri River Dam and Diversion
Project in North and South Dakota, (Burns and McDowell, engineers, 1933).
Concerning flood control on the Mississippi River are three publications,
Reports on the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers (1822), Spillways on the Lower
Mississippi River (1928), and Flood Control (in lower Mississippi Valley,
1928). Reports on various dams under construction in the United States
are in Engineering News Record (November, 1934).
In the Subject Files Series is much biographical information on Major Anders'
family. There is a typed manuscript, Bataan, an Incident, by his son Col.
Franklin O. Anders, as well as clippings and awards. There are numerous
clippings, awards, programs, etc. concerning Major Anders. Also found are
newspaper articles on the N.R.A., the Farmer's strike, Governor Langer
and the 1933 North Dakota Legislature, including a resolution that Western
United States secede from the East. There are also items on public works
with a speech by William Lemke (1933), and instructions to engineers.
Added (2006) is a ninety-seven page manuscript on the early history (1870s) of Bismarck, N.D.,
likely in the handwriting of Major Anders.
Separations
The following non-manuscript
items were removed from the Frank Anders papers and sent to the section
indicated.
Photographs (Photo 477)
1 Army units in the Philippines
(1899)
2 Sheyenne River Valley
3 Guernsey Dam
3 Proposed Missouri River
Dam site
1 Devils Lake showing lowered
water level
2 Dry lake beds in Central
North Dakota
6 Soil tests at capitol
site, Bismarck
1 New capitol building,
Bismarck
2 Architects, contractors,
original capitol commission, Governor Shafer
1 Second capitol commission
28 Cornerstone laying ceremony,
new capitol, Bismarck
3 Proposed architects sketches,
new capitol, Bismarck
Maps (Institute map collection,
consult map catalog)
Geological map of North
Dakota, by A. G. Leonard, State Geologist
North Dakota Highway System,
showing construction status of state and federal projects, State Highway
Department, 1931
Books (Library book collection,
consult the main library catalog for call number and location)
Building Ordnance of City
of Fargo, Office of City Engineer, 1915
Frank
L. Anders Papers | Architecture
and Historic Preservation
Business
|