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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200220T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200220T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20200103T172254Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200103T172254Z
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SUMMARY:History Revealed: Three Jewish Writers
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nPanel Discussion\, Three Jewish Writers: William Hoffman\, Norman Katkov and Max Shulman\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nThursday\, February 20\, 2020\n7:00 pm\nRoseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nRCHS Editor Meredith Cummings will emcee a fascinating discussion on three Jewish writers who made their homes in Saint Paul\, but who were national figures – William Hoffman\, Norman Katkov and Max Shulman. \nWilliam Hoffman (1914-1990) was a very well-known author whose works included “Tales of Hoffman\,” “Mendel\,”  “Neighborhood House: A Brief History of the First 75 Years\, 1897-1972” and writing for the Saint Paul Jewish News\, and other publications. \nNorman Katkov (1918-2009) authored short stories and tv scripts (Wild Wild West\, Bonanza\, Ben Casey\, and others)\, plus “A Little Sleep\, A Little Slumber\,” “The Judas Kiss\,” “Millionaires Row” and other books and novels. \nMax Shulman (1919-1988) was a screenwriter for “The Many Lives of Dobie Gillis\,” and many films\, including “The Tender Trap.” His books include “Barefoot Boy with Cheek\,” “The Feather Merchant\,” “Rally Round the Flag Boys!” and many short stories. \nReadings from their writings\, video clips of their films and TV episodes\, the stories of their lives as told by family members\, and the history of their neighborhoods in Saint Paul will be part of the discussion. \nPanel Members: \n\nMeredith Cummings\, RCHS Editor and panel emcee\nJon Hoffman\, son of author William Hoffman\nPaul D. Nelson\, historian and co-author of “Three Jewish Writers” in Ramsey County History magazine\, Fall 2019 issue.\nSteve Trimble\, historian and co-author of “Three Jewish Writers” in Ramsey County History magazine\, Fall 2019 issue.\nDaniel Shulman\, son of author Max Shulman\n\nFor a link to the recent article\, see: Ramsey County History magazine\, Volume 54-3\, Fall 2019 \nFeatured image photograph and design courtesy of Summit Images\, LLC – Robert Muschewske and Leaetta Hough. \n2020 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2020 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-three-jewish-writers/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs,Research
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200206T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200206T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20191213T214117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191213T214117Z
UID:10008713-1581015600-1581021000@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Transpacific Antiracism
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nYuichiro Onishi\, Transpacific Antiracism\, Afro-Asian Solidarity in 20th-Century Black America\, Japan\, and Okinawa\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nThursday\, February 6\, 2020\n7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nTranspacific Antiracism introduces the dynamic process out of which social movements in Black America\, Japan\, and Okinawa formed Afro-Asian solidarities against the practice of white supremacy in the twentieth century. Yuichiro Onishi argues that in the context of forging Afro-Asian solidarities\, race emerged as a political category of struggle with a distinct moral quality and vitality. \nThis book explores the work of Black intellectual-activists of the first half of the twentieth century\, including Hubert Harrison and W. E. B. Du Bois\, that took a pro-Japan stance to articulate the connection between local and global dimensions of antiracism. Turning to two places rarely seen as a part of the Black experience\, Japan and Okinawa\, the book also presents the accounts of a group of Japanese scholars shaping the Black studies movement in post-surrender Japan and multiracial coalition-building in U.S.-occupied Okinawa during the height of the Vietnam War which brought together local activists\, peace activists\, and antiracist and antiwar GIs. Together these cases of Afro-Asian solidarity make known political discourses and projects that reworked the concept of race to become a wellspring of aspiration for a new society. \nCopies of the book will be available for purchase and signing during the presentation. \nYuichiro Onishi is Assistant Professor of African American & African Studies and Asian American Studies at the University of Minnesota\, Twin Cities.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-transpacific-antiracism/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200123T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200123T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20191213T212623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191213T212623Z
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SUMMARY:History Revealed: Nicholas R. Brewer
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nJulie L’Enfant\, The Celebrity Portraits of Nicholas R. Brewer\nHistory Revealed Series\nThursday\, January 23\, 2020\n7:00 pm\nRoseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nNicholas R. Brewer (1857-1949) is a Minnesota artist best known today for his landscapes\, but in his own lifetime his wide reputation rested mainly on his portraits. He painted many prominent Minnesotans. His circuit exhibitions in the 1920s and 1930s also featured portraits of some of the most famous men and women of his day. This presentation will focus on portraits of Joseph Jefferson\, the comic actor who played Rip Van Winkle in theaters across the world; Ignace Paderewski\, the Polish pianist and politician; and the girl who starred in a sensational movie about the Armenian Massacres of World War One\, Aurora Mardiganian. These paintings\, little known today\, show Brewer’s intimate engagement with his era’s cultural and political events. \nJulie L’Enfant is the author of seven books\, including The Gag Family: German-Bohemian Artists in America (2002)\, Pioneer Modernists: Minnesota’s First Generation of Women Artists (2011)\, both of which won Minnesota Book Awards; Other Realities: The Art of Paul S. Kramer (2013); and\, with co-author Jaden Hansen\, Persistence of Vision: The Art of Bettye Olson (2017). \nA new softcover edition of Julie’s latest book\, Nicholas R. Brewer: His Art and Family (Afton Press\, 2019)\, will be available for purchase and signing. \nImage credit: Nicholas Brewer with his portrait of actress Margaret Anglin as her character in the play In the Wilderness. Mary Ann Walton collection. \n2020 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2020 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-nicholas-r-brewer/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200109T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200109T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20191213T212006Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191213T212006Z
UID:10008711-1578596400-1578601800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Moving Up\, Moving Out
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nDr. Will Cooley\, Moving Up\, Moving Out: The Rise of the Black Middle Class in Chicago\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nThursday\, January 9\, 2020\n7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nIn Moving Up\, Moving Out\, Will Cooley discusses the damage racism and discrimination have exacted on black Chicagoans in the twentieth century\, while accentuating the resilience of upwardly-mobile African Americans. Cooley examines how class differences created fissures in the black community and produced quandaries for black Chicagoans interested in racial welfare. While black Chicagoans engaged in collective struggles\, they also used individualistic means to secure the American Dream. Black Chicagoans demonstrated their talent and ambitions\, but they entered through the narrow gate\, and whites denied them equal opportunities in the educational institutions\, workplaces\, and neighborhoods that produced the middle class. African Americans resisted these restrictions at nearly every turn by moving up into better careers and moving out into higher-quality neighborhoods\, but their continued marginalization helped create a deeply dysfunctional city. African Americans settled in Chicago for decades\, inspired by the gains their forerunners were making in the city. Though faith in Chicago as a land of promise wavered\, the progress of the black middle class kept the city from completely falling apart. In this important study\, Cooley shows how Chicago\, in all of its glory and faults\, was held together by black dreams of advancement. Moving Up\, Moving Out will appeal to urban historians and sociologists\, scholars of African American studies\, and general readers interested in Chicago and urban history. \nWill Cooley is professor of history at Walsh University in North Canton\, Ohio. \n2020 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2020 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-moving-up-moving-out/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/9780875807874_p0_v3_s550x406-e1576271982476.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20191210T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20191210T190000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190612T144329Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190612T144329Z
