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Monday, August 8, 1887   Henry Severn

Today is a good day to remember Henry Severn, who during the Civil War started an ale and porter brewery with his father in Davenport Iowa.  In 1877 he left Iowa and moved to Stutsman County Dakota Territory, where he was one of the first settlers.

According to the Jamestown Weekly Alert: Mr. Severn, in company with his son Charles, had for some days been camping out in the hills about ten miles northwest of Windsor, putting up hay. Mr. Severn has a claim in that neighborhood and was stacking the hay on the ground expecting that one of the family would winter there with his stock, in which he had consider­able money invested.

Tuesday afternoon he and his son were stacking some hay Which had been recently cured, when the storm arose. The stack was situated in a low slough surrounded on every side by hills about thirty feet high, and as no rain was falling, and no danger appre­hended from lightning, they worked steadily on endeavoring to get all the hay into stack before the clouds, which had been gathering all the afternoon, let fall their water.

The deadly bolt which so quickly and mysteriously ended Mr. Severn's exist­ ence fell from a small cloud shortly after six'o'clock. Mr. Severn himself was on the stack with a pitchfork, and his son was standing on the hay rack gathering up the last forkfull to round up the stack and complete their day's labor, when with a flash and 'a roar the electric bolt descended.  Iit passed through Mr. Sev­ern's body, through the hay and into the ground.

His son was stunned by the shock and fell into the rack, while the horses which were also much startled by the nearness of the flash and the loudness of the report, started off on a, run. Charles recovered in time to check the team after it had gone about fifty rods. He immediately returned to the stack and finding it blazing, called to his father to get down as the stack was on fire. Not receiving any answer he climed up on the hay and found the body of his father ly­ing lifeless. In an excited state of mind he dragged the body a short distance to some weeds and mounting a horse rode to the ranch of W. P. Lampson, about six miles distant. With.Mr. Lamson and his father-in-law, Mr. Hall, he returned to the stack and started for home with the dead body. Leaving Mr. Lampson and the body at the ranch, Charles started for this city with the sad intelligence.  

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Associated Breweries

Thomas B. Carter, Ale & Porter Brewery, Davenport, Iowa, USA

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