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In 1990, a pair of peregrine falcons, an endangered species, showed up near the top of the First Interstate Bank in Fargo. They appeared to be looking for…
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After claims that the Spanish sunk the USS Maine off the coast of Cuba in 1898, no North Dakota newspaper called for a retaliatory strike. But once the…
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Shortly after bombing Pearl Harbor, the Japanese invaded the Philippines. Allied forces put up a stiff resistance, but slowly retreated to the Bataan…
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Tomorrow is the anniversary of North Dakota’s first commercial television station. It was 1953, and that first year, Minot’s KCJB – now KXMC – chartered a…
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Jim Miller grew up south of Casselton and was giving dog sled rides one day at the Red Willow Bible Camp, near Binford. It was there that he met his…
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About this time in 1911, folks in Cavalier County were reeling from a series of events that led to the murder trial of Dr. J.J. Reilly, a highly regarded…
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Today we bring you a mix of news from around the state from 1915.Near Burnstad, in south-central North Dakota, Tully Williams, a well-known farmer and…
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February is Black History Month. In North Dakota, the African American population has grown, though historically the numbers were few. But there have been…
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Sacagawea gave birth to Jean Baptiste Charbonneau on this date in 1805. Lewis and Clark were wintering at Ft. Mandan and had hired Touissant Charbonneau…
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There is much interest in architectural preservation these days, so it’s interesting that already back in 1923, there was concern about losing a historic…