North Dakota
Fatal flogging of young ND man helped end prison chain gang brutality in the U.S.
MUNICH, N.D. — In the portrait, 22-year-old Martin Tabert gazes outward with a stoic, serious expression, perhaps hoping to appear older than his years. Standing beside a chair, he’s dressed in a slightly oversized blue suit, complete with a crisp white detachable collar — evoking the style of silver-screen icons of the day Clark Gable and Douglas Fairbanks.
He looks every bit like a young man ready to leave behind his North Dakota farm for adventures unknown.
“He wanted to see the world,” nephew Clifford Tabert told a reporter in 2004 about his uncle. “He saw the bad part of it, I guess.”
Contributed/Find a Grave/Martin Tabert
Born on a 560-acre farm near Munich, North Dakota, in Cavalier County, Martin was the ninth of 12 children. Like some of his siblings before him, when he came of age and saved a few dollars, he left the farm in search of bigger and better things.
In the fall of 1921, he took a train south. His plan was to find work on farms along the way and learn about farming in other parts of the U.S. Everything was going well until December in Florida, when his luck and money ran out.

Tracy Briggs/Forum archives
He took a chance and hitched a ride on a train near Tallahassee. But a deputy spotted him and arrested him for vagrancy. Because he didn’t have the money to pay the $25 fine, he was sentenced to 90 days in jail.
Tabert sent a telegram home to his parents, Benjamin and Katie.
“In trouble and need 50 dollars to pay fine.”
His father replied (misspellings in the original message):
“Dear Martin, Am sending you $75.00 so you can pay the $50.00 fine and have $25.00 so if you can’t git no work, then you will have some money to live on. We could not git no mony till now. Ma would like to have you come home. It’s to bad that it happent to you. Ma would like to know why you went down there, and how you are feeling. As this is all I can think of just now so I must close. We are all well and hope this will find you the same.”

Tracy Briggs/Forum Archives
But days later, on Dec. 21, the letter was returned to the Taberts unopened with the words:
“Returned by request of Sheriff. Party gone.”
His North Dakota family was relieved. They figured he had found another way out of his jam and would be home soon, maybe even in time to sit down for Katie’s Christmas dinner.
That didn’t happen. Christmas came and went without Martin. In January, Ben and Katie received a letter from Putnam Lumber Company informing them Martin died in one of the firm’s camps of “fever and other complications.”
Those “other complications” were about to set off a firestorm in Florida.

Tracy Briggs/Forum archival photo
Shocked and saddened, Ben and Katie grieved the loss of their son. While they were a bit confused as to how he ended up with what was believed to be malaria at a lumber camp, they accepted the circumstances surrounding his death and were relieved when the company assured them Martin received “a proper Christian burial.”
That changed when the Taberts received a letter in July from Glen Thompson, who slept in the bunk beside Martin at Putnam.
According to historian Curt Eriksmoen, the letter was sent to the postmaster in Munich with these words:
“Please find out whether the parents or kinfolk of Martin Tabert know or care to know the particulars of Martin’s death. I was an eyewitness of the boy’s death and I am doubting whether any particulars were sent to the folks.”
The Taberts and Thompson corresponded for months. But they needed more information, so they eventually contacted Cavalier County State’s Attorney Gudmundur Grimson, who had begun his law career in Munich.
An Icelandic fighter gets answers
Grimson immigrated to North Dakota from Iceland as an infant. He grew up on a farm in Pembina County and worked as a teacher to earn the $150 tuition to the University of North Dakota, where he earned a law degree. While at UND, he shared a modest shack with another soon-to-be famous Icelandic immigrant, polar explorer
Vilhalmjer Steffanson.
Described in one Forum news story as possessing “personal grit and determination,” Grimson went to Florida and got to the bottom of Tabert’s death.

Contributed/State Historical Society of North Dakota
It turns out that after Tabert was sentenced to 90 days in jail, he was whisked off to the town of Clara, Florida, in Dixie County, 60 miles south of Tallahassee. He was assigned to work in the prison labor force at the Putnam Lumber Company.
Grimson learned it was part of an arrangement between the company and Sheriff J.R. Jones. Jones was promised around $20 for every man he could send to work for Putnam, earning him the nickname “The Slave Catcher.”

