St Paul, MN, USA
On November 21st, 2022, Nellie Stone Johnson made history again as the first African-American person and the first Minnesotan woman to be honored with a statue at the Minnesota Capitol.
Among those who participated in the unveiling ceremony were Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, labor and community leaders, and Nellie Stone Johnson’s family and relatives.
The life-size sculpture was created by Sculptor Tim Cleary, depicting Stone Johnson holding Farmer-Labor party publications.
Nellie Stone Johnson (1905-2002) was a civil rights activist and a union organizer. She was born to a black farming middle-class family in Dakota County, Minnesota. She started her activism work in her teenage years when she joined the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
In 1922, she moved to Minneapolis to complete her high school education and attended the University of Minnesota, majoring in social and political science. As a student, she worked at the all-male Minneapolis Athletic Club; after their salary cut, she organized the employees into the Minneapolis Hotel and Restaurant Workers union.
It was the beginning of her life journey of activism. The list of her accomplishments and firsts is long. Among them is helping to found the Minnesota Democratic Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), becoming the first black person elected to a Minneapolis citywide office in 1945 when she was elected to the Library Board, establishing state and local Fair Employment Practices departments, which later became the Minneapolis Civil Rights Commission and the state Human Rights Department.
She also worked on establishing the Minneapolis Fair Employment Practices department, the first of its kind in the US. In 1950, Stone Johnson wrote the Minneapolis NAACP initiative that led to the desegregation of the US armed forces. In 1963, Stone Johnson opened a sewing shop in the old downtown Minneapolis and operated it for over 30 years.
Stone Johnson’s statue is one of the first statues of black women in the state capitols.
In 2020, a statue of Harriet Tubman was dedicated at Maryland Capitol. The first black woman bust in the US Capitol was dedicated in 2009 to Sojourner Truth.
In 2013, Rosa Parks’ statue was dedicated; it was the first entire statue of a black person.
In July 2022, the first statue of an African-American was donated to the National Statuary Hall collection; it is the statue of Mary McLeod Bethune, representing the state of Florida.
In 2023, a statue of Daisy Lee Gatson Bates will be added to the collection, representing Arkansas. Read more...
Minneapolis, MN, USA
A life-size bronze statue of Mary Tyler Moore is commemorating the Emmy winning star and the character she played in the groundbreaking sitcom “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” The statue honors the impact it had on the image of Minneapolis, as it was set in the show.
Moore’s portrayal of an independent television producer challenged the traditional view of women’s role in society and offered a modern approach to women’s liberation.
The statue was commissioned by TV Land and was originally unveiled on May 8, 2002. It was created by the artist Gwendolyn Gillen, capturing the iconic moment Mary is tossing her hat in the air, as she does during the opening sequence of the show, at the very same spot where the shot was filmed, Nicollet and 7th Street, downtown Minneapolis. The plaque on the statue inscribed with the words of the show’s theme song: “Who can turn the world on with her smile?” Read more...
Saint Paul, MN, USA
Minnesota Woman Suffrage Memorial commemorates the US Suffrage Movement in general and the 25 suffragists who led the campaign for women’s right to vote in Minnesota from Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association (MWSA) in particular.
The memorial is located on the Minnesota State Capitol grounds since it was dedicated in 2000 on August 26th, Women’s Equality Day, precisely 80 years after the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution was ratified, giving women the right to vote. Minnesota was the 15th state to ratify the amendment, and this was the first memorial dedicated to women in the Minnesota State House.
The memorial is a combination of gardens of flowers, prairies, woodland plants and native grasses, separated by trellis imprinted with names of the 25 suffrage leaders of Minnesota.
Members of the Minnesota League of Women Voters led the initiative for the memorial, after receiving the approval from the Minnesota legislative in 1996. The memorial was built with donations collected from individuals and organizations. Read more...
Grand Rapids, MN, USA
A house museum dedicated to Judy Garland’s life and her legendary role as Dorothy in the movie ‘The Wizard of Oz’. The museum is located in Garland’s childhood home, which reflects her humble beginning as a small-town girl and her path to stardom.
Discover the star’s life story through personal family items as well as Wizard of Oz memorabilia, including Dorothy’s test dress and the original Carriage once owned by Abraham Lincoln. You can even engrave a message on the Yellow Brick Road.
While the adults explore the magic of Garland and the iconic movie, the children can enjoy the adjacent Children’s Discovery Museum, featuring hands-on exhibits such as a dinosaur dig, a Mississippi River water table, and the ‘Lions and Tigers and Bears’ Exhibit. The whole family can participate in special events, such as ‘A Rat Pack Dinner’, Judy, Frank, and Dean Special, and the Judy Garland Festival. Read more...