November/December - Winona County Historical Society
Transcription
November/December - Winona County Historical Society
The Argus Winona County Historical Society 160 Johnson Street Winona, MN 55987 Argus The Non - Profit U.S. Postage PAID Permit # 87 Winona, MN 55987 Address Service Requested Winona County Historical Society Newsletter photo by Paul Crosby Volume 16, No. 6 November/December 2015 On the Wall in Wanek Hall A look at the Historic River Paintings in Wanek Hall of the History Center From an article in our newsletter “Chronicles” Volume 3, No. 2, Spring 1984 In 1984 the Winona County Historical Society received two oil painting for our collection. These two important paintings were done in 1879 by George Zell Heuston (1855-1939). The paintings were originally a wedding gift to his brother B.F. Heuston, a Winona lawyer and his wife, May Newman, the daughter of Circuit Judge, Alfred Newman. They were married on September 26, 1893 standing below the flag on Mount Trempealeau. B.F. and May moved to Tacoma, Washington shortly after and these paintings hung in their home there. After B.F.’s death, May brought them to her son Alfred’s house in New York City where they stayed after her death. Alfred’s wife left them with George F. Heuston, the artist’s grandson, who is also an artist, and lives in Garrison, New York. It is through the generosity of these two people that the paintings came to be in our collection. George Zell Heuston was born in Galesville, Wisconsin in a log cabin built by his father on land he was clearing for a family farm. During George’s boyhood his father returned from the Civil War wounded and the farm was lost. George had to pursue a new way of life. At this time the countryside was canvassed by itinerant portrait painters. They did crayon likenesses of prosperous farmers at five dollars a head. George got a job with one of them handling gear and taking care of the horse used to travel from farm to farm. He saved enough money that summer to buy some paints and began to paint views of houses, barns, and scenery. Sometimes he sold one for fifty cents. George left for Chicago to study art and a newly opened school, which would become the present day Art Institute of Chicago. After a year there, he came home for the summer and met a girl who loved music and had studied at the New England Conservatory for Music in Boston. Penniless, they were married in 1878. They settled in Lacrosse, Wisconsin and set up a photography studio and she gave music lessons. Their business plan failed after children arrived. After trying to be a professional artist in Chicago, they moved to Arcadia, Wisconsin and tragedy struck. George’s wife died of Tuberculosis, leaving him a widower with three children at age thirty-three. He tried newspaper reporting but that did not pay enough. Falling back on his art skills he became a draftsman for the urban publics works of Winona. He qualified as a civil engineer and was elected as Winona’s Civil Engineer. He remarried and had a comfortable life. In 1890 George followed his brother, Benjamin, to Tacoma, Washington. He set up a studio and went on sketching trips through the still wild county side. George became an art teacher and was the only painter in the northwest to be invited to the San Francisco World’s Fair. He eventually had a third wife and travelled and painted and prospered until his death in 1939. w Board Members Peter Walsh, President Mary Nelson, VP Tom Bremer, Treasurer Jonelle Moore, ex officio Secretary Michelle Alexander, City Council Sandra Burke Jerome Christenson Robert Fischer Tim Hoff Sue Hovell Margaret Johnson Ken Lindamann Patrick Marek Mary Polus Jim Pomeroy Pat Rogers Mike Slaggie LeRoy Telstad Cindy Timm Staff Mark F. Peterson, Director 507-454-2723 ext. 1 director@winonahistory.org Jennifer Weaver, Asst. Director 507-454-2723 ext. 3 assistdir@winonahistory.org Bette Jean Cichoski, Visitor Service & Shop Manager 507-454-2723 ext. 0 desk@winonahistory.org Jodi Brom, Curator 507-454-2723 ext. 4 curator@winonahistory.org Walter Bennick, Archivist Andy Bloedorn, Archivist 507-454-2723 ext. 2 archives@winonahistory.org Vickie Hokenstad, Maintenance 507-454-2723 ext. 0 Ann Kendrick, Membership membership@winonahistory.org Laurie Lucas, Rental Coord. 