SCHS News

Reminiscing

Friday is my last day at the museum before I begin a new chapter in retirement.  For the past couple of weeks I’ve been reminiscing about the changes that have occured during my fifteen years at the Scott County Historical Society.

In technology alone we are light-years away from the lowly fax machine and dial-up internet service we used in 2004. To publicize our programs, like “coffee-talks” and “lunch-box lectures”, we had to program media phone numbers (like Southwest News and Star-Tribune reporters/editors), into the banker-box sized fax machine – which had a dedicated telephone line.  I remember listening for the buzz-dot-dot-ding-zzzzzz sound to make sure the fax went through properly.  Now sending a press release is super easy, just create a media email distribution list and send an email.  However, we still need to review and update the distribution lists – the same as for fax phone numbers – somethings don’t change.

Faster internet is a blessing – and a curse.  We can get so much more done, connect with people faster and easier, and share information with the click of a button, which is fantastic.  However, with ease-of-use comes pressure to do more.  It’s a balancing act to do more and keep quality, which is something I believe we achieve at SCHS.

Here is a visual walk through some of the more outstanding changes at SCHS.

Office space reflects changes in technology (thanks Cargill for donating in-kind the desk & chair).  The director (me) added a bit of color and cleaned up her act.

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Our early hands-on exhibit item was a push button board – now we have a touchscreen that’s easily changed for new exhibit content.

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Along with changes in technology, the museum building itself had a very different look when it opened.  Originally the center hallway was one large room. Over the years, two half-walls were added to create three separate exhibit galleries – Maurice Stans government life, family life, and a center hall gallery for local exhibits.

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There was limited space to display county history; at one point we used the museum store area for exhibits.  A museum redesign project (funded by a 2013 Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community – SMSC grant), provided great opportunities to make the museum more welcoming, accessible and useful, including… a new entry and store.

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We had an African gallery, complete with a diorama! The SMSC 2013 grant provided funds to change the diorama into much needed archival storage, and create open gallery space.  (The lion and zebra were auctioned and the proceeds benefited collections care.)

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The research library shared space with SCHS exhibits. Through the SMSC 2013 redesign, we removed the platform and installed a much needed education storage closet. Exhibits were removed from the space and now the full room is devoted to research library use.

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Even the garden changed (thanks to a TORO grant in 2016); we removed the hedge surrounding the garden to create an open parklike space.  The new garden has native plantings, butterfly gardens, pergola, raised garden beds, and open space for programming.  The garden has hosted a few weddings since it’s redesign!

Staff has shifted over the past 15 years and I am extremely grateful for their skills, laughter, and high-quality work!  Thanks Megan, Judith, Patrick, Jaden, Courtney, Andy, Allison, Theresa, Stephanie, Rachel, Tyler, Erika, Tony, Caitlin, Dave, and Rose.

It’s been quite a run and I am proud of all that we accomplished during my tenure at SCHS.  These years have been the best of my working life and I have had many wonderful experiences both professional and personal that I will remember fondly. I will miss the incredible people I had the pleasure to work with and am at a loss on how to thank you for all the support you’ve shown me and the experiences we shared.

SCHS has an amazing staff and a wonderful volunteer base, and I look forward to seeing what new heights SCHS will reach in the future.  Thank You!

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A Window to the Past

The Scott County Historical Society gathers and preserves all manner of items and materials from around the county. Among them are archival materials, letter, business records, cards, brochures, etc. As a new year approaches this seems like a good time to promote our wonderful archive. While currently many of these items are not up online to be searched, we will be starting to add them to our online database on our website soon.

Our archive is ever growing and full of wonderful materials. If you are interested in genealogy, maybe see if we have photographs, old deeds, we might have a diploma from a great grandparent, or a letter they wrote to family overseas. While we work to make our archive more accessible to the public, know that it is a resource available to you. If you are curious what we have, or if you are looking for something particular, contact us and we can do some quick searches.

Archives are instrumental in research and preservation. Documents, photographs, even oral histories are all stored in our archive to be used as tool in their searches through history. On that point, we would also like to encourage you think twice before deleting old emails, or tossing out letter or pamphlets you get. While those items might not have a use to you anymore, we might be able to use them as a snapshot of life and times today. It is important that we remember that we are living history right this moment, and we must share, collect, and preserve today as much as do yesterday.

