General Knowledge

Aprons – Tie One On

The holiday baking season is upon us and one item of clothing will be getting plenty of use… the apron.  Aprons have survived thousands of years as practical, functional clothing items; they served as towels, pot holders, baskets, and more.  Historically, the apron has engendered the feminine aura of domesticity. Some women adorned themselves with the apron as a mantle of pride, a symbol of homemaking, motherhood and nurturing.  Yet others felt it a symbol of constraint or oppression. Despite this, women found ways to be creative and resourceful, making them equally objects of skill and art.  The apron may be a simple object, but is firmly associated with home, motherhood, comfort, work, and servitude.

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Early aprons were made from muslin, silk, and serge, and formed part of the dress for special occasions as well as everyday wear. Aprons in the early 1700s were in regular use to protect clothing and were usually a simple rectangular piece of fabric fastened with ties or a belt.  By the end of the century, they were fashionable, particularly for upper-class women, and decorated with embroidery and drawn work. The dainty apron of the 1800s became the small tea apron pinned on – and became called the “pinner”, and was often the badge of the parlor maid.

Aprons gained popularity in Victorian England. The ideals of femininity and domesticity ensured their status as upper-class women wore them adorned with embroidery and hand-made lace. It was around the early part of the 1900s that aprons began to slowly diminish in size, previously covering the wearer from neck to toe.

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During the 1920s, the apron returned to its practical uses, but in a new style. The “Hooverette”, a loose, wrap-around apron, was influenced by the drop-waist, straight-lined dresses of the time. By the 1930s, the apron ended at the knees and the upper bib portion became smaller. During the Great Depression, a resurgence in home crafts resulted in many hand-embroidered aprons. Instead of the traditional white cotton or linen, women used what was available, including flour sacks and clothing scraps.  Aprons weren’t merely decorative, they meant hard work, often by members of an unpaid labor force.  Despite that, wearers found a way to be resourceful and creative.

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By the 1940s, aprons decorated with rick-rack and made of calicos and floral prints became symbols of pride. Flour sacks could be edged with stripes, ribbons, or ruffles.  By the 1950s the cocktail apron became a fashion statement. Summoning glamour, they weren’t created for protection. The bib portion was gone, and the length was shortened to well above the knees.  Fashion was more important than practicality.

The 1940’s and 1950s were the heyday of aprons, when commercial and intricately hand-decorated aprons flourished as symbols of family and motherhood. The TV family of the 1950s included the perfect housewife and mother, proudly wearing an apron as a symbol of her occupation. Apron kits became popular, but women continued to make their own. Hostess-aprons of sheer organdy trimmed with lace were more ceremonial than functional. Another change emerged in the 1950s – backyard barbecues, which allowed men to handle the cooking duties.  Aprons for “Dad” covered his larger size and many had whimsical pictures and sayings printed on the front.

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In the 1960s aprons plummeted out of fashion, seen as housewifely accoutrements that symbolized a secondary role for women. The apron became a frivolous item. This was also a time of washers and dryers, and better detergent. Ready-made, easy-to-change clothing  became cheaper so the need to protect and cover clothes disappeared.  By the 1970s, aprons were again utilitarian in nature, relegated to waiters and cooks at the barbecue. The bib returned, and fabric became heavy-duty.  Women began to work outside the home more, but cooking duties were still largely her responsibility. The more protective apron allowed women to cover their business clothes as they started dinner.

In recent years, planned menu and scratch cooking have become recreational activities and relegated to the weekend. Today’s aprons fit any size of wearer and are not gender specific, but their use continues to be limited to the kitchen and barbecue. However, snazzy / snappy sayings and beautiful fabrics are still popular today.

Apron etymology: Middle English, alteration of napron, from Middle French, naperon, diminutive of nape cloth, modification of Latin mappa napkin.

Apron: a garment usually of cloth, plastic, or leather usually tied around the waist and used to protect clothing or adorn a costume.

Apron String: the string of an apron – usually used in plural as a symbol of dominance or complete control.

Idiom: “tied to your mother’s apron strings”; wholly depended on or controlled by a woman, especially one’s mother or wife.  This expression, dating from the early 1800s probably alluded to Apron String Tenure, a 17th Century law that allowed a husband to control his wife’s and her family’s property during her lifetime. In other words: a husband could only hold title passed on by his wife’s family, only while the wife was alive.

From the SCHS 2003 exhibit, “Aprons: Tie One One”

Prohibition by the Numbers

Why Ban Alcohol?

