Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN)

 - Class of 1958

Page 17 of 106

 

Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 17 of 106
Page 17 of 106



Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

THEY CHARTED OUR COURSE In 18417 HARRIET BISHOP opened the first school ID St Paul Mmnesota It was situated ln a mud walled log hovel at the cor ner of St Peter and Third Street Only seven children two of whom were white attended the school Instructions were given in English and a half breed girl interpreted for the Indian chlldren Thls was the beginning of organized education in St Paul Rose Spazght '58 JONATHAN CARVER was the flrst British explorer to come to Mmnesota Later he wanted England to have a supply center on Lake Pepin for he saw the great possibilities of trading with New York by way of the rivers and lakes and also of tradm with the South through the Mississippi ngland however was at war with her colonies ln America and did nothmg ln favor of Carvers plans Mary Margaret Guettler '59 One of the most fabulous beginnings in the medical field was started ln 1855 by DR WILLIAM WORRELL MAYO 1n the small town of Rochester, Minnesota Dr Will and Dr Charlie aided their Little Doctor as Dr VV W Mayo IS affectionately known in his great work of making Rochester one of the greatest medical centers of the world They were specialists ln every field of human affllc tion As time passed they brought lnto their group the best skilled doctors of the world In 1915 they united wlth the University of Mmnesota to form the Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research The Doctors Mayo gave one of the greatest contributions a man can give to his state that of bringing people from every state ln the Union and every country of the world to ltS threshold to be healed of every human ailment Sharon Toogood '59 HENRY HASTINGS SIBLEY proved to be one of the strongest characters ln Mmnesota As a partner in the American Fur Company, Sibley had much contact with the Indians He learned to speak their native tongue and on his inspection tours lived with them for months at a time As a qualified business man his fame grew and ln 1838 he was elected Justice of the peace for parts of Mmnesota Iowa and the Dakotas When elected as a delegate to Congress he put through the bill which made Mmnesota a terrl tory When Minnesota became a state, he was made the first governor. Connie Snyder, '59 fiyfitzilfn ANSON NORTHUP IS credited wlth opening the first hotel in the area of Stillwater He IS especially remembered for an 1nc1dent which grew out of his mterest ln steamboatmg Challenged by the St Paul Chamber of Com merce he at the price of dismantling and trans porting his steamer the North Star operated the first steamboat on the previously 'unnavl gable Red River Louella Langenfeld 58 In the year 184-9 ALEXANDER RAMSEY became governor of Mmnesota Territory His first duty was to proclaim the government of the Mmnesota Territory established Founder and first president of the Mmnesota Historical So clety he devoted much of his time to the work of the society He provided for the first seal of Minnesota and the motto Star of the North Ramsey became the second Governor of the State of Minnesota in 1860 at the outbreak of the ClVll VVar He was known as the War Governor One of the most worthwhile ser vices that Ramsey rendered to our State was his whole hearted defense of the school lands Because of his mterest a permanent school fund was established Mary Cressy '59 PLE came to Mmnesota to be the states first EPISCOPHIIZH bishop Bishop Whipple expended his efforts not only for the Episcopal church but for the wel fare of our state He became known as the man of all creeds because of hls willingness to help all Bishop Whlpple was falr at all times with the Indlans and he took many trips to Washington ln their behalf On one such trip he had a special conference with President Lmcoln to plead the cause of the oppressed race Because of his love for the Indians and their trust 1n him Whipple recelved the nick name Straight Tongue Sue Lznquzst '59 The first man to brmg the American flag to Mmnesota was ZEBULON PIKE a soldier and explorer, who was sent ln 1805 by the President to search for the Nisslsslppl River While camping for an evening on the site of the present Fort Snelling this brawe young man unfurled the American flag Throughout his travels he met many different kmds of Indians and told them of the peace that the United States desired He also lnsplred them to shoot down all British and French flags and fly the Amerlcan flag This instilled a strong feeling against the British and French Plke was killed ln action ln the War of 1812 The American flag was grasped to his breast. Anne Marze Gaynor, 59 1 , 1 0 . ' l . , . ' 44' - - . . . . . ' 77 I 7 M . . 7 . . . 1. U N ' ' . . . a 1 - . . 4 .- . ,, . . . . U , 1 0 . , . . , 7 9 , . . ' . . . - , 1 1 1 . . . - E ' l 66 97 O ' 1 1 , 1 7 0 Q , . . , . . I 7 - - cc 17 ' ' , 7 . . ' . . 1 l . . 7 . ' a , ' ' ' f' ' i i ,W , In his early manhood, HENRY B. WHIP- ' ' 7 . . . . . ' . . . . ..- , - . D , . ,, 1 0 1 . , . . . Q CG ' 'D 0 . . , 7 7 1 o L 1 1 0 . I . 1 . Y . , , . - . . 0 - , . . . . ' 1 11