UID:10008690-1576004400-1576004400@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Slavery's Reach
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nChristopher Lehman\, Slavery’s Reach: Southern Slaveholders in the North Star State\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nDecember 10\, 2019\nTuesday\, 7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nWhen American slavery was legal\, Minnesota’s residents sold real estate to investors who enslaved African Americans in the South. This presentation looks at Minnesota’s communities and institutions that benefited from plantation money\, the enslavers who bought the land\, and the slaves whose labor made the money for investment possible. \nDr. Christopher P. Lehman is a professor of ethnic studies at St. Cloud State University in Minnesota. He has been a visiting fellow at Harvard University’s Center for African and African American Research. His articles have appeared in  Minnesota History magazine\, and he is the author of the book Slavery’s Reach: Southern Slaveholders in the North Star State. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\nFor 2019 History Revealed programs\, see https://www.rchs.com/news/history-revealed-2019/\nNew programs are being added.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-slaverys-reach/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/SlaverysReach.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20191121T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20191121T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190814T174330Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190814T174330Z
UID:10008701-1574362800-1574368200@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Ordnance Plant
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nMark Haidet\, The Twin Cities Ordnance Plant During World War II\nHistory Revealed Series\nNovember 21\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nHistorian Mark Haidet will tell the story behind the building of The Twin Cities Ordnance Plant and its key role in helping the United States and its Allies win World War II.  The rapid transformation of northwestern Ramsey County from farm fields in 1941 into an industrial complex employing more than 25\,000 men and women at its peak in 1943 was called a miracle. \nMark Haidet worked for the Minnesota Historical Society for 36 years – 10 years as a historian and 26 years in the Development Office.  As Director of Development for the program’s first 16 years\, he built a comprehensive program and led three major campaigns for the Minnesota History Center\, Mill City Museum and the Greatest Generation Project.  He closed his career with three years at the State Fair Foundation where he completed the campaign to build the Fair’s new History & Heritage Center.  Now retired\, Mark is helping others as a free-lance historian and fund-raising consultant. \n\n\nMain image: Inspection at the Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant\, 1942. Courtesy of Hennepin County Library.\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCourtesy of Hennepin County Library\n\n\n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-ordnance-plant/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20191107T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20191107T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190510T151915Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190510T151915Z
UID:10008678-1573153200-1573158600@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Relentless Business of Treaties
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nMartin Case\, The Relentless Business of Treaties\nThursday\, November 7\, 2019\n7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No registration needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nThe story of “western expansion” is a familiar one: US government agents\, through duplicity and force\, persuaded Native Americans to sign treaties that gave away their rights to the land. But this framing\, argues Martin Case\, hides a deeper story. Land cession treaties were essentially the act of supplanting indigenous kinship relationships to the land with a property relationship. And property is the organizing principle upon which US society is based. \nUS signers represented the relentless interests that drove treaty making: corporate and individual profit\, political ambition\, and assimilationist assumptions of cultural superiority. The lives of these men illustrate the assumptions inherent in the property system—and the dynamics by which it spread across the continent. In this book\, for the first time\, Case provides a comprehensive study of the treaty signers\, exposing their business ties and multigenerational interrelationships through birth and marriage. Taking Minnesota as a case study\, he describes the groups that shaped US treaty making to further their own interests: interpreters\, traders\, land speculators\, bureaucrats\, officeholders\, missionaries\, and mining\, timber\, and transportation companies. \n \nMartin Case\, freelance researcher and writer\, was a key participant in the development of Why Treaties Matter\, a collaboration of the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council\, the Minnesota Humanities Center\, and the Smithsonian Institute\, published by the Minnesota Historical Society Press. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\nFor 2019 History Revealed programs\, see https://www.rchs.com/news/history-revealed-2019/\nNew programs are being added.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-relentless-business-of-treaties/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20191024T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20191024T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20171106T193216Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171106T193216Z
UID:10008537-1571943600-1571949000@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Streetcars-CANCELLED
DESCRIPTION:CANCELLED: John Diers\, 1\,100 Streetcars: The Rise and Fall of the Twin City Rapid Transit Company\nWe apologize\, but the Thursday\, Oct. 24 program at the Roseville Library has been cancelled.\nHistory Revealed Series\nOctober 24\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed in 2018\, featuring the best of local history authors\, historians and archaeologists talking about a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nIn 1920 for a nickel fare the 1\,100 streetcars of the Twin City Rapid Transit Company carried 238 million riders on a 500-mile system that stretched from Lake Minnetonka to the St. Croix River. With over 4\,000 workers it was among the largest employers in the Twin Cities; turning a profit for its shareholders\, and regarded as among the finest street railway systems in the transit industry. Thirty-four years later it surrendered to the automobile. Its streetcars were gone\, replaced by buses—its assets looted by an unscrupulous management. From streetcars to freeways this is the story of the decline and fall of the late\, great Twin City Rapid Transit Company. \n \nJohn Diers is a writer-historian and the author of two books; Twin Cities by Trolley and St. Paul Union Depot (University of Minnesota Press) and articles on transit and transportation subjects in a number of historical and transportation journals\, among them Ramsey County History. He was with the Metropolitan Transit Commission in the Twin Cities and general manager of transit systems in Wisconsin and New York. \nThank you to the Ramsey County Roseville Library for their support of this program. \nFor more information and a list of upcoming 2019 History Revealed programs\, see the 2019 History Revealed page. \nArticle by John Diers\, The Force That Shaped the Neighborhoods: 1890–1953: Sixty-three Years of Streetcars in St. Paul and Millions of Dollars in Investments. Published in Ramsey County History magazine\, Spring 2005\, Vol. 40\, #1.\nLink to PDF of J. Diers article \nSave
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-streetcars-cancelled/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:Library Programs,Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/1901303_StreetcarMoundsPark_1910_April.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20191003T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20191003T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190820T205203Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190820T205203Z
UID:10008704-1570129200-1570134600@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Under Ground
