Maple candy sold through Native Harvest

Maple candy sold through Native Harvest

Ojibwe maple candy (Anishinaabe ziinzibaakwadoonsan) sold by the company Native Harvest, part of the White Earth Land Recovery Project, 2020s.

Photograph of Maple Leaf Farm

Maple Leaf Farm, Henrytown

Maple Leaf Farm, ca. 1913. The farm was owned by Michael Henry Onstine family, one of Henrytown’s founding families in Henrytown. Used with the permission of Amy Jo Hahn.

Black and white photograph of owners of a family farm in Maple Plain pose with their animals, October 10, 1955.

Maple Plain farm family

Owners of a family farm in Maple Plain pose with their animals, October 10, 1955.

Maple sap icicle, Mille Lacs

Maple sap icicle

Icicle made out of sap on a tree being tapped for sugar. Photograph by Moroe P. Killy, April 19, 1947.

Maple sugar candy

Maple sugar candy

Maple sugar candy molded into the shape of a maple leaf. From the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe, 1960–1985.

Maple sugaring paddle

Maple sugaring paddle

Paddle used for working maple sugar by the Big Bear family (White Earth Band of Ojibwe) ca. 1800s.

Image of wooden Maple sugaring skimming ladle

Maple sugaring skimming ladle

Ladle used as a maple sugaring skimmer by the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, 1900–1930.

Maple trees in maple sugar camp

Maple trees in maple sugar camp

Maple trees in a maple sugar camp. Photograph by Randy Croce, 1984.

Map of Niagara Cave system

Maps of Niagara Cave

A plan map (above) and a section map (below) of Niagara Cave. Published in R. K. Bower and T. N. Bayer’s Guide to the Caves of Minnesota (Minneapolis: Minnesota Geological Survey, 1967), pages 28 and 39.

Floor decoration honoring Father Michael J. Casey

Marble floor inserts honoring Father Michael J. Casey

Twin stripes of green marble—said to honor Father Michael J. Casey’s Irish heritage—in the floor leading up to the altar of the Church of St. Columba (St. Paul). Photograph by Paul Nelson, August 16, 2017.

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