Take me back to the Black Hills
The Black Hills of Dakota
To the beautiful Indian country
That I love
- Song from the 1953 western musical film Calamity Jane,
starring Doris Day
Julia Talledge in 1907
After the death of her mother, Julia, the third youngest of 13 siblings, and her younger brother Royal Elliot ‘Roy’ Talledge had visited relatives in South Dakota in the spring of 1900, and she had fallen in love with the vast flat land of the West River country. Over the next six years Julia saved and plotted to return, permanently. She kept in contact with a land agent called Bill Hudson, who located newcomers on claims west of Fort Pierre.
Julia stepped off the train at Pierre at 2pm on Saturday, April 6, 1907. She had already made a claim on a block of land on Mitchell Creek outside Midland, a small rural town in the south-eastern corner of Haakon County, laid out in 1890 and named from its location halfway between the Missouri and Cheyenne rivers. But she had failed to establish residence within the required six months, and on arriving in Pierre was told by the Government Land Office she had to remain on the land for 14 months without commuting. That made her think twice about her plan to build a 8ft x 10ft shack and live in the woods beyond Midland, and she was about to head back to Huron when the train conductor, Willis Fink, advised her to stay. Her first three nights in Midland she slept in a hotel bed with two other women in a room with 13 other guests.
Her shack, made of 4 x 2 uprights, rough boards, building paper and a rubberoid roof, was built in a day. The first night of hail, on July 6, 1907, “I sat on my cot with my parasol open over me and mackintosh spread over the bed, and I laughed and thought to myself if my friends back east could only see me now.” Pretty much confined to her claim for 14 months, Julia spent her first summer roaming the prairies and hills. To keep the claim she had to have five acres ploughed, fenced and planted. Julia stayed on the plot for three years, walking into Midland carrying a four-foot heavy switch to kill rattlesnakes on the road. She later bought an 8 x 16 shack and had it moved into Midland. An older brother, Albert Clarence Talledge, built her a house in which she lived from 1919.
Julia was the only shorthand-typist living on a homestead in the vicinity and her services were much in demand. On October 1, 1907, she was taken on full-time as a bookkeeper by a bank in Midland. In 1915 Julia became deputy to the Registrar of Deeds in Philip, west of Midland, then joined the Home Land and Abstract Office. Julia returned to banking management in Nowlin, Quinn and Wall, further west of Philip, then south-east to Okaton – in all nine banks, eight along the line of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad and one on the Milwaukee River.
On his visit to South Dakota in 1927, President Coolidge was declared "Leading Eagle", an honorary chief of the Sioux Native Americans at Deadwood. Here, from left, are First Lady Grace Coolidge, President Coolidge in war bonnet, Princess Rose Bud Yellow Robe, Chief Yellow Robe
and Chief Standing Bear. Below, the President and First Lady pose
outdoors at a party celebrating the 4th of July and his 55th birthday at the
Summer White House, State Game Lodge and Resort, Custer State Park, South
Dakota.
President Taft in Pierre, South Dakota, in 1911. Julia said she could have reached out and touched the President. This is the same station at which Julia had arrived in April 1907.
By 1975 Julia had moved to the Wilge Nursing Home in Mitchell, 175 miles east of her beloved Midland. She died there in June 1978, aged 95.
Julia in Mitchell in 1975.
4 comments:
Thank you for this. Julia would have been my father-in-law's aunt. I knew her name as someone who went to South Dakota, but never knew this much detail.
Jinny Talledge
Aunt Julia was my father’s aunt and a fun lady to visit. I remember her being a tall imposing woman with a very sharp wit. We often took her brothers- my grandfather Ben and brother Roy- out to Midland to see her. My father was a pastor and History teacher and was a favorite of hers. Thank you for all this info. Some of it I remember. I know that my father was extremely proud of his Aunt Julia and they corresponded right up to her death.
Rhonda Talledge Mataczynski- great niece
Thank you for this posting. My husband and I own the Stroppel Hotel and Mineral Baths in Midland, SD. I am working on the application to put the hotel on the national registry. Julia Tallege has repeatedly come up. I had a niece of Julia's come visit the hotel. At that time I did not have the information to know how influential and how strong of a woman that Julia Tallege was. I wish I had that personal visit back with her niece.
I plan to do themed historical rooms here in the hotel and you can bet that Julia Tallege will be on the list of Midland's most influential people.
Email me at stroppelhotelandmineralbaths@gmail.com. I have pictures of Julia’s typewriter from an exhibit in the Midland Museum
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