507-452-6609 rentals@winonahistory.org 2 History Never Stops Membership & Donations by Mark F. Peterson, Executive Director It was recently reported in the news that the Society purchased the two-story building at 118 W. Fourth St. with plans to eventually tear it down. This followed a similar purchase last summer of the property at 120 W. Fourth St. This would be a good time to let our members know what is going on. When we were planning our building expansion just over five years ago we looked at adjacent property to see what opportunities there might be. It became rather obvious that building the 12,500 foot addition was all we could undertake at that time, but in the process, we had a handshake agreement with both property owners that should they ever decide to sell their property they would talk with us first. Last summer the owner of the property at 120 W. Fourth, which by the way is the smallest commercial property in downtown Winona at 11’9” wide by 60’ long, approached us. The roof had collapsed and he wanted to sell. The property abuts our property. It also shares a common wall with the building at 118 W. Fourth St. A few months ago we were approached by one of the owners of 118 W. Fourth St. to see if we had an interest in buying their property. We were and over time we negotiated a price and with help from the family of Steve and Barb Slaggie we were able to close the deal. What does this mean for the Society? In the short run it gives us ample secure storage for much of the collection from the Arches Museum. In the long run it assures the Society that we will have space Winona County History Center Thank You for Your Support! photo by Kathy Greden to expand. Not if we expand, but when we do. It is inevitable that at some point in the future we will want more collection storage space and/or gallery space. We have now been able to assure ourselves that this will be possible. So, we have one very small building without a roof and one larger building that is in very poor condition. What are our plans for this property? For now we have asked the two remaining tenants to move out by November 30 (the main floor and two apartments are empty). We will continue to use it for storage until we can construct a new building at the Fairgrounds in St. Charles (following the sale of the Arches property). We will then tear it all down and create a nice downtown green space likely using a few architectural artifacts we have in our collection and add some seating and other amenities. The board looked carefully at this concept and agreed this was an opportunity we couldn’t afford to not take advantage of. I appreciate their foresight, the patience of the property owners and the support from the Slaggie family. w Business Partner Renewals: Biesanz Stone Co.; Bremer Bank; Edward Jones; Gordie’s BP; Hal Leonard Corp; Heart’s Desire, Inc.; Hoff Celebration of Life Center; Hy-Vee; Peerless Chain Co.; Sport & Spine; Wells Fargo Bank; Winona Daily News; Winona Post, Inc. New Members: Ben & Sharon Baratto; Jean & Clarence Chuchna, St. Charles, Mn; Bette Jean Cichoski; Nicholas Guy; Allen Halverson, Fountain City, WI; Allie Kabus, Independence, WI; Scott & Georganne Kaehler; Caylan Larson & Marcy Faircloth; Tim & Bonnie McBeth, Trempealeau, WI; Bill Wissman Renewals: Tom & Barb Ames, Rochester, MN; Don & Gwen Anderson, Minnesota City, MN; Jennifer Anderson & David Craw- ford; Dean & Mary Auna; Barbara Beeman; Marla Beeman; Betty Lou Bierly, LaCrosse, WI; Dr. Scott & Debra Birdsall; Lowell & Darlene Bjoraker; Les & Vi Boelter; Colleen Browne & Dan McKillop, Seattle, WA; Mary B. Burrichter; Steve & Mary Carson; Gerry Cichanowski; Gayla Clemons; Selma & Bill Crozier; John Davie, Trempealeau, WI; Robert & Barbara DuFresne; Nick & Lori Edstrom; Dr. Leon & Ramona English; Rosie & Duane Evans, Minnesota City, MN; Pamela Eyden & Reggie McLeod; Lyndie Fabian; Tom & Julie Fassbender; Retha & Richard Finger, Lewiston, MN; Steve & Mary Flad; David & Carole Forest; Timothy Forester; Jim Forsell; Bryan & Diane Forsyth, Houston, MN; Mary C. & Steve Fralish, Mankato, MN; Arlayne Fremling; Phyllis Frisch, Altura, MN; Ken Fritz; Dr. Todd Funk; Ann Gibson; Jane Habeck; George & Jane Henthorne; Carol Heyl; Glen & Carol Hines; Colette Hyman & John Campbell; Lawrence & Jeanette Indra; JoAnn Johnson; Victor Johnson & Judith Johnson, LaCrescent, MN; Nadine Kanz; Walter Kelly; Wayne & Bonnie Kelly; Chris & Jennifer Kendall; Charles & Sherrie Knopp; Jay Kohner & Emilie Falc; Roxy Kohner; Bernetta Kouba; Rita Lehnertz; Rodney