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Recipe for a Mill City Recipe for a Mill City is a curriculum kit geared for third graders who will be visiting Mill City Museum. The activities can easily be used by younger and older grades. We hope you and your students enjoy the pre and post visit activities this curriculum kit has to offer.
Exhibit Scavenger Hunt
Scavenger hunts and answer keys are available to download prior to your arrival. For pre-booked Youth and School Group visits, Mill City Museum will provide you with 1 scavenger hunt for every 3 to 5 kids when you arrive.
Teaching with Historic Places
TwHP is a program of the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places. Examine the inextricable connections binding railroads, North Dakota wheat fields, and Minnesota flour mills during the late 19th and early 20th centuries through full color maps, photos, and other documents. Complete lesson plans and materials available at your fingertips!
http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/106wheat/106wheat.htm
Photo and Art Database
Search the photograph, art and poster collections at the Minnesota Historical
Society. Not all collections are online, but over thousands of images are available.
Try searching for Pillsbury, Washburn Crosby, flour milling, St. Anthony Falls,
Betty Crocker, and the Stone Arch Bridge.
http://collections.mnhs.org/visualresources
Minnesota Communities Explore primary source activities about the St. Anthony Falls district, specifically about Eva McDonald Valesh, John Pillsbury, flour milling, St. Anthony Falls, the Washburn Mill explosion and hydropower.
http://www.mnhs.org/communities
Forest, Fields, and the Falls
Explore flour milling at St. Anthony Falls in 1886 with Minneapolis journalist
E.V. Smalley. Smalley's article and other primary sources are accessible from
this interactive online comic book. Students learn about the flour mililng
process, the explosive nature of flour dust, and why Minneapolis became the
flour milling capital of the world.
http://discovery.mnhs.org/ConnectingMN
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