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nMegan Marsnik: Under Ground\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nOctober 3\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nLike many stories of revolution and uprising\, Under Ground has passionately-spirited\, colorful protagonists and deeply-hated antagonists. It chronicles shootouts at labor rallies\, guns transported to and from secret bunkers\, fights in brothels\, police corruption\, xenophobia\, and false imprisonment. It features a cast of historical figures including Elizabeth Gurley Flynn\, Mother Jones\, Big Bill Haywood\, and socialist presidential candidate Eugene Debs. It is about courage and consequences. But unlike most novels written about the labor movement in the U.S.\, this novel is told from the perspective of a strong\, immigrant woman\, who reminds us that there are things worth dying for\, but more importantly\, there are things to live for. \nCentering on a young woman named Katka\, a Slovenian immigrant who gets involved in the Iron Range miners’ strike of 1916\, Under Ground is the first novel that we are highlighting as part of our History Revealed series. Inspired by real people and historical events\, expertly researched\, with a strong sense of place and character\, the novel not only covers the strike of 1916\, but also labor history\, women on the Iron Range and immigration in the early 1900s. \nMegan Marsnik is the granddaughter of Slovenian immigrants\, the daughter of union activists\, and a union member herself. She was born and raised in Biwabik\, a small town on Minnesota’s Iron Range settled primarily by Eastern European and Scandinavian immigrants. Marsnik earned her MFA in writing and poetics from Naropa University in Boulder\, CO\, where she won the Jack Kerouac Award for outstanding prose. She teaches creative writing and philosophy to high school students in Minneapolis. “Under Ground\,” her debut novel\, is steeped in Minnesota history and is this year’s Star Tribune summer serial. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-under-ground/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/marsnikportrait-e1565806002788.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190926T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190926T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190814T165008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190814T165008Z
UID:10008700-1569524400-1569529800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: George Bonga
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nJoel Brown\, The Story of George Bonga and the Fur Trade Era\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nSeptember 26\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nJoel Brown will present and reenact the story of George Bonga\, a legendary fur trader. George Bonga was born to an African-American father and an Ojibwe mother\, and is believed to be one of the first people of Africn-American descent born in Minnesota. Mr. Brown will also touch on the early days of the territory and the history of fur trading in Minnesota from the mid 1600s to the mid 1800s\, when Quebecois was the common language. Joel Brown will present in an authentic costume of the fur trading era. This is sure to be a fascinating and informative presentation. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-george-bonga/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/JoelBrown2-e1565804953100.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190905T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190905T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190605T165356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190605T165356Z
UID:10008683-1567710000-1567715400@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Children of Lincoln 1860-1876
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nWilliam D. Green: The Children of Lincoln: White Paternalism and the Limits of Black Opportunity in Minnesota\, 1860-1876\nHistory Revealed Series\nSeptember 5\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nFramed around four white champions of African Americans in Minnesota\, The Children of Lincoln reveals a little known but critical chapter in the state’s history as it intersects with the broader account of race in America. It reveals a pattern of racial paternalism\, describing how even “enlightened” white Northerners would come to embrace policies that reinforced a notion of black inferiority.\n\nWilliam D. Green is professor of history at Augsburg University and author of The Children of Lincoln: White Paternalism and the Limits of Black Opportunity in Minnesota\, 1860-1876\, which is a finalist for the Minnesota Non-Fiction category of the 2019 Minnesota Book Awards\, to be awarded in April. He is also the author of Degrees of Freedom: The Origins of Civil Rights in Minnesota\, 1865–1912 (winner of the Hognander Minnesota History Award) and A Peculiar Imbalance: The Rise and Fall of Racial Equality in Minnesota\, 1837–1869\, both published by University of Minnesota press. He is vice president of the Minnesota Historical Society.\n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-children-of-lincoln-1860-1876/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image_mini-e1541092449522.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190822T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190822T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190605T172928Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190605T172928Z
UID:10008684-1566500400-1566505800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Thank You for Shopping
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nKristal Leebrick\, Thank You for Shopping: The Golden Age of Minnesota Department Stores\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nAugust 22\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nThroughout the twentieth century\, department stores ruled the retail landscapes of downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul. More than just shopping centers\, stores like Dayton’s\, Powers\, Donaldson’s\, Young-Quinlan\, the Emporium\, and the Golden Rule were centers of social life. From the legendary Dayton’s Christmas and spring flower displays to celebrating a special occasion at Schuneman’s River Room\, the department store was a destination for generations of Minnesotans\, within the Twin Cities and beyond. \nThank You for Shopping author Kristal Leebrick presents the history and stories behind Minnesota’s great department stores\, offering a lively trip back to the glory days. \nDaytons catalog page\nKristal Leebrick has worked for more three decades as a writer and editor for community newspapers\, trade magazines and book publishers. She is the author of Dayton’s: A Twin Cities Institution as well as several nonfiction juvenile books\, and for eight years she served as editor of the Park Bugle\, the local monthly newspaper that covers the Como Park and St. Anthony Park neighborhoods of St. Paul. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-thank-you-for-shopping/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/TYFS-cover_web.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190801T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190801T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190605T164838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190605T164838Z
UID:10008682-1564686000-1564691400@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Queer Voices
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nQueer Voices Panel Discussion\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nAugust 1\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nJoin us at the East Side Freedom Library for a panel discussion and readings from the new publication\, Queer Voices. \nSince its beginnings in 1993\, the Queer Voices reading series has featured both emerging and established Minnesota-based writers of the LGBTQIA+ community. With a track record of more than twenty years\, the series has become a national model and one of Minnesota’s most important literary institutions. It is reputed to be the longest-running curated queer reading series in the country. \nIn this volume\, series curators John Medeiros and Andrea Jenkins and facilitator Lisa Marie Brimmer present the finest poetry\, fiction\, and nonfiction pieces by the presenters. Their work\, generated and performed in a powerful space of understanding\, explores the material of life without internal or external censorship. Living\, loving\, working\, learning\, playing\, reflecting\, knowing\, inventing\, and being—these magnificent queer voices affirm the importance of civil literacy and the power of vulnerability. \nThe following contributors will be part of the panel\, other editors and contributors will be joining us:\nStephanie Chrismon\nChristina Glendenning\nBronson Lemer\nNasreen Mohamed\nMichael Kiesow Moore\nWilliam Reichard\nMorgan Grayce Willow \nBooks will be available for purchase. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-queer-voices/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/QueerVoices2.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190725T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190725T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190605T153948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190605T153948Z
UID:10008680-1564081200-1564086600@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Floating Bethel
