{"id":1522,"date":"2014-10-21T09:00:02","date_gmt":"2014-10-21T14:00:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/historyapolis.com\/?p=1522"},"modified":"2024-01-10T13:43:34","modified_gmt":"2024-01-10T19:43:34","slug":"washington-avenue-now","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mvt.rpw.mybluehost.me\/.website_3d6664ec\/2014\/10\/21\/washington-avenue-now\/","title":{"rendered":"Washington Avenue: Then and Now"},"content":{"rendered":"
Published October 21, 2014 by Kevin Ehrman-Solberg<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n \n Washington Avenue between First and Nicollet. Click on the image to start the interactive tour.<\/p><\/div>\n This Washington Avenue “now-and-then visualization” was designed and engineered by Historyapolis intern Kevin Ehrman-Solberg, who curated the historic images and took the current-day photos of the street. The text for the post was co-written by Kevin Ehrman-Solberg\u00a0and Kirsten Delegard.\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n Few streets in Minneapolis have a past so checkered as Washington Avenue. An important commercial artery during the boom years of the 1880s, the street today is again at the center of a building boom. This digital exhibit uses visuals to compare one version of its nineteenth century facade to the present streetscape.<\/p>\n This digital juxtaposition\u2014which you can view here<\/a>\u2014 shows the complete transformation of Washington Avenue over the last 130 years. Yet these paired images also obscure as much as they reveal, glossing over the turbulent history of one of the city’s original thoroughfares.<\/p>\n This project began this summer when the Historyapolis team found this amazing volume in the Hennepin County Historical Society.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The Business Heart of Minneapolis<\/em> was a promotional book–commissioned by civic boosters in 1882–that used intricate visuals to advertise the city’s prosperity in an effort to lure new investors. The book folded out accordion-style to reveal a hand-drawn panorama that showed Washington Avenue from Eighth Street South to Fourth Street North. Laid on the floor of the Hennepin History Museum, this delicate drawing stretched ten feet long and presented a carefully constructed image of a clean and orderly metropolis. It had none of the gritty quality of the Hennepin Avenue panorama<\/a> we found earlier this spring. But like the 1970s montage, the Business Heart of Minneapolis<\/em> was a Google-style streetview, constructed long before the advent of digital media.<\/p>\n The Academy of Music building on the corner of Washington and Nicollet<\/p><\/div>\n The images were fascinating, transporting viewers back to the city during the Nineteenth Century. But they presented a challenge that prompted intense discussions. How could we present them to our readers? How could we use digital tools to share a drawing that stretches ten feet long?<\/p>\n What you see here is the product of these conversations. We decided to use twin image sliders. First, we digitized the original panorama and then cropped it into individual frames. Those images went into the top slider. We then took contemporary photos of Washington and put those underneath. The result is an interactive “now and then” exhibit that lets you compare\u2014block by block\u2014the Washington of the late 19th century with the street today.<\/p>\n The Business Heart of Minneapolis<\/em> illustrates the wide variety of business enterprises in operation along Washington Avenue in the last decades of the Nineteenth Century. The panorama featured the Kennedy Brothers gun store, which touted itself as the city’s source for the “best brands of gunpowder.” Shoppers could also peruse its wide selection of “roller and ice skates.” It showed the Anthony Kelly and Co. store, located on the corner of Second Avenue North. The Handbook of Minneapolis <\/em>published by the Minneapolis Tribune<\/em> asserted that the wholesale grocer “has in the minds of Northwestern tradesmen and the actual record of commercial life, been associated with all that was honorable in trade.”<\/p>\n A quick look through contemporary photographs and other records shows that the hand-drawn panorama tells only part of the story. It presented a view that was both sanitized and idealized, part of a larger campaign by the business community to convince the world that Minneapolis “has become the wonder of the country,” in the words of the West Hotel Tourists’ Guide<\/em>. “There is nothing of the mushroom about Minneapolis,” according to the Guide<\/em>. “Its buildings are the most substantial, its paving of the best material…its business on a sound, conservative basis…its hotels models for larger and older cities.”<\/p>\n The image below, taken by William H. Jacoby, offers a more complex view of this important street.<\/p>\n<\/a>
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