Lingenfelter, Minneapolis, MN; Stanley G. Mann, Minnesota City, MN; Cindy Marek & Doug Lofthus; Edwin L. Maus, Minnesota City, MN; Kathy & Ron McGuire; Jeff Morgan, Fountain City, WI; Mount Vernon Township, Altura, MN; Bill & Sue Ann Mullen; Anah & Howard Munson; Steve & Jane Napieralski; Alan & Carole Nelson, Palm Desert, CA; Mary & Jan Nelson; Paul & Lori Ness; Beth M. Nienow, Rochester, MN; David Pendleton; Julie Pendleton; Nick Perrella; Coleen Peterman; Mary & Hugh Polus; Robert & Kathy Redig; Connie & John Roche; Linda Runstrom; Charlotte Rupprecht, Utica, MN; Dorothy Sanders; Marilyn A. Schneider; Mathias F. Schroeder; Florence M. Schubert, RN, Ed D; Rochester, MN; Kay Shaw; Chuck & Judy Shepard; Robert Shoup; Jim & Diane Sillman, Lucedale, MS; Lisa Rae Skalicky, Altura, MN; Karl & Karin Sonneman; Beverly Spande; Dave & Judy Stoltman; Jeanne Stremcha, Dakota, MN; Rosine Tenenbaum; Michael & Barbara Thern; Barbara Tibor; John Vivian, Lewiston, MN; Robert & Ruth Werner; J.J. Weimerskirch, Bismarck, ND; Jerry Whetstone; Elaine Wieczorek; Leighton J. Wilkie, Alma, WI; Linda Wood, Edina, MN; Dennis & Sharon Woychek; Brooks & Ann Wrampelmeier, Washington, D.C.; Thomas S. & Barbara Wynn; Brian & Susan Zeller Donations: Marianne Hohenner; RTP; Kathleen Barber; Margaret Gunther; Laurie Lucas, In Memory of Roy Votruba; In Memory of Dorothy Peterson: Eileen Martin; In Memory of Betty Woodworth: Thomas & Kimberly Dekart; Wayne & Bonnie Kelly; Gerald & Kathleen Thomas; Daniel Lee Challeen; Lorraine Gresel; Margaret Shaw Johnson; Mark & Teri Kusilek; In Memory of Patricia McGuire: Eileen Martin; Florence E. Badowich; In Memory of Mark S. Fawcett: Laurie Lucas; In Memory of Margaret Gunther: Kathleen & Chris Carroll; Sally Lehmann; Lynn Nankivil & Ken McCullough; Laurie Lucas; In Memory of Stewart Shaw: Laurie Lucas; Darlene M. Metzler; In Memory of Sheila Homola Murray: Laurie Lucas WCHS Museums 160 Johnson St., Winona, MN 55987 Open: Weekdays 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., Sunday 12 - 4 p.m. Laird Lucas Library & Archives; Open: Weekdays 10 a.m. - 12 & 1 - 5 p.m. The Willard Bunnell House Off Hwy 61, Homer, MN Open for scheduled performances and special events Rural Heritage Museum Winona County Fairgrounds; Open for special events Moving? Headed South for the winter? Be sure to let us know! Please send your change of address to membership@winonahistory.org so you don’t miss “The Argus” or other mailings. This also helps us save some money, not having to pay for returned mail. Thank you! Ensure the Future of the Past! Remember the Winona County Historical Society in your estate planning. 11 Clip and Save Calendar November 9 Quilt Guild, 7 p.m. 11 Food For Thought: Personal Artifacts: Preserving Your Family Stories and Heirlooms, with Jodi Brom, 12:05 p.m. 12 Civil War Round Table, 7 p.m. 18 Food For Thought: Creating the Winona Christmas Radio Show, with Paul Sannerud and Dan Munson, 12:05 p.m. 19 Wings in the Wind: The Armistice Day Storm of 1940 with Jon Steffes, Thursday, 7 p.m. 21 Handmade Neighborhood Sale and Museum Shop Specials, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 26 Closed for Thanksgiving 27-29 Not-So-Black Friday and Shop Local Specials in the Museum Shop December 1 7 9 10 12 14 16 24 25 Food For Thought/A Page in History: A Community Conversation with Sara Pajunen, 12:05 p.m. Annual Quilt Drawing Winner announced, need not be present to win. Food For Thought: Book Chat, The Memory Keeper’s Daughter, by Kim Edwards, 12:05 p.m. Civil War Round Table, 7 p.m. Hands - On History: German Christmas Star Craft Class with Polly Renk, 1 p.m. Quilt Guild, 7 p.m. WCHS’ Volunteer Christmas Breakfast, 8 a.m. Open 9 a.m. - Noon Christmas Eve Closed for Christmas January 1 - Closed New Year’s Day Get Your Quilt Tickets! House Tour Takes a Break Annual Quilt Raffle No Christmas Candlelight House Tour Dec. 6 The Winona Area Quilt Guild has donated “All Wrapped Up,”a Christmas theme quilt that is 90” x 100” for the WCHS annual quilt raffle fund raiser. You can view this fun quilt at the History Center and get your chances to win. $1 each. We will draw the winner Monday, December 7 at 8 a.m. Need not be present to win. w We will not be offering the Christmas Candlelight House this year. For the past few years it has been increasingly difficult to find homes for the tour and so it was decided to give the event a rest. After 29 