Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Rodney Wallace Page Family Papers, 1881-1927
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Page, Rodney Wallace
- Title
- Rodney Wallace Page Family Papers
- Dates
- 1881-192718811927
- Quantity
- 1 folder
- Collection Number
- Collection 2545, MtBC, us (collection)
- Summary
- The Rodney W. Page Papers consist of letters and legal documents. Most of the letters were written in 1881-1882, correspondents include Rodney and his wife, Sarah, their son, Arthur, Rodney's daughter, Elvira, and her daughter Mary. These letters describe family news, local weather conditions, religious admonishments, the state of affairs in Montana, preparations for the family's move to the territory, as well as farming and ranching activities in Madison County. The legal documents discuss the sale and management of cattle.
- Repository
-
Montana State University Library, Merrill G. Burlingame Special Collections
Montana State University-Bozeman Library
Merrill G Burlingame Special Collections
P.O. Box 173320
Bozeman, MT
59717-3320
Telephone: 4069944242
Fax: 4069942851
- Access Restrictions
-
This collection is open for research.
- Languages
- English
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
Rodney Wallace Page was born in 1838, one of five children born to Wallace and Nancy Bonnie Page. His siblings were Elvira Page (1833-1914), Robert Wallace Page (1834-1913), Elmina Page (1836-1910) and James Madison Page (1839-1924). Sometime prior to 1864, Rodney married Sarah Peters and the couple had seven children: Evelyn (1864-1946), Arthur (1865-1958), Elvira (1867-1937), Alta (1868-1924), Ida (1870-1914), Ernest (1873-1964) and Edward (1875-1945). As Rodney worked as a surveyor in Osceola County, Michigan, his siblings began a family migration to Madison County, Montana, the first arrival being James Madison Page in 1866, followed by Robert Wallace Page in 1879 and Elmina Page in 1880. Rodney's eldest son, Arthur, had also removed before his father embarked to Montana and worked for his uncle James on his homestead. In 1882 Rodney left Michigan to join his brother James on a surveying expedition to Yellowstone National Park. Rodney's wife Sarah, along with the rest of the children and Rodney's widowed sister Elvira, joined them all shortly thereafter. Rodney eventually established his own homestead in the Twin Bridges area and continued to work as a land surveyor. Rodney's second daughter, Elvira, eventually married Harry Redfield, an employee of her father. Their daughter was Mary Redfield, whose publications and manuscripts can be found in Collection 336, the Mary Redfield Lindsey Papers. Rodney Wallace Page died in Santa Clara, California in 1915, and his wife Sarah died there in 1916.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The Rodney W. Page papers consist of letters and legal documents. Most of the letters were written in 1881-82 by Rodney and his wife, Sarah, from Osceola County, Michigan, to their son, Arthur, in Montana Territory. These letters describe family news, local weather conditions, religious admonishments, and questions regarding the state of affairs in Montana and the preparations for the family's move to the territory. Additional letters by Rodney's daughter, Elvira, to her daughter Mary, describe some farming and ranching activities in Madison County, Montana along with family news. Two legal documents complete the collection. These items concern the sale and management of cattle by Rodney in the early twentieth century. The documents in this collection have been individually calendared.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Acquisition Information
Letters and legal documents created or collected by the family of Rodney W. Page were donated to Montana State University by his descendants Orrie Page, of Lebanon, Oregon, Janice M. Hewitt and Laurence Page on August 4, 2011.
