Anoka Halloween Celebration, ca. 1925

Anoka Halloween Celebration, ca. 1925

Anoka Halloween Celebration, ca. 1925.

Anoka Halloween Celebration kids’ parade, 1990, Minnesota

Anoka Halloween Celebration kids’ parade, 1990

The "Halloween Capital of the World" float in the Anoka Halloween Celebration kids’ parade, 1990. Miss Anoka Kristin Young seated in back, Princess Jennifer Foss in front. Used with the permission of the Anoka County Historical Society.

Anoka Halloween Celebration

Anoka, Minnesota, became the Halloween Capital of the World in 1937. The title recognizes its status as one of the first cities to discourage Halloween tricks by hosting a city-wide party: the Anoka Halloween Celebration.

Senator Walter Mondale waves from the back of a car in the Minneapolis Aquatennial Parade, 1972

Senator Walter Mondale waves from the back of a car in the Minneapolis Aquatennial Parade, 1972

Senator Walter Mondale was a special guest at 1972’s Aquatennial. He would return to the festival as vice president in 1977.

Milk carton kayak used in Minneapolis Aquatennial, 1971

Milk carton kayak used in Minneapolis Aquatennial, 1971

Kayak constructed of waxed paper milk cartons over wooden frame with masonite supports. Brands of milk cartons used include Land-O-Lakes, Target, Polka-Dot Dairy, Inc., Dairy Fresh Brand, Purity-Ohleen, Franklin and Farmdale. Large advertisement stickers adhered to top of kayak are for sponsors including radio stations KDWB 63, and WDGY and Dairy Queen. Paddle wheel attachment is constructed of masonite with wood beam supports. Paddle hand crank made of white PVC pipe connected to wood supports with a small metal bracket connected to wood. Used in the 1971 Minneapolis Aquatennial.

1968 Minneapolis Aquatennial Skipper pin

1968 Minneapolis Aquatennial Skipper pin

Sales of commemorative “Skipper pins” have financed Aquatennial programming for decades. Many volunteers wear decades worth of pins on their lapels or hats during the festival to highlight their years of service with the organization.

Sonny And Cher Aquatennial concert advertisement, 1967

Sonny And Cher concert advertisement, 1967

Sonny and Cher were scheduled to be 1967’s headline musical performers supplementing the more psychedelic “Happening” concert series which included Buffalo Springfield, the Electric Prunes, and Jefferson Airplane. Tragically, Cher suffered a miscarriage shortly before the show was planned to begin. To save face for a heavily promoted show, the duo’s agent and radio promoters convinced a reluctant Sonny to leave California for the show while Cher recovered at a hospital. After holding a last-minute audition for backup female singers, Sonny performed his first show ever without Cher.

Aquatennial Queen Connie Haenny, 1963

Aquatennial Queen Connie Haenny, 1963

While winning the Queen of the Lakes pageant came with impressive perks for candidates in the early decades of the Aquatennial such as new cars and international trips, schedules proved grueling at times. 1962’s Queen of the Lakes, Pamela Jo Albinson, recalled the work which went into being featured in the parades: “Connie and I had to stand because of the float design. We were strapped into a metal waist--harness attached to a sturdy pole. Then our dresses were placed over the contraption. When the float jounced or jostled, it was quite a task to remain poised and posed.” Pamela Albinson, Seventy Five Years of the Minneapolis Aquatennial (Minneapolis: Nodin Press, 2014). Used with permission of the Hennepin County History Museum.

Visiting "royalty" from Rio’s Carnival, 1963

Visiting "royalty" from Rio’s Carnival, 1963

Visits from parade royalty from around the world, as well as from diplomatic officials served the Aquatennial’s original goal of building business connections between Minnesota and cities both at home and abroad. Minneapolis Aquatennial Souvenir Program Collection, Call # F.613.M93 M52. Used with permission of the Hennepin County History Museum.

Promotional material for Richard Nixon, Aquatennial 1958

Promotional material for Richard Nixon, Aquatennial 1958

Richard Nixon served as grand marshal of the Aquatennial in 1958, the first vice president to do so since Alben Barkley in 1950. Used with permission of the Hennepin County History Museum.

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