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Tag: historical account

The list begins

About this time of year I start to make my fall list of garden changes/updates/refreshes. It can get to be quite ambitious in my mind, so getting it in black and white is important. To set healthy limits, I have a moratorium on in-ground to in-ground transplanting from late June to the beginning of September. That timeline gives me time to focus on the daylilies during bloom, and it helps give me a chance to fully assess the gardens’ future needs. It also keeps me remembering that the September heat adds to the transplanting effort and curbs my “enthusiasm”, which in turn keeps the list manageable.
So the list has begun. #1 at the townhouse is dividing and transplanting more of the Blue Mouse Ears hostas. This one is already part of a long-term change for the gardens. Those Blue Mouse Ears started fairy ringing a few years ago. I divided and transplanted a few clumps last year and they are doing well, even scaping out and blooming.

The divisions this year will follow last year’s pattern, moving them more into the shade. I want to reestablish a path to the back of the garden again, so the hostas I divide will move into that area, giving more layering, which also keeps weeds down, and then the space where the Blue Mouse Ears hostas will come out of will become a footpath again.

The forget-me-nots are winding down their bloom and getting pulled out. They are biennials so as I pull more and more, only leaving them for a bunny deterrent, they will stay – but in significant moderation. I do miss them a bit, but you can imagine what I don’t miss. I don’t miss how the tall stems cling to anything fabric. So the decision is – they are awesome bunny repellent but they are not going to be taller parts of “bouquets” going forward. They can stay low. A sweet sentimental part of our garden.

The peach asian lilies are done blooming, and they have now been cut back to half height. All except one I missed. I do like that they not only look tidier but that cutting them back preserves their energy from going to seed. Oh, believe me, I am tempted to let the one I missed go to seed, but I researched to remind myself on why I don’t grow Asian lilies from seed, and to get success with bringing harvested Asian lily seed to bloom it takes a series of stratification steps, followed by 3-7 years as a seedling, before bloom. I think I may say no to that wonderful opportunity this year at least. Probably longer.

Speaking of years, 7 years in to my daylily propagation journey, I am now growing enough daylily seedlings, to bloom, to keep me (and the historic cemetery) more than good. This year we have three new daylily seedlings with scapes, and the 2024 seeds are popping up more for the future. The cloches are on the seedlings, and the Mahala Felton seeds that don’t germinate this week are going into the shamrocks with their dirt. They still will have a chance, just not a dedicated space.

And the shamrocks? I don’t know what is going on there. Birds or bunnies or squirrels or something are starting to dig at those pots again, so I am going to do an experiment. I am going to put them in the ground in a spot where we lost a hosta. That spot is already growing some shamrocks from bird, bunny, or squirrel damage I missed collecting earlier this spring. We had a friend who somehow managed to grow them perennially, outdoors, in the ground, here in Minnesota, even though they are not supposed to be winter hardy. At this point they are getting distroyed anyway, and I have plenty saved in the house, so no big. It will be an adventure. Could be I grow them as annuals in our garden forward. Or we could have a new perennial. We shall see.

Finally, I have a seedling from the early years when I was doing uneducated crosses that is baffling me. I have looked and looked at pics and notes, and it sure looks like I successfully crossed Pink Tirza with a tetraploid. That’s what the envelope said (my handwriting) when I planted it. That should not have worked, as Pink Tirza is supposed to be a diploid. Very odd. Maybe something got crossed before I did the cross. We shall see how that matures.

Other than that, Red Volunteer bloomed its first bloom since I planted it last year at the historic cemetery, and I missed it. Hey, that’s how it goes. It has another bud that looks like it might bloom soon – maybe the 4th of July 😊

And finally, July 2nd was the 162nd anniversary of Gettysburg where one of the historic cemetery’s residents, James Akers, was killed in action.

This year I finished up adding purple irises to both sides of the fence garden. I am hoping they bloom for Memorial Day next year.

