When it comes to history, it is easy to see how people’s clothing has changed, how houses look different, or even how social customs evolve. We often take it for granted that life sounds much different than it did 100 years ago. I remember watching an old episode of The Twilight Zone in which a scientist experimenting with time travel in 1961 brings a violent cowboy from the 1880s into his present. The cowboy, a master of his environment in the 19th century, is nearly driven mad when he walks out onto the New York street and hears cars honking their horns, jukeboxes blaring from diners, sirens whizzing by, and the dull roar of the city crowds. The difference in sound between his world and the modern world was overwhelming. Today, we can walk into virtually any business and hear music piped throughout the store or restaurant. Our cars are equipped with radios, tape decks, CD players, or even DVD players, turning them into portable sound machines. And our homes have just as many, if not more devices that emit constant streams of sound, television being chief among these. In the pioneer days of Minnesota history, long before these technological and cultural innovations enveloped our everyday worlds in sound, music was a much more powerful social force.
Social connectedness was one of the underlying purposes of music for a long time, and still is among those who go to concerts, play in bands, or sing in choirs. Just as music was an important part of individual expression and entertainment, live musical performance was an important social activity that brought individuals together and connected them to their communities. Here at the Scott County Historical Society, we have a number of items that illustrate this important musical legacy throughout the county.
The earliest pioneers to the county brought their musical instruments, skills, and traditions with them from the eastern U.S., Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg, Bohemia and other countries. In those heady days of land-grabbing and town-founding, dances and parades were some of the few occasions when settlers could enjoy themselves and interact with one another. Maine native Daniel Storer kept an extensive journal of his migration to Scott County in the early 1850s and his new life in Shakopee. Like many pioneers, Storer was multi-skilled and held numerous positions in the new town: carpenter, justice of the peace, town clerk, as well as fiddler and singer. His journal, published by the Shakopee Heritage Society, gives a glimpse of Storer’s success as a fiddler. It also hints at the social interactions of others during such festive occasions:
December 14, 1854: Went to a party in the hall in the eve. Gates and I played for them. A good many got drunk. I took Dr. Ripley’s lady home, and he was so mad that he set out to shoot me. He was so drunk himself that she would not go with him.
December 19, 1855: Went to Mrs. Holmes’ birthday party the night of the 19th. There was a large crowd of people there. Douglas and I played for them. John McCormick, whom I used to know in Stillwater, was after me to go to Eden Prairie the same night and play for a dance there.
Storer’s talents were much in demand, and the playing provided him with a little extra income. More importantly, he and other pioneer musicians brought townspeople together. Young men and women could court at such functions and strengthen their relationships with dance and conversation. Business might be conducted, or neighborly disputes settled (or commenced, in Dr. Ripley’s case). For many, town hall dances and concerts would simply be a much-needed reprieve from their daily toil.
Storer also witnessed several dances and songs performed by the Mdewakanton Dakota (Sioux) of Chief Sakpe’s village. Like Samuel Pond in his recollections of the Dakota in 1834, Storer was entranced by Dakota music, yet failed to understand it as a vital part of Dakota culture. Dakota traditions emphasized connectedness and kinship, and dances and singing were a way of reinforcing stories and memories from their history.
Browsing through our photograph catalogue, a researcher might find any number of images of marching bands parading through the streets of downtown Shakopee, Main Street in Belle Plaine, or Water Street in Jordan. Many of the occasions for which bands played in small towns and cities were tied to community or national celebrations, such as Independence Day, or Armistice Day. One photo from 1925 shows band leader extraordinaire Hubert Stans with his Shakopee band during the annual picnic of the American Range Corporation.