Evan E. Filby's Blog: South Fork and More, page 138
February 1, 2013
Right Reverend Alphonsus Glorieux, Bishop, Roman Catholic Diocese of Boise [otd 02/01]

After four years at various posts, Glorieux was appointed President of St. Michael's College in Portland, Oregon. Then, in 1884, Catholic authoriti...
Published on February 01, 2013 00:17
January 31, 2013
Attorney and Teton Valley Developer Benjamin Driggs [otd 01/31]

Driggs Family Archives.Teton Valley pioneer and attorney Benjamin W. Driggs, Jr., was born January 31, 1858 in Pleasant Grove, Utah, about ten miles north of Provo. His father had been among early converts to the LDS church, suffered through the expulsion from Nauvoo, and trekked to Utah in 1852. Besides owning and, sometimes, operating a store in Pleasant Grove, the senior Driggs guided, did blacksmith work, and fought Ute Indians in central and southern Utah
Benjamin, Jr. h...
Published on January 31, 2013 00:03
January 30, 2013
Frontier Missionary and Peacemaker Father Pierre-Jean de Smet [otd 01/30]

Library of Congress,
Brady-Handy Photograph Collection.Roman Catholic priest Pierre-Jean de Smet was born in Belgium, January 30, 1801. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1821 and trained as a Roman Catholic missionary with the Society of Jesus, the Jesuits. His first missionary work to the Indians was among the tribes along the lower Missouri.
In 1840, an Indian guided Father de Smet further west, where he met some Flathead Indians at Pierre’s Hole (today’s Teton Valley,...
Published on January 30, 2013 00:03
January 29, 2013
Entrepreneur, Fur Trader, and Fort Hall Founder Nathaniel Wyeth [otd 01/29]

Illustration for Harper's Magazine, 1892.Entrepreneur Nathaniel J. Wyeth was born January 29, 1802, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Despite strong ties to Harvard on both sides of the family, the young Wyeth chose to go directly into business rather than attend college. He was highly successful in the ice business, rising to a general manager’s position.
However, pamphleteering by advocate Hall J. Kelley convinced Wyeth that he could make his own fortune by exploiting oppor...
Published on January 29, 2013 00:08
January 28, 2013
Long-Time Boise Fire Chief William Foster [otd 01/28]

Boise Fire Department.Boise Fire Chief William A. Foster was born on January 28, 1870, in Grinnell, Iowa. The family moved to the high plains of northwestern Kansas when William was about fifteen years old. Then, in 1890, he moved to Idaho. He worked as a teamster hauling lumber for a time and then went into the freight business for himself.
After that, Foster spent five years representing a lumber company before moving out of state for a couple years. He returned to Boise in 189...
Published on January 28, 2013 00:23
January 27, 2013
Educator, Attorney, and Supreme Court Justice John Rice [otd 01/27]

John Campbell Rice Foundation photo.January 27, 1864, Idaho Supreme Court Justice John Campbell Rice was born on a farm in Cass County, Illinois, about thirty miles west of Springfield. After high school, he attended Illinois College, in Jacksonville (not far south of where Rice was born). He graduated in 1885 and began teaching mathematics at the college.
Three years later, he enrolled in law school, first at Michigan State University and then Cornell University. He received his la...
Published on January 27, 2013 00:02
January 26, 2013
Rancher, Canal Manager, and Ada County Sheriff James Bennett [otd 01/26]

Ada County Sheriff’s Office.Ada County Sheriff James A. Bennett was born January 26, 1865 in Leavenworth, Kansas. The family moved to farm country 40-50 southwest of St. Louis, Missouri when James was a few years old. He grew up in that area and garnered what education he could from the common schools there.
James came to Idaho in 1886. This was a period of high optimism for stock-raising in Idaho. For example, the Idaho Statesman gushed (October 9, 1886) that the cattle busine...
Published on January 26, 2013 00:12
January 25, 2013
Millionaire Banker, Business Leader, and Developer John Vollmer [otd 01/25]

Vollmer Family Archives.Wealthy developer John P. Vollmer was born on January 25, 1847, in Wurtemburg, Germany. The family emigrated to the U.S. when John was about four years old, settling in Louisville, Kentucky. From there, in 1855, they moved to Indianapolis, Indiana.
After some years in a German-speaking private school, Vollmer attended the Indianapolis college that is now Butler University.
During the Civil War, he saw action as an under-age soldier serving a br...
Published on January 25, 2013 00:09
January 24, 2013
Freighter William A. “Doc” Rankin – A Legend in His Time [otd 01/24]

William Allen “Doc” Rankin was born January 24, 1836, in Lafayette, Indiana. Several ancestors in his paternal line fought in the American Revolution, later being plantation owners in Virginia. Although Doc’s family moved to the Midwest (to Iowa after Indiana), they retained strong family ties to Virginia.
Thus, because his forebears were “old line” Virginians, the young man sympathized with the South during the Civil War. When the war began, Rankin was in Iowa...
Published on January 24, 2013 00:02
January 23, 2013
Church Leader, Suffragette, and Temperance Advocate Rebecca Mitchell [otd 01/23]

J. H. Hawley photo.Mrs. Rebecca Mitchell was born January 23, 1834, in Macoupin County, Illinois, 30-50 miles south of Springfield. Little is known of here early life. After she was widowed, she completed her education, first in local schools (which she attended with her own children) and then at the Baptist Missionary Training School in Chicago. For a time, she served as a missionary and church worker in Illinois.
However, the settled cities and towns of Illinois apparently...
Published on January 23, 2013 00:03
South Fork and More
As an author's vehicle, this blog will include my thoughts on the writing process, supplemental information about my books, and "status"updates on current projects.
My long-time blog -- the South Fork As an author's vehicle, this blog will include my thoughts on the writing process, supplemental information about my books, and "status"updates on current projects.
My long-time blog -- the South Fork Companion -- leans heavily toward Idaho history. In particular, I post an "On This Day" (OTD) item with an Idaho "spin" for every day of the year. I originally tried to have the system bring over the entire item, but the transfer does not handle the photo captions well. That's not good, because I generally include two images with each of my OTD posts. ...more
My long-time blog -- the South Fork As an author's vehicle, this blog will include my thoughts on the writing process, supplemental information about my books, and "status"updates on current projects.
My long-time blog -- the South Fork Companion -- leans heavily toward Idaho history. In particular, I post an "On This Day" (OTD) item with an Idaho "spin" for every day of the year. I originally tried to have the system bring over the entire item, but the transfer does not handle the photo captions well. That's not good, because I generally include two images with each of my OTD posts. ...more
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