Parching wild rice at Nett Lake

Parching wild rice at Nett Lake

Bebaa migizi go gaa (Mrs. Peter Fields) uses a traditional Ojibwe method to parch wild rice at Nett Lake. Photograph by Monroe P. Killy, September 1, 1946.

Park at Pine River, ca, 1910s

Park at Pine River, ca, 1910s

Park at Pine River above the dam, ca. 1910s or 1920s. Photograph from Logsleds to Snowmobiles, used with permission of the Pine River Chamber of Commerce.

Black and white photograph of a park building, Interstate State Park, ca. 1936.

Park building, Interstate State Park

Park building, Interstate State Park, ca. 1936.

Parks in northern Minnesota

Parks in northern Minnesota

Map of parks in northern Minnesota. National Park Service, ca. 2005. Public domain.

Parlor of the Women's State Reformatory, Shakopee

Parlor of the Women's State Reformatory, Shakopee

Parlor of the Women's State Reformatory, Shakopee, ca. 1950.

A partial view of the Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church (Our Savior’s Lutheran Church) in Ham Lake. This image was originally a slide. Photographer and date unknown. Anoka County Historical Society, Object ID# 235.1.05

Partial view of Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church

A partial view of the Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church (Our Savior’s Lutheran Church) in Ham Lake. This image was originally a slide. Photographer and date unknown. Anoka County Historical Society, Object ID# 235.1.05

Participants in a Kiddies Parade, an annual event held during the summer in New Ulm, Minnesota. The children and parents make all of their own costumes and floats.

Participants in a Kiddies Parade ca. 1975

Participants in a Kiddies Parade, an annual event held during the summer in New Ulm, Minnesota. The children and parents make all of their own costumes and floats.

Photograph of participants in a Somali Independence Day event

Participants in a Somali Independence Day event

Participants in a Somali Independence Day event dance to traditional music. Photograph by Bill Jolitz, 2012. Printed in Somalis in Minnesota, by Ahmed Ismail Yusuf (St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2012), 7.

Black and white photograph of a translator with three Ojibwe men. The Ojibwe leader Miskogwan (Red Feather) stands on the far right. Northwest School of Agriculture Dedication Day, October 5, 1920.

Participants in NWSA Dedication Day

Three Ojibwe men with a translator. The Ojibwe leader Miskogwan (Red Feather) stands on the far right. Northwest School of Agriculture Dedication Day, October 5, 1920.

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