Black and white photograph of the showroom at Bradstreet, Thurber & Company, 513 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, 1891.

Bradstreet, Thurber & Company showroom

Interior view of the showroom at Bradstreet, Thurber & Company, 513 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, 1891.

Brandon Peeters – What Fort Snelling Means to Me

Brandon Peeters explains his personal connection to Fort Snelling in the Civil War.

Color image of a brass bell from a horse-drawn streetcar used by the Minneapolis Street Railway Company, c.1874–1891.

Brass bell from a horse-drawn streetcar

Brass bell from a horse-drawn streetcar used by the Minneapolis Street Railway Company, c.1874–1891.

Black and white photograph of young bakers participating in a bread-making demonstration at the 1918 Minnesota State Fair.

Bread demonstration at the 1918 State Fair

Young bakers participate in a bread-making demonstration at the Minnesota State Fair, 1918.

Break in the tunnel at St. Anthony Falls

Break in the tunnel at St. Anthony Falls

Break in the tunnel at Saint Anthony Falls, 1869.

Break in the tunnel at St. Anthony Falls

Break in the tunnel at St. Anthony Falls

Break in the tunnel at Saint Anthony Falls, 1869.

Break in the tunnel, St. Anthony Falls

Break in the tunnel, St. Anthony Falls

Break in the tunnel at Saint Anthony Falls, 1869.

Black and white photograph of a breakfast for Pillsbury Bake-Off contestants, Los Angeles, 1957.

Breakfast for Pillsbury Bake-Off contestants

Breakfast for Pillsbury Bake-Off contestants, Los Angeles, 1957.

Black and white photograph of a team breaking ground along the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad at Dalrymple Farm, twenty miles west of Fargo, 1878. Photograph by Frank Jay Haynes.

Breaking ground along the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad at Dalrymple Farm

Breaking ground along the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad at Dalrymple Farm, twenty miles west of Fargo, 1878. Photograph by Frank Jay Haynes.

Breezy Point Lodge

Breezy Point Lodge

The main lobby of Breezy Point Lodge, Breezy Point, 1926. The lodge was advertised at the time as the largest log building in Minnesota.

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