Posts Tagged Minnesota

The History of Halloween

30 October 2012

The specific origins of Halloween are often debated. Like many historical events created in ancient times, much of how we celebrate Halloween today is a compilation of hundreds of years including the input of many different people. The most agreed upon version is that it began as a festival for witches, goblins and ghosts.

Ancient Celtic Origins
Originating with ancient Celts in the 5th century B.C. who were among the firsts to celebrate October 31st. They called it “All Hallows Eve.” The day itself had two meanings. First, it marked the official end of summer and the Celts were honor the sun god for the summer’s harvest. Secondly, the last day of October was believed to also be a day of supernatural forces. It was a day that the spirits of those who died the previous year could transfer into a living person or animal. By transferring into a body for the next year, it was believed that the spirit would then be able to move into the afterlife peacefully.

On “All Hallows Eve,” Celtic houses would be deliberately made cold in order ward off undesired spirits. Additionally to help deter and scare unwanted ghouls, family members dressed as witches, hobgoblins and demons. They would parade inside the home before moving outside. During their parading, it was important to be as noisy as possible and to partake in pranks and trickery. The parade continued through the village until they arrived at a large bonfire created by a Druid priest outside the village. The bonfire honored the sun god for the summer harvest but it was also a means to ward off furtive spirits. If a person was already believed to be possessed, they could be sacrificed as an example to the spirits thinking of possessing human body.

Roman and the Christianity Adaption
As the Roman Empire began to conquer Celtic territory around 43 A.D., they also adopted Celtic Halloween practices. However, they quickly outlawed human sacrificing around 61 A.D. The Romans added two major items to the Halloween celebrations, the first being to honor the passing of the dead. Secondly, they honored Pomona, the goddess of fruit and trees, by incorporating apples as a symbol of the goddess. They would use apples in various forms during their celebration. One activity still practiced today would be the tradition of “bobbing” for apples. Additionally, as time passed the belief in spiritual possession waned. Instead, celebrations still included the parading, costuming and trickery but it was more for amusement than as a method to deter unwanted spirits.

November 1st was eventually assigned as “All Saints Day.” Allegedly, this Christian feast was created to deter people from practicing the pagan traditions of Halloween. Instead the first of November honored every Christian saint, particularly those that do not have their own devoted day. The idea did not fully happen, however over time, many of the traditional deity worship done in the ancient “All Hollows Eve” rituals diminished. In the 9th century, the church tried again to weaken Halloween by establishing “All Souls Day” on November 2nd. “All Souls Day” was a day in which the living would pray for the souls of the dead. Again, the church was powerless in its attempt to create a secular church holiday that would overshadow Halloween.

Halloween comes to America
Halloween was not a popular holiday observed by the early settlers in the United States. The Protestants in the New England area were against it because it was considered a Pagan, Catholic or Episcopalian holiday and not acceptable. It was not until around the 1840s when Irish immigration greatly increased due to those fleeing the Great Famine (potato famine) that Halloween started to spread. Irish immigrants brought with them the Halloween customs of costume and mischief on a larger scale than was previous seen.

At the turn of the century, both children and adults celebrated with Halloween parties focused on games, food and costumes. In the 1920s and 1930s, the holiday became community-centered with parades and large parties. The town of Anoka, Minnesota is believed to be the first town in the country to host a Halloween parade in 1920. In an effort to deter the mischief of the town’s youth, who were known to let the cattle loose and turn over outhouses on Halloween, started this annual tradition. By the 1930s, it was estimated around 20,000 people attended the parades.

As the years passed, Halloween has become increasingly more popular. In the United States, Halloween has moved past its origins as a pagan spiritual festival and into a secular celebration. Commercialization has emphasized costumes, trick-or-treat and food as well as turning it into a holiday children and adults alike.

Sources
Charles Panati, Panati’s Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things, New York: Harper, 1989, 62-63.
Anoka, MN website
Halloween History
History Channel
Photos: 2nd, 3rd, 4th

In Their Words – Paul Wellstone

26 September 2012

Photo Credit: Wellstone.org

“If we don’t fight hard enough for the things we stand for, at  some point we have to recognize that we don’t really stand for them.”

- Paul Wellstone, U.S. Senator from 1991-2002

Horse Buying Defense Bonds, 1942

22 September 2012

In what was probably a staged photograph opportunity designed to build support for a bond drive, a horse approaches two post office workers at a service window as if to purchase defense bonds.  Captured by an unknown Minneapolis Star Tribune photographer on April 3, 1942.

Minnesota Historical Society

John Meints & WWI Anti-German Sentiment

18 June 2012

Back view of Meints

Meints after being tarred and feathered

German-Americans faced many problems during the World Wars, especially in the First World War. Besides being divided between their “homeland” and their new country, many German-Americans faced heavy Anti-German sentiment in the United States. The offices of German-language newspapers were closed; books deemed “Pro-German” were burned. Any German-Americans thought to have shown support or sympathy for Germany ran the risk of being named in newspapers as disloyal and, at times, risked physical harm.

