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Archive for July, 2008

Lowertown Manuscripts Collections Available

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Two new, related manuscripts collections are now available for use:

Lowertown Redevelopment Corporation Records, 1961-2007
(bulk of the records is between 1978 and 2006).
56.5 cubic feet (57 boxes).
MHS call number: ALPHA (see the green Alpha manuscripts notebooks for a list of the boxes and locator numbers, or use the online inventory).

Records of a St. Paul-based non-profit corporation that, working in partnership with the city and the private sector, developed and worked to bring to fruition a development strategy for Lowertown, a run-down 18-block historic warehouse district located at the eastern end of downtown St. Paul, with the goal of preserving and renovating historic sturctures, ensuring that new construction was compatible with existing historic buildings, attracting new business ventures and investment, and creating housing and entertainment venues in the area.

Weiming Lu Papers, 1963-2007
14.5 cubic feet (15 boxes).
MHS call number: ALPHA (see the green Alpha manuscripts notebooks for a list of the boxes and locator numbers, or use the online inventory).

Personal papers of a Chinese-American urban planner who for many years served as executive director of the Lowertown Redevelopment Corporation in St. Paul. The collection includes information on Corporation projects, as well as on a variety of Chinese-American and Asian-American organizations and projects in the United States. The collection includes an autobiography of Weiming Lu entitled “Being a Global Person,” which is a PDF of a PowerPoint presentation.

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Northern Pacific Land Department Records

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

The Minnesota Historical Society Library is pleased to announce that William M. Bomash’s Guide to a Microfilm Edition of The Northern Pacific Land Department Records is now available online with full text search capability.

The guide details the origin of records, an historical sketch of the Northern Pacific Railroad and its land grant, and a detailed description of the contents of each roll. The records are divided into four series: Land Department letters received and related records (1870-1876, reels 1-14), Land Department letters sent (1871-1876, reels 15-32), printed materials (1821-1876, reels 33-37), and Land Committee minutes (1871-1876, reel 37). In addition, a separate microfilm roll (reel 38) contains extensive editor’s notes about the content of the records.

The microfilm is available for use in the Hubbs Microforms reading room of the Minnesota Historical Society Library and is available for sale (scroll down about half way) and on interlibrary loan.

The records contain correspondence, reports, maps, minutes, and printed materials documenting the establishment and operation of the Northern Pacific’s Land Department’s main office in New York City and its local, district, and foreign offices. Major topics include the acquisition, preparation for sale, and promotion of the company’s extensive land grant from Minnesota to Washington Territory and foreign immigration and domestic migration to and settlement of the region tributary to the line, including the employment of and supervision of emigration agents in Scandinavia, the British Isles, and northern Europe. Substantial data are found on the Yeovil Colony (near Hawley, Minnesota), the Furness Colony (near Wadena, Minnesota), and other colony projects near Detroit Lakes, Minnesota, and in the Red River Valley, and on townsites proposed for development by the Lake Superior and Puget Sound Company and the Tacoma Land Company.

There is also a great deal of information on the company’s financial relationship with Jay Cooke & Co., as well as the relationship between the American railroad industry and the national and international financial communities; on the railroad’s relationship with competing lines, especially with the St. Paul and Pacific Railroad; on the railroad’s attitudes and policies toward the American Indians living on lands included within the railroad’s land grant; on the social, economic, and political conditions in the United States, Europe and Canada; and on numerous related topics, including, for example, the Chicago Fire of 1871 and the International Exposition held in Vienna in 1872-1873.

A host of major national and international business and political leaders are represented in this collection, of which the following is a sample: George L. Becker, Frederick Billings, Thomas Hawley Canfield, Jay Cooke, Columbus Delano, Horace Greeley, George B. Hibbard, John S. Loomis, William K. Mendenhall, James Buel Power, Thomas Lafayette Rosser, George Sheppard, John Gregory Smith, James Wickes Taylor, Hermann Trott, Benjamin Franklin Wade, and George B. Wright.

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Using the Blog

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

The following user guide will help you get more out of your blogging experience.

Creating a New Account

You do not have to register to add a comment; however by registering, your comments — after your first comment — will appear directly without waiting for approval.

  • To create an account scroll down to the “Login or Register” section in the right-hand menu and select “Register.”
  • On the next screen enter a username and an e-mail address, then click “Register.”
  • Go to your email inbox and retrieve the automatically-generated password.
  • To log in, go back to the Researchers Notebook and enter your username and password on the Login page, then click “Login.”
  • You should be forwarded to a Profile and Personal Options page. There you can add your real name, personal or organization’s web site address, Instant Message ID, biographical information, and, most important, change your password.
  • Note: If you forget your password, the website gives you the option of having it sent to your e-mail address so you can retrieve it.
  • The page also gives you the option of selecting what public profile name you wish to appear with your comments. Be aware that you first have to add your First/Last Name and Nickname and save the profile before you will be able to select them to use as your public profile name.

Leaving a Comment

  • You now have the option of not only commenting on the post, but also commenting on other persons’ comments.
  • You have the option of being notified of follow-up comments via e-mail.

Captcha

In addition to several anti-spam features, the blog is protected by the service, “reCaptcha”.

  • Before anyone can leave a comment, they have to verify they are human (as opposed to a spambot) by entering the two words—with the space—as shown to them.
  • The service also provides an audio-verification method for those unable to see the words.
  • If the words are unreadable you can click the refresh/recycle symbol to get a new verification challenge.
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Welcome to the Library & Archives Blog

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Welcome to the Minnesota Historical Society Library & Archives blog. Blog posts might include anything related to any topic covered by the collections of the Minnesota Historical Society! In addition to information about the collections you might find information on new books, manuscripts or archives collections, maps, oral histories, photographs, etc.; discussions of historical topics; reviews of books, articles, and websites; announcements of upcoming meetings, conferences, or seminars; information about changes in the Library’s hours; and similar things.

Feel free to join the discussions by commenting on the posts. Bookmark the blog and check for new posts, or register to be notified when new comments are posted.

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