American Woman Suffrage Association Convention, Minneapolis, 1885

The fight for woman suffrage in Minnesota was well underway when the American Woman Suffrage Association held its annual convention in Minneapolis in 1885. Key leaders of the movement were on hand to speak, among them prominent Minnesota suffragists, both female and male.

All American Girls Professional Baseball League player Marg Callaghan sliding into home plate as umpire Norris Ward watches (Opalocka, Florida)

All American Girls Professional Baseball League player Marg Callaghan sliding into home plate as umpire Norris Ward watches (Opalocka, Florida)

A hook slide into home plate during Fort Wayne inter-team practice game in Opalocka, Florida. Pictured are second baseman Marg Callaghan, 26, from Vancouver (formerly of the Minneapolis Millerettes); umpire Norris Ward; and catcher Vivian Kellog from Jackson, Michigan.

All American Girls Professional Baseball League members in Opalocka, Florida

All American Girls Professional Baseball League members in Opalocka, Florida

Bunk room session: Gene George, 20, a Peoria club member from Regina Saskatchewan, Canada, leans over from top bunk to point to pictures of catcher sister Bonnie Baker in Sport magazine. Left to right: Daisy Junor, 27, South Bend, Indiana, club from Regina, Canada; Dorice Reid, 19, Superior, Wisconsin, Chicago club member; and Dodie Healy, 19, Stockton, California, Chicago club member.

All American Girls Professional Baseball League members performing calisthenics in Opalocka, Florida. Black and White photo

All American Girls Professional Baseball League members performing calisthenics in Opalocka, Florida

The different baseball clubs pictured are (left to right): the Fort Wayne Daisies (partially visible), the Chicago Colleens, the Rockford Peaches, the South Bend Blue Sox, the Springfield Sallies, and the Peoria Redwings. Photographed on April 22, 1948. From the State Library and Archives of Florida’s Department of Commerce collection.

Minneapolis Millerettes

The short-lived run of the Minneapolis Millerettes brought professional women’s baseball to the Twin Cities. While providing entertainment during wartime and highlighting women’s athleticism on a national scale, the female players struggled against press perceptions and male competition. Their two-year run was immortalized in the film A League of Their Own.

Gown with bustle and train

Gown with bustle and train

Two- toned blue and teal taffeta bustled and trained silk gown attributed to Mary G. Worley, a dressmaker in St. Paul, Minnesota, ca. 1875.

Wedding gown

Wedding gown

Silk taffeta wedding gown, Lina Christianson, 1880.

Net and Satin Dress

Net and Satin Dress

Sequined net and satin dress attributed to Hattie H. McGahn, 1918–1923.

Bodice

Bodice

Chiffon bodice with lace made by Caroline Mundahl, 1915–1917

Rose Crelley Boyd

Rose Crelley Boyd

Rose Boyd operated the largest dressmaking business in Minneapolis between 1886 and 1917, employing between 40–100 seamstresses, fitters, designers and tailors and creating gowns for Minnesota's fashion elite.

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