Wishing you a wonderful 4th of July if you are in the United States, and a beautiful week ahead.

susansdailygarden Daylilies, Daylily seedlings, Dividing hostas, Forget-me-nots, Garden, Historic gardens, Historic site, Historic site gardens, Hostas Leave a comment July 3, 2025 4 Minutes

Molly Cowles

Molly Cowles was the wife of SGT Asa Cowles, an American Revolutionary War patriot. SGT Asa Cowles and his brothers served in the Revolutionary War. One of his brothers did not return. His brother was taken as a prisoner of war and was assumed to have died in an English POW camp. The Cowles were patriots.
How do I know this, and why? Well, it is a long story. I could give a short answer, but it really didn’t happen that way. In fact, I never would have researched anything about the Cowles had I not gone on the path I will share.
The long answer to why I have this information really started many years ago with a grade school field trip I chaperoned for one of our sons’ classes. That is when history actually came alive for me. Before then I just could not get excited about paper maps being rolled down from the ceiling and wooden pointers showing us war locations and routes. I really tried. I did! But for some reason while math and English kept me wide awake, I kept dozing off in history class. Literally – dozing off. Arrggghhhh.
But … I married a historian. Yah, absolutely true story. And one of our sons had that school field trip to a historic site and I agreed to be a chaperone. Well … I loved that site. Way more than our son did hahaha! It made history come alive for me. Next thing you know we were reenacting and doing historic rendezvous, in a tipi and then a wall tent. I know, crazy. So, you see, I was more interested in the everyday lives of the historic people at that point in my life, much more than the war maps in classrooms of my teen years. But everyday life history is harder to find. It is the bigger things that stand out, get documented – discoveries, settlements, births, wars. Sometimes occupation.
Fast forward, many years later we moved to our current town, and my friend who is a long time historian got me hooked into local history. But wow, she is good! She got me back in through gardening. Yah, gardening. Probably because she knew this girl was not reenacting anymore. I was pretty clear about that 😉 And there you have it. Regarding history, I volunteer garden at a historic site cemetery and do garden stuff in honor of some pretty cool historic people.
One of those people is Mahala Felton, the first white woman settler to our area. As that research project unfolded for me, I realized Mahala Felton’s incredible contribution to local history. I decided to name a daylily for her. And I shared the incredible history I had learned in a four part blog.
I was thinking at that point that I would take a break from researching, but it was not meant to be. The answer to how I know about SGT Asa Cowles falls in the timeline at the end of my research on Mahala Felton. About that time my sister shared our ancestry chart. I was intrigued by a very unique name (Sempronia) in our family genealogy. I might have stopped there, and missed SGT Asa Cowles, but somehow the name Tirza popped up. A very unusual, yet very familiar name to me – Tirzah. As in Pink Tirzah, the daylily. Pink Tirzah has a very storied history in my garden that I shall not recount. But suffice to say, Pink Tirzah overcame many obstacles and today she is thriving. She is now knocking it out of the park. Pink Tirzah was my most successful pollen source last year. Go Pink Tirzah! But I digress, slightly.
I found Tirzah Cowles but she was not in our lineage. Her brother was. And their father was SGT Asa Cowles.
Now stick with me here, because I suspect, as we used to say while sitting around evening campfires at rendevous, telling stories, it will seem like this is a “smoke goes up, heads north, and makes a hard turn right” but it is not. This all ties together, I promise.

My husband and I agree on names for my daylilies. Some of my intentional crosses get female names. That’s just how it rolls. We chatted one morning about all this and agreed. The Pink Tirzah cross will be named Molly Cowles.

There may be more female names from our genealogy. I thought I saw a Civil War reference somewhere along the way but didn’t pull that url. It looks right now like our lineage goes back to Jamestown, but we shall see. We are still researching. I will write more as we go.

susansdailygarden Daylily seedlings, Garden, Historic gardens, Historic site, Historic site gardens Leave a comment July 1, 2025 3 Minutes

Historic Account of Mahala Felton – Children Arrive, End of Buckhorn Era, Farm Claim

This final post in the Mahala Felton series will discuss the arrival of the Felton children (adults and a baby), the end of the Buckhorn era, and the start of the farm claim.