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nChristine Podas-Larson\, The Floating Bethel\nHistory Revealed Series\nJuly 25\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nChristine Podas-Larson\, author of the recent article in Ramsey County History magazine\, “Eliza Edgerton Newport and St. Paul’s Floating Bethel\, 1891-1903” will talk about the history of Saint Paul’s “Floating Bethel\,” a refuge for the working poor that was docked off Sibley Street on the Mississippi. Community leader and St. Paul resident Eliza Newport was well-educated and well-connected\, and she led many charitable organizations and community efforts at the end of the 19th century. Drawn to the work of the Bethel Association\, and in conjunction with other community leaders\, Eliza developed places where the poor and transient of the city could meet\, get food\, basic needs\, and have a safe place to stay. This culminated in the Floating Bethel\, a riverboat hotel & bathhouse on the Mississippi River that served the “floating class\,” river and railroad workers and their families. Over thirteen years it provided educational\, vocational\, and religious instruction for the guests. On July 5\, 1893 the Floating Bethel had a devastating fire. The legacy of the Floating Bethel lives on today through the Bethel Hotel\, a transitional housing program for men run by Union Gospel Mission Twin Cities. \nChristine Podas-Larson will present the history of the Floating Bethel\, and the work and life of her great-grandmother\, Eliza Newport in this fascinating presentation on the early years of Saint Paul. \n\nChristine Podas-Larson is the founder of Public Art Saint Paul\, where she was the organization’s Executive Director for many years. She is also the great-granddaughter of Eliza Edgerton Newport. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-floating-bethel/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs,Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/FloatingBethel.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190718T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190718T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190605T162826Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190605T162826Z
UID:10008681-1563476400-1563481800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Peoples Library
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nGreg Gaut\, Reinventing the Peoples Library\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nJuly 18\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nAuthor Greg Gaut will present his new book\, Reinventing the People’s Library\, which traces the history of the Arlington Hills Library\, one of three Carnegie Libraries in Saint Paul\, and its reinvention as the East Side Freedom Library. More than the history of a building\, the book is the story of the East Side community\, the history of immigration in Saint Paul\, and the role that libraries have played in the development of Minnesota. \nGreg Gaut earned his doctorate from the University of Minnesota and taught history at St. Mary’s University in Winona until his retirement in 2011. Since then he has focused on historic preservation\, preparing nominations for the National Register of Historic Places and for landmark status under local preservation ordinances. He has written articles for Minnesota History magazine and has twice won the David Gebhard Award for best article on Minnesota’s built environment. He has also written Laird’s Legacy: A History of the Winona Public Library. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-peoples-library/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Library_CoverImage2_Web.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190627T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190627T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190201T212511Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190201T212511Z
UID:10008661-1561662000-1561667400@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: The Leavenworth Expedition
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nGary Brueggemann: The Long Legacy of the Leavenworth Expedition (1819-20)\nHistory Revealed Series\nJune 27\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nTwo hundred years ago the largest expedition to enter present-day Minnesota launched the development of an American military establishment near the meeting of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers that proved to be a great turning point in Minnesota history. Never before in history had so many non-natives in one group traveled so far up the Mississippi – more than 530 miles north of St. Louis and over 200 miles upriver from Prairie du Chien\, the northernmost settlement on the Mississippi in 1819. And never before had so many people from so many places made such a large “Cantonment” in that part of the wilderness. \nIncluded among the 128 members of this historic expedition were the first non-Indigenous women and children to enter present-day Minnesota\, and the former New York lawyer and politician and war hero who led them\, – the “polished gentleman” destined for fame but also misery – Commander Lieutenant Colonel Henry Leavenworth. The group’s adventurous story\, which included the tragic deaths of dozens of soldiers and extraordinary hardships for everyone\, is a significant chapter in Minnesota history; yet it is one of the lesser known ones remembered today – and when it is remembered its legacy is largely underappreciated and the details of the story greatly condensed. \nMinnesota historian and author Gary Brueggemann  has been extensively researching this interesting and important story and will share what he has uncovered in a special pictorial presentation. \nGary Brueggemann is a lifetime resident of St. Paul’s West 7th neighborhood\, and he credits his love of history to his father\, who inspired his son with tales about his own childhood growing up along the river below the Randolph Ave. bluff. Gary received undergraduate and graduate degrees from University Of Wisconsin – River Falls. Now retired\, in 1978 Gary developed the first-ever college accredited course on St. Paul history for Inver Hills Community College\, where he served as a history professor. \nPhoto of Colonel Henry Leavenworth\, Wikimedia Commons\, in the public domain.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-the-leavenworth-expedition/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/General_Henry_Leavenworth_WikimediaCommons.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190606T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190606T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190416T133257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190416T133257Z
UID:10008671-1559847600-1559853000@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Cultures Coming Together
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nKrista Finstad Hanson: Cultures Coming Together in St. Paul: 100 Years of Immigration and Resettlement\nHistory Revealed Series\nJune 6\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nLearn about 100 years of immigration history to St. Paul\, Minnesota. In 2019\, the International Institute of Minnesota is celebrating 100 years of service to the existing ethnic groups and new groups of refugees\, immigrants\, and asylees in our community. By uncovering the history of this non-profit agency\, historian Krista Finstad Hanson will shine a light on the history of immigration to St. Paul\, the worldwide crises and US government policy behind the waves of new immigrants or refugees\, and the impact immigration has had on our community. \n \nKrista Finstad Hanson is the author of two travel guides to museums in historic houses: Minnesota Open House and Wisconsin’s Historic Houses and Living History Museums. She has also written a children’s science textbook\, The Great Barrier Reef: A Natural Wonder. Her writings focus on architectural history\, travel\, and homes\, and since 1992 she has written for such a number of local and national publications. \nFeatured image courtesy of International Institute of Minnesota\, 1920 Christmas party at the International Institute.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-cultures-coming-together/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/1921-IIM-01-e1555690761400.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190523T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190523T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190208T190744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190208T190744Z
UID:10008663-1558638000-1558643400@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Black Baseball & Rondo
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nFrank M. White\, Black Baseball & The Rondo Neighborhood\nHistory Revealed Series\nMay 23\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nAuthor and historian Frank M. White will discuss the overall picture of baseball and sports in the Rondo neighborhood. He will highlight some of the athletes from that neighborhood and will also place the history of baseball in context\, recognizing some of the landmarks and locations of significance in Rondo that were instrumental in the community and in developing sports in the area. \nFrank M. White is a former athlete\, coach\, official\, and sports administrator. He currently coordinates the RBI (Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities) program for the Minnesota Twins. His exhibit\, They Played for the Love of the Game\, was developed with the Ramsey County Historical Society in 2010. Frank is also the author of articles\, including for Ramsey County History magazine\, and They Played for the Love of the Game\, Minnesota Historical Society Press.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-black-baseball-rondo/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/CHS_FrankWhite-e1549652776770.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190507T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190507T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190405T204957Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190405T204957Z
UID:10008668-1557255600-1557261000@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Diesel Heart
