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Northfield-Rice County Digital History Collection

Northfield-Rice County Digital History Collection

Category Archives: Rice County Historical Society

World War I book donations

27 Thursday Sep 2018

Posted by Stephanie Hess in Arts and Culture, History Blog, Military, Northfield Historical Society, Northfield News, Northfield Public Library, Recreation, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

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Did you know that books can help win wars?

At least, that is what Northfield citizens thought 100 years ago, when their country was deeply involved in World War I. The Northfield News urged its readers to “Let Your Idle Books Help Our Soldiers.”

Northfield News, September 14, 1917

Northfield News, September 14, 1917

There were book collection points at the Northfield Public Library and other libraries in Rice County.

Book collection poster, 1918

Book collection poster, 1918

Book collection poster, 1917-1918

Book collection poster, 1917-1918

Even the Boy Scouts helped the cause – they “did their bit” to collect books from the community by driving around Northfield in a car with a large banner on it. According to their scrapbook from the time, the boys collected almost 1,300 volumes on March 23, 1918. This scrapbook has many other great photographs of the Boy Scouts activities during this period, including Liberty Loan parades and more.

Boy Scouts book collection drive, 1918

Boy Scouts book collection drive, 1918

During wartime, there are many ways to contribute to the war effort. Books – and knowledge – may have been just what they needed to win.

Poster, c. 1918

Poster, c. 1918

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What’s new on the DHC?

13 Friday Jul 2018

Posted by Stephanie Hess in Agriculture, Businesses, Carleton College, City of Northfield, History Blog, Malt-O-Meal, Northfield Historical Society, People, Politics and Government, Religion, Rice County Historical Society, Social Issues, St. Johns Lutheran Church, St. Olaf College

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Residence of Frederick Albers, c. 1900. Bridgewater Township collection.

We have been busy so far in 2018! Here is a list of some of the highlights that have been added to the Northfield-Rice County Digital History Collection since January:

Bridgewater Township collection:

  • Birth Register 1907-1915
  • Individual documents and photos

First United Church of Christ collection:

  • Looking Backward: A History of the Congregational Church in Northfield
  • Manual of the Congregational Church of Northfield, 1878

Three Links Care Center collection:

  • I.O.O.F. Home for Elderly and Children Scrapbook

St. John’s Lutheran Church collection:

  • Ladies Aid Past Presidents scrapbook

Rice County Historical Society collection:

  • Miscellaneous historical documents

Northfield Historical Society collection:

  • 1878 Newton S. Persons Diary
  • Northfield City Council meeting minutes book, 1893-1903
  • Malt-O-Meal photographs and documents
  • Sheldahl Co. photographs
  • Reminiscences of Elise K. Ytterboe
  • Minutes book of the Northfield Improvement Association, 1884-1937
  • Northfield High School commencement programs: added years 1929, 1930, 1937

Carleton College born digital collection:

  • World War II photographs and documents

More to come!

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500 Unique Items from World War I Era Digitized

02 Tuesday Jan 2018

Posted by Stephanie Hess in Carleton College, City of Dundas, History Blog, Military, Northfield Historical Society, Politics and Government, Rice County Historical Society, St. Olaf College, World War I

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We at the Northfield-Rice County Digital History Collection (DHC), a digital library of historical records from the Northfield area, are pleased to announce that we have completed a grant-funded project to digitize historical materials that document the World War I era in Northfield and Rice County, Minnesota.

The digitized materials come from many of the DHC’s 16 partner organizations and include text documents, photographs, illustrations, artifacts, and even sheet music. The new online collection shares the experiences of individuals from the Northfield and Rice County area who served during the war in various branches of the military, in the Red Cross and other humanitarian organizations, and on the home front.

Selection of items available in the World War I online collection.

“We have a remarkably deep collection of World War I records and are thrilled that we can now share a portion of those records online,” stated Susan Garwood, the Executive Director of the Rice County Historical Society, one of the DHC’s founding partners. “The records we have in our collection are the only remaining official record of Rice County’s participation in the war. They are invaluable to genealogical researchers and will provide a great cache of primary documents for schools.”

The Project Coordinator for the DHC, Stephanie Hess, added, “We are very excited that these materials can now be found and used widely, not just within our local organizations.”

To complete this digitization project, the DHC:

  • created 5,212 new digital images (scans and photographs);
  • transcribed 4,757 pages of typed and handwritten text; and
  • developed an extensive online collection guide, complete with links to the database.