Last time we left off with the most plausible account of what happened to the Buckhorn. We talked about how the Buckhorn was serving as a very multi-purpose building, that eventually the demand outgrew the reasonable use, and that new hotels began to be built.

In an earlier post we discussed how Mahala had written a very polite protest letter at having been overlooked as early settlers, when in fact she and William were some of the earliest, and that she did all the cooking for the earliest families to come through the Buckhorn because she left her daughters behind.

Now think about this for a moment when I tell you their oldest daughter had just welcomed a baby. William and Mahala left behind a baby grandson, to journey west, on a vessel on its first journey, to an unknown destination, and with not even a place to live. They did not arrive to a pre-started town, they welcomed families to the hotel they were running for the earliest settlers, and they themselves, were renters of that space.

The log trading house stood near the Mississippi, in the centre of Vermillion street, near its junction with Second street, and was long ago pulled down, but not until it had become quite famous to immigrants for the pleasant hospitality displayed there by Mr. and Mrs. William Felton, who now live on a farm a little west of the town. The first house, after this, was my own, as I have stated, next the store of the Baillys was erected, and soon afterward the hotel of the town, long known as the “New England House,” on Second street, was built, both by the town proprietors. The first white man to settle on the town site after the treaty was made, was myself. Mr. Felton was the next and his good lady was the first white woman settler.
http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/townshiphistory.html

By 1853, however, we see the Felton children began to arrive, themselves becoming pioneers.

Wm. Felton was born in 1802, June 15th, in Luzerne county, Pennsylvania, and was educated as a farmer. In 1825, August 18th, he married Miss Mahala Dana, who was born October 15th, 1805, in Dutchess county, New York, and who had removed in 1812 to Susquehanna county, in Pennsylvania. There have been born to this now aged couple two sons and four daughters. One of the sons is at present in the south, one of the daughters is a resident of Rice county, another daughter is a pioneer in Dakota territory, as her mother was in Dakota county, while the remaining son and two daughters are living within a mile of their parents’ home. Beside children and grandchildren Mr. and Mrs. Felton have six great-grandchildren.

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/bios_f1.html

In 1853 William and Mahala were still running the Buckhorn. Since it was the only hotel and they were not yet on their farm claim, it is assumed the children and their spouses and any children they had also stayed at the Buckhorn.

But we also see from the passage above that William was educated as a farmer. In 1853 the day also came when the Feltons got 65 acres of the 160 acre farm claim.

The Farm Claim” was the east 160 acres of what is now that addition. Sixty-five acres were broken, in 1853, and Mr. William Felton attended to the land, raising from it, various of the ordinary crops. This was the first “farming,” in the region, west of the river, except we consider an acre or more of potatoes and vegetables which had been cultured by the Baillys in 1852, as coming under that head.

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html

Along with William and Mahala, an 1855 map of the area shows two of the Felton’s daughters’ husbands, along with their son who originally came with them, on that farm claim.

Also, not to be forgotten, in 1854, William built the first wharf and ferry and, as if that was not enough, became the long-standing coroner during this time period.

As we see from the account above, William and Mahala’s family grew on the farm claim, and the account of what happened to the logs from the Buckhorn lend to the thought that not only did the Feltons grow crops but also raised livestock.

The Felton’s farm claim footprint was clearly seen on another map at the end of the century, and some of their descendants still live on that claim.

William passed in 1883, and Mahala passed in 1892. They are both buried at Oakwood Cemetery in Hastings, Minnesota, USA.

