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Advertise Copyright © 2008 - 2010 by Andrew J. Morris A generation which ignores history has no past -- and no future. Robert Heinlein |
History of North DakotaSelect a County: Featured Picture: ![]() Hunting near Crystal Springs ND 1880s Biographies:A Short Biography of Joseph McMurray Devine Joseph McMurray Devine, governor of North Dakota, was born in Wheeling, Va., March 15, 1861; son of Hugh E. and Jane (McMurray) Devine, and grandson of John Devine, and of William and Isabel McMurray. He was graduated at the University of West Virginia in 1884. He was a teacher in Dakota and served as superintendent of schools for La Moure county, 1886-96. He was made state educational lecturer in 1890; was lieutenant-governor of North Dakota, 1897-98, governor of the state in 1898, after the death of Gov. Frank A. Briggs, and lieutenant-governor again 1899-1900. A Short Biography of Frederick Bartlett Fancher Frederick Bartlett Fancher, governor of North Dakota, was born in Orleans county, N.Y, April 2, 1852; son of Tillotson and Julia (Kenyon) Fancher; and grandson of Richard and Catherine Augusta Fancher. He attended the State normal school, Ypsilanti, Mich., 1867-70; was engaged in the insurance business in Chicago, 1871-81, and began farming on a large scale in North Dakota in 1881. He was elected governor of North Dakota by the Republican party in 1899. He was president of the board of trustees of the North Dakota hospital for the insane for six years, president of the Constitutional convention in 1889, and insurance commissioner, 1894-98. Henry Clay Hansbrough Biography Henry Clay Hansbrough, senator, was born in Prairie du Rocher, Ill., Jan. 30, 1848; son of Eliab and Sarah (Hagen) Hansbrough, grandson of William H. and Elizabeth (Miller) Hansbrough of Virginia, and a descendant of John Hansbrough who came from England and settled in Virginia in 1640. His parents removed to Illinois from Kentucky in 1846, and he was brought up on his father's farm. The advent of the civil war closed the school in which he was preparing for college, and in 1866 he removed with his parents to California. He learned the trade of printer in the office of the San Jose Mercury, and in 1869 was a partner in publishing a daily paper in San Jose. He removed to San Francisco and was employed on the Chronicle, 1870-72, in the printing department; as telegraph editor and then as assistant managing editor, 1872-79; engaged in journalism in Wisconsin, 1880, and in 1882 went to Dakota Territory, where he continued in active newspaper work until he entered the field of politics in 1888. He was the first representative from North Dakota in the 51st congress, 1889-91; a delegate to the Republican national convention of 1888, and national committeeman from North Dakota, 1888-96. He was elected U.S. senator, Jan. 23, 1891, took his seat in the senate at the close of his term as a representative, March 4, 1891, and was re-elected, Jan. 20, 1897, for the term expiring March 3, 1903. His first wife, Josephine, daughter of James Orr of Newburgh, N.Y., died in January, 1895. He was married again in 1897 to Mary Berri Chapman of Washington, D.C. Local History and Genealogy Links:
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