Main
Street 1890 – Looking North -- In the picture of Main Street in 1890
the teams of wagons belong to local Indians and are filled with buffalo bones
which were traded to merchants for groceries and other merchandise. The bones
were taken to a railroad spur and eventually shipped to St Louis to be used in
refining sugar. The bones were worth ten to fifteen dollars a ton. The small
building on the left is the Post Office. Next to that was the office of J.B.
Rourke, Justice of the Peace. The taller building was a drug store owned by W.
E. Mansfield. This is the intersection of Main Street and 1st
Avenue. The two story brick building was a large general store owned by the
Strain Brothers. North of Strain Brothers was John and Peter Eher’s meat
market. The original Jacobson Hardware was a few doors down the street and at
the end of the street is the Great Northern passenger depot.
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