End notes

Along the way on this research project, I have had help. My friend, Shirley Dalaska, is a long time historian and suggested I research Mahala Felton almost 6 months ago. Wow! I never would have guessed the journey I would go on.
I am ever so grateful to Shirley for putting up with overly long, all hours texts as I was discovering more and more. And for going to the Pioneer Room and finding corroborating documentation. Dear Shirley, you are a saint! And that you let me garden at the cemetery and not attend many historical society meetings is a testament to the fact that you get me. Thank you so much for who you are, my friend!

susansdailygarden Historic site Leave a comment June 5, 2025 4 Minutes

Historical Account of Mahala Felton – What happened to the Buckhorn?

In past blogs on Mahala (and William) Felton’s early years as original settlers in Hastings, Minnesota, USA, we have discovered Mahala and William’s travel to the west led them to the future Hastings, Minnesota, USA area, that they were invited to rent the Buckhorn (a trading post) and run it as a hotel for the fellow early settlers that were expected to be coming, and that their hospitality was welcomed and well respected by prospective settlers, travelers, and natives. We discovered that William was very busy with business outside the home, and that it was not unusual for Mahala to be alone in her running of the Buckhorn. We also discovered that Mahala did not bring a cook, she was the cook, often had to harvest game, and definitely was cooking from scratch, even churning butter, all while working in very modest quarters. Worth reiterating is that she cooked for the first three families to come to the area. The very modest Buckhorn truly was the only place to stay, indeed the only home, for the early years, definitely through 1853, and became a truly multi-purpose dwelling and gathering place.

So, what became of the Buckhorn? Where is the historical building today? The answer is … As much as I was hoping to find it was preserved somewhere, I have not discovered anything to support that. The most likely scenario is it was dismantled, eventually used for fencing and hog pens, and most likely has returned to the ground.

To understand this, we first remember it belonged to the Bailly family, and it was not on Felton land.

“The first dwelling in the permanent settlement was “The Old Buckhorn.” As indicated above, although Henry Bailly was located, ostensibly as a trader, his real purpose was that of a settler. He selected as the site of his trading house, or dwelling, a spot not far from the junction of Second and Vermillion streets, as they are to-day. Here he built, with assistance, a log hut, twelve by sixteen feet in dimensions. Subsequently, a “kitchen” was attached to this “main” part, and its dimensions were ten by twelve feet …

The trading house was occupied afterwards as the first hotel of Hastings, and from the fact that the antlers of a stag had been nailed up over the door, it was known, and is known in memory only to this day, as the “Buckhorn Hotel.” 

The old “Buckhorn” was removed in 1856, by Mr. Dixon, to his farm on the Vermillion, but not until it had been the witness of many changes as well as of many kindly deeds and mirth provoking scenes enacted within its walls.”

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html

Next we might ask – Who is Mr. Dixon? In my research I could only find a remote reference to him having a claim in 1851 in section 20, but beyond that there is no mention. Part of me wonders if it was a name error and Dixon was really Felton, but William and Mahala’s homestead was on section 19, not 20. Perhaps there is more information on Dixon out there, but I looked for quite some time and could not find anything more.

Since William and Mahala were established on their homestead in 1855, I am guessing the more likely scenario is this preserved account:

“Memories of early Hastings…

103 years ago

THE HASTINGS GAZETTE

Published March 19, 1921

Indian Trading Post at Oliver’s Grove

By John H. Case of Nininger, Minnesota, 1856

This trading post was built of lots and was one story in height. It was put up by Abraham Truax, of Pt. Douglas, in 1850 for Henry G. Bailley. It stood on what was afterwards platted as lot five, block four of the original town site of Hastings Minnesota, then known as Oliver’s Grove, sometimes called Olive Grove by mistake.

It was located on the extreme north end of the lot in the northwest corner. Mr. Truax showed me the spot where this trading post stood. The lot is now (in 1921) occupied by Davis Bros. grocers, on the northeast corner of second and Vermillion Streets.

Elijah Wilson, father of A.W. Wilson, who came to Hastings in 1853 took me to the same place where Mr. Truax died, and said that when he came the old trading post was called the Buckhorn Tavern, that is was kept as a tavern by William Felton and his wife Mahala. He boarded with them and afterwards married their daughter Demlia and moved to his preemption claim in Nininger township adjoining his father-in-law’s claim which was north of his on Section 19, town 115, Range 17.

