Minnesota State Society








DC TOURISM


WELCOME TO THE MN STATE SOCIETY   

 
Annual Membership Dinner
May 13, 2008
starting at 6pm, food served at 7pm
Hyatt Daily Grill, Bethesda, MD (Metro: Red Line)
 
Cost: $25 members
$35 for non-members
Includes dinner and two drink tickets
 
RSVP no later than May 8 to Melissa Barkalow
E-mail: mbarkalow@cbmove.com
Phone: cell 202.285.9479 or work 202.471.5229

Read the Current Newsletter
Fall 2007 PDF and insert (Word) for ticket information

 

Need a Minnesota lift? Visit http://www.MNstories.com/

HISTORY

Thursday, April 19, 2001 marked the Minnesota State Society's 80th anniversary. Formally organized in 1921, the Society bylaws stated that the purpose of the Society was to come together to "cultivate social inter-course among its members and to promote the best interests of Minnesotans."

In our eighty-year plus history, we have hosted such historical figures as Charles Lindbergh, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Vice President Walter Mondale, former Governor and Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman and Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland at dinners or receptions. Almost all of our former Governors have graced us with their presence at one of our gatherings. Former Chaplain of the House, Rev. James Ford, has given the invocation before some of our special dinners.

Minnesota has been well represented on the Supreme Court with Chief Justice Warren Burger and Justice Harry Blackmun both of whom, along with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Jack Vessey, were honored at formal dinners here in DC as our "Minnesotan of the Year."

Here's a brief glimpse at the life and times of those pioneering members of the Minnesota State Society in 1921.

In 1921, Warren G. Harding became the first president to be broadcast on radio; he watched over a country of 108 million inhabitants - not even 40% of today's population; and implemented a federal budget of merely $5 billion compared with a whopping 2001 federal budget of nearly $2 trillion. Back then Minnesota State Society members were paying only 2 cents to mail their letters, spending 11 cents on a loaf of bread, 40 cents for a dozen eggs, and around 33 cents for milk. And a brand new 1921 Ford cost our founding members $535 - about the cost of floormats on a modern automobile.


For questions about our society, please email: info@mnstatesociety.org


For questions or comments on the MSS website please e-mail us at mnstate@mnstatesociety.org