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The United States had a drinking problem. At the turn of the century, alcohol was beginning to be seen not as natural or medicinal, but as a vice that attacked those who consumed it. Alcohol consumption was also primarily a male problem due to social pressures that kept most women in the home and out of the saloon. In a time when men primarily controlled family income, alcoholism had an outsized impact on dependent wives and children. The early 1900s was era of reformers, and with a newfound focus on health and the rights of women and children, it was natural that drinking would come under attack. Sides were formed between the “Wets” and the “Drys”, and an increasing number of Americans began to call for the ban of liquor.

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In 1920 the18th amendment was added to constitution, banning the sale if intoxicating liquors. This law was given teeth by the Vosted Act that allowed for enforcement.

Unfortunately, alcohol was woven into the fabric of US society, and it not fade peacefully into the night. Instead, Alcohol consumption was driven underground, and criminal elements rapidly gained control of supply and production. Though organized crime existed before prohibition, criminal groups received a major boost in income and publicity from the ban. Throughout the 1920s “wets” gained renewed support, painting prohibition as a source, rather than a cure, for crime and debauchery.

There were several legal sources of alcohol during prohibition. Doctors could prescribe it for medicinal purposes- a clause that was often abused. Over the course of prohibition, it is estimated that the medical community made more than $40 million dollars form illicit prescriptions. In order to appease rural populations, the Volsted act also allowed for home-brewing of wine and hard cider.

The prohibition experiment finally ended in 1933 with the push of the great depression creating a vested interest in the tax revenue that the sale of legal alcohol would bring in.

What about Scott County?

Group standing with kegs and beer. Taken in Shakopee between 1921 and 1928. Image from the SCHS collections.

Group standing with kegs and beer. Taken in Shakopee between 1921 and 1928. Image from the SCHS collections.

Minnesota a whole was in favor of Prohibition. The “Prohibition Party”, a political organization that put forth Dry and pro-suffrage candidates (the movements were closely linked) elected it’s first state candidates in 1871. Andrew Volsted, the imfamous author of the Volsted act was born in Goodhue County and attend St Olaf College. He served in the US House of Representatives from the 7th district of Minnesota from 1903-1923

Unlike the state at large, these Dry sentiments were not popular in Scott County. At the turn of the century, the county was overwhelmingly German and Czech, immigrant groups that were largely against prohibition. In fact, the specter of Prohibition was enough to completely alter the county’s voting habits. In the presidential election of 1920 and before the county voted largely Republican. In 1924, the Socialist 3rd party candidate won the majority of votes, and by 1928 the county mostly voted Democrat- a dramatic change that occurred without any major demographic shifts.

Prohibition By the Numbers

Alcohol-Related Arrests in Scott County in a single month, March of 1921

Jordan: Four arrests. It was claimed that 100 gallons of liquor were seized, 25 coming from one house alone.

Belle Plaine : Three arrests, including 10 gallons from a single restaurant

New Market: A man was arrested after drunkenly bragging that he had already made $16,000 ($225, 000 in 2018’s money) from the sale of illicit liquor

Shakopee: Only one arrest…this was not because Shakopee was low in crime, but rather because complicit police were tipping people off to the raids.

Scott County Presidential Election Results During Prohibition
Or, How the Right To Drink Flipped the Polls

1920
Republican: 69%
Democrat: 29.7%

1924
Republican: 29.3%
Democrat: 18.3%
Socialist: 52.4%

1928
Republican: 28.1%
Democrat: 71.7%

1932
Republican: 18.7%
Democrat: 80.6%

Scott County Ethnicities in 1920

German: 47.1%
Czech: 23.3%
Norwegian: 7.7%
Swedish: 3.6%
Irish: 2.8%
Canadian: 2.6%
Danish: 2.1%

Scott County Population

1860: 4,595
1930: 14,116

Alcohol Consumption Per Capita Per Year in the US

1790: 5.8 gallons
1830: 7.1 gallons
2016: 2.3 gallons

Death by Cirrhosis (liver failure) in US Men

1918: 29.5 / 100,000
1928: 4.7 / 100,000

Written by Rose James, Program. Thank you to Paul Keever for research.

Ring Ring!

Today, our phones are permanent fixtures in our lives. Most Scott County residents take their capacity for instantaneous global connections for granted. Telephones first came to Scott County In the 1880s, and quickly changed the face of county-wide communication. First citizens relished the ability to talk to their neighbors. Soon, they wanted the ability to communicate with the wider world.

