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  1. Franklin Steele (c. 1813 – September 10, 1880) was an early settler of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Born in Chester County, Pennsylvania, of Scottish descent, Steele worked in the Lancaster, Pennsylvania, post office as a young man, where he once met President James Buchanan.

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    • September 10, 1880 (aged 67), Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
  2. Nov 11, 2020 · Enter Franklin Steele. Franklin Steele was a shop keeper at Fort Snelling who got wind of the commander’s plan to grab the land. Before anyone knew what happened, Steele rushed to the vacant land, allegedly building a cabin via moonlight, and officially claimed the land as his own. 1848: Franklin Steele officially buys the first half of the ...

  3. Jun 1, 2021 · Franklin Steele came to the Minnesota territory in the 1830s and was soon nicknamed “the Father of Minneapolis”, but have you heard of him? Pull up a chair and let me tell you why not. In 1834, Steele arrived in St. Croix in search of lumber.

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  4. THE UNITED STATES. AMOS J. BRUCE AND FRANKLIN STEELE, PLAINTIFFS IN ERROR, v. THE UNITED STATES is a case that was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States on February 14, 1855. The case was argued before the court on January 30, 1855. In a 9-0 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the ruling of the lower court.

  5. James Steele was inspector general of the Pennsylvania militia dur ing the War of 1812, and at various times he was a member of the legislature of that commonwealth. Franklin, his youngest son, was born in 1813. Little is known about Franklin Steele's boyhood, edu cation, and training, but the fact that his penmanship was fair and

  6. frontier Minnesota was Franklin Steele, the entrepreneur who founded MinneapoUs and, in the period from 1837 to i860, helped to open the Northwest to settlement. The Steele family was of mixed Scottish and Welsh stock; it played a role of some importance in the political and military affairs of Pennsylvania during and after the American Revolution.

  7. The Army sold Fort Snelling, including 8000 acres later annexed into south Minneapolis, to Franklin Steele in 1858 for $90,000. During the Civil War, Franklin Steele leased Fort Snelling to the War Department for an induction station. More than 24,000 recruits from Minnesota were trained here.

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