Monday, April 24, 2017

Visiting South Dakota - 1938 with Noah Elwood and Edna Helena Weaver - Revisiting in April 2017

Discovered my Grandfather, Noah Elwood Weaver's photo album, annotated by my grandmother, Edna Helena Eicher Weaver from 1938-9, when they traveled to Minnesota to see their son, and went further west ---------Here is a composite shot from p 16 showing the South Dakota Capitol Building above, in Pierre on the left and the silver bridge (6 white bumps) more to the right below ----
Labeled "Pierre" South Dakota -From wiki "Pierre was named after Pierre Chouteau, Jr., a major American fur trader from St. Louis, Missouri who was of colonial French origin."

When Bob and I showed up in Pierre, we were directed to the Archives at the State Historical and Cultural Center, up the hill from the State Capital  -  when the folks there, looked at the photo above, and the yellow State Capitol Sticker that had the stamp "Barmore Cabin Camp" on the back, evidence where they stayed in August of 1938
State Capital in the distance with the dark dome! Taken from a hill on the east not far, we discerned from the place Noah Elwood Weaver took the above photo near their lodging at BARMORE CABIN CAMP,



Sticker with stamp on back found in the album - that resulted in Virginia at the State Historical Society to find that image of the Barmore Cabin Camp ----and send it to me by email with the reminder "

Hey Tom Thank you for stopping by the SD State Archives.  I hope you were able to find the hill top for your photo op. Attached are two photos.  One is a copy of the post card you saw, done up in color. The  other is a black and white original that I think turned out a bit clearer.These are scanned at a lower resolution but still give you an idea. IF you decide to post one or the other just put a note that they are the property of the South Dakota State Historical Society Archives


 From South Dakota State Historical Society Archives
From South Dakota State Historical Society Archives  - Where my Weaver grandparents stayed in 1938

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Friday Harbor Marine Biology Station - A Flatlander spends a summer Learning about invertibrates in the San Juan Islands

 In June, 1969, I deselected going to my Carleton College Graduation, and picked up a drive away car on Lake Street in Minneapolis, to make the 3 day drive out to Everett WA, where I dropped off the 1967 Rambler ---Stops along the way, included Joel Hesby's, a Carleton College friend whose home was in Volga SD, then to Dick Adam's Home, who sang with me in the Carleton Singing Knights, and I visited his Big Timber MT home ------I hitched hiked to Anacortes WA, and then made it here to the D-6 dorm building surrounded by Douglas fir   ---

 One of the slides I took of the dock and harbor at the Marine Biology Station supported by the U of Washington  - Close up of Douglas fir cone ----
 The boat used by the scientists to discover specimens was the Hydah ---I labeled the slide "Dr Fontaine from U of Victoria with slimy Pteraster with Gil Robinson from South Africa, back to camera Chuck O'Claire "

 
Lynn Dawson, of U of Washington, on Hydah  ---

 
Basket Star -Gorganocephalis, between islands deep dredge  --- 

 
Dr Anna Bidder, Cambridge University, UK   and Pycnopodia - 

 
Dr Bidder , with other students with top side of star fish Pynopoda  - Gil Robinson and Dave Macmillan, Melbourne Australia  ---

 
Dr Bidder leading dissection of cephalopod  -

 
Tom Weaver, yours truly, dissecting the octopus as directed by Dr Anna Bidder 

 
 Pier in front of Friday Harbor Labs
 view of Pier and Friday Harbor Labs from Hydah
Yacht moored at Friday Harbor Marina 
Dick Squires in a water hole, at low tide  
 Anemone Pink and Yellow

 Colorful sea slugs, Nudibranchs in a petri dish for scale ----

Colorful star fish  -  Red on Purple "Henrica on Solaster"?


Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Revisiting Red Cliff and the memory of Delores Bainbridge, elder and teacher

As I continued a cleansing of my files recently, looking  for material for my memoir, I found this letter to me, as professor Weaver, from Delores "Dee" Bainbridge who led our College of St Scholastica Field Botany Class on a walk in July of 1976  ----- 
Here is the letter she sent to me when she was teaching in the schools of the Bayfield Area, and when I had an office in Tower Hall on the campus of the College of St Scholastica from 1975-1977, when my wife Sue and I created a summer Field Botany Class to serve the college and the people of the area  ----We had 8 participants and the two of us  ----
In white with her back to us, must be Delores (I did not label the photo) with 8 others in our botany class at a sandy beach on Red Cliff, photo taken by the author --July 1976---I recall she served us hot mint tea.
St Scholastica Campus with Tower Hall in the center taken in the winter when Sue and I walked up the hill from 1716 E 5th St to work there, I teaching and she in the library ------

 
When I arrived at the Legendary Waters Hotel and Event Center last Friday, I asked about Dee, and was led by George Newago, one of the elders and keepers of the active sugar bush, he led me to this display case of the history of the Red Cliff Band of Anishinabeg, Chippewa, that honors her 
I had not returned to the Red Cliff Community since 1976, BC, as it were, Before Casinos, for sure, and was touched they honored her as an elder and educator of traditional stories, values and language ---Spirit encouraged me to bring a copy of a book on plants researched by Red Wing Author, Frances Desmore, 1867–1957,  who studied the music and customs of many tribes including Lake Superior Chippewa to gift it to the Red Cliff community to honor the spirit of Dee ---
See wiki  --https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Densmore
Here are some papers from my files  - Course Description for Field Botany -1976
 