In honor of the centennial of the United States’ involvement in the Great War, the DHC is pleased to provide the public this rich collection of primary resources. The online collection is open to all researchers: please follow the links to the materials through the collection guide at http://nrcdighistory.org/collection-guides/world-war-i-collection-guide/.

About the Northfield-Rice County Digital History Collection: The Northfield Historical Society and the Rice County Historical Society have partnered to provide a common site to preserve and make accessible digital versions of historical collections held in various locations across the Rice County, MN. Formerly this partnership was called the Northfield History Collaborative. In 2020, the name was changed to the Northfield-Rice County Digital History Collection and it remains a hub of historical resources related to the area.

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Massive Record of Soldiers Book Uploaded

14 Thursday Dec 2017

Posted by Stephanie Hess in History Blog, Military, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

≈ 1 Comment

We at the DHC are pleased to announce that we have completed the digitization of an incredibly rich resource detailing the service of Rice County servicemen during World War I.

Record of Soldiers in World War ledger

Record of Soldiers in World War ledger, Rice County Historical Society collection, 2010.119.04

This Record of Soldiers in the World War ledger was compiled by the Rice County War Records Committee during and after the war. They intended to keep a record of every man from the county who served using a two-sided form – although we have found that some forms are more filled out than others. As you can imagine, capturing the information for so many people was a massive undertaking and we can see the results in the more than 5″ tall ledger you see here.

To ready this book for the DHC, a team of staff and volunteers spent countless hours scanning every page with writing on it, and also transcribing all the unique text on the pages. We transcribed every word so that the digitized book is full-text searchable on both the DHC’s CONTENTdm database as well as on completely unrelated search engines. A team of DHC staff and volunteers created over 2,000 scans (2,084 to be exact) and transcribed 2,028 pages. None of this would have been possible without the help from these community volunteers and students from St. Olaf College:

Wally Ahrens
Ryleigh Beers
Thea Brenner
Kelly Cheng
Teagan Letscher
Anna Moen
Tetyana Samiliv
Danielle Sovereign
Danica Vin Ly
Jordan Weaver

Each page recorded personal and family information as well as enlistment and service details. In this way, the book is not simply a “war record” book – it can serve as a resource for family historians and genealogists, as well as researchers looking for details on occupations, demographics, residences and migration, and more.

Excerpt from the record of Christian M. Grastvedt of Northfield

Excerpt from the record of Christian M. Grastvedt of Northfield in the Record of Soldiers book.

Occasionally, more detailed stories can be found on the reverse side of a form, including the battles the man participated in, whether or not he was wounded, and sometimes if he died. A few of the records include the soldier’s first-person account of experiences copied from his letters.

First-person note from James Alfred Sheeran of Faribault

First-person note from James Alfred Sheeran of Faribault about his experiences at sea on the way to France during the war. As copied into his page in the Record of Soldiers book.

“The ship on which I traveled,” he wrote, “collided with the S.S. Otranto somewhere north of Ireland … accounts state between three and four hundred American Soldiers were killed or drowned.” Luckily, no one on his ship lost their lives due to the accident. Details like this can be found in many of the pages within the Record of Soldiers book.

Overall, this massive ledger provides a fascinating cross-section view on the variety of ways Rice County men served in the military during World War I. Reading it, you can see how many enlisted compared to how many were drafted. You can see the varied backgrounds each of them came from – yes, many were farmers, but there were also clerks, teachers, plumbers, dentists, mechanics, even a chiropractor. You can see the many departments they served in – Aviation, Signal Corps, Machine Gun, Field or Coast Artillery, Infantry, Engineers, Pioneer Infantry, Navy, and more. You can read details about their promotions, transfers, and movement throughout the U.S. in different training camps as well as all over France. You can see lists of battles they participated in and times they received medical care.

For all of the information found within this book, however, I am always left with a desire to learn more. Why did he get medical care? How did his wife feel about him enlisting and leaving her alone with their baby? Why was he rejected only 5 days after being drafted? What did he do once he returned home? How did he feel about his service if he only served 2 months and never went “across”? What memories did he hold on to long after the war ended?

That’s the beauty of primary source documents like this – they lead you down more paths to research and explore. I hope you enjoy digging into this document as much as we did while preparing it for you!

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Food and the War

16 Thursday Nov 2017

Posted by Stephanie Hess in Agriculture, Health and Medicine, History Blog, Politics and Government, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

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Today I am continuing to highlight some of the new resources available online that highlight the Northfield experience during World War I. In the last post, I shared some aerial photographs from France kept in a scrapbook by Irwin Smith, who served in the Intelligence Division “over there” during the war.