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nMelvin Carter Jr.: Diesel Heart\nwith Marvin R. Anderson\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nMay 7\, 2019\nTuesday\, 7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nFull of humor\, toughness\, hard work\, and surprising vulnerability\, this book shows the bitter weight of racism and the power of principled resistance.\n\nThe doctors gathered around\, passing the stethoscope from hand to hand\, taking turns listening to my chest. Finally\, the lead doctor said\, “Now\, that’s what I call a heartbeat!”\nI snapped\, “Whaddaya mean?”\n“It’s like hearing a diesel engine inside a Mustang body\,” he said. \nMelvin Whitfield Carter Jr.\, the father of St. Paul’s current mayor\, is a true son of Rondo\, the city’s storied African American neighborhood. He was born in a city divided along racial lines and rich in cultural misunderstanding. Growing up in the 1950s and ’60s\, he witnessed the destruction of his neighborhood by the I-94 freeway—and he found his way to fighting and trouble. \nBut Carter turned his life around. As a young man\, he enlisted in the US Navy. He used his fighting ability to survive racist treatment\, winning boxing matches and respect. And as an affirmative action hire in the St. Paul Police Department\, facing prejudice at every turn\, this hardworking\, talented\, and highly principled officer fought to protect the people of the city he calls home. \nDiesel Heart is the story of a leader who created a powerful family legacy by standing up for what is right\, even in the face of adversity. Marvin R. Anderson will be joining Melvin Carter in an informal\, engaging and enlightening conversation\, sharing Mr. Carter’s story and the history of a neighborhood and a city during a turbulent time. \nCopies of Diesel Heart will be available for purchase and signing. \nMelvin Whitfield Carter Jr. served as an officer in the St. Paul Police Department for twenty-eight years. He is the founder and executive director of Save Our Sons. \nMarvin Roger Anderson was raised in Saint Paul’s Rondo neighborhood before leaving to attend Morehouse College in Atlanta\, Georgia\, and then received his J.D. from Hastings College of Law in San Francisco. After serving int he Peace Corp\, he was an ordinance drafter for the city of Minneapolis Department of Civil Rights before earning his Master of Arts from the University of Minnesota’s School of Library Science. He was appointed State Law Librarian in 1980. Anderson’s tenure as State Law Librarian spanned 22 years and included many accomplishments including the “Everybody Wins” reading program\, which paired volunteer legal practitioners with elementary school students to encourage a life-long love of reading.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-diesel-heart/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs,Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Melvin-Carter-Jr.-by-Roosevelt-Mansfield_Crop-e1554500547221.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190425T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190425T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20181101T163949Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181101T163949Z
UID:10008609-1556218800-1556224200@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Metropolitan Dreams
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nLarry Millett: Metropolitan Dreams\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nApril 25\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nThe story of one of Minnesota’s most famous and most mourned buildings\, set against the history of downtown Minneapolis. \nWhen it opened in 1890\, the twelve-story Northwestern Guaranty Loan Building was the tallest\, largest\, and most splendid commercial structure in Minneapolis—a mighty stone skyscraper built for the ages. How this grand Richardsonian Romanesque edifice\, which later came to be called the Metropolitan Building\, rose with the growth of Minneapolis only to fall in the throes of the city’s postwar renewal\, is revealed in Metropolitan Dreams in all its scandalous intrigue. It is a tale of urban growing pains and architectural ghosts and of colorful\, sometimes criminal characters amid the grandeur and squalor of building and rebuilding a city’s skyline. \nAgainst the thrumming backdrop of turn-of-the-century Minneapolis\, architectural critic and historian Larry Millett recreates the impressive rise of the massive office building\, its walls of green New Hampshire granite and red Lake Superior sandstone surrounding its true architectural wonder\, a dazzling twelve-story iron and glass light court. The drama\, however\, was far from confined to the building itself. A consummate storyteller\, Millett summons the frenetic atmosphere in Gilded Age Minneapolis that encouraged the likes of Northwestern Guaranty’s founder\, real estate speculator Louis Menage\, whose shady deals financed this Minneapolis masterpiece—and then forced him to flee both prosecution and the country a mere three years later. \nDubious as its financial beginnings might have been\, the economic circumstances of the Metropolitan’s demise were at least as questionable. Anchoring Minneapolis’s historic Gateway District in its heyday\, the building’s fortunes shifted with the city’s demographics and finally it fell victim to the fervor of one of the largest downtown urban renewal projects ever undertaken in the United States. Though the long and furious battle to save the Metropolitan ultimately failed in 1962\, its ghost persists in the passion for historic preservation stirred by its demise—and in Metropolitan Dreams\, whose photographs\, architectural drawings\, and absorbing narrative bring the building and its story to vibrant\, enduring life. \nLarry Millet. Photo by Matt Schmidt.\nLarry Millett is the author of many notable books on regional architecture\, including Once There Were Castles\, Minnesota Modern: Architecture and Life at Midcentury (winner of a Minnesota Book Award)\, and Heart of St. Paul: A History of the Pioneer and Endicott Buildings\, all published by Minnesota\, as well as Lost Twin Cities\, Minnesota’s Own: Preserving Our Grand Homes\, and several AIA Guides to the architecture of the Twin Cities. He has also written eight historical novels involving Sherlock Holmes set in turn-of-the-century Minnesota. \n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-metropolitan-dreams/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs,Special Events
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190406T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190406T143000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20190201T213734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190201T213734Z
UID:10008662-1554555600-1554561000@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Homes vs Factories
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nMarc Manderscheid: Homes vs. Factories: The 95-Year Battle over the Future of the South Highland Park Neighborhood”\nHistory Revealed Series\nApril 6\, 2019\nSaturday\, 1:00 pm\nSt. Paul Highland Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nThe opening of the Ford plant in Highland Park in 1924 was only the beginning. Business leaders wanted the entire area south of St. Paul Avenue for industrial development: 700 acres above the bluff for factories and 600 acres on the Mississippi River for coal receiving by barge. \nMarc Manderscheid will present “Homes vs. Factories: The 95-Year Battle over the Future of the South Highland Park Neighborhood.”  He will explain how city and business leaders planned to make a great new industrial district\, but multiple factors killed the industrial dream: “down zoning” and changing economics then created the current residential neighborhood. \nFeatured image: Aerial view of the Highland Park neighborhood\, looking south. From the RCHS Collection.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-homes-vs-factories/
LOCATION:Highland Library Saint Paul\, 1974 Ford Pkwy\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55116\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/19801827_HighlandPark_looking-South-e1551732355108.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190328T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190328T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20181205T205143Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181205T205143Z
UID:10008612-1553799600-1553805000@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Home Away From Home
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nTerry Swanson\, Home Away From Home: Stories From Minnesota’s First Pioneer Girls\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nMarch 28\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nThe stories that dwell in our memories define us\, change over time\, and taken collectively\, portray a generation. Terry Swanson will provide a glimpse into the real world of Minnesota’s pioneer girls who settled in Minnesota with their families. This snapshot of Minnesota life from 1840-1860 comes from an analysis of first-hand accounts\, including the histories in “Old Rail Fence Corners.” \nTerry Swanson is an author and historian and recently retired as the manager of the Gibbs Farm historic site. \nFeatured image: Photograph of a group of five girls and two boys\, circa 1870. The girls seem to be holding diplomas. Back caption: “St. Paul.” From the RCHS Collection. \n\nDue to unforeseen circumstances the previous presentation by Moira Harris has been cancelled. We apologize for the cancellation.\n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-home-away-from-home/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs,Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/19801115-e1552322133386.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190312T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190312T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20181228T193836Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181228T193836Z