Page 16 text:

l.oRE OF LAKE PEPIN fr The area surrounding beautlful Lake Pepln has been the scene of many hlstorlc ew ents but I shall wrlte of only a few a small portlon of the hlstory of Inyan Teopa the founding of Fort Beauharnols and General Garrard the bullder of Frontenac Polnt no Pomt IS a glgantlc hlll of trees whlch enhances the MISSISSIPPI shorelme On the top of thls pomt lS Inyan Teopa a curlous rock formatlon flrmly lmbedded at an elex ation of nearly four hundred feet abose the water The rock has a hole ln the center large enough for a horse to walk through Years ago there was a huge boulder on lts flat surface shaped some thmg like an Indlan head Polsed perfectly It rested secure agamst the storms untll some van dal loosened lt and sent xt vshere lt now rests near the foot of the bluff To the Indlans the rock was a speclally venerated shrme where they gathered to com mune wlth the Great Splrlt Paths lead to xt from every dlrectlon Indlan dances were held legends and tradltlons of their forefathers The spmt of these fCStlVltlCS stlll lmgers at Invan Teopa From the descrlptlon of the beautlful pomt we turn to conslder the flrst white men who came to Mlnnesota A small group of French men left Montreal on June 16 1727 The party contalnmg about thlrty members cluded two Jesult fathers Louls Ignatlus Gulgnas and a companlon de Gonnor After travellng by way of Green Bay and the Fox and Wlsconsln Rxvers they reached the MISSISSIPPI earl ln September and arrlved at Polnt au Sab e a natural stoppmg place for voyagers On September 17 1727 thev established a fort namln lt Beauharnoxs after the Governor Gen eral o New France The blllldlllg had to be abandoned the followlng sprmg because of hlgh Waters The Sloux Indlans were frlendly to the French but the Fox were extremely hostile I October, 1728, owmg to the enmlty of the Indians, the post was partlally abandoned and later lt IS probable that Indlans looted and burned lt as well Nelll IH hls hlstorv of Mm nesota says that Father Gulgnas was captured by the Fox and escaped death only by bemg adopted by an Indlan The Indlans soon found that the post had been a declded convenlence to them ln manv X21 qw 4'-Tw1l0L'f'z'g wavs so they petltloned for 1tS re establxshment Acceedlng to the1r wlshes ID the early thlrtles Sleur Lmctot was ordered to bulld another fort He selected as the slte a better place on hlgher land beyond the reach of hlgh water It was a few hundred feet from the shore and afforded an extensive VICVI up and down the lake There IS good reason for lJCllCV1l'1g that thls was the present Slte of Vllla Marla Academy In 1854 Israel Garrard and hls brother LCWIS camped at Frontenac durlng a huntlng trlp from Kentucky to Mlnnesota LEWIS re turned to Kentucky and eventually went back to Europe but Israel stayed ln Mmnesota Garrard and Westervelt bought ses eral hun dred acres of land and started the town whlch at that time was called Westervelt They set aslde four tracts as parks and then dnlded the remainder between them In August 1858 Westervelt sold about half of hls land to Lewls Garrard and ln October of the same vear Israel By Jomt consent the four ovx ners changed the name of the town to Frontenac on September 13 1859 Indlan shrlnes French forts and bullders of hlstorlc towns are just a few hlstorlc facets of thls area surroundlng Lake Pepln They brlng the past 1nto our hvlng present and predlct a glorlous future to come Patrlcla Lorentz 58 A NEW FACE Were xt not for the lce cakes that are called glaclers the great state of Mxnnesota would not have the r1ch soll which makes lt prosperous farmlng land There are hllls made by the dlrt that was plled up by the laclers and left behmd when they melted he hllls make attractlve scenery ln our great state There are rlvers turned out of thelr old beds I seekln new ways of gettlng to the ocean they have tumbled over rocks and made waterfalls that produce electrlclty and water power The laclers left hollows all over Minnesota These ollows fllled wxth water and became the ten thousand lakes that make Mmnesota a dellght ful place Carol Ostertag '58 DID that M1ss1ss1pp1 lS an Indlan word Whlch means great water The Mlssissxppi IS the largest river Ill the Unlted States and one of the greatest trade waterways of the world. The Indlans compared the sxze of the r1ver with other streams over which they had traveled and called it The Father of Waters. KNOW. .. 10 Alzcza Cueva, '58 'A W Y g A g A 4 Q All '1 A ' 7 'A' F - l l . -71., 'A J Q - iii' Y , i .. . - . . ' I ' . - , ' n o 0 I . . 7 A o 1 1 u ' ' 7 I . ' 1 ' . . . , . . 9 ' n U u. l , Q- Y . ' . 7 1 . . ' . v - 7 - , . ' ' 1 s there and the old men taught the young the sold about half of hls to hls brother, Kenner. 7 . , 1 . ' ' ' . .0 . , . I,. . ' n a U , l c . . . . , , ln- ' , , , , - . , . , ' , 7 l , -- U . I 0 , 1 , ' , . 0 ' . n ' ' . ' ' . n . . . 3 , ' . E . . ' 7 o , I Q . . . 7 ca ' ' ' '11 ' ' ' cc S719



