Stone Arch Bridge, Minneapolis

Stone Arch Bridge, Minneapolis

Description: Stone Arch Bridge, 1884.

Stone Arch Bridge, St. Anthony Falls and milling district, Minneapolis

Stone Arch Bridge, St. Anthony Falls and milling district, Minneapolis

Postcard showing Stone Arch Bridge, St. Anthony Falls, and the milling district, c.1900.

Stone Arch Bridge, the milling districts and St. Anthony

Stone Arch Bridge, the milling districts and St. Anthony

Postcard showing Stone Arch Bridge, St. Anthony Falls, and the milling district, c.1900.

photograph of stone boat

Stone boat

A low-slung "stone boat" is loaded with limestone and ready to be pulled away from a Red Wing quarry, c. 1890.

The stone fence added to the Woodbury House property by the Caswell family in 1911. Both the vehicle and pedestrian gates are visible, opening onto an unpaved Ferry Street. Photographer and exact date unknown. Anoka County Historical Society, Object ID# 2074.1.5. Used with the permission of Anoka County Historical Society.

Stone fence around Woodbury House

The stone fence added to the Woodbury House property by the Caswell family in 1911. Both the vehicle and pedestrian gates are visible, opening onto an unpaved Ferry Street. Photographer and exact date unknown. Anoka County Historical Society, Object ID# 2074.1.5. Used with the permission of Anoka County Historical Society.

Black and white photograph of Stonebridge, c.1932. Designed by Clarence Johnston in 1914.

Stonebridge

Stonebridge, c.1932. Designed by Clarence Johnston in 1914.

Stoneware bottle

Stoneware bottle

Stoneware bottle created between 1846 and 1866. It has been refitted from multiple sherds and was found during excavation of the walled cnclosure behind the sutler's store at Historic Fort Snelling in 1969.

This bottle has a circular seal stamped just below the shoulder. On it the word "SELTERS" surrounds the image of a crowned lion standing on its hind legs. Stamped below this are the words "HERZOGTHUM NASSAU." These marks identify the former contents as mineral water from the Niederselters spring in the Duchy of Nassau, located in the modern state of Hesse Germany. The spring produced naturally carbonated water, and by the late eighteenth century, it was bottled and exported worldwide. By the nineteenth century it was so well known that one of our generic terms for carbonated water—seltzer—derives from Selters. During this period, mineral water was widely regarded as an effective cure for a host of ailments.

Black and white photograph of boarded-up storefronts on Plymouth Avenue in North Minneapolis, July 1967. Photographed by Twiggs.

Storefronts boarded up on Plymouth Avenue

Boarded-up storefronts on Plymouth Avenue in North Minneapolis, July 1967. Photographed by Twiggs.

Storied 1968: American Indian Movement

AIM—the American Indian Movement—began in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on July 28, 1968. It took form when 200 Native people turned out for a meeting called by a group of community activists led by George Mitchell, Dennis Banks, and Clyde Bellecourt. In this video, Bellecourt talks about about the movement and its growth over the past fifty years.

Much of the still photography in this piece was taken by Dick Bancroft, author of We Are Still Here: A Photographic History of the American Indian Movement (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2013). The remaining images are courtesy of the American Indian Movement Interpretive Center.

Storied 1968: Bill Tilton and the Minnesota Eight

Watch Bill Tilton, a member of the Minnesota Eight, recount his journey as an activist then and now.

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