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Black Friday: A Little History

While holiday gift-giving is a centuries-old tradition, the holiday shopping season is not – it was defined by of all things, parades!  By the mid-20th-century parades were drawing large crowds and not just in large cities. Many parades were sponsored by local retailers (usually department stores), who by attaching their names to the parade, increased store visibility with holiday shoppers. Over time, Thanksgiving parades came to be seen as the unofficial start to the shopping season. In fact, Macy’s first parade on November 27, 1924 was advertised as a Christmas Parade with the arrival of Santa marking the official start to holiday shopping. (Note, the first few Macy parades included live animals from the Central Park Zoo, who were replaced with large balloon animals in 1927.)

Macy’s 1st Thanksgiving Parade 1924, Bettman Archive – Getty Images

Macy’s 1st Thanksgiving Parade 1924, Bettman Archive – Getty Images

But where does the term Black Friday come from?

Originally, the term was used to describe a financial crisis in 1869 when James Fish and Jay Gould worked together to buy up as much gold as possible ,to drive up the price and corner the market. However, their conspiracy unraveled on Friday, September 24, 1869, sending the stock market into a free-fall, ruining investors and tanking the economy. That day came to be known as “Black Friday.”

So if that’s where the term comes from, why is it associated with shopping? Well, we have to back up a bit.

President Lincoln designated the last Thursday of November as Thanksgiving and, as noted above, that day came to be known as the start of the holiday shopping season. This was fine until 1939, when Thanksgiving fell on November 30, leaving only 24 shopping days (actually, a bit less as most stores weren’t open on Sundays). President Roosevelt gave in to pressure and moved Thanksgiving up a week to allow more time for shopping. (Remember, this was during the depression and a longer shopping season was seen as good for the economy.)  This move caused controversy and confusion, particularly because he made the declaration in October! Congress finally passed a law in 1941 making the fourth Thursday in November the official Thanksgiving holiday.

Franklin Thanksgiving, Bettman Archive – Getty Image

Franklin Thanksgiving, Bettman Archive – Getty Image

By the 1950s it was clear that many people were taking the Friday after Thanksgiving off work, giving themselves a four-day holiday and getting a head start on holiday shopping. Although the day after Thanksgiving isn’t a Federal holiday, many state and school employees were given the day off, increasing the number of potential shoppers. This came to a head in Philadelphia where the annual Army / Navy college football game takes place on the Saturday after Thanksgiving. Thousands of people flooded into the city to not only take in the game, but to shop. The combination of football fans and shoppers was a bad mix – city cops had to work extra-long shifts, deal with large crowds and traffic, and the headache of shoplifters who took advantage of the situation too. By the 1960s locals were calling the crazy day after Thanksgiving “Black Friday”, a name that stuck and spread.

Black Friday came into its own during the 1980s and 90s when large big-box stores like Walmart, Target and Best Buy advertised blowout sales. By the turn of the 21st century deal-hunters were camping out in parking lots and waiting in lines through the wee-hours of the morning to be the first to get bargains.  At times, some crowds have turned a bit violent with fist-fights breaking out.  There’s even a website called Black Friday Death Count!

Today Black Friday has to share space with Cyber Monday and Small Business Saturday, but Thanksgiving is still seen marking the start of holiday shopping.

If shopping isn’t your thing, a group in the UK (Buy Nothing Day ), invites people to escape the “Shopocalypse” by engaging in anti-commercial activities, suggesting you stay at home with a good book or organize a free concert, anything as long as you don’t buy anything.

All of us at the Scott County Historical Society wish you and yours a warm and filling Thanksgiving Holiday.

(FYI: The museum is closed for Thanksgiving and Black Friday – we’re eating goodies and shopping!  The museum – and our museum store are open on Saturday.)

Where Did My Office Go!?

I feel it is important to give everyone at look at what it takes to put exhibits together. Seldom does the general public get to see the behind the scenes of putting together an exhibit. It is a thrilling and exhausting process. For months now we have been gathering artifacts and stories, building walls and connections, and putting together stories from across the county. The exhibits you see at the Stans Museum take months to develop and design. Physically putting them together can sometimes be the easiest part, once the research and planning is finish. Now while it is important to discuss all of this, there is one other, more humorous aspect to exhibits that I would like to share. That is of course, my vanishing office.

As you can see, it seems to have disappeared beneath baseballs, jerseys, trophies, and all manner of other sports memorabilia. In plain view is a Prior Lake Basketball Trophy that gets to enjoy my chair more than I do. Pictures and baseballs line the tables and shelves, not to mention the baseball team of my own I could field with all the jerseys. Granted the team would be confused when they all got jerseys from different teams, but that’s part of the fun. While I hope my office will reappear once the exhibit goes up, this seemed a good opportunity to get in a small laugh, and show the fun that we can get up to at the museum. Play Ball opens September 27th and we hope you enjoy it.

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!