Closer to home, the households of the Northfield area were also heavily involved in wartime activities. Since Rice County is a very agricultural area, many local citizens were encouraged to contribute to the production and conservation of food for local and worldwide consumption. The National Emergency Food Garden Commission was formed shortly after America entered the war to promote food conservation ideas as well as educate Americans on how to participate. The commission urged households to grow and produce their own food so that the food they would normally buy could be exported to feed American troops and the populations of the Allied Nations.

Cartoon of produce joining the Army of Food Producers and Food Savers, 1917

Cartoon of produce joining the Army of Food Producers and Food Savers, 1917, from the Manual for Home Storage, Pickling, Fermentation and Salting Vegetables

This cartoon was printed in a manual with guidelines for the home storage, pickling, fermentation, and salting of perishable vegetables and fruits in 1917. Rice County Historical Society owns many of these wartime food conservation guides, with practical information on preserving produce, preparing dishes using new types of flour rather than wheat, and following recipes for sugarless sweets. Local families and businesses followed wheatless and meatless days. Even candy stores bought into the idea of using less sugar and created sweets based on fruit, nuts, and even the newly popular peanut butter. The idea was that the soldiers needed the meat and the wheat and the sugar more than the folks at home. Some of the recipes are also due to wartime shortages and issues with the food supply lines.

“Are we to do less now for sugar than we did last year for wheat?” the United States Food Administration wrote in a Sugar for the Common Table recipe booklet. “Are we not going to face the sugar shortage squarely and solve it satisfactorily?” The booklet continues:

Let it again be said to our honor, we have ungrudgingly shared with the brave soldiers and the War-wearied folks of other lands who sit with us now at freedom’s common table. When we eat candy, we must eat war confections. The old-fashioned candies, made largely from sugar, should be discouraged. On the succeeding pages are suggestions for making war confections. Patriotic people, big and little, will use these instead of pre-war candies.

manual Sugar for the Common Table, October 1918

Recipes from the manual Sugar for the Common Table, October 1918

Through food preservation and sacrificing pre-war sweets, meats, and wheats, people at home in Northfield could show their patriotic support for the war effort.

Another interesting facet of the food conservation movement during the war was the growth in understanding of nutritional science. The United States Food Administration developed a college course called “Food and the War” which was designed to provide students information not only on the wartime food situation, but also an understanding of how food fuels bodies, what calories are, different sources of protein, and more. Students at both St. Olaf and Carleton Colleges took this course, and its outline is available online.

Excerpt from Lecture II of the Food and the War course outline

Excerpt from Lecture II of the Food and the War course outline, 1918

By taking this course, students left behind at both colleges could learn how best to go about conserving food and other resources so that the rest of the country could focus on winning the war.

Check out the next post for more details on community organizations during and after the war!

View all of the items digitized for this project here.

 

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More Digitized Resources Available Online

01 Wednesday Nov 2017

Posted by Stephanie Hess in History Blog, Military, People, Politics and Government, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

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Over the last few months, I have been busy with my World War I digitization project for the Northfield-Rice County Digital History Collection. To see all 460+ and counting unique items online, go to http://nrcdighistory.org and click on the “World War I in Northfield” link near the bottom of the page.

The stories that can be found among the digitized materials of the DHC are set in locations both near and far. For example, Northfield-area serviceman Irwin F. Smith, a sergeant in Division Intelligence of the 88th Division, was stationed in the Alsace border region of France. Although we have found no records that specify exactly what Sgt. Smith did as an Intelligence officer, some clues can be found in his scrapbook of photographs that is in the Rice County Historical Society collection. The whole scrapbook has been digitized and you can see some amazing photographs from France during the war – including a set of aerial photographs showing trenchworks and more!

Irwin Smith and French colleagues "somewhere in France", 1918

Irwin Smith and French colleagues “somewhere in France”, 1918. See the original on page 7 of his scrapbook on the DHC.

This photograph shows Sgt. Smith standing with unidentified officers and men from the French army. Since America was so late in entering the war, its intelligence-gathering services were not as developed as its allies, and it relied heavily on standards set by the intelligence services of both France and Great Britain. Smith likely trained with and performed his work with these French allies in the field.