years, the Christmas Candlelight House tour has had well over 150 homes, generously opened up for the public by their homeowners. Thank you to all those gracious hosts who allowed the community into their homes for this festive event. Also, a big thanks to the churches that participated over the years too, offering treats and entertainment. Thank you to all the volunteers and committee members who brought a great event together each year. Its been a success, but has run its course and we are looking forward to a couple NEW tours we will be offering in 2016 featuring County back roads and Winona’s glorious stained glass. Watch for more this Spring! w Ryan Lange is from Winona. His parents are Joanne and Dave and he has two dogs, Yogi and Icee. Ryan loves to travel, and enjoys history and museums very much. As a child he has travelled the tri-state area visiting historic sites and museums. Ryan has an extensive book collection on history and art. He also likes trying new cooking recipes and a good glass of wine. Ryan has a Bachelor of Arts in History after graduating from Winona State University in December 2014. He started volunteering in the archives and assists Andy in cataloging primary sources and other volumes into the PastPerfect database, a museum inventory software. Ryan likes volunteering the archives, helping preserve our past, and to help researchers access records and documents. Ryan says, “History is my passion, and by volunteering here, I have an Volunteer Spotlight active connection to that interest, as well as, a sense of joy by being able to help as much as I can.” Charley Langowski is also from Winona and is volunteering in the Archives. Her parents are Paul and Michelle and she has two siblings, Dani and Randi. She also has two dogs, Ole and Sven. Charley loves exploring the river when she is not doing her other hobby: applying for jobs. She is a graduate of Appalachian State University and studied anthropology and archaeology. She really enjoys seeing what people thought was important about their life and times in Winona and how they saved various items. One of Charley’s favorite quotes is, “Life’s what you make it, so let’s make it rock!” w Wish List Maintenance Volunteer to help with light bulbs, and other light carpentry jobs. $100 for magnetic reusable name tags. Program ideas and speakers. 10 3 Biography by Walter Bennick William Ashley Jones 1822-1914 Surveyor, Editor and Railroad Executive William Ashley Jones, the son of Augustus and Mary (Reyburn) Jones, was born on September 1, 1822 in Caledonia (Washington) Missouri. William’s father, an army veteran of both the War of 1812 and the Mexican War, was a wealthy slave-owning farmer and entrepreneur and a personal friend of President Andrew Jackson. At the age of 19-years, Jones was married to 21-year-old Eliza Jane Wallace Burt in St. Louis, Missouri. Eliza, the daughter of Andrew and Esebella (Onmsten) Burt, was born in St. Louis County, Missouri on December 27, 1820. The couple settled in St. Louis, Missouri where their first three children were born. In 1847, Jones and his family moved to Dubuque, Iowa where his uncle, Senator George W. Jones, lived. Jones purchased the Dubuque Miner’s Express and became its editor. It was in Dubuque where three more children were born and a daughter died. Jones sold off his interest in the paper in the spring of 1853 and obtained employment as a deputy federal surveyor as Dubuque was the headquarters of the Surveyor General of the Old Northwest Territories. He was assigned to the Minnesota Territory near Wapasha’s Prairie later that summer. Jones quickly acquired land on the claims of Orrin Smith, Erwin Johnson and Silas Stevens, and with his rural connections, he was able to acquire 160 acres in Mount Vernon Township and another 1500 acres in St. Charles Township. Around 1856, he established a farm on his St. Charles property and built the largest barn in the region on it. However, while acquiring this property, Jones “crossed swords” with Henry D. Huff who owned a good share of the plotted community. By the fall of 1855, Jones was living in Winona with his family, while in Winona, another five children were born and three died, including their 16-month-old son, Robert, who died on May 29, 1857. After settling in Winona, Jones was appointed by President Pierce to take a census of the “mixed-bloods” on the Lake Pepin reservation and to adjudicate their claims to reservation land. Soon after securing land in Winona Jones built a large building at the southeast corner of Third and Franklin Street, in which he made his home. The building later converted into the ten-room Stadt Hamburg Hotel, which in 1892, was razed to make room for a brick building. 