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One hundred years ago the world was a very different place – in some ways, but not all ways! High school yearbooks from the past show us that high school ....
Memorial Day is May 31 this year. For so many people, it has become the holiday that marks the start of the summer. But it is important to remember that ....
The following article is a blending of information from several sources. The Mesaba Ore, a weekly newspaper, on February 23, 1907, reported about the problems caused by the mine for area roads. The Hibbing Daily Tribune published an article on December 2, 1973, at the time of the mineâs closure. The Chisholm Free Press on December 27, 1973, also published information about the mine and its impact. Marvin G. Lamppaâs outstanding book âMinnesotaâs Iron Countryâ supplied information to this article. Aaron Brownâs âMinnesota Brownâ website also contributed to this article about the Mighty Mahoning. Every iron ore mine in northern Minnesota has a story or two (or more!) connected to it. There are stories of discovery, of course, but also stories of odd events, powerful men and equipment, and sometimes death. ....
Throughout the years of Iron Range history, there is a thread that runs unbroken â hard-working people. The Anishinaabeg people lived on this land and drew sustenance from the flora and fauna. Then, as the people of European lineage arrived, new ways of surviving arrived also. The Anishinaabeg people knew the rhythms of the seasons and when to hunt, plant, and harvest. Later, the white men who surveyed the land, cut down the trees, developed farm land, dug test pits and put down the railroad lines all had to work hard. And what about the women? They had to be of every bit the same tough stuff as the men. The Anishinaabeg women planted gardens, stretched animal furs, preserved the bounty of the land with none of the security and conveniences we enjoy today. The white women who would call northern Minnesota home in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries toiled in cold shanties, one-room schoolhouses, large vegetable gardens, or behind store counters with no indoor p ....
For people in my parentsâ generation, there were many dates that held special significance. Sadly, the significance of these dates has faded as âThe Greatest Generationâ leaves us. âDecember 7, 1941, a date that will live in infamyâ stated President Franklin Roosevelt. For Americans, it meant that their lives were about to undergo a massive change after the Japanese attack on the American Pacific Naval Fleet in Hawaiiâs Pearl Harbor. Europe had already been suffering through over two years of horrid war, and now America would fully engage in the fight. June 6, 1944 â the great invasion of Europe began. D-Day was a day that brought hope, though the cost paid was very high. Reading the casualty lists from that one day alone is heartbreaking. ....