Grand Forks New Hampshire Apartments
Designed by architect Joseph Bell DeRemer, the New Hampshire Apartments were built in 1904 at a cost of $26,000. Uniquely connected on the second level to the Security Trust building, the New Hampshire was to have been one of four similar apartment buildings interconnected to the north. For whatever reason, the other three were not built. Classified as commercial vernacular with red colonial brick facing and stone trim, it is typical of early twentieth century business type structures. When the apartment building opened, it had the most modern facilities in town: hot and cold water, baths, electric bells, and speaking tubes. It was built by the Dinnie Brothers, a construction firm that was established in 1881 and was at one time responsible for the building of more than 60 percent of the commercial buildings in Grand Forks.

The New Hampshire Apartments in Grand Forks, North Dakota were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. The 1997 flood washed into the apartments and the following fire finished off the destruction of the apartments. 

Larimore - 1910-1919
Louise Landman and Edward N. McCoy sit in a buggy on the Christ Johnson farm in Larimore, N.D. Two unidentified men sit in a car.  Another man, perhaps Johnson, stands near the house with a phonograph on top of a small table. Guns, ammunition belts, and flags are stacked in front of the house. A dog lies on the ground next to the house.

Walhalla - Antoine Blanc Gingras 

Pembina County Historical Museum 

State Historical Society