4 In the early winter of the previous year, Jones had established the Winona Argus, the first newspaper in Winona. It was a 4-page, 6-column weekly with leanings toward states’ rights and took a proslavery stance and advocated against non-white citizenship. It editorialized that equality referred only to white Americans being equal to white Englishmen. Jones continued publishing the Argus until July 4, 1857 when he sold it to Henry B. Cozzens who closed it down on September 3, 1857. Again Jones crossed swords with Huff as Huff started his own newspaper, the Winona Weekly Express, which was more neutral in its political stance. Early in 1855, Jones became involved in two local transportation projects. In March of that year, the Territorial Legislature authorized the incorporation of the Winona Ferry Company to provide ferry service for Winona. The following year, the charter for the Transit Railroad was renewed and Jones bought $20,000 of company stock and was named the company’s vicepresident. However, during the financial panic of 1858-9 the stocks were deemed worthless and Jones lost all the monies he had invested. In 1858, Jones was elected the second one-year mayor of Winona, following Martin Wheeler Sargeant. After he served out his term it appears that Jones and his family moved to their farm near St. Charles. On October 12, 1859, while visiting the tenant in his old home, Jones was accosted by an intoxicated Joseph Denno who accused him of having his cattle damage his garden. During the ensuring pushing and shoving, Jones stabbed Denno, who soon died. Jones was arrested for manslaughter and was released on bail until his trial later in December. After a brief trial the jury found Jones not guilty of the charges and Jones returned to his home near St. Charles. About five years later, Jones and his family returned to Dubuque, Iowa where he worked as a surveyor, and for a while as the city recorder. In 1881, Jones filed a claim against the Minnesota Bond Commission regarding loses he incurred when the Transit Railroad was taken over by the Winona and St. Peter Railroad. Unfortunately, he lost his bid for recovery and blamed Henry Huff for his loss. Two years later, in 1883, Jones surveyed in Sully County, Dakota Territory and aided in the development of the Yankton, Okobojo and Fort Buford Railroad, of which he was named its president. It appears that around 1890, while Jones was living in Pierre, Dakota Territory, he and his wife, Eliza, separated and Eliza went to Minneapolis, Minnesota to live with her son, Stonewall Jackson Jones. In 1900, Jones was living in St. Charles, Minnesota and working as a surveyor, while his former wife was in Minneapolis with her son. By 1905, Jones was now in St. Paul, Minnesota and living in the city poor house. In August of 1908, Jones was being held in jail on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon for stabbing another poor house inmate. Continued on page 8 On Exhibit NEW Exhibits at the History Center We are Winona: The Cultures of Our County Now - January 10, 2016 Through historical biographies we explore the traditions of the various cultures that make up the people of Winona County. Featuring the exhibit, “One Community, Many Stories” from Project FINE, highlighting the stories of today’s immigrants to Winona County. Upcoming Exhibits for 2016! Warm Memories: Winona County Quilts January 15 – June 15 “Prof. Story” an African American musician and cook who lived in Winona during the early 1900s. Learn about him and others who were apart of Winona’s cultural heritage. We have a vast quilt collection and will be bringing out the best of them for viewing. We will also take a look at the heritage in quilting, origins of patterns, cultural influences, and how they hold the history of a life, a family, and a community. Art of Fine Furniture 2016 June 18 – July 31 The most popular exhibit WCHS has had, this 4th annual show will sure to be a hit again with all new pieces. Preserved in Paint: Winona County Art History Collection August 6 - October 30 From portraits to landscapes, some of our