North struggled as a lawyer. Seeking new financial opportunities, John and Ann North travelled to
Minnesota Territory in 1849, settling in
St. Anthony, near the growing cities of
Minneapolis and
Saint Paul. North settled in St. Anthony at the request of
Franklin Steele, agreeing to serve as his legal counsel. The political leadership of the Territory, men like
Henry Hastings Sibley and
Henry Mower Rice, were associated with the national
Democratic Party, a consequence of the connection between the
fur trade and the regional Democrats. Territorial governor
Alexander Ramsey, appointed by
Whig President Zachary Taylor, led local political opposition to the influence of the Democrats and the fur trade. Through a letter-writing campaign that targeted abolitionist reform newspapers and made use of the Norths' political connections, the Norths encouraged several thousand Eastern settlers to move to St. Anthony.
Founding Northfield, Minnesota In January 1855, North travelled south from St. Anthony to visit the Cannon River Valley. On that trip, he purchased interests in the town of
Faribault and met with nearby settlers along the
Cannon River, organizing a plan for the construction of a saw mill, a grist mill, and a bridge at a convenient site. A year later, the construction projects neared completion, a townsite was platted, and John and Ann moved their family to the town. A meeting of settlers named the town
Northfield.
Political career North's successful campaign to populate St. Anthony with anti-slavery reformers led to his election to the
Minnesota Territorial Legislature in 1851. On March 29, 1855, several hundred men met in the St. Anthony Congregational church to organize Minnesota's Republican Party. North called the meeting to order. John and Ann North prepared the party's resolutions, which John presented at the March party meeting. North's resolutions included the abolition of slavery in new states, the repeal of the
Fugitive Slave Act, and the prohibition of alcohol, among other resolutions. In 1860, North was a delegate to the Chicago
Republican Convention which nominated
Abraham Lincoln for the
presidency of the United States, and he was a member of the committee that went to
Springfield to notify Lincoln of his nomination. ==Career in Nevada==