As the sky turned menacing and the rain poured, Frank Rog tried with all his might to hitch the city of Roseville's puppet trailer to the back of the family station wagon. But when a large gust of wind hit on that stormy day in 1969, it sent the handmade trailer tumbling.
Deflated, Rog, Roseville's parks director, retreated with his family to the safety of the City Hall basement as tornado sirens wailed.
"Looks like we're going to have to build a new puppet trailer," he said.
Within a year, a new trailer was built.
Rog, who died Sept. 24 of complications related to Parkinson's disease, worked as the city of Roseville's parks and recreation director for 27 years before serving four years as mayor. He's credited with creating the city's park system, which includes the 225-acre Central Park. He was 83.
The story of that stormy Sunday is one that his son, Chris, shares often.
Rog, who grew up in northeast Minneapolis, was the youngest of six children born to parents who immigrated from Poland. As a teen, he was "super tall" with pimply skin, his daughter, Margaret Rog, said. That experience of feeling awkward stuck with him, and he later taught his children to reach out to those who may feel left out, she said.
Sports became Rog's passion. He was a star athlete at Edison High School and played football, basketball and baseball. He went on to play football at the University of Minnesota in 1953 and 1954 and became the first college graduate in his family.