Did you know that Glen and Sophia lived in northwestern
Minnesota, southeast of Fargo for about the first three years of their
marriage? The place was Manston township,
Wilkin County, Minnesota.
Per their marriage announcement, both Glen and Sophia, along
with Glen’s sister Lena and her new husband, Monte Sisson, were moving there
right after their marriage. They were
moving there to “have charge of a large farm belonging to A. H. McCoy, engineer
on the Fairmont-Madelia line of the Omaha”.
By June 5th they were living in Manston township
per Glen’s WW1 draft registration, so I would assume that they would have moved up
there some time after their marriage and probably before the spring planting.
I located the A. H. McCoy property on a map of the time and
located the farm. It was 320 acres, and
back in the 1917 timeframe, farming 320 acres by horse was probably a very
large and hard job. This would be approximately
the size of the farm where Steve originally farmed, which is also where Scott
used to live, or about the size of the Trimont farm. Imagine farming that by horse?
(you can double click on any picture for a closer look)
(you can double click on any picture for a closer look)
This is where Sophia gave birth to their first son, Lowel. He died in Barnesville, just a few miles
north of where they lived, and is buried in Barnesville.
When and why they moved back I’m a little uncertain. On January 29, 1920 they were still living in
Manston township, but Raymond was born later that year on December 29, 1920 and
they were back in Pilot Grove by then. By the
January 29th date, Lena and Monte had already returned to
Fairmont. Why or when I don’t know. So my assumption would be that Glen and Sophia
probably returned after the harvest in the fall of 1920. Why? A
guess would be that with Sophia pregnant with Raymond, and having lost the
first son, Lowel a long ways from family, and now even Lena and Monte were also gone, maybe Sophia wanted to be closer to home for this birth.
It may be due to totally unrelated reasons as well.
On Google Earth, this would be the farm place as it is today.