In the summer of 1960, the Star Tribune sent photographers to snap a shot of every corner in downtown Minneapolis. This is the latest installment in a series that takes a closer look at those pictures (and others), and passes on a few pieces of Minneapolis history. Let's get started:
There's one detail in this old Star-Journal photo that tells you the location of this corner. Hint: King Tut.
Need some more information? Well, it's a shot from the late '20s. There's no information on the back of the photo to indicate why they took this picture, but we can guess: the building on the corner is about to be demolished for a new high-rise. It's not an ancient old pile from Pioneer days -- can't be more than 30 years old, if that. Proof that Minneapolis streetscapes have been churning as long as the city's been around.
Let's take a closer look -- and keep in mind that the original photo is about seven inches wide. What does this mean?
They used radio to clean clothes?
No, of course not. The red child's wagon, the Radio Flyer, didn't use radio, either. But the word meant high-tech, modern, up-to-date. It was the "cyber" of its time. New technologies are always applied to things that don't really fit; in the late '30s, when television was on the horizon, a fountain pen company introduced a line of Television pens, so named because you could see the level of ink in the translucent barrel. That wasn't TV anymore than the laundry was radio.
Twenties fashion:
Cloche hats and white suits for men.