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Page 6 ~'~ L Summer 1999 <br />~~ ar i <br />~ r ~ <br />® ~ <br />excerpted from "Climate and Crops: <br />19~n. Section'; U.S. Dept. of~gricuiture <br />dome of the oldest inhabitants of this section, in <br />view of the present flood situation, are recalling a <br />statement which was frequently made by Pierre <br />Bottineau, the noted <br />guide and scout, a <br />large portion of whose ° <br />life was spent in this <br />vicinity and who at <br />one time resided at <br />Red Lake Falls. It was <br />to the effect that <br />people would live to <br />No farming whatever is being done here on account <br />of the annual floods in the valley for three years past, <br />the waters having risen to the height of thirty-one and <br />thirty-three feet above the low water mark, flooding all <br />the country and inundating houses at this place <br />(Pembina) to the depth of two or three feet. The ground <br />is destitute of grass, with tall, rank weeds three and <br />four feet in height abounding. <br />The heaviest floods known in the country occurred <br />in 1824, 1825 and 1826. The last year the water rose <br />sixty-siz feet in height and the whole country was <br />completely drowned out. <br />This produced <br />such universal <br />distress that many of <br />the most wealthy and <br />influential citizens <br />left Selkirk in <br />consequence and <br />made an overland <br />°...and about fifteen persons fro had <br />oalCUlated On this' <br />perished from hunger -° <br />see the day when water in the Red River would reach <br />the level of the prairies on either side. <br />In this connection a bit of ancient history is decid- <br />edly interesting. J.W. Bond, the historian, who came to <br />the Red River Valley in 1851 for the purpose of treating <br />with the Indians for the Red Lake reservation, says <br />they found the valley desalate and barren. Everything <br />was drowned out by the inundations of the river, which <br />had occurred for several successive years. In this book <br />published in 1853 he says of this section: <br />"Along the course of the river, both banks within the <br />margin of the stream, are covered with the thick growth <br />of drowned-out willows, while further back on the <br />prairie, fine large trees, majestic oaks and elms, are in <br />the same condition; and now stand towering aloft like <br />high, giant skeleton sentinels throwing out their dry <br />leafless limbs across the water as if to guard its pas- <br />sage. Each tree is marked at the height of about 30 feet <br />above the water, by the heavy drift ice during the <br />freshets. In some places the timber merely skirts the <br />river, at others it extends further than the eye can <br />penetrate; and no prairies being visible for miles, all is <br />a desolate solitude of dead and dying skeleton trunks of <br />leafless trees. <br />journey across the plains to St. Peters and Galena, <br />near which last place they settled. In 1825 the snow fell <br />the 15th of October in great quantity and remained on <br />the ground. Still more fell during the winter, which was <br />one of the coldest which had passed for twenty-five <br />years. The snow melted suddenly about the last of <br />April. The water had already risen in the streams as <br />high as the banks when the ice, which had scarcely <br />diminished in thickness, was dragged away by the <br />violence of the current, and taking a straight course, <br />rooted up trees and demolished edifices and whatever <br />found itself in its way. <br />The fish, the principal resource of the inhabitants at <br />this season of the year, were dispersed in this immense <br />extent of water and the fishermen were not able to take <br />them. The bison that were ordinarily found in abun- <br />dance near the river Pembina went away, and about <br />fifteen persons who had calculated on this resource <br />perished from hunger. The waters did not recede <br />entirely until the 20th of July; when some persons <br />risked sowing barley, which came to maturity. <br />A similar condition of affairs did not occur again <br />unti11852. Then "the water rose a foot higher than in <br />1826 (sixty-seven feet above low water) and the losses <br />occasioned by it are still greater. Fencing, grain and <br />property of all kinds was washed away and destroyed. <br />resource <br /> <br />