Jim Northrup, ca. 2010s. Photograph by Ivy Vainio. Used with the permission of Ivy Vainio.

Jim Northrup

Jim Northrup, ca. 2010s. Photograph by Ivy Vainio. Used with the permission of Ivy Vainio.

Northrup, James Warren (1943–2016)

James Warren Northrup was an award-winning Ojibwe author, columnist, playwright, poet, performer, political commentator, and Vietnam War veteran. He wrote extensively on combat life as a marine in the Vietnam War and on daily life on the Fond du Lac Indian Reservation.

Heart of the Earth Survival School yearbook, 1983. The school was located at 1209 Fourth Street in southeast Minneapolis.

Heart of the Earth Survival School yearbook

Chimigezi Winage, the Heart of the Earth Survival School's yearbook, 1983. The school was located at 1209 Fourth Street in southeast Minneapolis.

Duane Dunkley, director of Indian education for Minneapolis Public Schools, 1975. Dunkley wrote a grant proposal for the American Indian Cultural Center.

Duane Dunkley

Duane Dunkley, director of Indian education for Minneapolis Public Schools, 1975. Dunkley wrote a grant proposal for the American Indian Cultural Center.

Classroom in Redby Elementary School, Red Lake Reservation, ca. 1953. Photograph by Hakkerup Studio.

Redby Elementary School at Red Lake

Classroom in Redby Elementary School, Red Lake Indian Reservation, ca. 1953. Photograph by Hakkerup Studio.

Teacher and students, Morris Indian School, ca. 1895. Included are B. LeVivash, Joe Northrup, and Joe Siehy. Photograph by R. E. Brandmo.

Teacher and students from Morris Indian School

Teacher and students, Morris Indian School, ca. 1895. Included are B. LeVivash, Joe Northrup, and Joe Siehy. Photograph by R. E. Brandmo.

Northwest Trail

For untold generations, Indigenous people traversed North America’s interlocking waterways by canoe. When moving between drainage systems, it was necessary for them to bridge the high ground that kept the waters separated. This meant carrying, or “portaging,” canoes and belongings between watersheds. One of the most important portage routes in Minnesota, known today as the Northwest Trail, connected the Mississippi River to Lake Superior.

Gunflint Trail

The Gunflint Trail is a nationally designated scenic byway, also known as Cook County Road Twelve. It starts in Grand Marais and runs fifty-seven miles northwest to Trail’s End Campground near Saganaga Lake on the border with Canada. The trail, which cuts through parts of the Superior National Forest and the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, is a popular destination for fishing, camping, canoeing, hiking, and other outdoor recreation.

Rocks with pictographs at Nett Lake, ca. 1934. Photograph by Monroe P. Killy.

Rocks with pictographs at Nett Lake

Rocks with pictographs at Nett Lake, ca. 1934. Photograph by Monroe P. Killy.

Nett Lake Reservation of Ojibwe, ca. 1920.

Nett Lake Reservation of Ojibwe

Nett Lake Reservation of Ojibwe, ca. 1920.

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