This Day in Minnesota History

May 22, 2011

A tornado hits North Minneapolis, killing one and injuring thirty. The storm causes an estimated 80 million dollars worth of damages.

This Day in Minnesota History

October 11, 2011

The Minnesota Lynx win their first WNBA Championship, beating the Atlanta Dream in three games. This is the first championship won by a professional sports team in Minnesota since 1991.

This Day in Minnesota History

November 5, 2002

Norm Coleman is elected US Senator, defeating Walter Mondale by 2 percentage points. Mondale is a replacement candidate for Paul Wellstone, who was killed in a plane crash on October 25, 2002.

Color image of a steel animal trap used by the Hudson’s Bay Company.

Animal trap

Steel animal trap used by the Hudson’s Bay Company.

Color image of a musket stock used by the North West Fur Company. Made between 1790 and 1800.

Musket stock

Musket stock used by the North West Fur Company. Made between 1790 and 1800.

Nelson, George (1786–1859)

George Nelson spent nearly twenty years as a clerk in the fur trade, working for the XY, North West, and Hudson's Bay Companies. He kept extensive journals that offer a valuable picture of life in the fur trade and the culture of the American Indians he met during his travels.

Brin, Fanny Fligelman (1884–1961)

Fanny Fligelman Brin devoted her life to the causes of world peace, democracy, social justice, and Jewish welfare. Her long career as a peace activist included involvement with the National Council of Jewish Women, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and the National Committee on the Cause and Cure of War, among others.

Color image of a St. Paul Police revolver used in shootout with John Dillinger.

St. Paul Police revolver used in shootout with John Dillinger

1905 model Smith and Wesson hand-ejector military and police revolver used by St. Paul Police Detective Henry Cummings to injure John Dillinger in a shootout at the Lincoln Court Apartments in St. Paul, 1934.

Gangster Era in St. Paul, 1900–1936

St. Paul in the late 1920s and early 1930s was known as a “‘crooks’ haven”—a place for gangsters, bank robbers, and bootleggers from all over the Midwest to run their operations or to hide from the FBI. The concentration of local organized crime activity prompted reformers and crime reporters to call for a “cleanup” of the city in the mid-1930s.

Stone, Marcenia Lyle (Toni), 1921–1996

Marcenia Lyle (Toni "Tomboy") Stone broke both gender and racial barriers by becoming the first female professional baseball player in the Negro Major League. During her career, she played with a variety of men's teams before making history when she joined the Indianapolis Clowns, a Negro Major League Team.

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