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X-WR-CALNAME:Washington County Historical Society
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.wchsmn.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Washington County Historical Society
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DTSTART:20220313T080000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220405T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220405T203000
DTSTAMP:20260621T162112
CREATED:20220225T204543Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220806T174809Z
UID:4675-1649185200-1649190600@www.wchsmn.org
SUMMARY:"Ambulance Man" with author Brian Casey
DESCRIPTION:  \n\n \n\n \n“A behind-the-scenes ride that is sometimes funny\, sometimes frightening\, but always heartfelt.” Join Brian Casey for a program about what it was like to work in high-pressure situations as a paramedic and EMT including his early days working on the orange-and-white wagon ambulance that barreled down the streets of Stillwater in the 1980s.\n \nABOUT THE BOOK:\nBrian Casey’s latest book\, Ambulance Man\, is the story of a uniquely intense and rewarding occupation\, one that has not been widely told. Ride along with the calm and measured paramedics of 1980s ambulance work as they navigate speed and gore. Chronicled are the memories of a boy who followed the sirens’ call into manhood utilizing grit and imagination to overcome hidden deficits. Ambulance Man is the sometimes funny\, sometimes frightening\, but always heartfelt story of a young man’s entry into ambulance work.\n \nShort excerpt:\nFor years as a boy\, I had rushed from my house to the corner of Third and Laurel for a distant glimpse of the very ambulances that were now coming there to pick me up to be the ambulance attendant. Like a realized dream of glory\, that most beautiful of man-made objects\, the ambulance\, would stop before me and I would climb in.\nAt night the phone would ring and the caller quip\, “Gotta call\, pick ya up.” Sometimes I wouldn’t hear the phone ring and my folks would take the call and wake me with the message. I would spring from bed\, dress with trembling hands\, and go out into the dark. I would stand in the illumination of the streetlight as crickets chirped in the summer or crystalized snow fell in the winter.\nThe rig would arrive silently\, not wishing to advertise the detour needed to complete a crew. Sometimes I would wait and wonder if they had changed their mind or forgotten me. Once it occurred to me that some sick or injured person and I were both waiting for the same ambulance.\n \nABOUT THE AUTHOR:\nBrian Casey grew up Stillwater and earned a teaching degree from the University of Minnesota. Casey has spent his entire adult working life as an EMT\, paramedic\, EMS educator\, and police officer
URL:https://www.wchsmn.org/event/ambulanceman/
LOCATION:Washington County Heritage Center\, 1862 South Greeley St\, Stillwater\, MN\, 55082\, United States
CATEGORIES:Washington County Heritage Center
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220420T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220420T200000
DTSTAMP:20260621T162112
CREATED:20220305T193459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220811T190118Z
UID:4728-1650481200-1650484800@www.wchsmn.org
SUMMARY:"A Bag Worth a Pony: The Art of the Ojibwe Bandolier Bag" with author Marcia G. Anderson
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \n \n\nHave you seen the gorgeous bandolier bags in the lobby of the Washington County Heritage Center? WCHS is brought in the expert to talk about these beautiful pieces. Marcia G. Anderson\, whose book was a significant resource in the exhibit’s content\, presented on her book A Bag Worth a Pony: The Art of the Ojibwe Bandolier Bag. Marcia Anderson was curator of the Minnesota Historical Society’s museum collections for 30 years. \n\nCopies of A Bag Worth a Pony: The Art of the Ojibwe Bandolier Bag are available online at our store and in-person at the Heritage Center store.\n \nABOUT THE BOOK:\n\nBandolier bags\, or gashkibidaaganag—the large\, heavily beaded shoulder bags made and worn by several North American Indian tribes around the Great Lakes—are prized cultural icons here and around the world. From the 1870s to the present day\, Ojibwe bead artists of Minnesota have been especially well known for their lively\, creative designs. Neighboring Dakota people would trade a pony for a beautiful beaded bag. \n \nOver the years\, non-Indian collectors and ethnographers\, struck by the bags’ cultural significance and visual appeal\, bought them up. Today\, there are hundreds of bags in museums around the world\, but not so many in the hands of community members. In A Bag Worth a Pony\, Marcia G. Anderson shares the results of thirty years of study\, in which she learned from the talented bead artists who keep the form alive\, from historical records\, and from the bags themselves. \n \nAnderson examines the history\, forms\, structure\, and motifs of the bags\, giving readers the tools to understand a bag’s makeup and meaning. She also offers a tour of Minnesota’s seven Ojibwe reservations\, showing the beautiful beaded bags associated with each along with the personal insights of seven master beadworkers.