While the Allied Forces gained information about the enemy through breaking coded radio transmissions and other methods, they also conducted aerial surveillance using tethered balloons and airplanes equipped with cameras. The aerial photographs showed the locations of enemy trenches, tanks, soldiers, and more. It is very possible that Sgt. Smith was involved in the gathering and analysis of aerial photographs as an intelligence officer, because he had access to dozens of aerial photographs taken in the Alsace region where he was stationed. He kept copies of them in his scrapbook.

Aerial photograph of trenches and shell holes near Bernwiller in the Alsace region, c. 1918

Aerial photograph of trenches and shell holes near Bernwiller in the Alsace region, c. 1918. On page 17 of Smith’s scrapbook.

Most of his photographs show locations near Altkirch, a border town in the Alsace region that was affected by the opening attack of World War I by the French Army against Germany in 1914. Smith was not there until 1918, but the evidence of the battles remained in his photographs – miles of convoluted trench works and empty rain-filled shell holes, not to mention the ruins of houses and barns, remain visible in this contested area 4 years after they were destroyed. We can only imagine what they looked like on the ground.

Check out the next post to read about World War I-era Northfield stories closer to home!

View all of the items digitized for this project here.

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Propaganda Posters from World War I

05 Thursday Oct 2017

Posted by Stephanie Hess in History Blog, Military, Politics and Government, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

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Propaganda posters from World War I have very striking, sometimes disturbing designs and messages. Today’s audiences might laugh them off but at the time they were very successful at uniting the American home front to support the war. Check out some of my favorites from the Rice County Historical Society‘s collection here and also on the DHC: http://bit.ly/2z0Pnnv

Poster, “Can Vegetables Fruit and the Kaiser too,” 1918 http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5201/rec/3

Poster, “Are YOU a Victory Canner?” http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5187/rec/1

Poster, “Our Flags,” 1917-1918 http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5190/rec/11

Poster, “Over the top for you,” 1918 http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5196/rec/12

Poster, “Good Bye, Dad,” 1918 http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5199/rec/5

Poster, “Remember! The Flag of Liberty Support It!” 1918 http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5192/rec/13

Poster, “Halt the Hun!,” 1918 http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5191/rec/6

Poster, “Little Americans, Do your bit,” 1917 – 1918 http://contentdm.carleton.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/RiceCounty/id/5189/rec/10

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Rice County World War I Soldier Records

07 Friday Jul 2017

Posted by Stephanie Hess in History Blog, Military, People, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

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Highlights of the World War I digitization project, part 1

Today I would like to share with you some of the great resources I have been able to digitize as a part of this World War I project.

One of our contributors, the Rice County Historical Society, is home to an amazing collection of World War I records created by the Rice County War Records Committee. This committee was formed while World War I was underway primarily to create a historical record of those who served in the war from Rice County. The RCHS’s collection includes a basic index of names for servicemen arranged by township or city, a huge ledger with double-sided pages for everyone who served, and individual soldier files – many of which include original induction cards, photographs, correspondence, and more.

Individual soldier file for Frank Paul Delesha of Faribault, Rice County Historical Society collection

Since the entire collection takes up two wooden four-drawer file cabinets, the Collaborative has decided to scan only the ledger book and a small selection of individual soldier files. We chose to include folders from soldiers who came from various Rice County cities, villages, and townships that contained unique stories. And what stories they tell!

In summary form, we can learn about the soldiers’ families, residences and occupation prior to service, military training, ranks and departments, stations and battles, whether or not they were injured or killed, and (in some cases) what they did after the war. As a whole, this digitized collection gives us all a very broad perspective on the variety of ways men (and some women) could serve in the military during this time.

Individually, we get snapshots of experiences that are fascinating on many levels, not only for war history buffs. Genealogists, family historians, social historians, and more can find something of interest in this collection.

For example, the record for Roy James Kallak includes a personal account of life in the United States Navy, written by Roy himself. Part of his job was to escort troopships across the Atlantic Ocean for service in the trenches. They were constantly on the lookout for enemy submarines hoping to torpedo the American soldiers. At the end of his account, Roy writes:

It may be well to add, in the interests of those Minnesota “Leather-Necks,” especially the Faribault boys who left New York with our convoy Oct. 13th 1918, that I have since learned…that the ship has been officially notified through the Navy Department, by information received from Germany, that that convoy was followed by a submarine for thirteen hours, it being unable to get a shot in because of the series of zig-zag courses we run [sic].

Thanks to Roy and his Navy crew, those Faribault boys crossed safely over the ocean.

