juxtapozer:

Block E by John McNab on Flickr.
Minneapolis - 1973

 Block E during a more diverse time in it’s commercial history.  If you would like to find out more about the history of Hennepin Avenue, come to Minneapolis Central Library on March 8th.
Talk-It Hennepin: Honoring History—The Avenue Through the Ages
Thursday, March 8, 7–9 p.m. 
Minneapolis Central Library, 300 Nicollet Mall (Pohlad Room, 2nd Floor)
Talk-It Hennepin kicks off with a panel of local historians and experts in Native history, transit and GLBT issues examining the stories and histories of Minneapolis’ first street and gathering place. Discussion will range from Hennepin Avenue’s roots as a Dakota footpath and a trading/transportation hub for fur, agricultural commodities and people, to its modern transformation and function within the city’s evolving economy. 

Panelists include: Syd Beane, author and adjunct professor at Minneapolis Community and Technical College and a community organizer who is working on a documentary film about his famous Dakota Sioux uncle, Charles Alexander Eastman; Dorothy Bridges (moderator) Senior Vice President for Community Development and Outreach at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis; John Diers, a transit consultant and writer/researcher on transportation history based in the Twin Cities who is active in historic preservation; Kevin Murphy, Associate Professor in History at the University of Minnesota whose studies include gender, the history of sexuality and GLBT history; and Penny Peterson, historian/researcher at Hess Roise and Company who has published articles about local history and worked as an interpreter for the Minnesota Historical Society.

juxtapozer:

Block E by John McNab on Flickr.

Minneapolis - 1973

 Block E during a more diverse time in it’s commercial history.  If you would like to find out more about the history of Hennepin Avenue, come to Minneapolis Central Library on March 8th.

Thursday, March 8, 7–9 p.m.
Minneapolis Central Library, 300 Nicollet Mall (Pohlad Room, 2nd Floor)
Talk-It Hennepin kicks off with a panel of local historians and experts in Native history, transit and GLBT issues examining the stories and histories of Minneapolis’ first street and gathering place. Discussion will range from Hennepin Avenue’s roots as a Dakota footpath and a trading/transportation hub for fur, agricultural commodities and people, to its modern transformation and function within the city’s evolving economy.
Panelists include: Syd Beane, author and adjunct professor at Minneapolis Community and Technical College and a community organizer who is working on a documentary film about his famous Dakota Sioux uncle, Charles Alexander Eastman; Dorothy Bridges (moderator) Senior Vice President for Community Development and Outreach at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis; John Diers, a transit consultant and writer/researcher on transportation history based in the Twin Cities who is active in historic preservation; Kevin Murphy, Associate Professor in History at the University of Minnesota whose studies include gender, the history of sexuality and GLBT history; and Penny Peterson, historian/researcher at Hess Roise and Company who has published articles about local history and worked as an interpreter for the Minnesota Historical Society.

(via mnperegrinations)