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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CY8_surgeons-quarters-headquarters_Fairfax-MN.html
Surgeon's Quarters—HeadquartersFort Ridgely's commandant and its surgeon lived with their families in the structure on this site. A central hallway divided the quarters into two separate living units. The building was destroyed by fire in 18…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CXP_a-second-wave-of-attacks_Fairfax-MN.html
A SECOND WAVE OF ATTACKSThe Dakota plan of attack on August 22 was the same as on the 20th—a volley of three shots from the north, followed by a rush of warriors from the east, south, and west. The plan was disrupted again when a mail carrie…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CXD_surprise-attack-at-redwood-ferry_Fairfax-MN.html
SURPRISE ATTACK AT REDWOOD FERRYOn the morning of August 18, 1862, Captain John Marsh, 46 soldiers, and interpreter Peter Quinn left the fort to respond to news of violence at Lower Sioux Agency. After an 11-mile march, the soldiers prepared to cr…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CX5_officers-quarters-c_Fairfax-MN.html
Officers' Quarters—CThis building was identical to Officers' Quarters B and was one of several Fort Ridgely structures excavated by G. Hubert Smith in the mid-1930s. Assisted by unemployed World War I veterans from the Works Progress Adminis…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CWF_reinforcements-arrive_Fairfax-MN.html
REINFORCEMENTS ARRIVE Soldiers and civilian refugees peered anxiously in this direction, fearing another attack and praying for help. The garrison had dug entrenchments and built an earthen wall south of the fort. Barricades on all sides had been…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CTU_economic-engine_Fairfax-MN.html
ECONOMIC ENGINE With hundreds of men and some 175 horses, the garrison had a gargantuan appetite for wood, hay, grain, corn, and beef. Unable to meet the requirements of the post through any direct federal supply system, the War Department issued…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CM5_this-fort-had-a-purpose_Fairfax-MN.html
THIS FORT HAD A PURPOSE Fort Ridgely served as a buffer between Dakota Indians on the reservations and white settlers pouring into the Minnesota River valley. Soldiers stationed here enforced treaty agreements and protected the Dakota from intrus…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CKB_a-minority-in-their-homeland-u-s-dakota-conflict_Fairfax-MN.html
A Minority in Their Homeland For generations, the land stretching out around you was the homeland of the Dakota Indians. Through treaties in 1851, the Dakota sold all of their land in southern Minnesota. The treaties disregarded Dakota people's tr…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CAX_fort-ridgely-state-monument_Fairfax-MN.html
SIDE 1 IN MEMORY OF THE FALLEN; IN RECOGNITIONOF THE LIVING; AND FOR THE EMULATIONOF FUTURE GENERATIONS. Erected A.D. 1896, by the State of Minnesota, to preserve the site of Fort Ridgely, a United States military post established in 1853, and es…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1CAN_chief-mou-zoo-mau-nee-state-monument_Fairfax-MN.html
Erected by the State of Minnesota in recognition of, and to commemorate the loyal and efficient services rendered to the State by Chief Mou-Zoo-Mau-Nee and the Chippewa Indians during the Sioux out-break and the civil war.
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