John Meints, a German-American farmer living in Luverne, Minnesota, felt the fervor of Anti-German vigilantes. In the spring of 1918, he was suspected of being interested in or contributing to a Non-Partisan League newspaper. Other reports state that Meints was disloyal because he was not supporting war bond drives. On June 19th, Meints was taken from his house by a large group of local men and driven to Iowa, about fifteen miles south of Luverne. He was dropped off and told not to return to Minnesota. He then traveled to St. Paul and reported this incident to the Department of Justice, who investigated and told him it was safe to go back home. The agent also advised Meints that it would be safer for him to stay with one of his sons, who lived twelve miles out of the town.

On August 19, 1918, about a month after he returned to Luverne, men forced their way into the house of one of Meints’ sons and demanded to see Meints. The men then forcibly removed him from the house and drove to the South Dakota border. According to court records, once they reached the boarder, masked men “assaulted him, whipped him, threatened to shoot him, besmeared his body with tar and feathers, and told him to cross the line into South Dakota, and that if he ever returned to Minnesota he would be hanged.”

Meints again went to the authorities and sued 32 of the men involved. He sought $100,000 in damages for false imprisonment. The trial was held in Mankato, Minnesota and produced more than 1,100 pages of testimony. The outcome was against Meints, because the U.S. District Court jury agreed with the defendants that he was disloyal. Meints appealed and in 1922, he settled out of court for $6,000.

Below is a Minneapolis Tribune article describing the festive and happy homecoming the 32 accused defendants received:

Welcome home by a large delegation of Luverne (Minn.) citizens, headed by a band, was the sequel yesterday to the acquittal of 32 residents in federal court at Mankato on the charge of kidnapping, tarring and feathering John Meintz, according to dispatches from Luverne last night.
Meintz asked personal damages of $100,000 as balm for the treatment he received on the night of August 19, 1918. The jury denied him any damages, after deliberating one hour and a half.
Judge Wilbur F. Booth, in charging the jury, said that the evidence was overwhelming in support of the contention that Meintz was disloyal and that there was a strong feeling against him in the community.
The action of the Luverne citizens in staging a celebration  was taken as an indication of strong approval of the acquittal verdict, according to dispatches.

Sources:
Star Tribune website
The Federal reporter, Volume 276
Photos via National Archives

In Their Words – Margaret Culkin Banning

16 February 2012

“In this Second World War women will be used physically as never before, for production of war materials, for substitute labor in factories and on farms as man power is drained by the armed forces, and for guard and emergency duty of all kinds in threatened areas, and for management of evacuations, if it comes to that. Women by themselves cannot win this war. But quite certainly it cannot be won without them.”

- Margaret Culkin Banning, author, stated this in her 1942 book Women For Defense.

Eugenie Anderson

25 August 2011

Eugenie Anderson pictured at a DFL State Convention in Minnesota, 1954.

Eugenie M. Anderson (1909-1997) was the first woman appointed as a United States Ambassador. In 1949, President Truman selected Anderson to be the Ambassador to Denmark. She was the U.S. Ambassador to Denmark from October 20, 1949 to January 19, 1953.

She had been involved in local and state politics leading up to her appointment by Truman. After a trip to Europe and seeing the Communist state of Germany, Anderson joined the Democratic Party on her return to Minnesota. Anderson, along with Hubert Humphrey (future U.S. Vice President), eliminated the Communist sections within the party. The Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party formed out of these efforts, the DFL is still a leading political party in Minnesota today. This political activity earned Anderson the Ambassador role.

Information:
U.S. Department of State, Women in Diplomacy.
U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian.
Binder, David, “Eugenie Anderson, 87, First Woman to Be U.S. Ambassador,” New York Times, April 3, 1997.
Photo via Minnesota Historical Society Photograph Collection.

Tilt-A-Whirl

16 August 2011

Herbert Sellner of Faribault, Minnesota invented the Tilt-A-Whirl in 1926. He built the first fourteen rides in his basement and yard. A year later, in 1927, he opened Sellner Manufacturing and the Tilt-A-Whirl made its debut at the Minnesota State Fair. 

One Tilt-A-Whirl costs around $250,000.

Further Reading
Chuck Haga, “Aug. 31, 2001: It’s been a tilting, whirling ride for 75 years,” Star Tribune, March 29, 2007. Found online here.
Koutsky, Kathryn Strand and Linda Koutsky. Minnesota State Fair: An Illustrated History. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press, 2007.
Photos found on Minnesota Public Radio website.

“Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick”

10 July 2011

Roosevelt at the 1901 MN State Fair

In 1901, vice president Theodore Roosevelt first spoke that the US should “speak softly and carry a big stick” at the Minnesota State Fair.

- On September 14, 1901, two weeks after he uttered his famous line, he became president when President McKinley was assassinated.

[Information found here: Koutsky, Kathryn Strand and Linda Koutsky. Minnesota State Fair: An Illustrated History. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press, 2007, 162. Photo found here.