Elementos de identidade
Código de referência
Nome e localização da entidade custodiadora
Nível de descrição
Título
Data(s)
- 1960s-2010s (Produção)
Dimensão
Nome do produtor
História biográfica
The historic community of Crow Wing City (Old Crow Wing) formed on the east bank of the Mississippi river opposite the confluence of the Crow Wing River, about 10 miles southwest of the current city of Brainerd, beginning in the 1820s. Crow Wing became an important link in the fur trade between Saint Paul and the Canadian Red River Colony and attracted a mixed population of European, white American, Ojibwa, and Metis settlers. Clement Beaulieu, a fur trader of French-Canadian and Ojibwa descent, built a prominent house at Crow Wing about 1849. Between 1870 and 1880 Crow Wing was abandoned in favor of Brainerd when the Northern Pacific Railroad routed through the latter community. Beaulieu’s house was relocated south, to the vicinity of Fort Ripley in 1880.
Birk’s involvement with the Beaulieu House began in 1985 when the property owners offered the structure as a tax-deductible donation to any interested cultural agency or nonprofit. A coalition including the IMA, the state Department of Natural Resources, the state Historic Preservation Office, the Crow Wing County Historical Society, and interested citizens organized as the Friends of Old Crow Wing formulated a plan to relocate the Beaulieu House back to its original location in what was now Crow Wing State Park. Birk conducted in-depth research on the house, its occupants, and the community of Crow Wing, and helped lead the relocation effort on behalf of the IMA. In 1988 the house was moved to a temporary storage area in the park. In 1990 Birk and IMA colleagues conducted a brief excavation of the original house site in preparation for the permanent relocation of the house, which was accomplished in 1993.
Elementos de conteúdo e estrutura
Âmbito e conteúdo
This series focuses on Birk’s involvement with the Beaulieu House project. Records include copies of archival documents, articles, newspaper clippings, and miscellany relating to Beaulieu and the general history of Old Crow Wing; Birk’s report drafts; correspondence, memos, and planning documents relating to the relocation effort; and some field records from the IMA’s 1990 excavation. Additional topics covered in the same material include the Chippewa Agency at Crow Wing, Ojibwa Chief Hole-In-The-Day, and the 1993 expansion of Crow Wing State to include Crow Wing Island. The series also contains smaller research files on the Gideon H. Pond House in Bloomington, and a large collection of later clippings from the Brainerd Dispatch (1883-1889) compiled by Birk in 2012. The relation of these elements to the overall series is unclear but are retained here to preserve original order.