The First Winter During the first winter at the fort, the garrisoning company suffered great losses. 81 men died, mostly due to
scurvy as a result of malnutrition. Seven of these 81 deaths were a result of attacks from the
Lakota tribesmen, who believed that the land that the fort situated itself on was rightfully belonged to their people. This belief held true, as the construction of a fort on the land that Fort Rice sits on was a direct violation of the
Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851), and leaders of local Lakota tribes demanded the removal of the fort. Prominent Sioux leaders such as
Sitting Bull even led attacks against the fort's supplies and livestock in hopes of making the garrisoned army abandon the fort.
Matilda Galpin (Eagle Woman That All Look At) Matilda Galpin was a peace activist who gained quite an impressive reputation among the soldiers at Fort Rice. Wife to Charles Galpin, a US officer, Matilda Galpin was accustomed to life in the fort. However, upon witnessing an ambush of a First Lieutenant Benjamin Wilson by a Lakota warband, she sprinted into the fray and claimed the wounded man as one of her own. In doing so, she prevented the soldier from being scalped and was able to get him back into the fort to seek medical attention. Unfortunately, Wilson's lung had been pierced by an arrow, and he succumbed to the complications of the wound in the following days. That did not, however, prevent Galpin from attaining a heroine's reputation. Captain Enoch Adams went as far to refer to her as, "One of the finest women in the world..."
1953 Tornado On
May 29, 1953, a violent F5 tornado struck the area, killing two people and injuring 20 others. While the F-scale hadn't yet been developed in 1953, the Fort Rice tornado later became North Dakota's first confirmed F5 tornado. ==References==