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Dalton in Otter Tail County, Minnesota — The American Midwest (Upper Plains)
 

Dalton

The Good Old Days In Dalton

— Otter Trail Scenic Byway Site Q —

 
 
Dalton Marker image. Click for full size.
October 24, 2024
1. Dalton Marker
Inscription.
Founder of Dalton
Ole C. Dahl, founder of the city of Dalton immigrated from Norway in 1865. Initially settling in Iowa, he worked as a farm hand and painter until he had enough money to bring his wife Oline and their six children to join him from Norway.

In 1867, they left Iowa for Otter Tail County to claim a homestead of their own. Since they did not have a wagon the family once again traveled separately reuniting at their new homestead.

Like many other small towns, the railway went through Dalton. The town grew to have a post office, grain elevator, hotel, general store, blacksmith, jewelry store and restaurant.

Dalton Ski Jumpers
For early settlers, skiing was mainly considered a means of transportation through miles of deep snow to get necessities such as food and supplies.

Later, skiing turned into a sport and a ski jump was built north of Dalton. Bags were filled with snow and carried up by hand to cover the jump. Around 1915 Dalton held its first ski jumping competition. By 1933 yearly tournaments were attracting as many as 5,000 spectators.

Incorporated in 1939, the Dalton Ski Club tournaments
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saw participants from Michigan and Wisconsin as well as Minnesota. Sometimes there were so many entrants that they had to be turned away. The longest jump recorded at Dalton Ski Club in the 1940's was 144 feet.

By 1957 the jump was old and rotting, so the Dalton Ski Club decided to tear it down and build a new one. During deconstruction in the spring, tragedy struck when club member Walter Erickson was crushed to death by a falling support brace. After Erickson's death, interest in jumping began to fade.

Eight years later in 1966 the new Walter Erickson Memorial Ski Jump was built. It was 26 feet higher than the original jump, measuring 64 feet high with a 150-foot ramp and long drop of 20 feet.

That year, twenty-five skiers participated in the first and last tournament at the new jump. The following year it was blown down in a storm with gale winds estimated at 80 mph. The jump was never rebuilt again.

Threshing Days
Neighbors came together every year in the spirit of comradery and cooperation during harvest season to thresh grain. A threshing machine separated the grain from the straw or husks saving farmers a great deal
Dalton Marker image. Click for full size.
October 24, 2024
2. Dalton Marker
of manual labor and time.

Threshing machines were expensive, and few farmers could afford them, so neighbors came together using one machine to process all the grain.

Threshing started in early August. When fields were ready for harvest, farmers would cut the grain using a binder pulled by a team of horses. Then the grain would be set up in shocks.

A threshing crew consisted of roughly a dozen men; the thresher boss, six to eight bundle haulers, one or two field pitchers, two or three grain haulers, and one man to operate the elevator that lifted the grain into the granary.

To bring the bundles in from the field, the bundle haulers used a wooden rack mounted on the wagon and pulled by a team of horses. The men would start from the far end of the field and work toward the threshing machine, pitching the bundles into the wings of the thresher.

When the wagon box was filled, the hauler drove to the farmyard and pulled up to a portable grain elevator next to the granary. The grain was then scooped into the hopper. The elevator, powered by a small gas engine, then lifted the grain to the top of the granary until it was filled
Dalton Marker, from the north image. Click for full size.
October 24, 2024
3. Dalton Marker, from the north
to capacity.

It Takes A Village
It took a lot of preparation by the women to provide enough food for two or three days of feeding a crew of 12 or more men.

Cora Loken recalls:
"The women got up at four a.m. to make breakfast — which included fried potatoes and meatballs — for all the threshers. About nine a.m. we brought lunch out in the field for the men. At noon they would shut down the machine and come in the house and sit around the big table eating the hot meal — a roast or chicken, potatoes and gravy, vegetables and always fresh pie.

"In the afternoon Mother always baked a fresh cake for their lunch. Again we carried the big lunch out to the threshers. The supper too, was another big meal, so having the threshers was fun but also a lot of work."

Threshing Bee
Visit the past by attending the annual Lake Region Pioneer Threshing Show, held in the fall. The show recreates farming practices of the past with working steam engines and threshing machines. The 40-acre site and its many buildings are filled with history including pioneer cabins, blacksmith shop, general store, schoolhouse, and church.

Captions:
Ski Tournament, Dalton, February 25, 1915 [#4121 from the collections of the Otter Tail County Historical Society]
Tournaments at the Dalton Ski Jump attracted large crowds that would surround the runway and watch as skiers [From the collections of the Otter Tail County Historical Society]
[From the collections of the Otter Tail Historical Society]
Lake Region Pioneer Threshermaen's Show

 
Erected by Otter
Threshing Bee Grounds, nearby image. Click for full size.
October 24, 2024
4. Threshing Bee Grounds, nearby
Tail Lakes Country Association.
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: AgricultureSettlements & SettlersSports. A significant historical year for this entry is 1867.
 
Location. 46° 10.233′ N, 95° 54.931′ W. Marker is in Dalton, Minnesota, in Otter Tail County. It is on South Central Avenue (County Highway 35) south of Pioneer Lane, on the right when traveling north. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Dalton MN 56324, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in the American Midwest and in the Corn Belt. Globally, it is in North America, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once Rupert’s Land, the territory of the Mississippian Culture, and the Louisiana Purchase.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 11 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies: Dalton Area Veterans Memorial (within shouting distance of this marker); Tordenskjold A County Seat in 1870. (approx. 3.1 miles away); Dane Prairie (approx. 6.9 miles away); Sverdrup Lutheran Cemetery
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(approx. 9.2 miles away); Prairie Wetlands Learning Center (approx. 9.7 miles away); Ottertail County Veterans Memorial Park (approx. 10.7 miles away); The Fergus Falls River Walk (approx. 10.7 miles away); Fergus Falls Woolen Mill (approx. 10.7 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Dalton.
 
Also see . . .  History - Lake Region Threshers Show. (Submitted on November 9, 2024.)
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on November 9, 2024. It was originally submitted on November 9, 2024. This page has been viewed 461 times since then and 250 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4. submitted on November 9, 2024.
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Jul. 9, 2026