art pieces in the collection have been part of other exhibits, but many have not been on exhibit for a very long time, if at all. This exhibition will highlight the best of our art collection that will take us back in time to visualize Winona County years ago. Plan Your Visit! History Center Admission: $5 Adults, $3 Students, WCHS members free! Log-on to winonahistory.org and click MUSEUMS 9 Society News A New Microfilm Machine in the Archives Thanks to a Minnesota Legacy grant the Laird Lucas Library and Archives features a brand new microfilm machine. Fully digital, this new system can edit pages, cut and paste, save clippings, improve clarity and much more. What is micro film? It is a strip of film with small images of documents, mainly for saving newspapers, that are too large to store themselves. Andy or Walt will be happy to show you! Stop on in and check it out. A new series of programs are being developed for families and children too! Several will be offered this next summer. As before members will be able to get tickets first and receive discounts! The Winona Argus, volume one, number three, was published on Wednesday, October 1, 1854. Its first issue was published on September 20, 1854. It was published every Wednesday morning until September 3, 1857. It was a four page, six column sheet with pro-slavery and statesrights leanings. We would like to thank the crew of the Cal Fremling, our ticket takers, and the public for making this new way of presenting our past and relationships with the Mississippi River a success! ...and some history. The History on the River cruise programs aboard the Cal Fremling (operated by Winona State University) were a huge success this past season. Each Thursday, with a few added special trips, we took some of our regular programming on the river over the summer and into this fall. We are planning for next season and welcome any topic ideas related to local history and/or the river, but don’t worry we will bring back a few of the more popular topics too. You can send your ideas to info@winonahistory.org. The 17th Voices From the Past: Woodlawn Cemetery Walk was a great success rasing over $6500. Over 600 students came to learn more about our city’s street names October 7 - 9 and over 650 people came to the public tours over the weekend and the indoor performance that Thursday evening. We would like to extend a huge thank you to the dedicated volunteers that make this event what it is. The planning committee, script writers, actors, guides, treat bakers, parking attendants, and admission table helpers all create a wonderful and educational experience. We also greatly appreciate the Trester Trolley with Coldwell Banker Skeels/Moore for the rides around the Cemetery; Whitewater State Park for a naturalist site for the school days; the generous advertisers in the program, and our lead sponsor Merchants Bank. For 2016 we will explore the lives of the working class in Winona. From Knitting Mill workers to chamber maids, the 18th annual Walk will celebrate the people who made Winona work over the decades. 8 By Walter Bennick William Ashley Jones’s signature found in the Huff Hotel register, dated Oct. 1853 This is a view of Winona from the levee at the foot of Lafayette Street In the foreground is a two story building that stood along Front Street between Lafayette and Center Streets. The building next back is the Minnesota House, a hotel built by A. B. Smith and the third two story building became the offices of the Winona Argus in September of 1854. A Great Cemetery Walk Fun on the River From the Archives Biography, cont. from page 4. When Jones went before the court, he explained that he was a pauper. He once had over a million dollars in railroad stock which was deemed worthless when the railroad went into receivership and he was penniless. His wife had left him and he wandered the country, not being able to settle in one place. By 1910, Jones was an inmate at the St. Peter (Minnesota) Hospital for the Insane where he remained until his death on June 9, 1914; his remains being interred in the hospital’s cemetery. His former wife, Eliza, died on April 21, 1915 and was buried in the Crystal Lake Cemetery, which is located in North Minneapolis. w While working on the inventory records I came across an item identified as an “immigrant skirt”. I wondered what that was, so I did some research. I didn’t find anything, though, so