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OCR Page 1 of 2TRUMAN
"NATIONAL
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
ARCHIVES AND
LIBRARY
RECORDS
U.S.
STATEMENT
(812 alt., 464,356 pop.)
Largest city in Minnesota in both area and population and ranks
fifteenth among American cities.
People
Well provided with churches, 290 of which are Protestant, 27 Roman
Catholic, and 10 Jewish, every creed is represented in the city - even
the Orthodox Greek. By far the largest number of churchgoers have Lutheran
affiliations. In the social life of middle-class Scandinavians, their
church plays a large part.
In a rapidly growing city, amalgamation of foreign groups tends to
take place very quickly, and the evaluation of the contribution of each
grows increasingly difficult. If to the Scandinavians and Finns can safely
be ascribed much of the success of the co-operatives, of the city's smaller
national groups, the French, German, Polish, Ukranian, Greek, Negro, and
others, it can be said with assurance that all have shared in the making
of Minneapolis, and that all have made cultural contributions. Until
1900 the French continued to come to Minneapolis, most often by way of
Canada, and for years they struggled to conserve their language and
traditions, but it was a losing fight in the face of the hordes of
Scandinavians who were all but taking possession of the city. Today their
only stronghold is their church, Our Lady of Lourdes (Notre Dame de Lourdes),
where sermons in French are still preached every Sunday and in whose parochial
school at least a part of the teaching is carried on in the language of their
ancestors.
After the Civil War Scandinavians swept into Minneapolis in ever
increasing numbers. They opened the city's first boarding houses, they
became storekeepers, tailors, milk dealers, lawyers, doctors, and bankers.
By the seventies there was not a business, trade, or profession in which
Scandinavian names did not occur. Washington Avenue became their main
business street. At first the Scandinavian population was almost equally
divided between Swedes and Norse, with far fewer Danes. But by 1880 Swedes
began to outnumber the Norse, and after that date the discripancy grew greater.
With the practical cessation of immigration, and the frequent intermarrying
into other racial groups, the proportion of Scandinavians in the population
has been steadily growing smaller. Today foreign-born Scandinavians make
up less than 10 percent of the city's population. Their language and customs
are rapidly disappearing as with each oncoming year they grow more and more
truly American.
Industry
Its two chief industries, flour milling and grain elevators, make
Minneapolis the bread basket and grain bin for the nation. Its Federal
Reserve Bank has made it the financial center of the Northwest.
Election Statistics: Hennepin County (Presidential)
1940: Democratic
145,168
Republican
122,960
1944: Democratic
148,792
116,781
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