According to a 1923 story in The New York Age newspaper, Tabert and the other convicts were forced to work long days “waist-deep in swampy water” and “fed and housed in a way that no North Dakota farmer would feed and house his domestic animals.”
Tabert soon suffered from fever, headaches and open sores. When he couldn’t keep up with his work, Thompson and others said Putnam’s “whipping boss” Walter Higginbotham propped him up on his swollen feet and flogged him 50 times with “Black Aunty,” a 5-foot-long, 7.5-pound rawhide strap.
He then forced Tabert to the ground, stepped on his neck, and kept beating him. His fellow prisoners carried him back to his bunk, where he lay in excruciating pain before dying three days later.

Contributed/Library of Congress
When Grimson returned to Cavalier County and shared the news about Tabert, his fellow North Dakotans were outraged.
Local leaders set up a defense fund and distributed a pamphlet titled “Can America Stand For This?”
With residents of Cavalier County leading the way, people from all over the state contributed a total of $4,000 to help pay for the prosecution of individuals connected to Tabert’s death.
The North Dakota Legislature also passed a resolution demanding the Florida Legislature investigate the matter.
Eriksmoen said newspapers in the Sunshine State didn’t take the criticism lying down.
“When the Florida newspapers learned of the demands from North Dakota, they stirred up their readers by writing that these impertinent farmers should ‘go back home and slop their hogs,’ ” he wrote.
Grimson urged major national newspapers to cover Martin Tabert’s story, and they did. By July 1923, more than 50 papers worldwide had covered the flogging. Renowned author Marjory Stoneman Douglas penned a poignant poem about Tabert, set to music in a minor key and sung by schoolchildren across Florida. The story even inspired a film, “The Whipping Boss.”

Public Domain
It’s important to note that despite the publicity exploding around the case, Martin Tabert was hardly the first man fatally beaten in a prison camp. But sadly, people and the press paid attention, partly because he was white, well-educated, and came from a family with the ability to pay his fine and a community willing to finance a fight.
The majority of the convicts killed previously were either Black or poor whites who didn’t have the means to fight the system.
The New York Age noted in 1923, “The case of Tabert, as terrible as it is, could be matched and outmatched by the cases of thousands of Negroes who have suffered and died under the systems of convict leasing and peonage.”
Whether embarrassed by the publicity or not, the Florida Legislature eventually agreed with North Dakota’s position and passed a resolution thanking the state for bringing the Tabert incident to their attention. Meanwhile, fearing the matter would hurt tourism, Florida’s governor, Cary Hardee, ordered Higginbotham to be arrested.

Contributed/Forum archives
‘Lightly beat’ or ‘brutally whipped’?
The trial took place in Columbia County, 150 miles from Putnam’s lumber camp. Higginbotham faced first-degree murder charges. He claimed he only “lightly beat” Tabert for neglecting his duties.
Sixteen witnesses testified. Most of them disputed Higginbotham’s story.
One of them, John T. Gardner, a one-time U.S. Army private who was in the camp, testified to the brutality Higginbotham inflicted upon Tabert despite Tabert screaming and begging for mercy.
“I’ve seen Higginbotham beat five or six men in one night,” Gardner testified. “Seems like when he got started, he wouldn’t know when to quit.”

Tracy Briggs/Forum archives
On July 8, 1923, Higginbotham was found guilty of second-degree murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison.
Gudmundur Grimson received a letter of thanks and congratulations from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, commending him and the State of North Dakota for the conviction, calling it “an accomplishment of the greatest public importance and a godsend to the future protection of the American people.”
However, the conviction didn’t stand. The Supreme Court of Florida overturned it, ruling that while there was enough evidence to support the guilty verdict, it would be necessary to retry the case in Dixie County because of legal technicalities.
After two years, a trial was held in Dixie County. But getting a conviction again would be an uphill battle.
Irving Wallace, author of “The Last of the Whipping Bosses,” said the Putnam Lumber Company owned 75% of the land in Dixie County, and most residents were dependent on it for their livelihood.
Additionally, Wallace said the county sheriff was the brother-in-law of Higginbotham’s attorney and a member of the Board of Commissioners whose job was to select juries.
“The drawing had not been properly done, and the court had been having the sheriff select the jurors,” Wallace wrote.
Higginbotham was found not guilty.
Despite Higginbotham’s release from prison, the Tabert case led to change throughout the South. In 1924, Florida abolished the convict leasing system and corporal punishment for prisoners and revised other penal laws. Other Southern states followed.
The New York World won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 1924 for its coverage of the Tabert case and for raising awareness about the abuses in Southern states surrounding the leasing of convicts for forced penal labor.
After he was acquitted in the Tabert case, Higginbotham faced charges of beating another inmate. However, before that trial started, he was seriously injured in a car accident and excused from the proceedings. He kept a low profile after that.

