Exhibits
Posted on
January 8, 2022
The Links, Incorporated – Exhibit
50 Years of the Minneapolis/St. Paul (MN) Chapter of The Links, Incorporated 1972-2022 Linked In Friendship, Connected in Service Racial discrimination in Philadelphia was pervasive in both employment and housing and World War II brought new urgency to the struggle for civil rights. In 1945, the Philadelphia NAACP (National Association…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
Supreme Court – Persistence Exhibit
Rosalie Wahl In the 1970s, DFL women began to organize and work for more women to be appointed in government. They set their sights on getting a woman appointed to the Minnesota Supreme Court. This would allow them to last beyond the current governor. Rosalie Wahl (1924-2013) was the first…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
LGBTQI – Persistence Exhibit
PRISM Campus Alliance from St. Paul College marched in the Minneapolis Pride parade in June 2019. Minneapolis Star-Tribune file, Nicole Neri. In 1989, Governor Rudy Perpich proposed a state commission to study adding sexual orientation to the proposed Human Rights Act, which did not pass. Governor Arne Carlson issued an…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
Activism Continues – Persistence Exhibit
Katie McWatt Kathleen Curry McWatt Born in 1931, Kathleen Curry McWatt (1931-2010) grew up in Minneapolis. As a first grader, and the only African American child in her school, she was followed home by a group of white children who threatened to lynch her. With the support of her parents…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
Minnesota Women in Washington – Representation Grows – Persistence Exhibit
Mabeth Hurd Paige Minnesota did not elect another woman to Congress until Betty McCollum was elected from the fourth district in 2000. She began her political journey when she was elected to the North St. Paul City Council in 1986. In 1992, she was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives with…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
Minnesota Women in Washington – The Beginning – Persistence Exhibit
Anna Dickie Olesen Anna Dickie Olesen In 1922, Anna Dickie Olesen (1885-1961) ran for the US Senate as a Democrat from Minnesota. She was the first woman in the United States to run for Senate as the endorsed candidate of a major party. Her opponents were Republican incumbent Frank Kellogg…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
In the People’s House – Persistence Exhibit
Myrtle Cain In 1922, women were able to run for office. In 1923, four women reached the Minnesota State Legislature. After this success, however, few women followed in their footsteps. Numbers did not increase significantly until the 1980s. The 2019-2020 legislature includes sixty-four women, down from a peak of seventy-one…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
Forward Movement – Persistence Exhibit
Bertha Berglin Moller. Harris & Ewing, Photographer. The 19th Amendment Passes Congress in 1919 After the success of protests, progress stalled. President Wilson was focused on the war in Europe. In response, the NWP initiated the protests again. The Senate narrowly defeated the measure twice, in October 1918 and again…
Posted on
October 22, 2020
Silent Sentinels – Persistence Exhibit
Sylvie Thygeson. Silent Sentinels Bring a Loud Response Starting in January 1917, women from the NWP picketed the White House almost daily. They stood as “silent sentinels” holding banners. The NWP wanted to highlight what they saw as President Wilson’s hypocrisy. He was fighting for democracy abroad when millions of…