Grand Forks street names often chosen to honor founding fathers, civic and business leaders, and U.S. presidents, as well as relevance to life in this region
The Red River along the eastern edge of North Dakota was a vital trade route for Native Americans, Metis, fur traders, and then Americans and Canadians. However, by the 1910s, the need for river transportation had been firmly supplanted by trains and automobiles. On this date in 1913, the Fargo Forum announced that one of the last links to the heyday of the river trade was broken. Charles B. Thimens, a former steamboat captain, had died.
He was a tailor who became a merchant, who served as a soldier in defense of the Union and then helped build Grand Forks – literally by felling trees and sawing lumber.