Tracy Briggs/Forum Archives
Other men connected to the Tabert case also faced consequences. Martin’s sentencing judge, Ben Willis, and Sheriff Jones were removed from office, the prison supervisor resigned, and Dr. T. Caper Jones, the Putnam physician who failed to tend to Martin’s needs, was condemned by the legislature as “a disgrace to his profession.”
Gudmundur Grimson eventually climbed the ladder in the North Dakota court system, becoming the chief justice of the North Dakota Supreme Court from 1957 to 1959. The Tabert case was a highlight of his career.

Forum archives
In a 1953 letter to the editor of The Forum, he expressed gratitude for the changes made in the penal system.
“That result could never have been accomplished except for the support and encouragement of friends and newspapers in North Dakota and all over the United States.”
Grimson died in 1965 at the age of 86.
Putnam Lumber paid the Tabert family $20,000 in damages for the death of their son.
Martin Tabert’s body was never returned to North Dakota, where his family longed to lay him to rest in their family plot.
The fate of his remains is unknown. The lumber company lied when it said Martin received “a proper Christian burial.” By most accounts, he was thrown into a swamp.
Yet, despite this tragic loss, Martin Tabert’s legacy endures.
The farm kid who left home in ‘21 to make a name for himself did that, forever becoming synonymous with efforts to improve America’s penal system.
North Dakota
North Dakota Supreme Court reverses dismissal of contractors’ lawsuit against city of West Fargo
WEST FARGO — A lawsuit against the city of West Fargo will continue after the North Dakota Supreme Court on Thursday, June 25, reversed a 2025 dismissal.
In December, the Associated General Contractors of North Dakota and the American Concrete Pavement Association–North Dakota Chapter, Inc. appealed the dismissal judgment filed in favor of the city of West Fargo.
The North Dakota Supreme Court determined in its Thursday, June 25, ruling that the district court made an error by
dismissing these claims as “moot,”
with the reasoning that the construction project is completed and can’t be undone, and the court additionally erred by denying the plaintiffs the opportunity to amend their complaint “on grounds the association lacks standing to challenge a city ordinance.”
The dismissal was reversed, so the case will continue. The attorney for the plaintiffs/appellants, Nicholas Surma, said his team is very pleased with the outcome.
“(We) look forward to a decision on the merits whether the city can continue to substitute itself for private contractors or whether projects must be competitively bid to achieve the law’s intended purpose — allowing the free market to provide the best quality at the best price for West Fargo’s taxpaying citizens,” Surma said in a written statement.
David Samson / The Forum file photo
Rachel Richter Lordemann, director of communications for the city of West Fargo, said the city doesn’t comment on ongoing litigation.
The plaintiffs, collectively referred to as the “association,” originally filed a claim against West Fargo in May 2025, arguing the city violated competitive bidding requirements for a public improvement project by delegating some tasks to city staff rather than putting them up for bid.
North Dakota Century Code at the time stated the threshold for bidding the construction of a public improvement project was $200,000, according to Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling. The project in this case was expected to exceed that cost.
The plaintiffs asked the court to enter a judgment saying the city can’t self-perform any public improvement that exceeds $200,000, and violated state law by doing so in the Improvement District No. 2290 mill and overlay project. They also asked the court to prohibit West Fargo from self-performing work on that project and future projects required to be publicly bid on under state law.
West Fargo approved a contract for the project in June 2025, and the project was completed in September. After the project was finished, the city adopted an ordinance allowing the city to self-perform routine street maintenance with available funds, regardless of the estimated value, if the city feels it’s in its best interest to internally handle the job.
After the ordinance passed, the plaintiffs filed a motion to amend their complaint to include, among other things, a request for a declaration that the ordinance is invalid. The district court allowed the case to be put on hold while the plaintiffs gathered information, but denied their challenge of the ordinance.
“The court reasoned the association lacked standing to challenge the ordinance because the association had not alleged ‘an actual or threatened injury stemming from action under the ordinance’ or that ‘the City has exercised authority under the ordinance,’” the Supreme Court ruling said.
