The
sight of the bluffs
A
Closer Look
There are many reports that Alexander Faribault
had expressed his intention to settle in the Faribault area early
on.
Henry Sibley was Alexanders friend
and boss. He was an important man in Minnesota's early military,
and became the state's first governor. He said:
"Indeed,
that locality on the Straight river was for years so firmly
fixed in his [Alexander's] regard
that he frequently adverted to it and wished for the day to
come when he would be permitted to carry out his darling project."
Peter Bush, an
early settler, reported meeting Alexander Faribault in 1852
in St. Paul. He told the Faribault Republican on March
10, 1875:
"[Mr. Faribault]
had been farming [in Faribault]... He told me...that he only
intended to stay in
Mendota a short time, but always intended to return [to Faribault]."
Henry Sibley also
was quoted in an 1877
newspaper article:
"It was on our route
homeward [from hunting] that we passed through the site of your
thriving city, and Faribault
pointed it
out to me as the spot upon which he intended to settle and spend
the rest of his days so soon as the Indian title was extinguished
and the land opened to white occupation."
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