Old Rail Fence Corners, by 
Various 
 
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Title: Old Rail Fence Corners The A. B. C's. of Minnesota History 
Author: Various 
Editor: Lucy Leavenworth Wilder Morris 
Release Date: July 30, 2007 [EBook #22179] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD RAIL 
FENCE CORNERS *** 
 
Produced by K Nordquist, Dave Morgan, Graeme Mackreth and the 
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
[Illustration: LUCY LEAVENWORTH WILDER MORRIS
Originator of "Old Rail Fence Corners."] 
 
OLD RAIL FENCE CORNERS 
THE A. B. C's. OF 
Minnesota History 
SECOND EDITION 
AUTHENTIC INCIDENTS GLEANED FROM The Old Settlers By 
The Book Committee 1914 
COPYRIGHTED 1914 BY THE BOOK COMMITTEE 
LUCY LEAVENWORTH WILDER MORRIS, EDITOR 
PUBLISHED BY THE F. H. MCCULLOCH PRINTING @ AUSTIN, 
MINN. 
 
In Memoriam 
Mr. Eli Pettijohn Mrs. Missouri Rose Pratt Mr. James McMullen Mrs. 
Samuel B. Dresser Mr. William W. Ellison Mr. Henry Favel Major 
Benjamin Randall Mrs. Duncan Kennedy Major S. A. Buell Mrs. Helen 
Horton Mrs. Mary Massolt Mrs. J. M. Paine Mr. Chas. Watson Mrs. C. 
W. Gress 
[Illustration: Map of OLD TRAILS AND ROADS 
COMPILED BY MR. GEORGE RALPH AND MRS. JAMES T. 
MORRIS] 
 
Explanatory
How little we know about what we don't know! 
During my search for a map of the Old Trails and Roads of Minnesota, 
public libraries were thoroughly investigated, but no book or map could 
be found showing these old highways. A few old maps in the Historical 
Library bore snatches of them, but in their entirety they had 
disappeared from books and maps, as well as from our state. 
They might be the foundations for modern roads, but only the names of 
those modern roads survived, so they were lost. 
Months of this research work failed to resurrect them, although a map 
was made from the fragmentary pieces on old maps, filled out by what 
the pioneers who had traveled those roads could furnish. All old maps 
seemed to have disappeared from the state. 
"We had one of the new territory of Minnesota when it was admitted in 
'49, but just threw it out when we cleaned house lately. I think it came 
from Washington," said one dear old pioneer woman. 
"What do you want of those old roads anyway," said another. "If you 
had been over them as I have, you would know how much better these 
roads are, and be glad they are gone." 
It was hard to locate them from hearsay for when we asked "Did it go 
through Alexandria," the answer was, "There was no town on it after 
leaving St. Cloud, so I can't say just where it went, but we went to Fort 
Garry and crossed the river at Georgetown." 
Finally, after nearly a year's hard work, as we were on our way to the 
Capitol to look over the first government surveys, Mr. George Ralph 
was met, became interested, and drew part of these trails from the old 
plats for this map. 
When a surveyor goes into a new country to make a government survey, 
he is required to place on that plat every trail, road or plowed 
field--John Ryan, who worked in the forties was the only one we found 
who always followed these directions. He would survey several
townships, and there would be the much-wanted road. Some other 
surveyor would do the one below and there would be a break, but John 
would take hold again a little further on and the trail could be joined 
from the direction shown. 
Later this map made was compared with old maps since destroyed at 
the Army Building in St. Paul and found correct. 
The three great routes for the Red River carts to St. Paul, the great fur 
market, which used to come down by the hundreds from the Pembina 
and Fort Garry country are shown. One through the Minnesota Valley; 
one through the Sauk Valley, and the most used of all through the Crow 
Wing Valley by way of Leaf Lake. They used to come to the head 
waters of the Mississippi in 1808.[1] The Wabasha Prairie Road, called 
Winona Trail on this map, was a very old one, as also were those 
leading to the sacred Pipestone Quarries and the sacred Spirit Lake. 
There is a tradition that there was a truce between all tribes when these 
trails were followed. Mrs. J. T. M. 
[Footnote 1: From Captain Alexander Henry's diary about the Red 
River country in 1801, presented to Ottawa. He    
    
		
	
	
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