Color image of a Eastlake upholstered side chair, used in the second state capitol, ca. 1890s.

Eastlake upholstered side chair

Eastlake upholstered side chair, used in the second state capitol, ca. 1890s.

Eberhart campaign button

Eberhart campaign button

Gubernatorial campaign button for Adolph O. Eberhart, c.1909.

Eberhart campaign button

Eberhart campaign button

Adolph O. Eberhart gubernatorial campaign button, 1912.

Color image of the Ecolab building, 2014. Photograph by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever.

Ecolab building

Ecolab building, 2014. Photograph by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever.

Color image Ecolab buildings, St. Paul, July 2017.

Ecolab buildings

Ecolab buildings, St. Paul, July 2017. In the foreground, the new Ecolab headquarters in downtown St. Paul. Behind can be seen the old tower on Wabasha, still bearing the Ecolab name.

Black and white photograph of Economics Laboratory, 144–146 South Livingston Avenue, St. Paul, ca. 1955.

Economics Laboratory

Economics Laboratory, 144–146 South Livingston Avenue, St. Paul, ca. 1955.

Black and white photograph of economics Laboratory employees, 1935.

Economics Laboratory employees

Economics Laboratory employees, 1935.

Black and white photograph of Economics Laboratory, 293 Como Avenue, St. Paul, October 8, 1962.

Economics Laboratory, 293 Como Avenue, St. Paul

Economics Laboratory, 293 Como Avenue, St. Paul, October 8, 1962.

Black and white photograph of an Economics Laboratory, 800 Eustis Street, St. Paul, ca. 1956.

Economics Laboratory, St. Paul

Economics Laboratory, 800 Eustis Street, St. Paul, ca. 1956.

Ed Wilson and Mike Flatt

Ed Wilson and Mike Flatt at the dedication of Grand Portage as a National Historic Site

Image from the 1951 ceremony dedicating Grand Portage as a National Historic Site. Ed Wilson, the chief of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe (MCT), is shown speaking at a podium in front of the reconstructed Great Hall. Mike Flatt, head of the Grand Portage Band of Chippewa, is seated at right. The Grand Portage Band is part of the MCT, which was created as a result of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. The ceremony was attended by politicians, officials, and conservationists from Minnesota, the federal government, and Canada—some of whom are visible behind Wilson and Flatt. Photograph by Abbie Rowe.

Pages

Subscribe to Multimedia