Dr. Benjamin Franklin Slaughter

From The Infomercantile
Revision as of 16:55, 5 March 2014 by AzraelBrown (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Dr. Benjamin Franklin Slaughter, also known as B.F. Slaughter or B. Frank Slaughter, was a military doctor who was stationed at frontier forts during the early 1870s. Retiring f...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Dr. Benjamin Franklin Slaughter, also known as B.F. Slaughter or B. Frank Slaughter, was a military doctor who was stationed at frontier forts during the early 1870s. Retiring from the military in 1873, Dr. Slaughter, with his wife Linda and their child, moved to Bismarck, ND, where he was a prominent surgeon. Dr. Slaughter died in 1896 due to complications from paralysis.

Quotes

From Early History of North Dakota:

Mr. Linda W Slaughter was the wife of Dr. B. Frank Slaughter, post surgeon of Camp Hancock, and came to Bismarck from Fort Rice in August 1872 with her husband and baby...Dr. Slaughter resigned from the army in November, 1873, to become a citizen of Bismarck...Dr. Slaughter died December 26, 1896, of paralysis.[1]

Iowa State profile of Linda Slaughter:

In 1868...Linda Warfel met Dr. Benjamin Franklin Slaughter, an army surgeon. Dr. Slaughter, although from an established southern family, had joined the Union Army when he finished medical school in Kentucky and stayed in the army following the Civil War. After their marriage, they were ordered first to Fort Rive in 1871 and then in 1872 further up the Missouri River to Camp Hancock, which was to become Bismarck, ND.[2]

North Dakota Place Names:

Wales, ND: This was a rural post office established May 21, 1886 with Dr. Benjamin Franklin Slaughter (1842-1896) as Postmaster, primarily as a means of creating a rural route from Bismarck to the Slaughter post office located farther north, which was officially run by Dr. Slaughter's wife...The proposed name for this facility was Mount Hope, but the Slaughters renamed it for a postal official to compliment his decision to rename the Solitude post office as Slaughter. [3]

References