There is a display inside the visitor's center of the Anderson family who owned the farm and lived on the land for almost all of the years when it was a family farm. The display includes a photo taken in probably about 1954 of the entire, at that time, family. This photo includes all of the people present today who are pictured in the 1954 photo, a couple of younger cousins, and one special guest. Family members will be able to, without difficulty, make all of the identifications.
We also met to commemorate the placement of a Minnesota granite bench. Funded by the family, the bench is in what Uncle John identifies as part of the corn field. It recognizes the family and the family's role in stewardship of this piece of land in the period between fur trading post and historical site.
The story involves a stump puller, peeled popple logs for skids, two sets of power to move the cabin, a team of horses on one side and a small John Deere tractor on the other. Both sources of power were necessary because Grampa and Uncle John did not think that either one acting alone would not be enough to make the move possible. Grampa stood on a plank across the skids at the front of the cabin, intending to control the horse team. Uncle John rode on the tractor. It had snowed about three inches the night before the move and in a slightly downhill move the cabin moved on the skids like a sled. The problem was that the horses, urged to start the pull by Grampa Richard, looked back to observe a house following them and spooked, running out of control down the slope. Uncle John stated that not only did the tractor not actually help but that it was being pushed along by the momentum of the horse team and the cabin. He said that he thought about bailing out because he feared that his position had become dangerous and untenable.
Instead he hung on and Richard did his best. The horses led the procession towards the area where everyone wanted the cabin to end up but also towards what had before the move been viewed as a tricky move between standing mature trees. The horses, Babe and Toots for those who know, much to the amazement even at this late date of Uncle John, pulled the cabin between the trees to more or less the area where it was intended to be and then stopped as if they knew that what they had done was what was intended all along.
Here is a photo of the reconstruction of the fort as it existed in those now more than two hundred year ago winters.
Here is a reconstructed building outside the walls of the fort, part of the reconstructed native village.