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A Look
Back: The History of the Minnesota Humanities Center
Intrinsic to
the missions of both the Gillette Children's Hospital and the Minnesota
Humanities Center is the belief that all Minnesotans must have the
opportunity to learn in spite of race, creed, class, or physical
ability. It is fitting, therefore, that the Humanities Center has
recovered the school building of the old hospital, restored it to
its original state, and is now using it as an educational center.
Gillette
Children's Hospital was founded in 1897 to treat the orthopedic
diseases (polio, club feet, bone diseases) of disadvantaged children.
It moved to its Phalen site in 1911 where Michael Dowling Memorial
Hall, the only remaining Gillette building, was built in 1924 as
a schoolhouse for children. Dowling Hall was a memorial to Minnesota
educator and legislator Michael J. Dowling who had lost his feet
and hands to frostbite, but who triumphed in spite of his disability.
Gillette superintendent Elizabeth McGovern wrote in a 1921 letter:
"Mr.
Dowling stood for opportunity for the physically handicapped and
. . . the most fitting memorial that could be erected to his memory
would be a school where children of normal mentality, physically
handicapped, might have the opportunity to get an education that
would fit them to go out into their communities and take their
places as self-supporting citizens."
Architectural
researcher Paul Larson notes that though architect Clarence H. Johnston
favored separate cottages for most of the institutions he designed,
the Gillette West Wing was built under a single roof to accommodate
patients. The structure was originally a single floor with K-12
classrooms, millinery and watch-making workshops, an auditorium
and a library built in the "telephone pole" plan which
made the entire building accessible from one wide hallway. There
were no tricky corners or stairs to hinder wheelchairs and gurneys.
The "Spanish style" stucco and tile exterior was inexpensive,
impervious to harsh Minnesota weather, and allowed for large windows
in every room. This was very important to Gillette's method of sun-treatment
for the patients (and very pleasant for the guests and staff today.)
It
is believed that Dowling Hall was left standing after the rest of
the hospital was demolished because it was one of the more recent
and decorative buildings. The graceful portico and elegant marble
floors speak for themselves. The delightful carved tiles were most
likely imported from Henry Chapman Mercer's Moravian Pottery and
Tiles Works in Doylestown, Pennsylvania.
The whimsical
plaster sculptures, on the other hand, remain something of a mystery.
Based on the appearance and context, we believe they were carved
by the St. Paul-based Brioschi-Minuti Company, which was responsible
for Columbus statues in St. Paul and Chicago, the interiors of the
Basilica of St. Mary and the State Theater, and other important
artistic decoration in the Midwest during the 1910s-1940s. Johnston's
transfer ledgers show that he worked several times with Carlo and
Amerigo Brioschi between 1920-1935, even designing the Brioschi
mausoleum.
The
figures in the foyer of the building are small, contorted American
Indians, Redcoats and Pilgrims, all taking aim at some fierce enemy.
These may have been based on figures that appeared in a popular
children's reader of the 1920s. Nestled among the grapevine moldings
in the Commons, the "Humanities Trolls" are amazingly
appropriate for the Minnesota Humanities Center. The same sort of
disfigured men--knees drawn up, hands gnarled--are depicted reading
a book, peering at a globe, singing songs, and playing an instrument.
When the Gillette
Children's Hospital moved to downtown St. Paul in 1977, the entire
13-acre campus was razed in 1979 except the west wing. Although
various organizations and developers expressed interest in the property,
it remained vacant for 18 years until the Minnesota Humanities Center
renovated the building at a cost of $2.57 million. In 1996 the Humanities
Center opened and now houses a full-service conference center, fifteen
administrative offices and 15 private guest rooms.
For more information
or to reserve meeting space at the Minnesota Humanities Center,
please call 651-772-4242 (toll free: 866-268-7293) ext. 242 or email
Nicole Youngvorst,
Events Manager.
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