Category: history

  • COLUMN: From the Grange to the Range, Minnesota’s protest history shapes today

    COLUMN: From the Grange to the Range, Minnesota’s protest history shapes today

    This is my Sunday column for the Feb. 26, 2012 edition of the Hibbing Daily Tribune. From the Grange to the Range, Minnesota’s protest history shapes todayBy Aaron J. Brown I’ll never forget the night of the 1998 election. I was working as a reporter for KDTH-AM in Dubuque, Iowa. My boss Cindy Kohlmann and…

  • Hibbing demolishes landmark Dupont building

    Hibbing demolishes landmark Dupont building

    I wrote two months ago about the city of Hibbing’s plans to demolish the landmark Dupont Blasting Powder power station. I wrote then with hope the city would reconsider its decision. The Hibbing Historical Society took a stab at preserving the site somehow, but lacked funds to pay for a study. When those efforts failed…

  • The cold touch of metal, the language of machines

    The cold touch of metal, the language of machines

    I grew up a mechanic’s son of a mechanic’s son on the Iron Range of northern Minnesota. My family has long lived around the Range’s tamarack swamps, seldom within its cities and often many miles out. Always more focused on the machines, the woods and the work than the machinations of the region’s booming, busting…

  • This blasted husk of a building is our coliseum

    This blasted husk of a building is our coliseum

    Last Sunday, my old neighbor and Hibbing Daily Tribune staff “curmudgeon” (that is his actual byline) penned a wonderful but disturbing column. He reported that the ruins of the old Dupont power house by Carey Lake in Hibbing might have to be demolished, presumably for safety reasons. Lynch also shared a wonderful collection of archived…

  • Skating back to the 1970s Iron Range

    Skating back to the 1970s Iron Range

    I was born on Minnesota’s Iron Range in 1979, essentially moments before the big steel industry collapse and local economic crash of the early 1980s. The region’s culture in the time since the crash seems forever oriented around comparisons to that boom time of the 1970s, when the taconite plants were new and running hot,…

  • COLUMN: ‘Peddler from the Range’ leaves great mark, complicated legacy

    COLUMN: ‘Peddler from the Range’ leaves great mark, complicated legacy

    This is my Sunday column for the Dec. 4, 2011 edition of the Hibbing Daily Tribune. On the same page of the newspaper my old neighbor from town days wrote a more detailed account of Paulucci’s history. ‘Peddler from the Range’ leaves great mark, complicated legacyBy Aaron J. Brown Early Thanksgiving 2011 Jeno Paulucci passed…

  • Iron Range history, depicted by mustachioed gentleman, giant talking dog

    Iron Range history, depicted by mustachioed gentleman, giant talking dog

    This upcoming Saturday folks can interact with Iron Range pioneer Cuyler Adams and his massive, bipedal, sentient dog at the Minnesota Discovery Center in Chisholm. CHISHOLM – See Hibbing resident Richie Johnson as pioneer and prospector Cuyler Adams in a family performance at 1 p.m. Saturday, December 3, at Minnesota Discovery Center. In real life,…

  • The wreck of the Mataafa

    The wreck of the Mataafa

    The other night the family and I were enjoying the light show at Bentleyville in one of our rare trips to Duluth, northern Minnesota’s regional center. In the glare of holiday opulence we caught a glimpse of a big laker gliding through the cold harbor on its way under the lift bridge, out the canal…

  • The Gales of November Come Early

    In memory of the 29 sailors who lost their lives Nov. 10, 1975 in the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. There are many other tragedies to report in our history, but none associated with such a good song that also highlights the dangerous work people in the upper midwest have done to build America’s industry.…

  • The night the Soviets occupied Hibbing

    I was absolutely floored by this item on the new Minnesota-based “Historically Inclined” blog by Jayson Hron. He describes in exquisite, luscious detail the frigid January 1959 night when the Soviet hockey team played an exhibition game in Hibbing, whipping a young American team in the Memorial Building arena. You must read this and you…

  • Range trolley runs extended through fall (bring your jammies)

    Range trolley runs extended through fall (bring your jammies)

    Etched into the woods north of many Iron Range towns is the faint outline of the trolley line that once spanned the mighty Mesabi iron formation, transporting workers from mine to mine, but usually from mine to the wet-and-wild city of Gilbert. (Gilbert would want you to know it is now a fine, upstanding small…

  • Brown on the Air: ETHNICITY!

    Brown on the Air: ETHNICITY!

    My essay for this week’s 91.7 KAXE edition of “Between You and Me” is about “my people.” The show’s topic is ethnicity. Guest host Linda Johnson will be taking stories from you, the listener, and playing great music. I’ll have some amusing observations about my strange blend of Iron Range nationalities. You can hear “Between…

  • A final word on Range political history and voting patterns

    A final word on Range political history and voting patterns

    The history keeps coming! My Silent Cal post from two weeks ago and my update about historical Range voting patterns last week have elicited an important clarification from the Iron Range’s most prominent and respected working historian, Pam Brunfelt. Actually, it is not accurate to state that voters had to request a ballot for the…

  • Another thought on early GOP politics in Range history

    Another thought on early GOP politics in Range history

    Folks seemed to like my Aug. 2 post “Silent Cal at the Hull Rust Mine” detailing the visit of President Calvin Coolidge to the Iron Range on that same date in 1928. I gave a brief overview of the Republican politics in the early 20th century on the Range. David Bednarczuk wrote me with this…

  • Silent Cal at the Hull Rust Mine

    Silent Cal at the Hull Rust Mine

    On this date in 1923, Warren Harding, an amiable, if corruptible president who sometimes questioned his own abilities to govern, died of a heart attack in San Francisco. Vice President Calvin Coolidge was sworn in during the night by his own father, a notary public. On this same date in 1928, President Coolidge became the…