Mr. Wilson said that on the west end of this building, nailed to the gable was a fine set of deer horns, that he helped to take the building down and that it was taken out to a ten acre piece of land on section 19, of William Felton’s land, afterwards owned by J. K. Frear. He thought Felton first gave this ten acres to his son Silas Felton. The logs from the old Buckhorn were finally used to build a log fence and hog pen by William Felton back of his home in the oak grove, close to the present house of E. H. Chamberlain’s, a great grandson of William Felton.

Some of the later pioneers supposed that the Buck Horn Tavern was formerly Joe Brown’s Indian Trading Post, but this is not true. It was Bailey’s Indian Trading Post built by Abe Truax in (illegi-ble) Caleb and James Truax… (speculation that building was constructed as a means to keepland claim, more history).”

https://zeta.creativecirclecdn.com/paperboy/files/20241219-110009-877-hj-2024-12-19.pdf

To backup that the Buckhorn was a different log cabin than “Brown’s magazine” we see:

“Major Joseph R. Brown, Indian trader, has the honor of being the first white man to settle at Oliver’s Grove. He was here under a trader’s license in 1833-’34. He built a trading house of logs and having a stone chimney, on the brow of the second bench of land above the Mississippi, near the site of the present City hotel. Major Brown was a man of rare ability and rendered important aid and played an important part in the early development of Minnesota.

He came into the country as a drummer-boy, with the detachment of troops that came in 1819 for the purpose of erecting what is now Fort Snelling. He was distinguished as an Indian trader, as a member of the Wisconsin legislature, as founder of the first settlement at the head of Lake St. Croix, as founder of the town of Henderson, as clerk of the first territorial council, and a member of succeeding territorial and state legislatures; as editor and publisher of the St. Paul Pioneer, and in nearly all the public affairs of the early days. He represented Dakota county in the legislatures of 1854 and 1855, and as lumberman, politician, editor and soldier during the outbreak of 1862, founder of cities, and later in life as an inventor, he became one of the most widely-known of Minnesota’s public men. The state has attempted to do honor to his memory by affixing his name to one of her counties. Major Brown was born in Harford county, Maryland, in 1805, and died in New York city in 1870.

Such was the career, in brief, of the first white settler of Oliver’s Grove. He was a man in every respect worthy of the city which has since arisen on the spot he once inhabited. He is reported by the oldest surviving settler of Minnesota to have been holding his post at Oliver’s Grove in 1839-’40.

For some years after this the old log-house stood lonely and deserted. Indeed, it was not occupied continuously, at all, from 1834 to the latter dates, as will be seen by the extracts from Featherstonhaugh’s journal given below. Mr. David Hone, who crossed the river from Point Douglas in 1845, on a fishing excursion to the Vermillion, reports the building as standing at that time untenanted. He and his companion, Hertzell, were lost among the burr-oaks and the dense growths of alder, hazel and Kinnickinnic bushes, and “Brown’s Magazine,” as the old trading-house was long called, served them as a land-mark in recrossing to their homes. In 1850 the “old magazine” had either decayed or been burned down, but the stone chimney was still standing. This chimney, or the stones of which it was composed, tradition says were a part of the contents of the first lime-kiln operated at that spot, by a Mr. Tripp, in 1856; and further, tradition says that the last vestige of this first white man’s dwelling on the site of Hastings is preserved in the mortar with which the foundations of the City Hotel were cemented.”

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html

Also as collaboration of the Case account above is the documentation of the Felton daughters’ spouses that arrived in 1853 and stayed at the Buckhorn for a time.

“P. T. Chamberlain, a son-in-law of the Feltons, came from Pennsylvania, and Elijah Wilson, a pilot on the Mississippi, and afterwards son-in-law of the Feltons, came about the same time. The latter settlers made claims in Nininger, but for a time boarded at the Buckhorn, which had become a general resort.”