I concluded that it must have been a skirt worn by an immigrant coming to America. It’s made of dark hand woven wool. The material was woven and made into a skirt by Maria Charlotte Fredricke Nemoth. She was born on October 10, 1817 in Pomerania, Prussia and married Johanna Kressin Sr. on November 4, 1835, also in Pomerania Prussia. Maria and Johanna had three children born in Prussia: Johanna, Jr, Wilhelm, and Caroline. The family sailed from Stettin, Germany on the ship “Ajax” and arrived in New York City on September 11, 1843. They ended up in Jackson, Wisconsin. There Heinrich (1845), Carl (1850), and Franz (1851) were born. Maria Charlotte passed away on April 5, 1853 in Kirchyan, Wisconsin and was buried in David Star Evangelical Lutheran Cemetery. The skirt came to Winona with Franz who married Johanna Henrietta Charlotte Fellfaum on April 13, 1880 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In Winona they had two children: daughter Adele Hellen Ottille Kressin who was born on February 28, 1884 and son Bonno F. G. Kressin on August 4, 1886. Adele worked for 30 years in the Winona Public School system as Clerk for the board of Education. She lived on east 7th Street and never married. Adele donated the skirt to the WCHS on June 25, 1964, while she resided at St. Anne’s Hospice in Winona. She passed Collection Corner By Jodi Brom away on September 15, 1966 and was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery. This has personal meaning for me because, although I was very young then, my mother worked at St. Anne’s and I believe I met Adele there! What a story! w 5 Food For Thought A Lunchtime Learning Series The Food For Thought learning series takes place at the Winona County History Center. Lectures, Films, and Book Chats begin at 12:05 p.m. and last approximately one hour (unless otherwise noted). Attendees are welcome to bring their own lunch. A beverage is served. All are free and open to the public. Helsinki, she founded three touring ensembles based on her Finnish heritage. Her current duo Aallotar explores the similarities and differences of cultures grown apart and in her solo work she melds audio interviews, concept, and acoustic and electronic music into live sound presentations. Her music has received grants from Minnesota State Arts Board and Koneen Säätiö and she is Finlandia Foundation’s 2015-16 Performer of the Year. She will be performing at the Minnesota Marine Art Museum through the Page Theatre’s Off the Page Series at 7:30. Both these experiences are free! Please RSVP for the evening performance through the Page Theatre box office, space is limited. Lecture Personal Artifacts: Preserving Your Family Stories and Book Chat The Memory Keeper’s Daughter, Heirlooms, with Jodi Brom, November 11, 12:05 p.m. WCHS Curator of Collections, Jodi Brom, will share some simple and effective ways to store and care for your family photos, heirlooms, and ways to document the history and stories they can share with future generations. The holiday time is a great time to gather grandpa’s memories of his old banjo or great grandmother’s crazy quilt or that funny photo of your uncle swimming for the first time. Order forms will offered for personal archival supplies, but the knowledge and ideas are free! Lecture Creating the Winona Christmas Radio Show, with Paul Sannerud and Dan Munson, November 18, 12:05 p.m. Theatre du Mississippi’s 4th annual Christmas Radio Show will feature the 1950s and many Winona memories. What procedures, processes and research go into developing a script? Join Paul and Dan as they take a look into the work for producing this unique local historically based performance. Mark your calendars for the performances held the weekend of December 4th, 5th and 6th. Lecture A Page in History, A Community Conversation with Sara Pajunen, December 1, 12:05 p.m. (Tuesday) Past and future. Is it important to know our history? What power do we have, with one life, to influence the future? How can the two connect? Sara Pajunen is a Minnesota-based musician. After receiving classical music degrees (violin) in both Minneapolis and Upcoming Books for Food For Thought Book Chat The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway January 27, 2016 6 by Kim Edwards, December 9, 12:05 p.m. Please note there is no November Book Chat and the December one is moved ahead due to holidays. On a winter night in 