Mary Dodge Woodward, a fifty-six-year-old widow, moved from Wisconsin
with her two grown sons and a daughter to a 1,500-acre bonanza wheat
farm in Dakota Territory's Red River valley in 1882. For five years she
recorded the yearly farm cycle of plowing and harvesting as well as the
frustrations of gardening and raising chickens, the phenomenon of
mirages on the plains, the awesome blizzard of 1888, her reliance on her
family, and her close relationship with her daughter. She noted "blots,
mistakes, joys, and sorrows" in her "olf friend." This Borealis edition
brings back to print a valuable record of a frontier woman's life.
"Mary Dodge Woodward's personal record of her life on a Dakota Territory
'bonanza farm' adds new detail and texture to the histories of both
women and the West. . . . [She] wrote about what she saw: The epic
procession of reapers and threshing crews, the wildflowers and birds,
the stupendous mirages that could make the wintry prairie an optical
wonderland." --Elizabeth Jameson, from the Introduction