Wibaux, Wibaux County, Montana, USA
Notizen:
Wikipedia 2017:
Wibaux is a town in and the county seat of Wibaux County, Montana, United States. The population was 589 at the 2010 census.
Geschichte:
The town originally had names such as Keith, Beaver, and Mingusville (named for Minnie and Gus Grisy, who ran the Post Office in the late 19th century). In 1895, the town was renamed for prominent local cattle rancher, Pierre Wibaux, who had immigrated to the area from France in 1883. Wibaux expanded his herds by buying stock from less fortunate ranchers.
After Wibaux's arrival, the town became a major cattle shipping center for the Northern Pacific Railroad, notably receiving some of the cattle from Theodore Roosevelt's Maltese Cross and Elkhorn ranches near Medora, North Dakota. The great cattle drives of the 1880s often passed by Wibaux on their way from Texas to the northern ranges.
Theodore Roosevelt had a famous encounter with a bully at Nolan's Hotel in Wibaux (Mingusville, at the time) shortly after moving to the North Dakota Badlands in 1884. Arriving at the hotel late at night, Roosevelt was accosted by a drunk sheep herder carrying cocked revolvers in both hands, and ordered to buy drinks for the crowd. Roosevelt pretended to move towards the bar, then punched the man three times in quick succession, causing the drunk to fire his revolvers as he fell. The future president then took away the man's guns before several other occupants of the hotel dragged him out into a shed.
Lore has it that in the late 1970s oil boom, Wibaux had a brawl unlike any seen before, straight out of an Old West show. Hundreds of drunk participants fought for hours in the streets. It started from some minor dispute.
Arleigh "Bunny" Meek, Jr. was the sheriff in Wibaux, and Wibaux County from 1968-1998 (32 years). He served longer than any other sheriff in Montana's history. He succeeded his father, Arleigh Meek, Sr. as sheriff. The only uniform he wore was his badge. Neither "Bunny" or his father carried a gun when they were sheriff, although they walked in and apprehended some very large, very violent (or drunk) individuals in this modern day old west town.
The National Register of Historical Places has three entries in Wibaux: The Pierre Wibaux House, St. Peter's Catholic Church, and the Wibaux Historical District.
Treffer 1 bis 4 von 4
Familie | Eheschließung | Familien-Kennung | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Graff / Graff | 6 Jul 1949 | Wibaux, Wibaux County, Montana, USA | F31116 |
2 | Grenz / Hermann | 5 Jan 1917 | Wibaux, Wibaux County, Montana, USA | F37175 |
3 | Riedlinger / Sayler | 16 Feb 1946 | Wibaux, Wibaux County, Montana, USA | F14073 |
4 | Sayler / Young | 16 Nov 1951 | Wibaux, Wibaux County, Montana, USA | F14781 |