Portrait of Roy Kallak, Rice County Historical Society collection

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Pvt. John Fredrickson and the 54th Pioneers

02 Friday Jun 2017

Posted by Stephanie Hess in History Blog, Military, People, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

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Item of the Week:

Here is Private John Fredrickson’s handwritten poem about his unit in World War I: Company L of The 54th Pioneers, who were cross-trained in combat engineering and infantry tactics, and often were responsible for building the roads for their fellow troops – all while under heavy bombardment.

The Pioneers, Private John Fredrickson. Rice County Historical Society Collection.

Apparently the Pioneer Infantry units were often overlooked in stories about the war, and Fredrickson felt the need to laud their efforts when he wrote:

We read about the dough boys and their valor, which is true,
And of the valiant part they played for old Red, White and Blue;
We read about the H.F.A. [heavy field artillery] and their ever roaring guns,
Also the heavy part they played in blowing up the Hun;
The Infantry, the Cavalry, the hardy engineers,
But we never read a single line about “The Pioneers.”

He continues:

The Pioneers, Private John Fredrickson. Rice County Historical Society Collection.

He sums up his work in this way:

We didn’t really fight the battles,
Nor really chase the Hun,
Our bit was just to keep on working,
And not to shoot a gun.
But tell your friends and neighbors, Frank
We helped old Bill’s retreat
For every road was fixed for loads
For troops and trucks and tanks.

Read more about Pvt. John Fredrickson and see his photographs in his war service record on the Collaborative.

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Service and Sacrifice

21 Friday Apr 2017

Posted by Stephanie Hess in History Blog, Military, People, Rice County Historical Society, World War I

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Two of the major themes we are exploring at the Northfield Historical Society for our centennial commemoration of World War I are service and sacrifice, both at home and abroad. While going through some of the individual soldier records in the Rice County War Records Commission collection at the Rice County Historical Society (2 file cabinets full!) I have already found a few examples of both service and sacrifice from Northfield-area citizens.

Delphine Carpenter in uniform. Rice County Historical Society collection.

Miss Delphine Carpenter is one of the few women included in the files. She was from Northfield and served the U.S. Navy as a Yeoman 3 Class Female, one of the few ways women could directly serve the U.S. military during the war. She was stationed at Navy Yard in Washington, D.C. for the duration of the war until she was discharged in 1920.

Ralph W. Cornell in uniform. Rice County Historical Society collection.

Ralph W. Cornell was drafted on June 25, 1918 in Faribault. He served with the infantry in the battles of Argonne Forest in November of 1918, and was badly wounded by shrapnel in his neck and shoulder. After he returned to civilian life, he only worked two days before his wound opened and he was unable to work consistently for years after he returned. He sent this photograph to the War Records Committee along with a letter describing when it was taken:

Letter from Ralph Cornell to Frank Kaisersatt, 1919. Rice County Historical Society collection.

“From appearances,” he wrote, “you would hardly think me badly injured would you?” He continued, “Still the left arm at that time was paralized [sic] and an ugly hole through the base of neck and left shoulder also a portion of the spine shot away, and since then have had one rib removed etc.” Living with the realities of his wound, he concluded that his arm “hasn’t weakened yet but may get thin some day.”

Arthur H. Drewitz in uniform. Rice County Historical Society collection.

Finally, some of the greatest sacrifices were borne by the families of soldiers. Arthur Drewitz served with the infantry in France from August to October 1918. He was declared missing in action since October 8, 1918.

Telegram sent to Arthur Drewitz’s parents, December 1918. Rice County Historical Society collection.

His mother wrote the following letter in March of 1919 asking the Rice County War Records Committee to track down any information they could about her “Dear boy” Arthur. She asked them to do what they could so that she “may know what has become of him” and to “find out if he is alive yet or if he is in some prisoners camp yet or any place in Germany.” She had not heard from her son since his last letter of September 15, 1918.

Letter from Mrs. Hermann Drewitz, March 26, 1919. Rice County Historical Society collection.

Many of the soldiers initially listed as missing in action were later classified as killed in action, but their bodies were never recovered. Can you imagine the pain of not knowing anything about your son like Mrs. Hermann Drewitz? Or living with chronic pain from shrapnel wounds? Even despite these sacrifices, though, most of those who served remained proud of their service. Even Private Cornell, disabled as he was, said, “I am sure proud to say I did my little bit over there for Minnesota.”

The full records of these individuals, among others, will soon be posted on the Northfield History Collaborative site. You can view more of them in person in Faribault at the Rice County Historical Society.

 

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