Jewel of the Prairie - Owatonna Architecture
To be perfectly honest I didn't know much about Owatonna when I set out Thursday morning. After a drive down Interstate 35 from Saint Paul I arrived at the Minnesota State Public School for Neglected and Dependent Children. Little did I know that I was about to meet Harvey Ronglien, a very vibrant, positive and energetic man, who lived at the State School from the age for 4 for 11 years. At the age of 4 Harvey's mother was sent to a sanatorium with TB and his father was put in jail in Stillwater. Harvey and his seven siblings were lined up at the courthouse in Appleton, MN and offered in an orphan "firesale". By day's end Harvey and his brother Oscar remained and were sent to the State School in Owatonna. (Check out Harvey's book, A Boy from C-11: Case #9164 for more of his story) Harvey greeted me along with his wife, Max, Lisa Krampitz MainStreet Director with the Owatonna Area Chamber of Commerce & Tourism, and Nancy Vaillancourt, a local historian.
Harvey and Max have poured an enormous amount of energy into making sure the tale of the State School and its orphans is known and continues to be told. There is a lovely museum which pays tribute to those who walked through the doors. Over the course of its operation, 10,000 children passed through the doors of the State School. This was a full service campus, not only with its own schools, but also a farm, dairy, church services conducted by local ministers , and cemetery where children who died at the State School were buried. It seems that there were some in the community who did not know of the State School's existence until after it closed in 1977. The State then sold the campus to the town of Owatonna which now uses this campus for its town office, council meetings and a number of other service programs.
4 comments:
As a Preservation Leadership participant this year, this is a great preview. Can't wait to be there!
I know how hard you ladies are working ("15 days, 29 Field Session Dry Runs", not to mention the madatory taste testing)! Thanks for taking the time to share our experiences with us. Looking forward to PLT and the National Conference.
The Sullivan building looks spectacular! More important, what terrific examples of history through the built environment. You're whetting our appetite for what's to come, for sure.
Owatonna's Sullivan bank building was featured on a postage stamp a few decades back. I will try to get it to Charlotte at some point - it's on our fridge right now.
"The Mall In A Ditch," second-ring suburb Woodbury's answer to the "Sprawl Of America," contains a "21st Century Sullivan Rip-off." It's quite horrid, but look for it in the south ditch of Interstate 94 near County Roads 19 & 21, 5 or 10 miles east of Saint Paul.
AMH
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