MANDAN Historical Society

Working to Preserve & Promote Mandan's Heritage since 2004

Welcome

Membership

Activities

Mandan Museum

TR-Coe Exhibit

WWII Exhibit

Beanery Museum

Biographies A-D

J D Allen

Franklin Anders

Richard Baron

George Bingenheimer

William Block

Philip Blumenthal

Elijah Boley

Frank Briggs

Leo Broderick

William Broderick

Lyman Cary

James Clark

Henry Coe

Daniel Collins

Elizabeth Custer

George Custer

Alice Dahners

Henry Dahners

C E V (Charles) Draper

Esther Davis

Tony Dean

Joseph Devine

Biographies E-O

Ronald Erhardt

John Forbes

Palma Fristad

Gilbert Furness

Aloysius Galowitsch

Frederic Gerard

Zalmon Gilbert

Charles Grantier

James Hanley Jr

James Hanley Sr

Mary Harris

Michael Lang

William Langer

Albert Lanterman

William Lanterman

John Lockwood

Richard Longfellow

Rolland Lutz

Hiram Lyon

George Marback

Gary Miller

Lee Mohr

Margaret Naylor

John Newton

Anton Ness

John Osterhouse

Biographies P-Z

George Peoples

Arthur Peterson

Nels Romer

Hoy Russell

Antonie Rybnicek

Ervin Rybnicek

Hynek Rybnicek

Margaret Schaaf

George Shafer

Erica Schroeder

William Simpson

Anna Knox Stark

Mary Stark

J O Sullivan

John Sullivan

Era Bell Thompson

Andrew E. Thorberg

Ida Johnson Thorberg

George Toman

Earle Tostevin

Edwin A Tostevin Sr

Edwin D Tostevin Jr

Walter Tostevin

Felix Vinatieri

A B Welch

Levon West

Harry Wheeler

What's New

Area History

Mandan Rodeo / Fair

The 1880s

School Systems History

The 1890s

The 1900s

1901 Pan Am Expo

1903 TR Visit to NDak

The 1910s

1911 Fair & Airplane Demo

The 1920s

Prohibition in Mandan

The 1930s

FDR Visit August 1936

The 1940s

The 1950s

1958 Lincoln Stamp FDC

Custer Drama / Trail West

The 1960s

The 1970s

The 1980s

The 1990s

1st of the 21st

2010-Present

Area Landmarks

Cary Bldg - Mandan Drug

Christ the King Church

Collins Av Civic Bldg

First Lutheran Church

First National Bank Bldg

First Presbyterian Church

Lewis & Clark Hotel

Mandan Hill

Mandan Theatre

MV Produce Warehouse

Methodist Church

NP Beanery

NP "Colonial" RR Depot

NPRR Freighthouse

NP Rail High Bridge

Roughrider Statue

St Joseph Church

Great Plains Expermt Stn

WWar Memorial Bldg

Youth Correctional Center

Gone Forever

Collins Ave Courthouse

Cummins Building

Deaconess Hospital

Eielson Field

First St Federal Building

Havana Club

Hotel Nigey

InterOcean Hotel

Liberty Memorial Bridge

Mandan Creamery & Produce

NP "Queen Anne" Depot

Original Passenger Depot

Peoples' Hotel

Russell-Miller Mill

Rock Haven

Young's Tavern

Heritage Homes

Stuart Dunlap Home

Ellis-Uden Home

Freeburg-Esser Home

Lyon-Weigel Home

Olson-Brick Home

Parkins-Cooley Home

Stutsman-Wyatt Home

Swanson-Reichman Home

Welch-Ness Home

View Collections

Artifacts - Miscellanous

Newspapers

Pottery and Glass

Photos - Buildings

Photos - Downtown

Photos - Floods

Photos - People

Photos - Rail and Trains

Genealogy Links

Endowment Fund

Lyman Northrop Cary (1856-1929)
Lyman Cary was born on April 10, 1856 and grew up in Flanders, New Jersey.  He attended Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in upstate New York and graduated with a degree in civil engineering. 

In April 1881, when the rail tracks extended only 40 miles of town, he arrived in Mandan at the age of 25 to seek his fortune.  He was convinced, like others, that Mandan would become the "Omaha of the North" and was persuaded by investors out east to send for his surveying equipment.  He is credited with platted the town of Sterling and parks of both Mandan and Bismarck.  He was often paid for his work with lots from these developments.

Living quarters were very scarce but the two young men found accommodations in a log rooming house which had a canvas roof.  According to the report this roof was as hospitable to the rain and snow as it was to is lodgers.  Undaunted by the inconvenience, the two men quickly dubbed their rooming house, "The Arlington" as the western counterpart of the fashionable Arlington Hotel in Washington, DC with which they were both familiar.
Cary initially partnered with Warren Carpenter and became the land agent for the Northern Pacific Railroad. Their territory extended from the Missouri River to the Montana line.  To compensate the railroad company for their risk in undertaking the construction of the line, the government had awarded the NPRR every odd numbered section of land for fifty miles on each side of the tracks.
Railroads, through land agents such as Lyman Cary, would subsequently resell the land to settlers to finance the construction of the railway. The Northern Pacific Railroad had recruiters in Europe encouraging immigration to the United States.  Cary sold thousands of acres at $2.60 to $3.00 per acre - an investment which could be recouped with just one good crop.
After completing the real estate transactions for the railroad, Cary moved on to become the land agent for "the Syndicate" area of town which comprized the majority of southwest Mandan in and around the present day Mary Stark Elementary School area.  "The Boston Syndicate" was a group of eastern investors who owned an operated a significant portion of the southwest area of Mandan including a brickyard. 

Mr. Cary also developed major portions of the downtown business district. Lyman Cary reportedly still holds the record for the most land sale transactions in the history of the state of North Dakota.

In the early 1900s, Mr. Cary would sponsor a $100 prize to be awarded to the farmer producing the best corn sample displayed at the Morton County Fair.

He married Anne Alison Clark, daughter of James Reed Clark a pharmacist and proprietor of Clark Drug Store in 1884.  Lyman and Anne lived at 309 Third Ave NW with their five children; Ethelind (Litle), Willam, Anne, Alison and Colin.  The house was originally built at 201 Seventh Ave NW, but Lyman had it moved to this new location across the street from the First Presbyterian Church at his wife's so that she could be closer to their church and its activities.  The home was torn down in the late 1970s.
Cary House circa 1906
The couple were very active among the congregation of the First Presbyterian Church in Mandan.  Anne Cary is also credited as being the first woman to be elected as forman of a trial jury in North Dakota history.  She was active in a wide variety of civic organizations and was a authority on local history. 

Lyman Cary died on April 15, 1929.  He is buried in the family plot in Union Cemetery, Mandan, which Cary had selected when he had platted that area of town.
  

The Cary Real Estate office was operated by his son, Colin Cary, until the mid 1960s.

The MHSoc's museum and office is located at 411 W Main St, Mandan, ND 58554
Contact us at info@mandanhistory.org or leave message at 
(701) 751-2983


Last Updated 05/04
/12    ©  2006-2012  Mandan Historical Society  All rights reserved