\n \nIn the Media:\n \n“Bright red\, green\, and blue beads in geometric and floral patterns on shoulder bags being danced by Ojibwe men. This is what the reader first sees when opening Minnesota Historical Society curator Anderson’s wonderful new book about the gashkibidaaganag (Anishinaabe beaded bags) held in the collections of the Minnesota Historical Society. One can quickly see why Anderson has worked with these culturally significant pieces for over 30 years\, and how her dedicated research has produced sophisticated and nuanced scholarship as well as a model for how museum collections can be fruitfully reanalyzed so readers can hear the history and continuing cultural vitality of Native peoples. As Anderson deftly demonstrates\, the pieces communicate much about Ojibwe culture\, how art is used on a daily basis and in special events\, the historical experiences of each community\, Anishinaabe-Euroamerican economic and political relations\, and how the storied bags moved from makers to a museum. The book’s second half contains fascinating stories from knowledgeable individuals and beadwork artists residing at 12 different Anishinaabe communities. These stories are as important as the bags\, for they show that the bags are living expressions of Anishinaabe culture.”\nCHOICE reviews\n \nPraise:\n \n“Beautifully illustrated\, carefully researched\, and sensitively written\, A Bag Worth a Pony is filled with valuable information about Ojibwe bandolier bags—gashkibidaagang—one of the great glories of Native North American beaded art and an important part of Ojibwe identity. The author uses historical writings\, photographs\, contemporary interviews\, and analysis of technique and designs to accurately place the bags within their communities. Above all\, Anderson conveys the spirit behind the bags by honoring the superb artistry of their (predominantly female) makers.”\nLois Sherr Dubin\, author of The History of Beads: 100\,000 BC to the Present\n \n“A Bag Worth a Pony reveals the story behind the Ojibwe bandolier bag\, which proliferated throughout the assimilation era when Ojibwe and other Native people struggled to maintain their cultural traditions. Over several decades\, Minnesota historian Marcia Anderson interviewed several bead artists whose voices teach us more about the significance of this enduring practice and the strength of a people.”\nKarissa Isaacs\, associate curator\, Tweed Museum of Art\, University of Minnesota Duluth\n \n“In this well-researched and richly illustrated history of a distinctive indigenous art form\, Anderson does the hard work of connecting specific gashkibidaagan to their Minnesota communities of origin and\, when possible\, to individual artists or families\, enriching our understanding of local stylistic variations. By providing context to the circumstances of making\, wearing\, and collecting these regalia\, in the past and today\, she also brings much-needed focus to the lived experiences of Ojibwe artists across the generations.”\nAdriana Greci Green\, curator of Indigenous Arts of the Americas\, The Fralin Museum of Art at the University of Virginia
URL:https://www.wchsmn.org/event/marciaganderson/
LOCATION:Washington County Heritage Center\, 1862 South Greeley St\, Stillwater\, MN\, 55082\, United States
CATEGORIES:Washington County Heritage Center
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220427T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220427T203000
DTSTAMP:20260621T162112
CREATED:20220308T182603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220806T175801Z
UID:4732-1651086000-1651091400@www.wchsmn.org
SUMMARY:Presentation on the Red River Métis by historian Fritz Anderson
DESCRIPTION:EVENT INFO: \nFrom Fritz Anderson: \nThe Red River Métis is a community of the Minnesota’s early settlers of Minnesota that came from the OTHER direction of many settlers of the day. Early Minnesotan history had many settlers that came from the Northwest\, rather than the East.  This intriguing group came from the Red River Valley of northwestern Minnesota and what is now Southern Manitoba.  The Métis were an entirely new society that were of Native and White ancestry but subscribed to being neither. A new people that were distinctive in American history as being the only example of a new culture with a unique language and strong social identity that arose from a combination of many peoples. \nThe Washington County Heritage Center will be open at 6pm for event attendees to experience the museum prior to the event at 7pm. No registration required. 
URL:https://www.wchsmn.org/event/fritzanderson/
LOCATION:Washington County Heritage Center\, 1862 South Greeley St\, Stillwater\, MN\, 55082\, United States
CATEGORIES:Washington County Heritage Center
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220428T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220428T203000
DTSTAMP:20260621T162112
CREATED:20220423T200140Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220423T200411Z
UID:4849-1651170600-1651177800@www.wchsmn.org
SUMMARY:Private Rental
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://www.wchsmn.org/event/education-center-private-rental/
LOCATION:Washington County Heritage Center\, 1862 South Greeley St\, Stillwater\, MN\, 55082\, United States
CATEGORIES:Washington County Heritage Center
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