1. African American Students at Gustavus Adolphus College,1963–1982

    African American Students at Gustavus Adolphus College,1963–1982
    Creator: Sherick Francois | Key Date: 1970 | First Published: April 14, 2015

    Founded by Swedish Americans in St. Peter in 1862, Gustavus Adolphus College attracted a mostly white student body for much of its history. In the 1960s, the college took steps to diversify its campus by recruiting and retaining African American students from the South. This effort made Gustavus unique among Midwestern liberal arts colleges.

  2. African American Suffrage in Minnesota, 1868

    African American Suffrage in Minnesota, 1868
    Creator: Matt Reicher | Key Date: 1868 | First Published: May 21, 2014

    From their state's admission to the Union until the mid-1860s, a majority of Minnesotans advocated the abolition of slavery in the South. African American suffrage, however, did not enjoy the same support. Minnesota's African American citizens paid taxes, fought in wars, and fostered their communities. But they could not vote, hold political office, or serve on juries. This continued until 1868, when an amendment to the state's constitution approved suffrage for all non-white men.

  3. African Americans in Minnesota

    African Americans in Minnesota
    Creator: Tina Burnside | First Published: July 26, 2017

    African Americans have lived in Minnesota since the 1800s. The local African American population developed from individuals who were born in the state as well as those who migrated to Minnesota from other states in search of a better life. Despite being subjected to discrimination and inequality, African Americans established communities and institutions that contributed to the vibrancy of the state. This article defines African Americans as Americans who are descendants of enslaved black Africans in the U.S. and does not include immigrants or refugees from Africa (for example, Somali people).

  4. Bonga, George (ca. 1802–1874)

    Bonga, George (ca. 1802–1874)
    Creator: Eric W. Weber | Key Date: 1837 | First Published: October 29, 2012

    Fur trader and translator George Bonga was one of the first African Americans born in what later became Minnesota. His mother was Ojibwe, as were both of his wives. Through these relationships, Bonga was part of the mixed racial and cultural groups that connected trading companies and American Indians. He frequently guided white immigrants and traders through the region. Comfortable in many worlds, Bonga often worked as an advocate for the Ojibwe in their dealings with trading companies and the government.

  5. Boyd, Frank (1881–1962)

    Boyd, Frank (1881–1962)
    Creator: Paul Nelson | Key Date: January 1926 | First Published: June 8, 2016

    Frank Boyd was a celebrated organizer in Minnesota for the country’s most influential African American labor union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, from 1926 to 1951.

  6. Casiville Bullard House, St. Paul

    Casiville Bullard House, St. Paul
    Creator: Molly Huber | Key Date: 1909 | First Published: June 6, 2011

    The 1909 Casiville Bullard House in St. Paul is a rare example of a house built and owned by an African American skilled laborer in the early twentieth century in Minnesota. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997 in recognition of its significance.

  7. Civil Unrest on Plymouth Avenue, Minneapolis, 1967

    Civil Unrest on Plymouth Avenue, Minneapolis, 1967
    Creator: Susan Marks | Key Date: July 19, 1967 | First Published: December 21, 2015

    On the night of July 19, 1967, racial tension in North Minneapolis erupted along Plymouth Avenue in a series of acts of arson, assaults, and vandalism. The violence, which lasted for three nights, is often linked with other race-related demonstrations in cities across the nation during 1967’s “long hot summer.”

  8. Civilian Conservation Corps in Minnesota, 1933–1942

    Civilian Conservation Corps in Minnesota, 1933–1942
    Creator: Linda A. Cameron | Key Date: 1935 | First Published: July 25, 2016

    The U.S. Congress paved the way for the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) when it passed the Emergency Conservation Work (ECW) Act in March 1933, at the height of the Great Depression. This New Deal program offered meaningful work to young men with few employment prospects. It resulted in a lasting legacy of forestry, soil, and water conservation, as well as enhancements to Minnesota's state and national parks.

  9. Cooke, Marvel Jackson (1901–2000)

    Cooke, Marvel Jackson (1901–2000)
    Creator: Sherick Francois | Key Date: 1950 | First Published: August 6, 2012

    Marvel Cooke was a pioneering journalist and political activist who spent her groundbreaking career in a world where she was often the only female African American. Talking about her work environment for the white-owned newspaper the Compass, she told biographer Kay Mills in 1988, ''there were no black workers there and no women."

  10. Crispus Attucks Home, St. Paul

    Crispus Attucks Home, St. Paul
    Creator: Paul Nelson | Key Date: 1913 | First Published: February 24, 2014

    In 1910 there were over sixty orphanages and homes for the aged operated by and for African Americans in the United States. Minnesota had one of them: St. Paul's Crispus Attucks Home. The home was named for the African American patriot killed in the Boston Massacre of 1770. It served the community for six decades, beginning in 1906 during the Jim Crow era and ending in 1966 at the peak of the civil rights movement.

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