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Wishek was platted in 1898 when the railroad was extended to that point. [6] A post office has been in operation at Wishek since 1898. [7] The city was named in honor of John H. Wishek Sr., a local cattleman. [8] Wishek was originally built up chiefly by Germans from Russia. [9] The Old Wishek City Hall was built in 1916.
That said, even dogs with healthy homes and lifestyles with ample activity can still exhibit signs of depression. Treating Dog Depression ©Zontica/Shutterstock.com
The town was named after Colonel Andrew Bisbee, a native of Peru, Maine.Bisbee, a veteran of the Civil War who came to Towner County in 1885. In 1890 he was chosen by the county commissioners of Towner County to solicit drought relief and was elected to a term in the North Dakota Senate.
The old Wishek City Hall was a historic building in Wishek, North Dakota.The one-story building was built in 1916 and demolished c. 2011. [2] This building may or may not have originally been the power plant built by the Krein Brothers in 1916, and likely was sold after the Krien Brothers sold their properties to a predecessor of Montana-Dakota Utilities in 1925.
Doyle Memorial Park is a 21-acre (8.5 ha) public recreation area occupying a peninsula on Green Lake five miles (8.0 km) southeast of Wishek in McIntosh County, North Dakota. The park was formerly known as Doyle Memorial State Recreation Area. It became the property of the City of Wishek on July 1, 2017, [3] and is operated by the Wishek Park ...
Feist is a Canadian singer-songwriter from Amherst, Nova Scotia. [1] She has released four studio albums as a member of the indie rock supergroup Broken Social Scene: Feel Good Lost (2001), You Forgot It in People (2002), Bee Hives (2004), and Broken Social Scene (2005). All four albums were released with the Arts & Crafts record label.
Marilyn Hagerty (née Hansen; born May 30, 1926) [1] is an American newspaper columnist writing for the Grand Forks Herald.She has been with the paper since 1957, when her husband, Jack Hagerty (1918–1997), became editor of the paper.
North Dakota Highway 13 (ND 13) is an approximately 205-mile-long (330 km) highway that serves southeast North Dakota. For the most part, the highway is a rural two-lane road, but for the final 12 miles (19 km) east of I-29 it is a four-lane divided road. Its eastern terminus is at the Minnesota state line over the Bois de Sioux River.