Here is the class outline in the memeograph technology common in the 1970's Sue and I created at CSS
Recommended readying including the Dover Reprint of Densmore's Smithsonian writing,  Published 1920's book, How Indians Use Wild Plants for Food, Medicine and Crafts, then available for about $3 as a reprint in the 70's
Press Release describing the class that Sue and I co created, that attracted 8 registrants in Duluth 

Article in my files from the Duluth News Tribune Sept 5, 1976- Including the descriptions of the 2 canoes, Delores wrote about in her letter  -- Ron DePerry, Marvin DuFoe were local builders of the conoes, as well as Warren Bellenberg, Park Naturalist, Ron Livingston of the Native American Cultural Appreciation Team (NACAT) were involved in the Bicentennial Funding according to the article here

And Dee's obit I found on line prior to my drive up with Jeff J from Faribault who encouraged me to join him in storytelling with others at Red Cliff on a spiritual path ---Pidamiya Megwitch---mitakuye Oyasin

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Delores M. 'Dee' Bainbridge
(June 20, 1931 - January 10, 2008)
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Delores M. 'Dee' Bainbridge, age 76, of 308 Third Avenue East, Ashland, Wisconsin, died Thursday, January 10, 2008, at Northern Lights Health Care Center, in Washburn, Wisconsin.
Dee was born, on June 20, 1931, in Red Cliff, Wisconsin, the daughter of Charlotte DePerry. She was united in marriage, to Theodore C. Bainbridge, in Pine City, Minnesota, on February 19, 1958. She was a homemaker and Native American educator in the public school system. Her resume also includes 22 years at Northland College. She was instrumental in preserving the language, culture and teachings of the Lake Superior Ojibwe. She was equally comfortable telling stories in Ojibwe and English. She was a very generous person who opened her home and her heart to everyone. She will be missed by everyone who knew her.
She would burn tobacco, this was an offering to the spirits, so she wouldn't offend anybody. Then she would burn cedar, which is supposed to take away all the evil spirits. The whole house would be like incense. She did that pretty regularly. They tell us now that we shouldn't talk about Wenabozho unless there is snow on the ground, otherwise a big frog will jump on your bed and leave welts on your body. I've violated that, but if a frog jumps into my bed, I'll kiss him and see if he turns into a prince. I don't remember that she ever said it was taboo, but I've read several times since that you shouldn't tell stories in the summer. Some stories that don't pertain to Wenabozho I guess are okay.
While some of the stories swirling around the DePerry home were in English, Dee's grandmother told her's in Ojibwe. Dee absorbed some stories by simply listening, but others were acquired more formally. She recalled that her grandmother would tell me a story, then ask me to repeat it.
Dee went through eight grades at the Catholic Mission School, at Red Cliff, then attended Bayfield High School. She worked at several jobs, married, raised six children and provided a home for her grandmother. In the Bainbridge home, Dee and Ida Mary DePerry relied on Ojibwe as a secret language when they did not want the children to understand. Likewise Dee continued to enjoy talking and joking with elders in Ojibwe. In early 1973, she began a twenty-two year career of teaching: the Ojibwe language, Indian history and storytelling at Bayfield High School, where roughly 70% of the student body were Ojibwe.
About the same time, she began teaching Ojibwe at Ashland's Northland College. Beyond telling stories amidst other Ojibwes and within the context of her classes. Dee Bainbridge also performed for various community groups and organizations.
She was equally comfortable telling stories in Ojibwe and English. Her delivery was stately and sure, accompanied by occasional mimetic gestures and reliant on subtle vocal shifts that conveyed character and mood. In the 1990's, Dee Bainbridge was recognized by: local Ojibwe, the Wisconsin Arts Board and the National Endowment for the Arts, for her story telling.
Survivors include: her four daughters: Ida Nemec, of Sayner, Wisconsin; Gail Maderich and her husband, Steve, of Ashland; Nan Emery and her husband, Darren, of Lakewood, Washington; and Mary Simmons and her husband, Kirk, of Eagan, Minnesota; and two sons: Paul Bainbridge and his wife, Janet, of Naperville, Illinois; and Joseph Bainbridge and his wife, Carla, of Port Wing, Wisconsin. Dee is also survived by: thirteen grandchildren; four great grandchildren and several foster children.
She was preceded in death by: her parents; her husband, Theodore, on December 22, 1974; two brothers, her grandmother, Ida DePerry and her beloved canine companion, Doobie.
A visitation, for family and friends, will begin at 4 p.m. Monday, January 14, 2008, at the Red Cliff Elderly Center, in Red Cliff, and will feature a Native American Service at 7 p.m. The visitation will resume, on Tuesday, at Our Lady of the Lake Catholic Church, in Ashland, beginning at 10 a.m., continuing until the hour of the service.
A Mass of Christian Burial, for Dee Bainbridge, will be held at 11 a.m., Tuesday, January 15, 2008, at Our Lady of the Lake Catholic Church, in Ashland. Father Frank Folino, O.F.M., will be the Celebrant. The casket bearers will include: Joseph Pascale, Jr., James Peterson, Edward DePerry, Gerald DePerry, Paul Bainbridge, Joseph Bainbridge, Joe Rose and John Anderson.
Interment, in the Saint Agnes Cemetery, in Ashland, will follow the Mass.
Our Ashland Chapel has been entrusted with the privilege of assisting her family with their desires for these memorialization events.





Ice in Bayfield Harbor, Sunday morning April 9 on our way back south



Brownstone National Park Visitors Center in Bayfield not yet open on Sundays in the spring
Beginning of the Brownstone Trail by the Bayfield Harbor, history of the mining of the stone, and the 1883 courthouse now serving as the visitors center -----more interest for a return trip with more loved ones ?