Slide show presentation featuring Don Wallenberg from Corsica, South Dakota and Albert Wanous from Pine City, Minnesota. Also includes images relating to Co-ops in Minnesota
Creator:
Interregional Cooperatives
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Magrath Library.
Positioned on left side of photograph, a front view of a bust of Anna Pavlova. Inscribed on the back of the photograph "Bust by Lauroff owned by George Chaffe"(?)
Creator:
Lauroff
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Special Collections and Rare Books.
A scrim panel is inserted into a double doorway. Two side windows mirror the green double door pattern. The design elements depicted in the windows and doorway are very reminiscent of the interior Temple view in tehatre installation photograph, accession #MSSCG721.
Creator:
DuBois, Don C.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Performing Arts Archives.
Funeral for Samuel Yblonsky at Chesed Shel Emes Cemetery. In attendance is Lena Ylonsky, Samuel's wife, and the St. Paul chaper of the Jewish War Vets. Chesed Shel Emes Jewish War Vet. Silent.
Contributor:
Dorr, Bertha
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Nathan and Theresa Berman Upper Midwest Jewish Archives.
A group of adults and children in a small town (probably in Superior, Wisconsin or Ely, Minnesota) gather for a funeral procession. A coffin sits on a sidewalk, in front of a building marked with the sign "Undertaking." A horse-drawn hearse waits nearby.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Account books and correspondence collected by John A. Bardon relating to the following fur traders and missionaries: Friedrich Baraga, Clement H. Beaulieu, Stephen Bonga, Joseph Cadotte, Paul Morrison, Francis Pierz, and Francois Roussain. The nine account books (1852-1864), written in Ojibwe, French, and English, record trade with the Indians.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Department of American Indian Studies.
Pharmacy bottle. Cylindrical clear plastic pharmacy bottle with a wide, short cylindrical neck and a clear plastic stopper with a disc-shaped head; gold, black, red and paper label. Contains manufacturer markings:"G. ACACIAE."
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Owen H. Wangensteen Historical Library of Biology and Medicine.
The borders of the lungi have two contrasting colors (typically called Ganga and Jumna) which allows the wearer to reverse the cloth and seemingly have two separate lungis. Cotton
Members of the Greek American Progressive Association spell out the letters "G.A.P.A." during a ceremony. An American flag and a Greek flag sit on the altar-like table.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.