Page 18 text:

James Goodwm was HERITAGE Todays world IS a great world So real and VIS 1d are the lmpresslons lt makes upon us that today s llfe may seem the only hfe worth thlnk mg about Yet lf your fathers and grandfathers and thelr fathers and grandfathers had In ed differently from the wav thev dld we oursels es should probably not be doln what we are The people u ho In ed IU the past helped to make the present They lard the foundatlon for our own world Wlth the knowledge that our forefathers gave us we should be able to thmk lntelhgently about the problems of todav But do we just accept someone elses ldeas wlthout a thought? Only too soon the I'CSp0I1SlbllltlCS of world affalrs are golng to come lHt0 our hands vse the xounger eneratlon If we dont know how to handle them what IS golng to become of the world or just the United States alone9 Are we gomg to waste all the efforts of others9 In hlstory we have learned to understand all types of people who have l1ved through the a es Are we prepared to understand and cope wlth all our nelghbors not just Mr Jones next door or Mrs Smlth ln the nelghborlng state but Mrs Wongzong ln China and Mr Nlelson 111 Sneden'? In a short tlme we may even have the Martlans for our nelghbors wlth Sputnlk fly mg around Wlth the knowledge of what our forefathers have done we must set our Ideals and standards hlgh ln all xx alks of llfe We must be prepared so that we dont lose all that has been accom pllshed throu h the ages Laura Ingersoll '59 TH I RTY SECON D STAR Old Man Rner dld you see The people who came to conquer me? And dld you see w1th1n my breast The battles the heartaches that won the West? Long before the Enghsh came the French Lastly the Amerlcans brave and tense Through the years my bounderles changed A serles of people oer me have ranged Some of them left some of them stayed They stayed to settle and they were pald With prosperous farms on my rlch lands Because they had strong wllls strong hands I IH the Unlon was thlrty second star F om c1v1l1zat1on no longer afar If you cant guess, Ill glVC you a clue My name s Mmnesota Mean something to you? Barbara Cam '59 GOODWIN COU LEE FARM 2 I Ill 1 .9 hls summer will mark the centenary of our farm There will be a blg celebratlon wlth a whole roasted calf and suckhng p1g bushels of sweet corn and baked potatoes and kegs of apple clder The rela tlves wlll gather and the whole communlty wlll be muted Great great Grandfather James Goodwm h1s famlly and the splrlts of all the ancestors wlll mlngle w1th us partlclpatlng IH the fCSt1V1tlCS the founder of the farm He selected the locatlon and cleared the land to make the beautlful Goodwln Coulee Farm now named Bluff