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html

Finally, the claim mentioned, on section 19, was part of the farmland tract mentioned here:

“FIRST AGRICULTURAL ATTEMPTS-“THE FARM CLAIM.”

In the year 1853, Henry G. Bailly had built him a private residence, of logs, principally, now in use by J. A. Ennis, as a constituent part of the beautiful edifice which marks its place in addition 13.

“The Farm Claim” was the east 160 acres of what is now that addition. Sixty-five acres were broken, in 1853, and Mr. William Felton attended to the land, raising from it, various of the ordinary crops. This was the first “farming,” in the region, west of the river, except we consider an acre or more of potatoes and vegetables which had been cultured by the Baillys in 1852, as coming under that head.”

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html

Final collaboration lies in the cessation of use of the Buckhorn as a hotel, and a new hotel and proprietor being established.


“With the opening of navigation, settlers came in greater numbers than previously. The Buckhorn tavern refused to serve longer, as church, court of justice, hotel and private dwellings. It seems incredible that forty-three people could remain of a night, in the pent-up compass of its walls. Nevertheless, such is the fact. Men slept under the table, on the floor, and on the table. Accordingly, in the spirit of the “agreement articles,” the town proprietors proceeded to erect the New England house. Mr. Knox was again the contractor and the first legitimate “tavern,” was located at the corner of what are now Sibley and Second streets on the site of the post-office building. It was a frame building of two stories and is at present occupied by John Van Slyke as a residence, it having been removed to Ninth street. It had no sign except the word, “Hotel,” but was called the Dakota House, but, soon after, the New England house; by which name it is universally known. In June, 1854, David Barker and family came to Hastings from Prescott, Wisconsin, and took up quarters as the first exclusive hotel keepers. They occupied the Dakota House until the following year, when M. O. W. Truax succeeded them. Hotels never lacked for custom, and during the years ’54, ’55 and ’56 it was often an exceedingly difficult matter to find lodgings, there was such an influx of all castes, conditions, and characters, in search of business, homes and land.”

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html

My educated guess is permission was given to remove the Buckhorn log home, as logs, from the original site and Elijah Wilson and maybe some helpers, maybe Dixon being one, moved them to the 10 acre site in question, but that they eventually went to the Felton’s property, as stated, to be used as fencing and hog pens. I am guessing that somewhere in the dirt at that property is the decomposed remnant, however small, of the Buckhorn.

Next week we will wrap up the series with a brief discussion on the family members that followed William and Mahala Felton on their move west.

susansdailygarden Historic site Leave a comment May 29, 2025 8 Minutes

Historical account of Mahala Felton – Early Settler Accommodations and Native Encounters

This week I want to share some of the accounts of Mahala Felton’s early years in the area and what her presence may have been like. To do that we return again to our primary source from the introduction – genealogytrails.com

So where did we leave off?

William and Mahala left Pennsylvania after raising their children, came on a vessel that was on its first voyage, stayed at a hotel where they met a trading post claim staker, and, finding the trading post area to be satisfactory, settled in to run the trading post as a hotel, the Buckhorn. Now, just in case this move west might conjure up images of boardwalks and saloons with swinging doors and someone in the corner playing piano while others played cards and took shots, let’s find out what type of hotel Mahala was running.

From http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/bios_f1.html we find the following:

“Upon their arrival they rented a log house, the first house built in the town, and opened the first boarding-house in the county. This log house was only 12×16 feet in dimension, with a kitchen 10×12 feet; in these narrow quarters Mr. and Mrs. Felton showed a generous hospitality that will long be remembered and recounted. As many as forty-three persons have remained of a night in that little log cabin, which was long ago pulled down. As early as 1853 this house was used as a place of worship by the Catholics; services were also conducted there by Rev. T. B. Cressy, a Baptist clergyman. Mr. Felton wes the first elected justice of the peace, and since 1856 has been coroner. In 1854 he built the first wharf and established the first ferry, at Hastings, across the Mississippi. Since 1856 the Feltons have resided on their claim in Nininger township.
[History of the Minnesota Valley, including the Explorers and Pioneers of Minnesota, 1882, Submitted by Tina Easley]”