UID:10008614-1552417200-1552422600@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Modern Bonds
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nElizabeth Duclos-Orsello\, Modern Bonds: Redefining Community in Early 20th C Saint Paul\nTuesday\, March 12\, 2019\n7:00 pm\nEast Side Freedom Library\nIf you missed the presentation\, you can watch it at the following links:\nFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/EastSideFreedomLibrary/videos/601328617047594/\nYouTube (somewhat better quality): https://youtu.be/MSZaVKkHuEw \nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nWhat does “community” mean and how did it come to signify everything from close friends to the entire world? Elizabeth Duclos-Orsello returns to St. Paul to talk about her new book\,  Modern Bonds: Redefining Community in Early Twentieth Century St. Paul\,  which considers how community was reconceptualized in the first decades of the twentieth century. Using St. Paul as an example\, she mines a wide range of materials to show how everyday practices and materials — fiction\, photography\, architecture\, public parks\, the winter carnivals — unite and divide citizens across lines of gender\, class\, and race\, while remaking the definition of “community.” Duclos-Orsello makes sense of the complex set of activities\, policies and practices that not only gave birth to modern America but continue to shape life today.  In this interactive lecture/discussion she will share key ideas and examples from the book with the goal of opening up conversations and motivating action in the here and now as much as offering a new synthesis of cultural\, social and intellectual history of the early 20th century. \nCopies of the book will be available for purchase and signing. \nElizabeth Ann Duclos-Orsello is professor and chair of interdisciplinary studies and coordinator of American studies at Salem State University.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-modern-bonds/
LOCATION:East Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier St\, Saint Paul\, MN\, 55106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/9781625343352.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:44.9745221;-93.0713914
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=East Side Freedom Library 1105 Greenbrier St Saint Paul MN 55106 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1105 Greenbrier St:geo:-93.0713914,44.9745221
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190228T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190228T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20181101T161744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181101T161744Z
UID:10008607-1551380400-1551385800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Children of Lincoln
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nWilliam D. Green: The Children of Lincoln: White Paternalism and the Limits of Black Opportunity in Minnesota\, 1860-1876\nHistory Revealed Series\nFebruary 28\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nFramed around four white champions of African Americans in Minnesota\, The Children of Lincoln reveals a little known but critical chapter in the state’s history as it intersects with the broader account of race in America. It reveals a pattern of racial paternalism\, describing how even “enlightened” white Northerners would come to embrace policies that reinforced a notion of black inferiority.\n\nWilliam D. Green is professor of history at Augsburg University and author of The Children of Lincoln: White Paternalism and the Limits of Black Opportunity in Minnesota\, 1860-1876\, which is a finalist for the Minnesota Non-Fiction category of the 2019 Minnesota Book Awards\, to be awarded in April. He is also the author of Degrees of Freedom: The Origins of Civil Rights in Minnesota\, 1865–1912 (winner of the Hognander Minnesota History Award) and A Peculiar Imbalance: The Rise and Fall of Racial Equality in Minnesota\, 1837–1869\, both published by University of Minnesota press. He is vice president of the Minnesota Historical Society.\n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-children-of-lincoln/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/image_mini-e1541092449522.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20190124T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20190124T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20181101T160546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181101T160546Z
UID:10008606-1548356400-1548361800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: National Register
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nDenis Gardiner\, The National Register of Historic Places\nHistory Revealed Series\nJanuary 24\, 2019\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. No reservations needed. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nThe National Register of Historic Places is the federal list of properties considered historically significant and worthy of preservation. The list includes properties significant in American history\, culture\, architecture\, engineering\, and archaeology. In this presentation Denis P. Gardner\, Minnesota’s National Register Historian\, highlights the events that spurred creation of the National Register\, and he explains the concepts that help us determine what makes a property eligible for listing in this special inventory of places. Gardner finishes his talk by featuring properties in this area that are a part of the National Register.\n\nDenis P. Gardner is the National Register Historian at the Minnesota State Historic Preservation Office in St. Paul\, where he reviews the eligibility of properties for the National Register of Historic Places. He is the author of Minnesota Treasures: Stories Behind the State’s Historic Places (Minnesota Historical Society Press) and Wood\, Concrete\, Stone\, and Steel: Minnesota’s Historic Bridges (University of Minnesota Press). His latest book is Our Minnesota State Capitol: From Groundbreaking Through Restoration (Minnesota Historical Society Press).\n2019 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed 2019 information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-national-register/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20181129T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20181129T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20180316T172733Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180316T172733Z
UID:10008573-1543518000-1543523400@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: North Star
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nDaniel Bergin\, North Star Stories\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nNovember 29\, 2018\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nJoin producer and director Daniel Pierce Bergin in a discussion about researching\, filming and producing the TPT series\, North Star that focuses on the history of African-Americans in Minnesota. Daniel will talk about the most recent film\, co-produced with the Ramsey County Historical Society\, North Star: Civil War Stories\, as well as other in the series\, including North Star: Stories of Minnesota’s Black Pioneers that tells the stories of 12 of Minnesota’s early black leaders. \nDaniel Pierce Bergin is Senior Producer & Partnership Manager for Twin Cities Public Television. He was a Production Fellow for the PBS documentary Slavery by Another Name\, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Bergin won a regional Emmy Award for Slavery By Another Name: Behind the Scenes. His other notable productions include regional Emmy-winners Asian Flavors\, North Star: Minnesota’s Black Pioneers; Lowertown: The Rise of an Urban Village; Cass Gilbert: Standing the Test of Time. His literary history documentary\, Literature & Life: The Givens Collection was named “Best History Documentary” at the Prized Pieces International Black Film Festival. His documentary With Impunity: Men & Gender Violence was named “Best Documentary of 2012” by Mpls/St. Paul Magazine. In addition to long-form documentary work\, Bergin received a regional Emmy award for Legacy Letters\, a PSA series about celebrating and protecting Minnesota’s natural\, historical\, and cultural heritage. Bergin produced exhibit videos for the Science Museum of Minnesota’s award-winning touring exhibit “Race: Are We So Different?” He also produced a companion program for broadcast. \nThe filmmaker’s short narrative films have screened at the American Film Institute\, the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival\, The Wexner Center\, and the Hollywood Black Film Festival.  In the 1990s\, Daniel Bergin produced the ground breaking “Don’t Believe the Hype\,” TPT’s Emmy award winning youth media program. \nThe Minneapolis native and University of Minnesota graduate has served as a director on the boards of several community media organizations including Intermedia Arts\, St. Paul Neighborhood Network\, Hennepin Theatre Trust\, and IFP MN. He was on the Walker Art Center’s Parent Advisory Council. Daniel is an adjunct instructor at St. Cloud State University. He has been recognized as a MN State Arts Board Fellow\, a 2003 Twin Cities Business Journal’s “40 under 40”\, a City Pages Artist of the Year\, attended the esteemed PBS Producers Academy\, and was awarded a Bush Leadership Fellowship for his work in community media. \n2018 History Revealed Programs\n\nSee the History Revealed information page for updates and a list of programs.\nOr check our Calendar for these and other programs at the Gibbs Farm\, and more!
