Luella J. Hall Papers
Scope and Contents
The Luella J. Hall Papers consist of two folders. Folder one contains newspaper clippings from The Renville County Farmer from 1951 to 1954. The bulk of the clippings are from the June 21, 1951 edition, issued to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Mohall. Most clippings concern Mohall and Renville County history and are individually mounted on paper. Also included are two postcards, featuring Mohall’s first community Christmas tree in 1925 and the Mohall City Park. Folder two contains a paper written about 1923 by Hall, “The Early History of Mohall, North Dakota.” The paper, fifty pages long, contains four chapters: I. Physiography of the Mouse River Loop, North Dakota; II. The founding of Mohall; III. The coming of the railroad; and IV. The reorganization of Renville County. The first three chapters cover to 1903, and the fourth covers to 1910. The paper includes a description of the area, mentioning floods, blizzards, travel, Mohall pioneers, and railroad expansion. Also mentioned are regional towns, including Minot and Towner, and the separation of Renville County from Ward County.
Dates
- created: 1923, 1951-1954
- Other: Date acquired: 08/09/1952
Creator
- Hall, Luella J. (Person)
Conditions Governing Access
Open for inspection under the rules and regulations of the Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections.
Biographical or Historical Information
Luella Jemima Hall was born October 18, 1890, the daughter of Martin O. Hall. Martin was born October 30, 1853, in Norway and founded Mohall, North Dakota, in 1901. Luella attended the University of North Dakota, earning a B.A. in 1917 and a M.A. in 1919. Her master’s thesis was titled “County Boundaries in North Dakota, 1849-1916.” She was a charter member of the Upsilon Chapter of Delta Zeta, a women’s fraternity installed at UND in 1919. She joined the UND faculty, and served as advisor to Delta Zeta. In about 1923, she wrote “The Early History of Mohall, North Dakota.” M.O. Hall became ill and moved to Los Angeles, California, where he died January 12, 1925. By 1925, Luella also had moved to California and was teaching at Lodi. Luella earned a Ph.D. in History from Stanford University in 1937. Her dissertation was “The United States and the Moroccan Problem.” In 1937, she accepted a position at Hartnell Junior College (Salinas, California), where she served as a professor of Geography and History until 1960. She was an expert on U.S.-Morocco relations, but primarily taught courses concerning Latin America, international relations, and American Indians. She revised her dissertation, which was published as The United States and Morocco, 1776-1956 (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1971). She died June 15, 1973.
Note written by
Full Extent
0.25 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
1890-1973; Mohall, North Dakota, historian
Source of Acquisition
Luella J. Hall
Method of Acquisition
Donation
Accruals and Additions
Hall deposited additions on November 30, 1953 and June 16, 1954
- Title
- Archon Finding Aid Title
- Description rules
- Other Unmapped
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- eng
Repository Details
Part of the Elwyn B. Robinson Department of Special Collections Repository
Chester Fritz Library
3051 University Ave Stop 9000
Grand Forks ND 58202-9000 US
701-777-4625
und.archives@und.edu