In another account, we see additional detail:

“In 1852 the Felton’s took a boat from Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, for Minnesota. The name of their craft was the Ben Campbell, and this was its first trip. Landing at Wabasha in June they remained there until September of 1852, when they came to Hastings. Mrs. Felton claims the honor of being the first white woman settler at this point. On arriving at Hastings Mr. Felton rented a log house, the first house built in the town, where he opened the first boarding-house in the county. Mrs. Felton did the cooking for the first three families in Hastings. This log house was only 12×16 feet in dimension, with a kitchen 10×12 feet. In these narrow and primitive quarters Mr. and Mrs. Felton showed a generous hospitality and kindness to new comers and to every one, that will long be remembered and recounted. As many as forty-three persons have remained of a night in that little cabin, which was long ago pulled down. This house was also granted to the Catholics, as early as 1853, as a house of the Lord, and its walls re-echoed the holy mass. In the autumn of the same year Rev. T. R. Cressy, a Baptist clergyman, began holding meetings also at Mr. Felton’s house. As Dido knew no difference between Trojan or Tyrian, so the Feltons in in the spirit of true liberality, made no discrimination in those early days between Catholic and Protestant. Mr. Felton was the first elected justice of the peace, and the little log house was in turn dedicated to the law as it had previously been to the church. Mr. Felton has also been coroner since 1856, and has held office longer than any other man in the county. In 1854 he built the first wharf and established the first ferry at Hastings across the Mississippi. He fixed the rate at ten cents and earned nothing at the commencement of his experiment, but the tide of immigration setting in strongly soon afterwards, he reports even so high as $15 as the receipts for a single day. In May of 1855, the Feltons made a claim in Nininger township, and have lived upon it since 1856, universally respected and esteemed.
[History of Dakota County and the City of Hastings, by Edward D. Neill, North Star Publishing Co. Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1882]”

So let’s pick this apart. They were renting. They did not own the land or home. This was a log house, all alone, no town, just this log home, off the Mississippi, and of very modest dimensions. Into that tiny, rented, log home with a tiny add-on kitchen, William and Mahala welcomed sometimes dozens of people at a time, to eat and congregate for multiple purposes, and sleep, with graciousness. We see Mahala did not bring a cook, she was the cook. We also see that William was a very busy man. By 1854 he had built and begun to run a ferry across the Mississippi, the only one in the area, and for which he did not initially charge a fee. He was also the first elected Justice of the Peace, and by 1856 he began his very longstanding service as the coroner. William was as busy as Mahala, and she was often home alone in her work.

I think I would very much like to have met William and Mahala Felton. I also would have liked to see the log cabin. But that was not to be. We see mentioned above it was pulled down. There are various accounts of what happened to it, but we shall save that for another post.
Suffice to say, that log cabin was well used and was quickly becoming outgrown. Nevertheless, the early settlers were documented as living very happily and amicably.
Of the early settlers, it is noted,

“They were few in number, but happy and contented. There was very little society to be sure, but when mankind got “near to natures heart,” as they must do, when living in cabins and in the wilderness, it is remarkable, with what a little of any further companionship, they are satisfied. Still it is under those very circumstances, that they are the most free hearted, most generous and hospitable to the stranger.” http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html

And what of hospitality to the native peoples?
Let’s take a look at that.

http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html states,

“Although, “O-wo-bop-te” was not so far as is known, a favorite resort with the Sioux, (or at least, that part of it nearest the Mississippi), they came and went constantly to and from the earlier Hastings. Wabashaw, and his spokesman, Red Owl, “Oukeesi,” Red Wing’s successor, and the chief of the Kaposia band, Little Crow, were all early Indian celebrities that honored the first inhabitants of Hastings with their occasional presence; while lesser members of their bands, came often and in numbers.”