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-north-star/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs,Presentation
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20180726T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20180726T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20180208T215118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180208T215118Z
UID:10008543-1532631600-1532637000@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: MN State Fair in WWI
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nMark Haidet\, The Minnesota State Fair during World War I\nHistory Revealed Series\nJuly 26\, 2018\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. \nJoin RCHS for a new series\, History Revealed\, featuring the best of local history authors talking about a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. See our History Revealed page here for more programs\, past and future. \nState Fair historian Mark Haidet will present the story of how the Minnesota State Fair played a key role in mobilizing the Minnesota home front for victory during World War I. From the State Fair’s national leadership in the campaign to “Win the War with Food\,” to large war exhibits\, military pageants\, and Grandstand shows depicting major battles\, discover the fascinating history of Minnesota’s beloved State Fair during this challenging era. \nMark Haidet\nMark Haidet worked for the Minnesota Historical Society for more than 36 years – 10 years as a historian and 26 years in the Development Office. As Director of Development for the program’s first 16 years\, he built a comprehensive program and led three major campaigns for the Minnesota History Center\, Mill City Museum and the Greatest Generation Project. He closed his career with three years at the State Fair Foundation where he completed the campaign to build the Fair’s new History & Heritage Center. Now retired\, Mark is helping others as a free-lance historian and fund-raising consultant. \nMark\, who has attended all but one State Fair since moving to Minnesota in 1976\, is passionate about the Fair\, its history\, and its importance to Minnesota. \nFeatured image: Black and white photograph of people lining up to purchase tickets at an entrance to the Minnesota State Fairgrounds\, circa September\, 1950. From the Ramsey County Historical Society photo & postcard collection. \nThank you to the Ramsey County Roseville Library for their support of this program. \nScheduled 2018 History Revealed Programs\nCheck back for updates!\nClick on the titles for more information.\nPlease note that topics and speakers may change. Check the website and our Facebook page for updates.\nPlease also note presentation location and times.\nClick here for the History Revealed webpage: Past presentations and updates. \nJune 28\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm\, Scott Carlson\, Twin Cities Beer\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nJuly 11\, 2018\, Wednesday\, Noon\, Peter Rachleff\, Immigration Then and Now: From Swede Hollow to Arlington Hills Walking Tour\nHistory Revealed Walking Tour\nEast Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier Street\, Saint Paul\, 55106\nMeet at the History & Heritage Center. Reservations required\, limit 30.\nMore information \nJuly 12\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 –Paul Nelson\, Frederick McGhee\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nJuly 26\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Mark Haidet\, The Minnesota State Fair During World War I\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nAugust 9\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nAugust 23\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Grant Merritt\, Iron and Water: My Life Protecting Minnesota’s Environment\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nSeptember 12\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Denis P. Gardner\, Our Minnesota State Capitol: From Groundbreaking through Restoration\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nSeptember 13\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nSeptember 27\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Bill Lindeke\, Saint Paul Then & Now\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information \nOctober 10\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Susan Bartlett Foote\, The Crusade for Forgotten Souls: Reforming Minnesota’s Mental Health Institutions\, 1946-1954\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nOctober 11\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nOctober 25\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Krista Finstad Hanson\, Japanese American Resettlement to St. Paul during World War II: The International Institute\, The War Relocation Authority\, and Ruth & Earl Tanabara\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nNovember 8\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nNovember 29\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Daniel Bergin\, North Star Stories\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nDecember 5\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Gibbs Farm staff\, Holiday Traditions on the Minnesota Prairie\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information \nDecember 13\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-mn-state-fair-wwi/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:History Revealed,Library Programs
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/StateFair_2009312-e1518123669997.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20180628T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20180628T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20180316T142245Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180316T142245Z
UID:10008569-1530212400-1530217800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Twin Cities Beer
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nScott Carlson\, Twin Cities Beer\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nJune 28\, 2018\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nThe Twin Cities witnessed a recent explosion of craft beer breweries and brewpubs\, but the region’s beer history reaches back generations. The Minneapolis Brewing Company introduced the iconic Grain Belt beer in 1893\, and it remains a local favorite. Fur trapper and bootlegger Pierre “Pig’s Eye” Parrant established a St. Paul tavern along the banks of the Mississippi River in the early 1800s. The area has been home to some of the best-known beer brands in America\, from Hamm’s and Schmidt’s to Yoerg’s and Olympia. Today\, microbreweries such as Bad Weather Brewing\, Summit Brewing and more than fifty others are forging new avenues. Join author Scott Carlson as he offers an intriguing history and guide to Twin Cities beer. \nAbout the author: \nScott Carlson is a Twin Cities journalist and writer. He spent nearly thirty years at the St. Paul Pioneer Press\, where he won numerous awards for his work. Most recently\, Scott served as a research associate in the Community Broadband Networks initiative at the Institute for Local Self-Reliance and as a media relations and communications consultant. Scott has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Minnesota and a juris doctorate from the William Mitchell College of Law (now known as the Hamline Mitchell School of Law). He lives with his wife\, Betsy\, in the Twin Cities. \nScheduled 2018 History Revealed Programs\nCheck back for updates!\nClick on the titles for more information.\nPlease note that topics and speakers may change. Check the website and our Facebook page for updates.\nPlease also note presentation location and times.\nClick here for the History Revealed webpage: Past presentations and updates. \nJune 28\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm\, Scott Carlson\, Twin Cities Beer\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nJuly 11\, 2018\, Wednesday\, Noon\, Peter Rachleff\, Immigration Then and Now: From Swede Hollow to Arlington Hills Walking Tour\nHistory Revealed Walking Tour\nEast Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier Street\, Saint Paul\, 55106\nMeet at the History & Heritage Center. Reservations required\, limit 30.\nMore information \nJuly 12\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 –Paul Nelson\, Frederick McGhee\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nJuly 26\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Mark Haidet\, The Minnesota State Fair During World War I\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nAugust 9\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nAugust 23\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Grant Merritt\, Iron and Water: My Life Protecting Minnesota’s Environment\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nSeptember 12\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Denis P. Gardner\, Our Minnesota State Capitol: From Groundbreaking through Restoration\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nSeptember 13\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nSeptember 27\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Bill Lindeke\, Saint Paul Then & Now\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information \nOctober 10\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Susan Bartlett Foote\, The Crusade for Forgotten Souls: Reforming Minnesota’s Mental Health Institutions\, 1946-1954\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nOctober 11\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nOctober 25\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Krista Finstad Hanson\, Japanese American Resettlement to St. Paul during World War II: The International Institute\, The War Relocation Authority\, and Ruth & Earl Tanabara\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nNovember 8\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information. \nNovember 29\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Daniel Bergin\, North Star Stories\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nDecember 5\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Gibbs Farm staff\, Holiday Traditions on the Minnesota Prairie\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information \nDecember 13\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:45-9:00 – TBA\nHistory Revealed: A Toast to History\nRCHS Day at Waldmann\nWaldmann Brewery & Wurstery\, 445 Smith Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55102\nMore information.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-twin-cities-beer/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:Book Event,History Revealed,Library Programs,Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Yoerg1-e1521213609346.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20180524T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20180524T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20171114T155315Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171114T155315Z
UID:10008538-1527188400-1527193800@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Elaine Goodale Eastman
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society presents \nTerry Swanson\, Elaine Goodale Eastman: Sister to the Sioux\, In Her Own Words\nHistory Revealed Series\nMay 24\, 2018\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed in 2018\, featuring the best of local history authors\, historians and archaeologists talking about a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nIn 1884\, twenty-one-year old Elaine Goodale\, a published poet from New England became the first white woman to teach Dakota and Lakota students at South Dakota reservations. She was working at the Pine Ridge Reservation in 1890 at the time of the Wounded Knee Massacre. She met and fell in love with Dr. Charles Eastman\, a noted Native American medical doctor who was the physician at the reservation during the tragedy. \nThey married in 1891 and moved to St. Paul in 1893 where they lived until 1897. During this period\, Elaine and Charles began to write and publish children’s stories. \nFor the article\, Charles and Elaine Eastman: Their Years in St. Paul\, 1893–1898 by Teresa Swanson\, Sydney Beane\, and William Beane\, published in Ramsey County History magazine\, Spring 2018\, Vol. 53\, #1\, click here for the article summary and a downloadable PDF of the entire article. \nTerry Swanson\, historian and recently retired manager of the Gibbs Farm historic site will examine the life and times of Elaine Goodale Eastman through the lens of her own autobiographical accounts. \nThank you to the Ramsey County Roseville Library for their support of this program. \nHistory Revealed Presentations\nScheduled 2018 History Revealed Programs\nCheck back for updates! \nClick on the titles for more information.\nPlease note that topics and speakers may change. Check the website and our Facebook page for updates.\nPlease also note presentation location and times. \nMay 24\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Terry Swanson\, Elaine Goodale Eastman: Sister to the Sioux in Her Own Words\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nJune 6\, 2018\, Wednesday\, 10:30 am-noon – Mark Haidet\, Walking Tour of the MN State Fair\nHistory Revealed Walking Tour\nMinnesota State Fairgrounds\, 1265 Snelling Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55108\nMeet at the History & Heritage Center. Reservations required\, limit 30.\nMore information and reservations. \nJune 28\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm\, Scott Carlson\, Twin Cities Beer\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nJuly 11\, 2018\, Wednesday\, Noon\, Peter Rachleff\, Immigration Then and Now: From Swede Hollow to Arlington Hills Walking Tour\nHistory Revealed Walking Tour\nEast Side Freedom Library\, 1105 Greenbrier Street\, Saint Paul\, 55106\nMeet at the History & Heritage Center. Reservations required\, limit 30.\nMore information \nJuly 26\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Mark Haidet\, The Minnesota State Fair During World War I\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nAugust 23\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Grant Merritt\, Iron and Water: My Life Protecting Minnesota’s Environment\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nSeptember 12\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Denis P. Gardner\, Our Minnesota State Capitol: From Groundbreaking through Restoration\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nSeptember 27\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – TBA\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all. \nOctober 10\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Susan Bartlett Foote\, The Crusade for Forgotten Souls: Reforming Minnesota’s Mental Health Institutions\, 1946-1954\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nOctober 25\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – TBA\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all. \nNovember 29\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Daniel Bergin\, North Star Stories\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nDecember 5\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Gibbs Farm staff\, Holiday Traditions on the Minnesota Prairie\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information.