Coulee Farm James was born 1n England around the year 1825 He grew up ln England and was educated at Eton and Oxford After he flI'l1Sl'lCd at Oxford he was sent to Indla but came back home broken 1n money and dejected IH splrlts These were sad tlmes so his famlly marrxed h1m off to Mary land, England near Carlisle Mary was one of the twln daughters of a poor Anghcan mmlster After thelr marrlage James came alone to Amerlca ln 1858 brmglng wlth hlm h1S hlgh s1lk hat, bracks of guns and styhsh wardrobe SIX months later however he declded that grubbmg the land was not for htm He wrote to hls wxfe telllng her not to come packed up hls belongmgs and by stage coach and boat dashed off to New York and England not knowlng that the letter to hls wlfe was on the same boat on which he was salhng Meantlme Mary, wlth her three month old son cradled ln a straw hat Wlth twelve mch ostrlch feathers on lt, and carrymg her twenty one s1lk dresses had started for Amerlca It took three weeks by packets James and Marys boats passed ID mld Atlantlc Mary was dreadfully s1ck the whole voyage She wanted to come to Trenton WISCOHSIH but lnstead she was taken to Trenton New Jersey After an overland Journey from New Jersey she arrlved 1n Chlcago at the Inn Keefers All she wanted was a cup of tea The 1nn mlstress sald that she had no tea but would Mary hke a slug of wh1skey9 Mary thought what a terrlble place and country she had come to, a place where there IS no ea Mary finally arrived at Trenton WISCOHSID, by boat trlp up the MISSISSIPPI where she came to a cellar house When dug the house revealed , Y , . . . 7. . . . v, o u n ' . . I ' I . ' . . . 1 1 . 7 Y Y 7 G . g . . , , 7 . . A . A . - . f ' , . . 1 ' ' ' 1 t ' 1 ' ' . ' - I t 7 , , 7 n 4 . ' ' T 7 7 1 I , 4 1 . . I I 7 Q' . , ' ' D u ' n ,u . . . I ' - 1 g . i l . . , n u . 0 0 l , . Q ' . . u 4 o o . 7 . ' D ' . . . . I . 7 U 9 - , ' ' ' Boutead, of Brough-by-the-Sea IH Northumber- . Y. . , . l ' Q . ' a 1 A o u 1 u n I , ' . 7 . ' g , . a a l m 7 ' ' , 7 7 7 7 I , . ,Q . o - - 7 I ' I , . . ' GC 77 7 , 1 1 , . . ' . 9 l - , ' ' . , . 1 :- - . a 3 s 0- ' A ' ' 1 - I . , I , ' ' ' ' , Aa as , I I r . , , , , CC t !77 , 1 1 l 7 . 7 ' 1 12

Suggestions in the Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) collection:

Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 38

1958, pg 38

Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 89

1958, pg 89

Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 103

1958, pg 103

Villa Maria Academy - Frontenac Yearbook (Frontenac, MN) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 10

1958, pg 10


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