1. 1976 Presidential Election in Minnesota

    1976 Presidential Election in Minnesota
    Creator: Tom Weber | First Published: June 5, 2024

    Former Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter and his running mate, Senator Walter Mondale, overwhelmingly won the state of Minnesota and its ten electoral votes in 1976. The Democratic ticket scored a nearly thirteen-point victory (54.9 percent to 42.0 percent) over Republican President Gerald Ford and his running mate, Senator Robert Dole. The election was the third of four consecutive presidential races with a Minnesotan on the national ticket of a major party, and it marked the beginning of the longest active streak of any state voting Democratic in presidential elections.

  2. African American Suffrage in Minnesota, 1868

    African American Suffrage in Minnesota, 1868
    Creator: Matt Reicher | Key Date: 1868 | First Published: May 21, 2014

    From their state's admission to the Union until the mid-1860s, a majority of Minnesotans advocated the abolition of slavery in the South. African American suffrage, however, did not enjoy the same support. Minnesota's African American citizens paid taxes, fought in wars, and fostered their communities. But they could not vote, hold political office, or serve on juries. This continued until 1868, when an amendment to the state's constitution approved suffrage for all non-white men. The amendment did not apply to African American women, however, who continued to be disenfranchised in Minnesota and the rest of the United States.

  3. America First Association

    America First Association
    Creator: Steven R. Anderson | First Published: December 21, 2018

    The expression “America First” has been used by numerous American organizations and movements since at least 1914. Most of them opposed US involvement in foreign conflicts. The Minnesota-based America First Association (AFA) was an exception in that it was formed to support the United States’ entry into World War I.

  4. American Woman Suffrage Association Convention, Minneapolis, 1885

    American Woman Suffrage Association Convention, Minneapolis, 1885
    Creator: Linda A. Cameron | First Published: June 26, 2019

    The fight for woman suffrage in Minnesota was well underway when the American Woman Suffrage Association held its annual convention in Minneapolis in 1885. Key leaders of the movement were on hand to speak, among them prominent Minnesota suffragists, both female and male.

  5. 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.

  6. Anderson, Helen Eugenie Moore (1909–1997)

    Anderson, Helen Eugenie Moore (1909–1997)
    Creator: Frederick L. Johnson | Key Date: 1949 | First Published: January 14, 2013

    Eugenie Moore Anderson emerged as a trailblazer for American women in international diplomacy during the post-World War II era. In 1949 she became the first American woman to hold the rank of ambassador.

  7. Baker v. Nelson

    Baker v. Nelson
    Creator: Sarah Shirey | Key Date: May 18, 1971 | First Published: October 3, 2016

    When Jack Baker and Michael McConnell became the first same-sex couple in the United States to apply for a marriage license, in 1970, Hennepin County clerk Gerald R. Nelson rejected their application. They then sued Nelson, claiming a constitutional right to marry in what would become a landmark Supreme Court Case.

  8. Benson, Elmer (1895–1985)

    Benson, Elmer (1895–1985)
    Creator: Tom O’Connell | Key Date: 1938 | First Published: April 25, 2016

    Elmer Benson was elected in 1936 as Minnesota’s second Farmer-Labor Party governor with over 58 percent of the vote. He was defeated only two years later by an even larger margin. An outspoken champion of Minnesota’s workers and family farmers, Benson lacked the political gifts of his charismatic predecessor, Floyd B. Olson. However, many of his proposals—at first considered radical—became law in the decades that followed.

  9. Bernard, John Toussaint (1893–1983)

    Bernard, John Toussaint (1893–1983)
    Creator: Jason Scorich | Key Date: January 6, 1937 | First Published: October 19, 2015

    Minnesota Congressman John T. Bernard fought throughout his life for working people against strong opposition. His outspoken and uncompromising views led him, on his second day in office, to cast the single “no” vote in Congress against the Spanish arms embargo. Bernard’s vote proved farsighted as the Spanish Civil War became, in many ways, a “dress rehearsal” for World War II.

  10. Bisexual Organizing Project

    Bisexual Organizing Project
    Creator: Stewart Van Cleve | Key Date: 1999 | First Published: December 26, 2017

    The Bisexual Organizing Project (BOP) is a nonprofit group that has supported Minnesota’s bisexual, pansexual, fluid, queer, and unlabeled (bi+) communities since 1999. BOP promotes bi+ identities as an option for those who do not fit under gay, lesbian, or straight labels. Through its flagship event, the annual BECAUSE conference (Bisexual Empowerment Conference, A United Supportive Experience), it provides one of the nation’s key forums for the discussion of bi+ issues. BOP also represents the bi+ community at Twin Cities Pride and other events of interest to LGBTQ+ communities.

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