Black and white photograph of Winneshiek II (second from left) and other Ho-Chunk leaders, c.1865.

Winneshiek II (second from left) and other Ho-Chunk leaders

Winneshiek II (second from left) and other Ho-Chunk leaders, at Fort Snelling, c.1865. The man third from the left is thought to be Waukon Decorah, a leader in Ho-Chunk diplomatic relations with the United States.

Black and white photograph of Ho-Chunk leader, Winneshiek II, c.1865.

Winneshiek II, Ho-Chunk leader

Ho-Chunk leader, Winneshiek II, c.1865.

Black and white photograph of Ho-Chunk leader, Winneshiek II, likely at Fort Snelling, 1863

Winneshiek II, Ho-Chunk resistance leader

Ho-Chunk leader, Winneshiek II, likely at Fort Snelling, 1863. Winnesheik II led Ho-Chunk resistance against the treaty of 1859. His band was the last to submit to removal from Minnesota.

Winnibigoshish Dam.

Winnibigoshish Dam

Lake Winnibigoshish dam after the first round of renovations, 1904.

Winona County Courthouse

Winona County Courthouse

Winona County Courthouse (built in 1889), Winona, Minnesota. Photograph by Wikimedia commons user Jonathunder, October 31, 2009. GNU Free Documentation License 1.2.

Winona LaDuke

Winona LaDuke

Winona LaDuke, founder of the White Earth Land Recovery Project (WELRP) and a co-founder of Honor the Earth, speaks at the University of Washington’s Intellectual House in Seattle on March 10, 2018. CC BY 4.0

Winona Library Public Stacks

Winona Library Public Stacks

Iron book shelves with glass floors in the stacks of the Winona Public Library. Photograph by Greg Gaut, 2019. Used with the permission of Greg Gaut.

Color image of the Winona Masonic Temple, c.1998.

Winona Masonic Temple

Winona Masonic Temple, c.1998.

Winona Normal School

Winona Normal School

The main building of the Winona Normal School, built in 1869, destroyed by fire in 1922. Date unknown. Used with the permission of Winona Historical Society.

Winona Normal School

Winona Normal School

The main building of the Winona Normal School, built in 1869, destroyed by fire in 1922. Pictured ca. 1900.

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