Strike at the WPA gravel pit project

Strike at the WPA gravel pit project

Police, strikers, and workers at the Works Progress Administration gravel pit at Hidden Falls Park, July 1939.

Work Progress Administration sewing project strike, Minneapolis

Work Progress Administration sewing project strike, Minneapolis

Work Progress Administration (WPA) sewing project strike, Minneapolis, ca. 1939.

Works Progress Administration Strikes, 1939

In the summer of 1939, workers went on strike across the nation to protest budget cuts to the Works Progress Administration imposed by the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act. While they did not bring about the act’s repeal, they kept their jobs and were allowed to return to work after the strike. Minnesota was the only state in which strikers faced criminal charges for preventing people from working.

St. Stanislaus Church

St. Stanislaus Church

St. Stanislaus Church, Winona, ca. 1973

St. Stanislaus Church

St. Stanislaus Church

Postcard image of St. Stanislaus church and the original school, ca. 1905.

Basilica of St. Stanislaus Kostka

In 1895, the Polish immigrant community in Winona raised funds to construct St. Stanislaus Kostka, the grand church dominating the city’s skyline. The church, which still serves the East End parish, was listed on the National Register in 1984 and elevated to a minor basilica of the Catholic Church in 2011.

Henry Mower Rice

Henry Mower Rice

Henry Mower Rice in 1863. Rice was the archetypal "Moccasin Democrat," emerging from the fur trade as a capable and often unscrupulous treaty negotiator and politician. Rice authored the bill enabling Minnesota's statehood, became its first senator, and was instrumental in the development in St. Paul. At the same time, he used his position to enrich his friends from the fur trade and railroads through land speculation, often at the expense of the indigenous people who launched his career in the first place.

Franklin Steele

Franklin Steele, 1856

Franklin Steele was Fort Snelling's sutler, and made a fortune by staking claim to the eastern side of St. Anthony's Falls and building sawmills and a toll-bridge on the site of what would soon be Minneapolis. With the help of Congressman Henry Rice, his former assistant sutler, he purchased the 8,000 acres of land surrounding the recently decommissioned Fort Snelling from the federal government for $90,000 in 1857, hoping to make a profit selling prime land situated between Minneapolis and St. Paul. While the Panic of 1857 put these hopes on hold, he made more than $100,000 by renting the property back to the government during the Civil War.

Henry Hastings Sibley

Henry Hastings Sibley

Henry H. Sibley in 1865.

St. Paul at the intersection of Fifth and Wabasha Streets

St. Paul at the intersection of Fifth and Wabasha Streets, 1857

St. Paul at the intersection of Fifth and Wabasha Streets. Construction of the Cathedral of St. Paul is visible at center. Photograph by Benjamin Franklin Upton, 1857.

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