From the Scott County Argus, June 1, 1933

From the Scott County Argus, June 1, 1933


By 1882, Joesph Strunk of Strunk’s Drug Store convinced the Bell phone company to run a line connecting Shakopee to the Twin Cities. The company was initially resistant to his proposal, claiming that Shakopee was not large enough to be worth the effort. Strunk finally got his wish by agreeing to pre-pay for $500.00 of long-distance calls as an offset the $1200.00 cost of installing the line. By 1886, other businesses around Shakopee had hired “unlicensed local talent” to connect their businesses to Strunk’s long distance access. Before long, the web of lines had spread throughout the county. These were not private communication networks. For many years, Scott County had party lines.

If you haven’t heard of this concept, when using a party line you picked up the phone and talked to an operator. That operator then physically moved a plug to connect your call. There were only so many lines, and only one person could be on them at once. If you were on the phone, your neighbor would hear the call when they picked up the receiver, and would be unable to place a call themselves until you were finished.

“All A’s For Alice” From the Shakopee Argus Tribune, March 20, 1947

“All A’s For Alice” From the Shakopee Argus Tribune, March 20, 1947


At the telephone’s conception, the first telephone operators were teenage boys- it was an entry level part time job, similar to getting a job at McDonalds or as a grocery clerk today. Early customers complained about the disrespectful tone and language of these operators. Alexander Graham Bell  had the solution of replacing one of them with a women. At the time women were thought to be naturally more patient and soothing. By the end of the 1880s, the job of telephone operator was considered exclusively a female trade.

Telephone employees, operators and linesmen. Belle Plaine, 1900

Telephone employees, operators and linesmen. Belle Plaine, 1900

Telephone Operator, New Prague 1910

Telephone Operator, New Prague 1910


Unfortunately once the job of telephone operator became to be know as exclusively female, the pay (predictably) lowered. Emma Nutt, the first American female telephone operator who was picked by Bell himself made only 10$ for a 54 hour week.

In 1919, East Coast telephone operators went on strike, shutting down phones across New England and eventually won a wage increase.

This movement for equitable pay in the Telephone industry hit Scott County as well. On April 3rd, 1947 the following ad appeared in the Shakopee Argus Tribune

Shakopee Argus Tribune,  April 3rd, 1947

Shakopee Argus Tribune, April 3rd, 1947

In spite of the company’s unusual bid for public sympathy, on April 2nd the Shakopee phone operators, along with two linesmen, went on strike

Shakopee Argus, April 10, 1947

Shakopee Argus, April 10, 1947

Telephone operators remained a fixture, and almost exclusively female one, for a long time. 1973 saw a national strike of female Bell operators. Along with the strike, the women filed a complaint with the EEOC. They pointed out that almost all operators were female- a low wage job with little advancement, while better paying management and repair positions were almost all male. The company responded by hiring more men to be operators, but other positions remained bereft of women.

Operators remained an essential part of telephone service until the late 1990s, an occupation that lasted over 100 years in spite of changing technology. The job even outlasted Strunk’s Drug Store which finally closed in 1977

Today, Scott County residents (along with the rest of the globe) independently operate the vast communication powers of their own phones- for better or for worse. Come visit the Tools of the Trade exhibit at the Scott County Historical Society to try out several eras of Scott county phones, or harness the powers of your own phone and check out our upcoming events at scottcountyhistory.org

Written by Rose James, SCHS Program Manager

Flashback: 1968

On Saturday the Scott County Historical Society will be celebrating its 50th Anniversary!

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We are marking the event with a full day of games, music, food and crafting in the Stans Garden.  Indoors (in addition to our regular exhibits), SCHS will pay tribute to the year of our formation, 1968. You will have the chance to test your knowledge with a 1968 trivia game, and take some snapshots in a retro photo-booth.




 We’ve also taken this opportunity to take a look at what was going on around the county 50 years ago in 1968. Below are some articles and cartoons that graced Scott County’s papers that year:

Belle Plaine 

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Jordan

New Prague

Prior Lake 

Savage

Shakopee

There will be flip books available on Saturday with more articles, giving a snapshot of the highs and lows, triumphs and losses and everyday stories of the county and this nation. We are excited to celebrate 50 years, and we hope to see you this Saturday from 10-3 at the Stans Museum. Thank you for a great half century!











Independence!