“The first white lady settler of the town, on one occasion, in 1853, and while her husband was away from home, was entreated for a night’s lodging by a band of fifteen of these vagrant “children of the twilight.” As the wisest, though not the most agreeable course, she acceded to their request, and the whole company reposed for the night, on the floor of her comfortable log house. In the morning they showed a genuine Indian appreciation of the courage and hospitality of this unprotected, yet fearless lady, by leaving seasonably and in silence.

“Nevertheless, to the ordinary woman, alone in a house, and almost without a neighbor, such an incident would be fearfully shocking. No ordinary woman would endure at all, it might justly be suggested, the hardships and perils of frontier life, requiring as they do, an extraordinary supply of fortitude, capability and good sense. But the entertainment of the savage, though always, in his best estate, exceedingly annoying, was often fraught with a genuine danger, apart from any evil motive that might find lodgment in his breast.

“On another occasion, the lady above mentioned, together with her husband, sheltered another wandering party of red men, from an intensely bitter, wintry night, and retiring left the dusky savages, stretched peacefully about the fire. In the night, hearing some little confusion among them, the gentleman arose and found the Indians in great glee, at the gorgeous appearance of the stove and pipe, which they had brought to a red and white heat by an unsparing use of the dry fuel which had been left ready at their hands. The walls and ceiling were smoking, and in a few moments more the result must have been the entire destruction of the house. A generous use of water, alone, was sufficient to save it, even then, and for the remainder of the night the owner of the dwelling preferred to act as fireman in person.”

Was this during the time of treaty negotiations. Yes. In fact it is mentioned that the negotiations changed little for the settlers in those early years, adding,

“An Indian squaw pitched her lodge near the Feltons, and with her little Indian girls was Mrs. Felton’s most frequent caller, and principal lady visitant. Whether the calls were as brief as those of to-day, or not, they were certainly far more taciturn.”

OK, that is a lot. And I am sure you will understand the verbiage is not mine and is a historical account. As shocking as the language is by today’s standard, I think we can safely say the native people knew William and Mahala, and what they were up to, and lived peaceably with them, even staying in the log cabin when William was not home, with no incidents. Mahala was strong and brave, but she must have also had quite a peaceful and welcoming presence.

So how long did the Feltons stay at the Buckhorn? I cannot tell for certain. I suspect around one year. http://genealogytrails.com/minn/dakota/towns_hastings.html states,


“Mr. Bailly was more anxious than ever that the Feltons should make their home at Olive Grove, and engaged to keep them in supplies at the trading house, in return for their making a home out of it for his son Henry.

“The Felton’s came, accordingly, by boat, and reached their destination September 6th, 1852. The first white woman settler on the original town site was Mrs. Mahala D. Felton. The family continued the above arrangement with the Baillys until the following spring. On their arrival at Olive Grove they found the trading house deserted, except that Van Rensalaer was stolidly sitting in the sun outside. Mrs. Felton, after much hunting and difficulty, prepared a supper, and soon introduced such civilized comforts into Olive Grove, as only a genuine woman can bring to any community. She made butter from the cows, cooked for the men, and later on for all new comers, by whom her hospitality was thankfully acknowledged and long remembered.”


Of 1853 the same source states,

“Although these settlers had come in, it must be remembered, that no houses were built this year, except shanties on claims, mostly outside of the town. The site of Hastings was covered with burr oaks, and in the low places, hazel, alder and Kinnikinick bushes. There were no streets, and everything centered about the Buckhorn, which, with its live stock, presented much the appearance of a primitive New England farm, except that such a farm would be adorned with better buildings.”


We see William and Mahala stayed at the Buckhorn at least into spring of 1853, but if I remember correctly, their children stayed there when they came, as well. By 1855 their family claims show on the map, in the farmland area.

But that is another post, and where we will pick up next time.

susansdailygarden Historic site Leave a comment May 22, 2025May 21, 2025 8 Minutes
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