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-elaine-goodale-eastman/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:Library Programs,Presentation,Research
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/ElaineGoodaleEastman.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20180322T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20180322T203000
DTSTAMP:20260421T213352
CREATED:20171027T131744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171027T131744Z
UID:10008536-1521745200-1521750600@rchs.com
SUMMARY:History Revealed: Booth Hospital
DESCRIPTION:Ramsey County Historical Society Presents\nKim Heikkila\, To Bear the Mark: Unwed Motherhood at the Salvation Army’s Booth Memorial Hospital\, 1913-1973 (or\, History\, My Mother\, and Me)\n\nHistory Revealed Series\nMarch 22\, 2018\nThursday\, 7:00 pm\nRamsey County Roseville Library\nFree and open to all. \nJoin RCHS for History Revealed\, our program series featuring presentations and tours from the best of local historians\, authors and archaeologists\, with a wide range of topics drawn from the heritage and traditions of Ramsey County. \nFor 75 years\, the Salvation Army in St. Paul operated a maternity home and hospital for unwed mothers. Booth Memorial Hospital housed thousands of young women who sought refuge – sometimes willingly\, sometimes not — from the public censure that their status usually elicited. In the early twentieth century\, mothers were encouraged to keep and raise their babies\, but after World War II\, public and expert opinion suggested that surrendering these “illegitimate” babies for adoption was the best solution – for mother\, baby\, and a deserving couple facing infertility. By the 1960s\, at the peak of the maternity home movement\, approximately 70% of single mothers at Booth relinquished their children for adoption. \nDr. Kim Heikkila’s mother was one of these women; she delivered her first daughter\, Dr. Heikkila’s half-sister\, at Booth in 1961\, surrendered her for adoption\, and kept the whole experience a secret for 33 years\, until that daughter found her long-lost birth mother. \nIn this talk\, Dr. Heikkila will explore the intersection of her mother’s story with the history of Booth Memorial Hospital and the experiences of seven former “Booth girls” with whom she conducted oral history interviews. \n  \n \nKim Heikkila has a doctorate in American Studies\, with a minor in Feminist Studies\, from the University of Minnesota. She has written about Booth Memorial Hospital for Ramsey County History and Minnesota History\, and has published several personal essays about her mother’s experiences as a birth mother and her own as an adoptive mother. She recently completed an oral history project with former Booth residents\, staff\, and related personnel\, which was sponsored by the Minnesota Independent Scholars Forum with funding from a Minnesota Historical and Cultural Heritage grant. Her first book\, Sisterhood of War: Minnesota Women in Vietnam (Minnesota Historical Society Press\, 2011)\, was a finalist for a 2012 Minnesota Book Award. She taught U.S. and women’s history at local colleges and universities for more than 10 years before leaving academia to open her own oral history consulting business\, Spotlight Oral History. \nThank you to the Ramsey County Roseville Library for their support of this program. \nHistory Revealed Presentations\nScheduled 2018 History Revealed Programs\nCheck back for updates! \nClick on the titles for more information.\nPlease note that topics and speakers may change. Check the website and our Facebook page for updates.\nPlease also note presentation location and times. \nMarch 22\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Kim Heikkila\, To Bear the Mark: Unwed Motherhood at the Salvation Army’s Booth Memorial Hospital\, 1913-1973 (or\, History\, My Mother\, and Me)\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nApril 18\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – James Marrinan & Bonnie Lindberg\, Value: It’s Not Always in the Money! A Look at YOUR Treasured Antiques\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102\nRegistration required.\nMore information and reservations. \nApril 26\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – John Diers\, 1\,100 Streetcars: The Rise and Fall of the Twin City Rapid Transit Company\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nMay 16\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Paul Nelson\, Rocky Roots: Walking Tour of the Geology of Downtown Saint Paul\nHistory Revealed Walking Tour\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102\nMeet at the Landmark Center. Reservations required\, limit 20.\nMore information and reservations. \nMay 24\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Terry Swanson\, Elaine Goodale Eastman: Sister to the Sioux in Her Own Words\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nJune 6\, 2018\, Wednesday\, 10:30 am-noon – Mark Haidet\, Walking Tour of the MN State Fair\nHistory Revealed Walking Tour\nMinnesota State Fairgrounds\, 1265 Snelling Ave N\, Saint Paul\, MN 55108\nMeet at the History & Heritage Center. Reservations required\, limit 30.\nMore information and reservations. \nJune 28\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm\, Scott Carlson\, Twin Cities Beer\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nJuly 26\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Mark Haidet\, The Minnesota State Fair During World War I\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nAugust 23\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Grant Merritt\, Iron and Water: My Life Protecting Minnesota’s Environment\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nSeptember 12\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Denis P. Gardner\, Our Minnesota State Capitol: From Groundbreaking through Restoration\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \nOctober 10\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Susan Bartlett Foote\, The Crusade for Forgotten Souls: Reforming Minnesota’s Mental Health Institutions\, 1946-1954\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nNovember 29\, 2018\, Thursday\, 7:00 pm – Daniel Bergin\, North Star Stories\nHistory Revealed Library Series\nRoseville Library\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville MN 55113. Free and open to all.\nMore information. \nDecember 5\, 2018\, Wednesday\, noon – Gibbs Farm staff\, Holiday Traditions on the Minnesota Prairie\nHistory Revealed Landmark Lunch Series\nLandmark Center\, 75 Fifth St W\, Saint Paul MN 55102. Free and open to all.\nMore information.\n \n  \n  \n  \nSave \nSave \nSave
URL:https://rchs.com/event/history-revealed-booth-hospital/
LOCATION:Ramsey County Library – Roseville\, 2180 Hamline Ave N\, Roseville\, MN\, 55113\, United States
CATEGORIES:Library Programs,Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Booth_Memorial_St_Paul_19461.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Ramsey County Historical Society":MAILTO:info@rchs.com
GEO:45.007478;-93.1557684
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ramsey County Library – Roseville 2180 Hamline Ave N Roseville MN 55113 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2180 Hamline Ave N:geo:-93.1557684,45.007478
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR