MANDAN Historical Society

Working to Preserve & Promote Mandan's Heritage since 2004

Welcome

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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

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The 1890s

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1901 Pan Am Expo

1903 TR Visit to NDak

The 1910s

1911 Fair & Airplane Demo

The 1920s

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FDR Visit August 1936

The 1940s

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1958 Lincoln Stamp FDC

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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

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Artifacts - Miscellanous

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Photos - Downtown

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Photos - People

Photos - Rail and Trains

Genealogy Links

Endowment Fund

Hoy Sylvester Russell (1886-1958)
Hoy Sylvester Russell was born on May 9, 1886 in Grand Forks, Dakota Territory and the only child of William and Ida (Padelford) Russell, both of Minnesota.  He lived there until 1899 when he moved with his mother and father to Dickinson, ND where his father and his business partners started Dickinson Clay and Pressed Brick Company.  The younger Russell continued his schooling in Dickinson and later at North Dakota Agricultural College (now North Dakota State University) in Fargo. 

On June 22, 1909 he married Cora Walton, the daughter of western Dakota pioneers in Dickinson and the oldest of seven children.  They lived for some years in Dickinson, Miles City, MT and Butte, MT where he worked in the produce business.

In the fall of 1913 they moved to Glen Ullin, ND where he was employed by the Hess Creamery Company, which at that time was one of the largest North Dakota creameries.  Hoy believed the dairy business was a developing industry and that North Dakota was destined to become a principal area for the industry.
He began looking for a likely location to establish a dairy and produce business. Mandan, he concluded, was a logical location.  It was a large town and the farming around Mandan was well diversified.  In addition, it was a division point for the Northern Pacific Railroad which provided good transportation in all directions.  In 1914 he came to Mandan and interested W. H. Lanterman, a local banker, and other Mandan businessmen in participating in the establishment of a creamery, poultry and egg processing operation.  After several meetings, financing was secured and a corporation was formed. 

The Mandan Creamery and Produce Company commenced operation on February 15, 1915 in the two-story Ronco building on the corner of 4th Avenue and West Main Street.  Hoy and his friend, Henry Schulte, moved their families from Glen Ullin to Mandan to manage and supervise the operations.

In 1923, Hoy and Cora Russell purchased the Stuart Dunlap home on the corner of 1st Street and 7th Avenue where they lived and raised their family until the death of Cora in 1972.

Eventually, the Mandan Creamery and Produce Company, through the foresight and guidance of Hoy Russell became one of the largest butter manufacturers and turkey processors in the United States.  Mandan butter and Mandan turkeys were shipped to and were known coast to coast.
 

Crated Turkeys Awaiting Shipment at Mandan Rail Depot c.1926
With growth in dairy and poultry increasing, plants were established at Dickinson, Minot, Hettinger, Garrison, and Bismarck and Miles City, MT.  Around 30,000 pounds of butter was the average year round daily production of the Mandan and Minot plants with peak production of 60,000 pounds daily being reached during the summer months.  Milk was pasteurized and ice cream were produced at the Dickinson plant and delivered locally by the creamery for many years.

Mandan Creamery and Produce Company employed well over 200 employees by way of its several plants.  The success of the company depended on the many dairy production farms which shipped their cream to the company from east of Jamestown to as far west as Billings, Montana and from the northern parts of South Dakota to the northern border of North Dakota.  As a result of the success of the business, Hoy became nationally recognized as a leader in the field of butter, poultry and egg
production.

That changes were coming in agriculture became obvious in the 1940s.  After World War II there was a steady decline in poultry and dairy production.  As a result the Mandan brand turkey production was discontinued after the war when commercial growers took over the raising and processing of the birds.  Combined with other changes in the industry, the company chose to focused on premium pork products and recast its corporate image.  Today H.S. Russell's legacy of the Mandan Creamery and Produce Company continues as Cloverdale Foods Company.  

Hoy and Cora had three children: sons William R. and Walton S. and daughter Mary.  Hoy Russell died on January 11, 1958 from injuries resulting from a motor vehicle accident on (old) US Highway 10 while enroute to his 4-Square Ranch located 3-miles west of Mandan.  He and his wife Cora are buried in Union Cemetery, Mandan.
The Society would like to thank Hoy Russell's grandson Walton Russell for sharing this information with us.
 

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