1964, Dr. David Henry is forced by a blizzard to deliver his own twins. His son, born first, is perfectly healthy. Yet when his daughter is born, he sees immediately that she has Down’s syndrome. Rationalizing it as a need to protect Norah, his wife, he makes a split second decision that will alter all of their lives forever. He asks his nurse to take the baby away to an institution and never to reveal the secret. But Caroline, the nurse, cannot leave the infant. Instead, she disappears into another city to raise the child herself. So begins this beautifully told story that unfolds over a quarter of a century in which these two families, ignorant of each other, are yet bound by David Henry’s fateful decision that long-ago winter night. (From Amazon books.) Our 2016 Calendars, which feature military pictures from our archives, are available at the History Center or any of our generous advertisWinona County HistoriCal soCiety Calendar er locations! A big thank 2016 you to Mary Nelson for selling ads and those who are in the calendar are: Altura State Bank, Bloedow Bakery, Boomers Plumbing, Bremer Bank, Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Winona, Coldwell Banker Skeels/Moore, Dahl Automotive, Edward Jones, Funk Dental, Great River Shakespeare Festival, Hawkins Ash CPAs, HBC, Winona HyVee, InTech, Merchants Bank, Midtown Foods, Minnesota Marine Art Museum, Plasticert, Russell and Associates, Schneider Heating and Air, Steak Shop Catering, The Grill and Signatures, Windom Park B&B, Winona Monuments, Winona National Bank. Thank You! Also, a thank you to Heather Ratz for her design skills. FREE! Programs & Events Wings in the Wind: The Armistice Day Storm of 1940 with Jon Steffes, Thursday, November 19, 7 p.m., at the History Center Jon Steffes is an elementary teacher from La Crescent, Minnesota. Besides teaching second grade, running the Summer Recreation and Aquatic Center for the City of La Crescent, and being the Vice President of the District 300 Foundation, Jon enjoys writing novels. Jon’s first book is called Dirty Hands, and is based on the 2007 floods that occurred in La Crescent. His second book is called Wings in the Wind: The Armistice Day Storm of 1940. Wings in the Wind used Jon’s father as the main character, following Bob Steffes through the blizzard that killed dozens of duck hunters in the Mississippi River bottoms in November, 1940. Jon’s third book is an outdoor mystery that takes place in northern Minnesota and is called Drawing Trouble. Jon’s fourth book will be out in October, 2015, and is called 45 Days. It uses Jon’s grandfather, Nic Steffes as the main character. Nic and his friend, Schmitty, trap the Trempealeau River bottoms for the majority of the trapping season during The Depression in 1937. It is a prequel to Wings in the Wind. Jon grew up in Winona, Minnesota and writes outdoor adventure books for readers of all ages. Jon loves to hunt and fish the river bottoms and bluffs he writes about and often gives talks to groups and schools about his books and the writing process. Hands - On History: German Christmas Star Create a German Christmas Star Ornament with Polly Renk, Saturday, December 12, 1 p.m. at the History Center Polly will guide the group through the process of making a German Christmas Star, which can be used as an ornament. These are popular Christmas ornaments since the early 1800s and have several names, including, Advent star, Danish star, German star, Nordic star, Pennsylvanian star, Polish star, Swedish star, Christmas star, and are considered Origami, because they are created with folded paper and no glue. The ones we will be creating will be the style of the Froebel Star, or Fröbelstern, in German. It is named after the German educationist Friedrich Fröbel (1782–1852), founder of the Kindergarten concept. He encouraged the use of paper folding for educating children about geometric and mathematical concepts. There are similar stars that use the term Moravian, which comes from what English speaking countries call the Moravian Church, but in Germany, they are known as Herrnhut stars, named after the Moravian Mother Community in Saxony, Germany, where they were first commercially produced. These stars are often illuminated and can have as many as 110 points! This class is free and all supplies are included. Please sign up by calling 507-454-2723 ext. 0 or stop in the History Center. Space is limited. 7