T. B. Walker inside the Walker Art Gallery

T. B. Walker inside the Walker Art Gallery

T. B. Walker standing on the grand stairway inside the Walker Art Gallery (later called the Walker Art Center), ca. 1925.

T. B. Walker with his five sons

T. B. Walker with his five sons

Thomas Barlow (T. B.) Walker with his five sons (left to right): Fletcher, Willis, Archie, T. B., Gilbert, and Clinton, 1907. Leon, a sixth son, had died in 1887.

T. Thomas Fortune, 1902.

T. Thomas Fortune

T. Thomas Fortune, 1902. Fortune, a former slave, became a well-respected newspaperman and author. Among the reporters he employed was Ida B. Wells-Barnett.

Black and white photograph of T. W. Thorson, ca. 1950s.

T. W. Thorson

T. W. Thorson, ca. 1950s.

T.B. Walker Art Gallery, 807 Hennepin Avenue, Minneapolis

T.B. Walker Art Gallery

T.B. Walker Art Gallery, 807 Hennepin Avenue, Minneapolis, c.1890.

Ta Oyate Duta

Ta Oyate Duta

Ta Oyate Duta, also called Little Crow, in 1862. He was a leader of the Mdewakanton Dakota people during the US-Dakota War of 1862. Ta Oyate Duta means "His Red Nation," but he was known as Little Crow because of a mistranslation by Europeans of his grandfather's name, Ċetaŋ Wakuwa Mani (Hawk that Chases Walking).

Ta Oyate Duta (Little Crow)

Ta Oyate Duta (His Red Nation, also known as Little Crow)

Ta Oyate Duta (His Red Nation, also known as Little Crow), 1862.

Table used at Yuen Faung Low (John's Place)

Table was used at Yuen Faung Low (John's Place) Chinese restaurant in Minneapolis, between 1945 and 1960.

Tablet to Peter M. Gideon

Tablet to Peter M. Gideon

Tablet to Peter M. Gideon, one-half mile north of Highway 7, Shorewood, 1936. Photograph by A.F. Raymond.

Taconite Amendment bumper sticker, 1964. To promote a “yes” vote on the taconite amendment to rewrite the tax structure that affected taconite operations, advocates made bumper stickers to advertise their cause.

Taconite Amendment bumper sticker

Taconite Amendment bumper sticker, 1964. To promote a “yes” vote on the taconite amendment to rewrite the tax structure that affected taconite operations, advocates made bumper stickers to advertise their cause.

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