1. AIDS Conference Protest, St. Paul, 1987

    AIDS Conference Protest, St. Paul, 1987
    Creator: Jennifer Kleinjung | First Published: August 28, 2023

    On November 7, 1987, roughly 400 people representing Minnesota’s gay community—including allies and activists—protested an AIDS conference in St. Paul sponsored by a conservative Christian political organization called the Berean League. With over 1,500 people in attendance, it was the largest gathering in the state to date addressing the HIV/AIDS crisis. It was also a show of force for fundamentalist Christians and other conservatives who opposed gay rights.

  2. Ames, Albert Alonzo “Doc” (1842–1911)

    Ames, Albert Alonzo “Doc” (1842–1911)
    Creator: Tamatha Perlman | Key Date: 1901 | First Published: November 17, 2016

    Albert Alonzo Ames, called “Doc,” was mayor of Minneapolis four times, between 1876 and 1903. Though he earned notoriety as "the shame of Minneapolis" for his involvement in extortion and fraud during his last term in office, Ames also won praise for his work as a doctor and an advocate for veterans.

  3. Anoka State Hospital

    Anoka State Hospital
    Creator: Carrie Hatler | Key Date: October 31, 1949 | First Published: January 21, 2020

    When the fourth state hospital for the insane at Anoka opened in 1900, it became the first state transfer hospital for patients considered incurably insane. The hospital was the first in Minnesota to be built according to the cottage plan to reduce the institutional feel for its chronic patients. It remains one of the finest examples of the cottage plan in Minnesota.

  4. Artificial Limb Industry in Minneapolis

    Artificial Limb Industry in Minneapolis
    Creator: R. L. Cartwright | Key Date: 1890 | First Published: July 1, 2014

    The milling, logging, farming, and railroad industries that made Minneapolis a prosperous town in the late nineteenth century also cost many men their limbs, if not their lives. Minneapolis entrepreneurs, many of them amputees themselves, built on the local need and made the city one of the leading producers of artificial limbs in the United States.

  5. Beltrami County Poor Farm

    Beltrami County Poor Farm
    Creator: Cecelia Wattles McKeig | Key Date: 1920 | First Published: July 6, 2018

    The Beltrami County Poor Farm provided shelter and care for elderly and disabled people from 1902 until 1935, when old-age assistance programs replaced the poor farm system.

  6. Boynton, Ruth Evelyn (1896–1977)

    Boynton, Ruth Evelyn (1896–1977)
    Creator: Julie Kelly and Kathy Robbins | Key Date: 1936 | First Published: March 18, 2013

    Ruth Boynton was a physician, researcher, and administrator who spent almost her entire career at the University of Minnesota (U of M). She worked in public health and student health services at a time (the mid-twentieth century) when there were few women in either of those fields. She was director of the University Student Health Service from 1936 to 1961, and the facility was renamed Boynton Health Service in her honor in 1975.

  7. Burns, Dr. H. A. (1883–1949)

    Burns, Dr. H. A. (1883–1949)
    Creator: Cecelia Wattles McKeig | Key Date: 1931 | First Published: May 18, 2018

    Dr. Herbert Arthur (H. A.) Burns was named superintendent of the Minnesota Sanatorium for Consumptives (Ah-Gwah-Ching) in 1928. Over the next fourteen years, he brought crucial changes to the institution that improved patient care, housing, therapy, and recreation.

  8. Children's Blizzard, 1888

    Children's Blizzard, 1888
    Creator: Alyssa Ford | Key Date: January 12, 1888 | First Published: May 6, 2013

    The winter of 1887-1888 was ferocious and unrelenting. But nothing prepared southwestern Minnesota for the January storm that came to be known as the Children's Blizzard.

  9. Children’s Preventorium of Ramsey County

    Children’s Preventorium of Ramsey County
    Creator: Paul Nelson | First Published: May 4, 2023

    Between 1915 and 1953 over 950 Ramsey County youth, most between the ages of four and fourteen, resided at the Children’s Preventorium of Ramsey County, in Shoreview. A handful stayed for a day or two; hundreds lived there for years. As its name suggests, the purpose of the Preventorium was to prevent disease—in this case, tuberculosis. It was the only such institution to function in Minnesota.

  10. Clara Barton Club

    Clara Barton Club
    Creator: Carolyn S. Van Loh | Key Date: 1997 | First Published: April 2, 2018

    Nurses organized the Clara Barton Club at Westbrook’s Schmidt Memorial Hospital in 1948 with three goals. First, they aimed to study the health needs of their community. Second, they promised to keep themselves updated about new drugs and evolving nursing methods. Third, they pledged to support their hospital.

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