In the late 1960s,
Mrs. Wirt Mineau of Eureka wrote a letter to Rosemarie Vezina Braatz, then a columnist
for the Standard Press, that included some early West Sterling history which we
excerpt this week Hope Mineau’s
grandfather had come from California with Gold mined from the 1848 gold rush
there and decided to settle on the Minnesota side of the St Croix at Nevers and
Sunrise.
West Sterling 150 Years ago by Hope Mineau
Shortly after
locating his family at the Minn
side of what later would be Nevers Dam, Dr. Garlick with two others surveyed
and named the township “Amador” for the Spanish settlement where he and 12 other
men had mined gold.
The pioneers
from the east who settled here were men of vision. They surveyed a railroad route across Amador
and on across the St Croix River where there was an
Indian settlement named Sebatana (place of softly babbling waters). Dr. Garlick made maps and had them
lithographed. I found one in V Canadays’
father’s possession in 1934 and I believe that the Minn Historical Society now
has it.
Mrs. Rudy
Johnson of Almelund told me that when she did office work in Taylors
Falls school, about the time it was
moved to the new building she saw a map of the proposed railroad with townsites
named Washington and Lincoln.
When the Garlicks
came to Minn Territory
they found Smith Elison with his partners, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bates settled on
Goose Creek Meadows near Sunrise . As
a part of Mr. Elison’s many activities, he bought beef cattle to supply the U.
S. Army at Fort Snelling
in Civil War time and also for them during the so called Indian Wars west of
the Miss. river. Then later supplies for the railroad
construction crews. The beef were
bought and sold on hoof and driven to the locations when needed and butchered
there.
At that time West Sterling
was covered with a grass, the Elison’s said, much like the buffalo grass they
found when in later years they farmed in the plains west of here. Also there were acres of vetch. All this made excellent pasture for cattle
as did the oaks. The oaks found on that
part of Sterling were the same species as those on our farm 1 ½ miles east of
Big Spring in St Croix River where the Chippewa Indians made camp fall and
spring when they tribes of the Valley met for ceremonial dances on the Nevers
flats two miles up river . Some say
acorns poison stock. It may be some do,
but from 20 years of experience in those hills in our Eureka
home, I can only say if cattle have access to salt and water they will survive
and fatten as do deer and produces a finer flavored beef than corn fed cattle.
The early pioneers
in West Sterling made use of the native feed and cattle
were driven across at the ford in the fall or on the ice later to be driven to Fort
Snelling .
When the beef trade
decreased the undergrowth increased; fires became more numerous and the top
soil was destroyed, never to be restored as that grass never comes back. An expensive lesson learned on the Plain
States when they plowed up buffalo grass and got sand storms in pay.
Since this cattle
pasturing was done by New Englanders living on the west bank there was much
land available for others, especially Scandinavians who made homes on the east
side. Some thirty years ago I was
talking to one of the Anderson
brothers (namely John, Charles Peter and Adolph) who migrated from Sweden
about 1869 and settled near that old church at Trade River-Cowan Creek, West
Sterling area. Charles Anderson
resided in St Croix Falls
late in life when his son Andrew had a store here. In our conversation with him and son and
wife, the subject of that church came up and he told me “we all built that
church.” Everyone regardless of
nationality brought materials and built a community church it appears. He said later on people drifted away to other
towns and churches but we stayed. I
asked him “Why did you stay?” “Because it
reminded us of our homelands back in Sweden —the
evergreen and such”
Hope
Mineau’s account tells us of Sebatana, an Indian settlement on the Wisconsin
side of the river near Nevers Dam. In
Rosemarie Braatz’s wonderful booklet on Nevers Dam written in 1965 (which is out
of print but now on the web at the MN DNR website at http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/publications/books/wildriver/neversdam
) there is this reference.
Mrs. Ernest Armstrong of Trade
River , writes: "In 1850 there
was an Indian settlement at the mouth of Wolf
Creek by the St. Croix
River . (This was called Sebatana, meaning "Place of flowing
clear water".) Near the site which later became Nevers Dam the Indians had
chosen a place as a ceremonial ground where they came spring and fall to pray
and give thanks. There were two Indian
camps, one near the west bank of the river -- later this site was called
Frawley's Trout pond, the other to the east, called the Big Pond. Years later
in the woods and fields were found many arrow heads from these Indians."
2011 Autumn photo West Sterling showing prairie remnants Section 26 |
More good reading on the Internet: “TIME