Whitewater State Park, May 22, 2009. Photo by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever. CC BY-SA 3.0

Whitewater State Park

Whitewater State Park, May 22, 2009. Photo by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever. CC BY-SA 3.0

postcard photograph showing Barn Bluff limestone formation

Whitney View

This c. 1860 photo shows the west face of Barn Bluff as viewed from the Wisconsin shore of the Mississippi River. Much of the lower portion of the bluff was removed in 1960 for construction of a highway bridge.

Wicker covered glass canteen.

Wicker covered glass flask canteen with cork

This canteen was carried through the Civil War by Minnesota's Fifth governor, William R. Marshall, colonel of the Seventh Minnesota Infantry Regiment.

Photograph of the Wiebe Quartet

Wiebe Quartet

The Wiebe Quartet, ca 1920s. Pictured are (left to right): Ben Friesen, Frank Woyke, Pete Ewert (seated), and Jacob D. Wiebe. Used with the permission of Glenn Wiebe.

Black and white photograph of the Wiens family homestead, ca. 1950s

Wiens family homestead

The Wiens family homestead, site of the Bible studies meetings that led to the formation of Bingham Lake Mennonite Brethren Church. Photograph by Mountain Lake Studio, ca. 1950s.

Wigwam on Nett Lake Reservation of Ojibwe, 1918.

Wigwam on Nett Lake Reservation of Ojibwe

Wigwam on Nett Lake Reservation of Ojibwe, 1918.

Black and white portrait of Wilbur Burton Foshay, 1929.

Wilbur B. Foshay

Wilbur Burton Foshay, 1929.

Black and white photograph of Foshay and Henry H. Henley facing charges of mail fraud, 1931.

Wilbur B. Foshay (right) and Henry H. Henley, facing arraignment on charges of mail fraud

Foshay (right) and Henry H. Henley face arraignment on charges of mail fraud, 1931. Photographed by the Minneapolis Star Journal.

Mug Shot of Wilbur Foshay

Wilbur Foshay

Wilbur Foshay’s mug shot, taken at Leavenworth Penitentiary, ca. 1934. Public domain.

Black and white photograph of Foshay and Henry H. Henley in Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, 1934.

Wilbur Foshay and Henry H. Henley

Foshay with his associate Henry H. Henley at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary following their conviction on mail fraud, 1934.

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