There are those who make history and are revered with its names and dates and ticker-tape parades. And then there are those whose impact on history is, at most, a glancing blow, a near-miss, a feebly grasped coattail. This would be most of us.
Still, rubbing shoulders with destiny should count for something. In honor of Minnesota's 150th birthday, we asked you to share accounts of your sideways associations with the glories of the state's past. The idea is that we're all a part of Minnesota's lore, darn it -- if we stretch circumstances far enough.
Here are some of the tangential ways in which citizens have been touched by history:
A bachelor godfather Andrea Blume Tilke's brother's godfather is Dan Ellison, who came up with the idea of creating career jobs to attract women to Herman and so ignited the "Bachelormania" craze in 1994. Ellison, an eligible bachelor, was on "Oprah," in People magazine and was played by Michael O'Keefe in the movie "Herman USA." Tilke lives in Savage.
A ride with Benny Leah Barnacle's father, John Benson, was the first person to use the state's first drive-through banking lane in November 1963, when Northwestern National Bank asked if it could use Benson's 1911 Maxwell car for the event. The bank's celebrity pitchman, Jack Benny, also owned a Maxwell and rode along as Benson's passenger. Barnacle lives in Wayzata.
A yummy invention Jodi Schwen says her husband's grandfather, Walter J. Schwen, invented the process to cover a brick of ice cream with chocolate coating, which later was sold and patented to become the Eskimo Pie. Walter was the founder of Schwen's Ice Cream and Candy Co. in Blue Earth. Jodi lives in Brainerd.
All about safety Two people claimed this link with history: Stephanie Ehlers' father's cousin -- who also is Karen Hanggi's grandfather's aunt -- was Sister Carmela Hanggi, who started the school safety patrol in 1921 while principal of the St. Paul Cathedral School. The first crossing was at Kellogg Boulevard and Summit Avenue. The concept of the school patrol is used by schools in all 50 states. Ehlers lives in St. Paul and Hanggi in Coon Rapids.
Scene of the crime Myrna Maikkula's cousin's husband was the pastor whom kidnappers called with the information that Virginia Piper was handcuffed and chained to a tree south of Duluth in Jay Cooke State Park in 1972, after having demanded a $1 million ransom. Maikkula also is the city clerk who swore Jesse Ventura into office as mayor of Brooklyn Park, launching his political career. She lives in Brooklyn Park.