Evan E. Filby's Blog: South Fork and More, page 41
November 28, 2019
“Rufus” Reid and Agnes Just Perpetuate Century Ranch Heritage [otd 11/28]

Family Archives.*On November 28, 1906, twenty-year-old Agnes Just married Robert E. “Rufus” Reid in Blackfoot, Idaho. Agnes was the youngest child and only surviving daughter of Nels and Emma Just.
Born in Denmark in 1847, Nels A. Just was ten years old when his family came to the United States. They had already converted to the LDS Church, and aimed to settle in Utah. The Justs traveled as part of one of the so-called “handcart” companies and arrived at Salt Lake in...
Published on November 28, 2019 00:07
November 27, 2019
Pure Food, Dairy & Oil Commissioner William C. Howie [otd 11/27]

H. T. French photo.Attorney William Clarence Howie, Idaho Food, Dairy & Oil Commission President, was born November 27, 1860, in Davis County, Iowa. He graduated from high school in Bloomfield, the county seat, which is located about 15 miles south of Ottumwa. In 1883, William graduated from a Normal School in Bloomfield and moved to Nebraska to teach.
Howie also read at a couple of law offices. The senior partner at his second stay later became a Chief Justice of the...
Published on November 27, 2019 00:03
November 26, 2019
Idaho State University President Miles Reed [otd 11/26]

Idaho State University photo.Miles F. Reed, president of the Academy of Idaho, precursor to Idaho State University, was born November 26, 1872 about 20 miles south of Dubuque, Iowa. Reed’s parents moved to Idaho in 1889 and he attended high school at an academy in Grangeville.
After his graduation in 1892, Reed taught in Idaho’s rural schools for a time. From 1891 to 1897, Miles also served in the Idaho National Guard, rising from a Private to the rank of First Lieutenant. He...
Published on November 26, 2019 00:03
November 24, 2019
Nampa Businessman, Investor, Novelist, and World Traveler Fred G. Mock [otd 11/24]
Idaho pioneer, author, and world traveler Fred G. Mock was born November 24, 1861 on a farm in Cumberland County, Illinois, about sixty miles south of Champagne. Fred left home when he was twelve or thirteen years old. He never explained why.
For the next fifteen years or so, Mock “knocked around” Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, the Dakotas, and Colorado. He took work where he could find it, but also made time to complete a sixty-day course at a business school.
Fred G. Mock. [Hawley]
He...
For the next fifteen years or so, Mock “knocked around” Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, the Dakotas, and Colorado. He took work where he could find it, but also made time to complete a sixty-day course at a business school.

He...
Published on November 24, 2019 00:05
November 23, 2019
Unsuspecting Cowboy Shot and Killed at Fort Hall by Angry Bannock [otd 11/23]
On November 23, 1877, a Bannock Indian, Tambiago by name, shot and killed cattleman Alexander Rhoden at the Fort Hall Indian Agency. Alex was born around 1852 in northeast Missouri, near the Nebraska border. In 1865, the family moved to near Omaha.
Alexander Toponce. Reminiscences.
Later, Rhoden came to Idaho and went to work for cattleman Alexander Toponce [blog, Nov 10]. Toponce, who recalled the spelling as “Rodin,” said the Missourian had been working at the ranch for a number of years...

Later, Rhoden came to Idaho and went to work for cattleman Alexander Toponce [blog, Nov 10]. Toponce, who recalled the spelling as “Rodin,” said the Missourian had been working at the ranch for a number of years...
Published on November 23, 2019 00:06
November 21, 2019
Wilson Price Hunt Fur Trade Party Reaches Boise Valley [otd 11/21]
In November 1811, Wilson Price Hunt recorded in his journal, “On the 21st at daybreak we saw ahead of us a river that flowed to the west, its banks lined with cottonwood and willow trees. Some Indians who had pitched camp there had many horses and were far better clothed than those whom we had seen recently."
Hunt’s party thus became the first whites to report seeing the Boise Valley. (A smaller group led by Hunt’s associate Donald Mackenzie had probably seen it earlier, but the de...
Hunt’s party thus became the first whites to report seeing the Boise Valley. (A smaller group led by Hunt’s associate Donald Mackenzie had probably seen it earlier, but the de...
Published on November 21, 2019 00:04
November 20, 2019
Women’s Suffrage Advocates Hold First Idaho Convention [otd 11/20]
On November 20, 1895, supporters held the first women’s suffrage convention in Idaho. In general, the western states had been much more supportive of women’s suffrage than those in the East. Wyoming had written it into the Territorial Constitution in 1869 and carried that over into statehood in 1890. The state of Colorado passed a similar amendment in 1893.
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Published on November 20, 2019 00:07
November 19, 2019
Boise Attorney, Businessman, and Education Leader Oliver Haga [otd 11/19]

At the age of twenty, he had a job as school Principal in Wisconsin. In 1894, he graduated from Indiana’s Valparaiso University. (He later received a master’s degree from the school.)
After graduation, he moved to Idaho as the school Principal in Salmon City. He spen...
Published on November 19, 2019 00:03
November 18, 2019
Nez Percés Indian Reservation Opened to White Settlers [otd 11/18]
On November 18, 1895, “surplus” lands on the Nez Percés Indian Reservation were thrown open to claims by white settlers. This action crowned a long campaign to force assimilation upon the Nez Percés and other Indian tribes.
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Published on November 18, 2019 00:02
November 17, 2019
Horses Thieves Trailed, Captured, and Jailed – Escaped, Caught Again [otd 11/17]
On Saturday, November 17, 1883, three different newspapers across Idaho published stories about a trio of captured horse thieves. That timing arose from the more-leisurely newspaper publication schedules back then. The Owyhee Avalanche (Silver City, Idaho) and the Blackfoot Register were both weeklies, issued only on Saturdays. The Idaho Tri-Weekly Statesman (Boise) had issues on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday.
Watching the horses. Library of Congress.
The raiders began their depredations the previous month when they stole a c...The

The raiders began their depredations the previous month when they stole a c...The
Published on November 17, 2019 00:08
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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