To commemorate the United States’ mid-summer festivities, I thought it would be fun to look back at how Scott County has celebrated the fourth of July in years past. This history of Independence Day celebrations is interesting due to how little the holiday has changed throughout time. In a July 3rd, 1776 letter from John to Abagail Adams, John expressed his hopes that the occasion should be commemorated “with Pomp and Parade, with Shews [shows], Games, Sports, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.” Even in the late 1700s, novelty fireworks were widely available to the public, with one vendor listing his pyrotechnic wares as  “rockets, serpents, wheels, table rockets, cherry trees, fountains, and sun flowers.”

A notice in the Belle Plaine Herald from about a hundred years after Adams, June 27th 1894, told of a gathering that would not have been out of place on a fourth of July today. “A Grand Celebration” including a “large platform on which music will be furnished for dancing purposes”. Sports of the day included foot racing, sack racing, horse racing and pony racing. Finally, of course, the event finished off with a “Grand display of fireworks”. In 1988, more then 200 years after John wrote to Abigail, New Prague celebrated the fourth with fireworks and music from the band “East Side Pharaohs”, mirroring celebrations from years past.

Independence day in Scott County has not only been influenced by the United States, but by broader global events.  On the sunset of  World War 1, July 4th 1919, the Shakopee Argus Tribune published an article entitled “Freedom All Over The Earth: The Due Recognition of Human Rights now the Aim of Mankind”. As a counter to global war, the article expressed worthy sentiments such as “One hundred two score and three years ago the federation of the thirteen colonies into a federal union was a political event of prime import. Today that goal is overshadowed by by that great thing of which Tennyson dreamed: the federation of the world” The article explains that with the age of European monarchs in the past, it was time to forgo nationalism and for every country to work together towards a better global future. The piece ends with this noble ideal:

“On July 4th 1776 the liberty bell rang out in order to proclaim liberty throughout all the land and to unite the inhabitants thereof. Suppose that on another July fourth it were permitted to raise it’s cracked and wheezy voice to do a far nobler thing: proclaim liberty and an end to oppression and suffering all over the world! Where is the man who would not wish to live in this world? Let all the peoples of the world send a representative to meet. Let them create and sign a nobler document that that which our forefathers signed… That document will enable all people to stand against the oppression of autocratic spoilers. It will assert solidarity of all that stand for freedom and love their fellow men. It will set forth a growing sense of human brotherhood”   

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Unfortunately for the planet, and the writer of  this article, by the 1940s the US was once again at war.  This was reflected in the independence day celebrations of the time. The 1943 Shakopee Tribune encouraged readers to visit Minneapolis to celebrate the fourth of July. The holiday was a week-long event featuring “Fifty thousand marchers, scores of floats, bands,  and drum corps”.  The primary aim, according to the promoters, was to “build morale and sell war bonds”. By 1946, Jordan was recognizing the fourth with a “welcome home to WW2 veterans”. 

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During the Vietnam war, Independence day once again inspired musings on American ideals. On July 3rd, 1978, the Shakopee Valley Tribune published a letter to the editor, that was written as if it were to Richard Cox, who was killed while serving with the ninth Marine Amphibious brigade in Vietnam. The letter is from the mother of one of Richard’s close friends. She writes, ” Has death and war become as ordinary as drinking coffee? Your mother will receive a gold pin, but touching the pin and feeling the insignia are not the same as as touching the features and warmth of your son… Dick, thank you. You are at peace. When will we be?” 

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Outside of wars, political and social issues of the times are reflected in Independence day newspaper commentary. On June 20th, 1910, the Belle Plaine Herald published an incredibly charming story about Gloria West who, since the age of 5, had been “imbued with a patriotic feeling and reverence for the constitution of this country”. As Gloria grows older, she is harangued by suitors who want her hand. Her sister tells her that she is being too picky, bit Gloria refuses to be swayed. One fourth of July, she invites all of 6 “most ardent” suitors to a reading of the Declaration of Independence. There, she makes them sign her own declaration of independence, declaring that she will be her own woman. Eventually, one of her suitors creates his own document- a constitution recognizing her independence and proposing a “more perfect union” between them.  In additional to being adorable, this tale clearly displays a changing attitude towards womens’ roles that was taking place during the early 1900s. 

Today, Independence is a chance to get together with family and friends, eat, chat, and enjoy some pyrotechnics. It is also a good time to pause and think about what it means to be an American.

Written by Rose James, SCHS Program Manager