Traveling
Tuesday: Minnesota-Land of 10,000 Lakes
The U.S. state of Minnesota has many nicknames: Land
of 10,000 Lakes, The Gopher State, The North Star State, The Agate State, and
the State of Hockey. Personally, I’m surprised it’s not also called The Corn
State in recognition of the miles of corn fields I pass during the ninety-minute
drive from the Minneapolis airport to my sister’s house. A beautiful state, its
flat lands and gently rolling hills are vastly different from the forested
mountains of New Hampshire where I live.
But Minnesota is much more than its geography,
although its geography is part of what helped the state “do its bit” during
WWII.
As soon as the U.S. entered the war, Fort Snelling, located
south of Minneapolis where the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers come together, became
an induction center and processed more than 300,000 men and women into the
Armed Forces. At its peak, nearly 800 recruits per day passed through. The Fort
was also used to organize and train specialized unit such as the military
police and the 99th Infantry Battalion that was made up of
Norwegian-speaking soldiers who trained to fight on skis and snowshoes. In
1944, Nisei (second generation) Japanese-Americans came to the fort to learn
Japanese, Korean, and Chinese in preparation for service as interpreters, interrogators,
and intelligence workers.
In the Iron Range, over 338 million tons of iron ore
were mined which amount to seventy percent of the iron ore needed for
battleships, planes, and tanks. One train car of ore left Hibbing’s
Hull-Rust-Mahoning Mine every twenty
seconds for the shipping docks!
Shipbuilding was also a big enterprise in Minnesota. Contracted
to build six ships, Savage Shipyard managed to produce eighteen ships and four
tug boats instead. All told the six shipyards in the area manufactured over 230
ships for the war effort.
At the University of Minnesota, thirty-six
conscientious objectors volunteered for an experiment to determine the physical
and mental effects of starvation. The study ran for over a year, from November
20, 1944 until December 19, 1945. The results guided Allied relief assistance
to famine victims in Europe and Asia at the end of the war. Another project at
the University developed the K ration, a prepackaged set of meals soldiers
could carry.
The Mayo Clinic’s Aero Medical Unit participated by
inventing the first practical “G-suit,” a pressured flight suits that prevented
fighter pilots from blacking out during quick maneuvers and dives. The Unit’s
doctors and engineers risked their own safety by whirling themselves
unconscious in the first civilian centrifuge.
One of the more unusual products devised by a company
for the war effort of the manufacture of “wet or dry strips” by 3M. The strips
were sticky on one side, and used on the edges of plane wings and ambulance
runners to people could stand on them without fear of slipping.
Food manufacturer, General Mills used its Mechanical
Division to produce gun sights.
Remember Spam? Hormel had been manufacturing the
canned meat since 1937, but in 1941 it became an important part of the Lend-Lease
program which sent food and supplied to allied countries.
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