North Dakota
'New Twins' for Uncle Sam
The Jamestown area was pretty proud when North Dakota achieved statehood on Nov. 2, 1889.
“Uncle Sam’s New Twins” was the headline for The Jamestown Alert on Nov. 7, 1889, the first weekly edition of the Alert that ran after statehood.
“By official proclamation, North Dakota and South Dakota are at last provided with snug quarters in the household of the United States,” said a sub-headline.
I’m not sure what is meant by the “snug quarters in the household of the United States,” but that is how reporters wrote the news back then.
The article went on to say that the Dakota Territory had been seeking statehood under one form or another for eight years before it was granted by a stroke of the pen in The White House by Benjamin Harrison on a Saturday afternoon.
The proclamation was not publicly announced until Nov. 4, 1889 which was a Monday.
When it was made official, there was a lot of scrambling going on.
An election held in October had ratified the North Dakota Constitution and elected the first set of state officials. Once the president signed the papers making North Dakota a state, those officials could be officially sworn into office.
There were some questions raised about the process of transitioning from residents of a territory to residents of a state.
An article in the Alert reassured homesteaders that it was indeed legal to file the claim papers for a homestead using a territorial address and get the final proof conveying the title of the land to them with a state address.
And there were some detractors around the nation to North Dakota getting a star on the United States flag.
The Chicago Herald and St. Paul Globe both editorialized that the residents of the new state were too poor and destitute to join the union as full-fledged states.
The St. Paul Globe went as far as sending wagons through the streets of the Minnesota capital city to gather clothes for the poor of newly formed North Dakota.
In all, four states were admitted to the Union in 1889. North and South Dakota on Nov. 2, 1889. Harrison shuffled the papers so no one knows which was signed first, although North Dakota is considered the 39th state and South Dakota the 40th.
A week or so later, Harrison signed proclamations admitting Montana and Washington to the union.
Author Keith Norman can be reached at
www.KeithNormanBooks.com
North Dakota
North Dakota widow with disabilities fears November SNAP halt amid ongoing government shutdown
BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – Federal food assistance for low-income persons is set to freeze on Saturday because of the gridlock in Washington.
Terry Hornbuckle is a 65-year-old disabled widow, and she wonders how she will be able to make up for SNAP payments if they are paused in November due to the government shutdown.
“Any penny that comes into this house is absolutely pinched until it screams,” said Hornbuckle.
The government shutdown started almost a month ago. Democrats want a resolution on expiring health care tax credits. But Republicans demand that Democrats end the shutdown before they negotiate anything.
“Well, we’re going to get it done. The Democrats have caused the problem on food stamps,” said President Donald Trump.
Hornbuckle is just living off her late husband’s Social Security. She finds it unfathomable that the shutdown is hurting society’s most vulnerable.
“I’m being used as a weapon. I’m marginalized. I’m collateral damage,” said Hornbuckle.
The state Department of Health and Human Services has funds it could use to resume SNAP, but federal rules prevent this.
On Thursday, Governor Kelly Armstrong will announce a plan that could help North Dakotans bridge a possible gap in food assistance after Nov. 1.
Hornbuckle said this would be a meaningful step in the right direction.
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz recently announced that he is sending $4 million in emergency funding to food shelves in advance of the SNAP benefits pausing.
Governor Armstrong’s office has not elaborated on what he is planning to announce on Thursday afternoon. We’ll be at the press conference and let you know the details as soon as we hear them.
Copyright 2025 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
Obituary for John "Jack" Peter Buchner at Gregory J. Norman Funeral Chapel
North Dakota
Knoxville police lieutenant dies in drowning near Woodworth
WOODWORTH, N.D. — The 57-year-old man who drowned Sunday morning, Oct. 26, near Woodworth was a lieutenant with the Knoxville Police Department in Tennessee, according to the department’s Facebook post.
Gordon Gwathney, of Knoxville, died after the kayak he was in tipped over in a slough about 15 miles northwest of Woodworth, according to information provided by the Stutsman County Sheriff’s Office.
Gwathney was on a duck hunting trip with three friends.
“This is an incomprehensible loss for our agency and the entire Knoxville community,” Knoxville Police Chief Paul Noel said in the Facebook post on Sunday. “Gordon was beloved by our department and so many members of our community. He was a truly exceptional police officer who mentored generations of officers, dedicated his entire life to service and embodied the true spirit of community policing.”
The Stutsman County Sheriff’s Office said Gwathney was duck hunting with three friends in a slough. Gwathney was in a kayak and went to retrieve a duck that was shot in the slough. Winds were 30-40 mph at the time of the accident.
While out on the water, the kayak capsized and Gwathney fell into the water, the sheriff’s office said. The sheriff’s office said he was not wearing a life preserver but had waders on.
First responders located and removed Gwathney from the slough before he was transported by Carrington Ambulance to CHI St. Alexius Health Carrington, where he was pronounced dead.
The North Dakota Game and Fish Department is investigating the accident.
Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.
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