Processing Note
This collection was processed 2011 August 11
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates |
---|---|---|
folder-item | ||
1/1 | Ida Page, Hersey, Michigan, letter to Rodney
Wallace Page
Family news; school studies; addendum to Arthur Page expressing her
loneliness and asking him to write
|
September 3, 1881 |
1/2 | Rodney Wallace Page and Sarah Peters Page,
Hersey, Michigan, letter to Arthur Page
Family news; mentions smallpox in Osceola County; questions about Montana
homestead site regarding river location and proximity of potential
neighbors; religious admonishments
|
December 11, 1881 |
1/3 | Sarah Peters Page, Hersey, Michigan, letter to
Arthur Page
Family news; mentions hearing from James and his satisfaction with Arthur's
work; religious admonishments; asks if Arthur would consider coming back to
Michigan to live
|
December 18, 1881 |
1/4 | Rodney Wallace Page, Hersey, Michigan, letter
to Arthur Page
Mentions receiving a letter from Arthur and James; asks that logs be hauled
to prepare a home site in Montana; religious admonishments
|
January 17, 1882 |
1/5 | Sarah Peters Page, Hersey, Michigan, letter to
Arthur Page
Mentions receiving two letters from Arthur; family news and farm matters in
Michigan; asks about the Montana home site and any potential Indian
problems
|
January 19, 1882 |
1/6 | Sarah Peters Page, Hersey, Michigan, letter to
Arthur Page
General admonishments of religion
|
January 23, 1882 |
1/7 | Rodney Wallace Page and Sarah Peters Page,
Hersey, Michigan, letter to Arthur Page
Family news and local travels in Michigan; notes anxiousness of sons to go to
Montana; mentions recently published book on the life of President James A.
Garfield
|
January 31, 1882 |
1/8 | Rodney Wallace Page and Sarah Peters Page,
Climax, Michigan, letter to Arthur Page
Visiting relatives in area; mentions being in a hurry to get to the
Beaverhead Valley in Montana; asks how the ranch looks; religious
admonishments
|
March 5, 1882 |
1/9 | Rodney Wallace Page, Pageville, Montana,
memorandum of agreement with E. B. Page
Agreement to share the offspring of cattle, with proper identification
information for twelve head
|
April 2, 1900 |
1/10 | Harry Redfield and Elvira Page Redfield,
Pageville, Montana, letter to Ida Page
Mentions regret over Charlie's sickness; family news; housekeeping details;
mentions accident suffered by Harry; regret over Charlie's failure to finish
a contract due to illness
|
September 5, 1905 |
1/11 | Rodney Wallace Page, bill of sale to Parson
Brothers, Wibaux, Montana
Details sale of fifty head of cattle
|
October 14, 1914 |
1/12 | Sarah Peters Page, Santa Clara, California,
letter to Elvira Page Redfield
[handwritten transcription]
Health matters; family news
|
January 1916 |
1/13 | Elvira Page Redfield, Twin Bridges, Montana,
letter to Mary Redfield
Family news; local weather conditions; raising turkeys; making butter;
managing sheep
|
June 4, 1925 |
1/14 | Elvira Page Redfield, Whitehall, Montana, letter to Mary Redfield
Family news; illnesses; threshing; household chores; hunting
|
April 1926 |
1/15 | Elvira Page Redfield, Whitehall, Montana, letter to Mary Redfield
Family news; dental work; weather
|
September 25, 1927 |
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Agriculture -- Montana -- Madison County
- Families -- Michigan -- Osceola County
- Families -- Montana -- Madison County
- Frontier and pioneer life -- Montana -- Madison County
- Ranching -- Montana -- Madison County
Personal Names
- Lindsey, Mary Redfield, 1892-1972 -- Correspondence
- Page, Arthur, 1865-1958 -- Correspondence
- Page, Rodney Wallace, 1838-1915 -- Correspondence
- Page, Sarah Peters, d. 1916 -- Correspondence
- Redfield, Elvira Page, 1867-1937 -- Correspondence
Family Names
- Page family -- Archives
Geographical Names
- Madison County (Mont.) -- History -- 19th century
- Osceola County (Mich.) -- History -- 19th century
- Twin Bridges (Mont.)
Form or Genre Terms
- Family papers -- Michigan -- Osceola County
- amily papers -- Montana -- Madison County
Other Creators
-
Family Names
- Page family