Exterior view of the Badger School with several children and teachers in front of the school. The school was located in the same area that the present school is located. The building had a wonderful bell tower that the town was very proud of. This school was built in 1902.
Class portrait with 21 students. The teacher's desk is to the left, piled with books. Bare blackboards on two walls, with clock and various pictures around. Girls wearing dresses, boys in shirts with ties, vests or sweaters. Emma Ashauer and Elsie Teschendorf.
Proctor, near Duluth, was the home base of the DM & IR and its predecessor roads the D & IR and the DM & N. Proctor was created in 1892 when the railroad was extending into Duluth and needed large flat areas. It was the largest such yard in the world. In 1894, the village was incorporated as Proctorknott after J. Proctor Knott, a U.S. Congressman from Kentucky who delivered a satirical speech ridiculing Duluth. The name was later shortened to Proctor. The locomotive back shop was was completed in 1905 and used continuously until the end of the steam era. The old roundhouse at the left had already been superseded by a new engine facility at the north end of the yard when this photograph was taken.
Contributing Institution:
University of Minnesota Duluth, Kathryn A. Martin Library, Northeast Minnesota Historical Collections
Pictured is the South Side School in St. James. Commander AK Peck, Drummer Ida Schutz, Caroline Schutz Zellers, Miss Lobben, Mod Rawland, Miss Treffery, Clara Schutz, Hilda Howe, Miss Kopp, Miss Olson, Ida Clemments, Kellie Mullen, Hattie Merigold, Jannie Johnson, Lottie Johnson, Mary Sneller and Mary Wakefield
Glenwood High School 1899, south and west facades. Photo taken across Second Street NE. The first Glenwood Lutheran Church is partially visible in the background.