After oral arguments, the claims were dismissed without prejudice or costs awarded to either party.
Dismissals without prejudice can rarely be appealed, since plaintiffs can simply refile their case, however, the Supreme Court found an appeal was appropriate because the association has no ability to seek the relief it was when originally filing the case. The project can’t be undone.
The Supreme Court determined the public interest exception to mootness applies in this case, because “competitive bidding laws are designed to protect the public, and a decision will guide public officials administering political subdivisions across the state.”
The Supreme Court also disagreed with the district court’s ruling that the association had no ability to challenge the ordinance. It said the association has alleged facts that demonstrate the ordinance presents a threat to the interests of its members.
North Dakota
North Dakota composer launches statewide virtual choir project
GRAND FORKS — A North Dakota composer’s dream is turning into a statewide invitation.
Williston-based musician Emily Black-Driscoll was chosen as the North Dakota Music Teachers Association’s commissioned composer for 2026. She’s preparing an original composition that will premiere in August.
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North Dakota
Challengers declare victory after ND Supreme Court rules against Legislature’s attempt to alter term limits
BISMARCK — A constitutional ballot measure to amend the state’s term limits law as proposed by the Legislature will not appear on November’s ballot, the North Dakota Supreme Court ruled Thursday, siding with petitioners who argued the Legislature exceeded its authority and violated the state constitution in proposing the changes.
“The people’s voice was heard,” Grand Forks County Commissioner Terry Bjerke said in reaction to the news.
Bjerke was a member of the sponsoring committee behind the successful 2022 effort to pass a term limits initiative, which amended the state constitution by capping legislative term limits to eight years in the House and eight years in the Senate. The amendment, which became article XV of the state constitution, also included a clause barring the Legislature from making constitutional changes to term limits.
During the 2025 session, however, lawmakers narrowly approved Senate Concurrent Resolution 4008, in which the legislature proposed Constitutional Measure 1, a ballot measure to amend the term limits language to allow legislators to decide in which chamber they want to serve their 16 years, and to repeal the clause limiting the legislative assembly’s authority to propose an amendment to alter or repeal term limits.
Bjerke and former Minot legislator Oley Larsen brought the lawsuit challenging the validity of the Legislature’s action in January, and the state Supreme Court
heard oral arguments in the case
this spring.
“Those term limits may only be altered by a measure proposed by the people rather than the Legislative Assembly. And yet a few years later, the Legislative Assembly is doing what they are prohibited from doing,” attorney Zachary Wallen argued on Bjerke and Larsen’s behalf.
Tanner Ecker / The Bismarck Tribune
The Legislature’s attorneys argued the clause prohibiting legislative proposals to alter the constitutional term limits language “infringes on our republican form of government” by “limiting the people’s ability to vote on amendments proposed by their elected officials.”
Justice Jon Jensen seemed skeptical of that argument during the April 2 hearing, questioning whether a second vote was appropriate.
“The public did speak on this. The public spoke on it when it passed the original constitutional amendment and they said, ‘Legislature, you don’t even get to propose a change.’ They have already spoken on it,” Jensen said. “You want a second shot, or a second bite at the apple, not a first one, a second.”
In Thursday’s ruling, all five justices sided with Bjerke and Larsen.
“We … conclude the Legislative Assembly’s adoption of S.C.R. 4008 violated N.D. Const. art. XV … and declare S.C.R. 4008 and Constitutional Measure 1 void … We enjoin the Secretary of State from placing Constitutional Measure 1 on the November 2026 general election ballot,” the ruling said.
Bjerke thanked the legal team that worked on behalf of their lawsuit, and said he was grateful the court reached the conclusion it did.
“I’m thrilled that what the people voted on and approved has been validated,” Bjerke said.
He added that the Legislature had “multiple opportunities” to address term limits prior to 2022’s initiated measure and chose not to, and gave a nod to the country’s coming milestone and the process by which voters expressed their support for term limits.
“We’ve lasted 250 years,” Bjerke said. “I have two words for those elected leaders who think they aren’t: everyone’s replaceable.”
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