Linda Harder and Sue Nau had worked hard for this moment.
For an entire summer and then some, the two retirees from Stillwater prison had labored over thousands of boxes in a damp basement below the prison, rescuing historic documents from the ravages of time.
Now, as part of a program commemorating the prison's 100th anniversary, the two were showing off their hard work to hundreds of visitors in the huge, remodeled house where past wardens once lived.
And they couldn't have been more pleased.
"We're just glad to see it come to this day and see everybody enjoy it," Harder said.
Harder and Nau, "best friends," both worked more than 30 years at Stillwater prison. They began in the clerical department — Harder in parole and Nau in records — before being promoted through a series of jobs, finishing a few years ago as program directors in charge of cell houses.
Two years ago they volunteered to sort musty records, many of them covered with pigeon and mouse droppings, in a quest to save Stillwater prison's history. What they found told a story, receipt by receipt, of the early years of Minnesota's oldest existing prison.
"It was like reading a novel," Nau said of their exploration into thousands of business receipts, disciplinary reports and time sheets recovered from beneath the prison. "We spent an entire summer in a cellar, sorting."