Online Encyclopedia

FARGO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 177 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FARGO  , a

city and the county-seat of Cass county, North Dakota, U.S.A., about 254 M . W. of
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Duluth,
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Minnesota . Pop . (1890) 5664; (1900) 9589, of whom 2564 were
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foreign-born; (1910 census) 14,331• It is served by the
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Northern Pacific, the
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Great Northern, and the Chicago,
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Milwaukee & St Paul
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railways . The city is situated on the W.
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bank of the Red
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river of the North, which in 1909 had a navigable
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depth of only about 2 ft. from Fargo to Grank Forks, and the navigation of which was obstructed at various places by fixed bridges . In the city are Island and Oakgrove parks, the former of which contains a statue (erected by Norwegians in 1908) of Henrik Arnold Wergeland, the
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Norwegian poet . Fargo is the seat of the North Dakota agricultural college (coeducational), founded in 1890 under the provisions of the Federal Morrill Act " of 1862; it receives both Federal and state support (the former under the Morrill Act of I89o), and in connexion with it a
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United States Agricultural Experiment Station is maintained . In 1907-1908 the college had 988 students in the
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regular courses (including the students in the Academy), 117 in the summer course in steam
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engineering, and 68 in correspondence courses . At Fargo, also, are Fargo College (non-sectarian, 1887; founded by Congregationalists), which has a college department, a preparatory department, and a conservatory of
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music, and in 1908 had 310 students, of whom 211 were in the conservatory of music; the Oak Grove Lutheran ladies' seminary (1906) and the Sacred Heart Academy (
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Roman Catholic) . The city is the see of both a Roman Catholic bishop and a
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Protestant Episcopal bishop; and it is the centre of masonic interests in the state, having a
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fine masonic temple . There are a public library and a large Y.M.C.A.
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building . St John's hospital is controlled by Roman Catholic sisters, and St Luke's hospital by the, Lutheran Church .

Fargo is in a

rich agricultural (especially wheat) region, is a busy grain-trading and jobbing centre, is one of the most important wholesale distributing centres for agricultural implements and machinery in the United States, and has a number of manufactures, notably
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flour . The
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total value of the city's factory products in 1905 was $1,160,832 . Fargo, named in honour of W . G . Fargo of the Wells Fargo Express
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Company, was first settled as a
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tent city in 1871, when the Red river was crossed by the Northern Pacific, but was not permanently settled until after the extinction in 1873 of the
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Indian title to the reservation on which it was situated . It was chartered as a city in 1875 . The Milwaukee railway was completed to Fargo in 1884 . In
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June 1893 a large
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part of the city was destroyed by fire, the loss being more than $3,000,000 .

End of Article: FARGO
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JOHN FAREY (1766-1826)
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WILLIAM GEORGE FARGO (1818-1881)

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