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6.2. HRSR 05-28-2002
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6.2. HRSR 05-28-2002
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5/28/2002
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were named for Godfrey's wife and daughter,as well as Elk, <br /> Merchants,Minnehaha and Hiawatha.53 <br /> The nucleus of Orono was its six-foot crib and boulder dam. <br /> Drawing power from the Elk River, the lumber mill used <br /> timber floated down the Mississippi in seasonal log drives. The <br /> sawmill was fitted with one sash saw,capable of sawing about <br /> three thousand feet of lumber per day. Godfrey also opened a <br /> general store,as did P.C.Hawes. <br /> In addition to the mills and dam,Orono had a scattering of <br /> houses,a cemetery,a schoolhouse built in 1857 that also served <br /> as the Sherburne County Courthouse,and the Trinity <br /> Episcopal Church.By 1857,population of the settlement <br /> reached about 134. <br /> Godfrey appears to have been in partnership in the lumber mill <br /> with Charles Mansur, an Orono resident who left Minnesota <br /> about 1862. 54 Godfrey also sold an interest to Ed Dickey in <br /> 1857. By 1880, the property was sold to E.P. Mills and W. H. <br /> Houlton, whose lumber business would produce 1,200,000 <br /> board feet of lumber by1880. <br /> Ard Godfrey (1813-?) was born at Orono, Maine and grew up <br /> in a family of millwrights. In 1847 he arrived in St. Anthony to <br /> work as a millwright for Franklin Steele who was planning the <br /> • first dam at the falls. (The house he built in St. Anthony in <br /> 1849 still stands.) Throughout his career, Godfrey sought <br /> opportunities to develop millsites. He left St. Anthony to <br /> briefly return to Maine, and upon his return he purchased the <br /> Orono millsite, made a townsite plan in 1855, and an addition <br /> in 1857. However, he does not appear to have permanently <br /> resided in Orono,and well before he sold his last mill property <br /> there about 1863 he devoted himself to his interests in <br /> Minneapolis, including his saw mill and grist mill on <br /> Minnehaha Creek. 55 Pushing westward, he later built the first <br /> sawmill in Montana. 56 Godfrey's partner, John G. Jameson, <br /> was also a native of Maine. He arrived in Minnesota in 1851. <br /> Unlike Godfrey, after the sale of the mill property he entered <br /> farming,which he pursued until his death in 18695 <br /> By1899, there were two general stores and a wagon shop still in <br /> operation near the dam, in addition to the Elk River Milling • <br /> Company's flour mill and the W. H. Houlton Lumber s ��� <br /> Company's sawmill. While Godfrey provided the dam and <br /> sap �d r <br /> early mills,it was W.H. Houlton's flour and lumber businesses , <br /> that would persist at this location for several generations.Ss <br /> Elk River <br /> Orono was a successful if small mill center,but the arrival of Pierre Bottineau's Riverside <br /> the railroad encouraged growth to the south in what was Hotel,begun in the 1850s,in <br /> known as Lowertown.Elk River was not platted until 1865, 1900. Photo:MHS. <br /> replatted in 1868,and incorporated in 1880-8159 The original <br /> • plat was made by O.E.Garrison for J.Q.A Nickerson.The <br /> incorporation included the townsite of Orono.Interest in the <br /> banks of the Elk River as a location for commerce began in the <br /> Elk River Historic Contexts Study Draft 5/2002 <br /> 23 <br />
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