Robert Thomas
Pionerd
Pionerd is a daily Minnesota history podcast. Every day, one story drawn from the people, places, and moments that shaped the state we call home. From the Iron Range to the Mississippi headwaters, from the Twin Cities to the small towns most maps forget, Minnesota's history is richer and stranger than most people realize. Join us every day and find out what happened here.
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The St. Paul Betrayal: How a 1902 Capitol Coup Reconfigured the Civil Rights Movement - Part 2 10.07.2026 10:42
On July 10, 1902, the quiet chambers of the old Minnesota State Capitol became an anomalous laboratory for a high-stakes, sophisticated proxy war that split early Black political leadership. In this episode, we trace the dramatic floor fight of the National Afro-American Council convention in St. Paul. Discover how the corporate precision of the Booker T. Washington machine staged a procedural amb...
The Red-Hot Crucible - Part 1 09.07.2026 11:11
On a sweltering July 9th day in 1902, the absolute titans of the national civil rights movement, including W.E.B. Du Bois, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, and Booker T. Washington, descended on St. Paul. We look inside the House of Representatives chamber of the Old Minnesota State Capitol, where local legal pioneer Fredrick McGhee fought a high-stakes legislative battle for the political soul of Black Amer...
The Invisible Threat Under the Suburbs 08.07.2026 9:19
In July 1986, a high-pressure petroleum pipeline ruptured beneath Mounds View, Minnesota, sending over 22,000 gallons of raw gasoline into a suburban storm sewer system. The resulting 50-foot wall of fire claimed the lives of Beverly and Jennifer Spano, injured local residents, and forced the evacuation of an entire neighborhood. Discover the story of the corporate diagnostic delays, the federal i...
Unity Day - July 7: Honoring the Life and Legacy of Philando Castile 07.07.2026 10:41
On this anniversary of the two-day Philando Castile Restoration (July 6) and Unity (July 7) observance, we recount the events of July 6, 2016, in Falcon Heights and the decade of community action that followed. This episode covers the life of Philando Castile, the impact of his death on state policy, and the movement to turn these dates into an annual mandate for civic reflection. We detail the es...
The Duluth Trench: 1889 06.07.2026 9:57
On July 6, 1889, Duluth was a city being violently carved out of solid rock, driven by an industrial boom that outpaced its own humanity. As wealth accumulated on the bluffs, laborers in the damp ravines fought for the dignity of a living wage. What began as a strategic walkout rapidly disintegrated into chaotic gunfire on West Michigan Street. This is the story of that morning—the cost of Minneso...
The Killing of Little Crow 03.07.2026 8:44
In a Meeker County raspberry patch, two settlers kill a Dakota man without knowing who he is. They soon discover they have killed Ta Oyate Duta, Little Crow, the leader of the 1862 conflict. We uncover the state-sanctioned scalp-bounty system that incentivized this violence, turning a local killing into a systematic tool for the permanent removal of the Dakota from Minnesota. We trace how the stat...
The First Minnesota at Gettysburg 02.07.2026 8:45
When the Union center faced total collapse at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863, only one force stood between the Union line and disaster. This episode follows the First Minnesota from their origin as the first regiment offered to the Union in 1861 to the moment they stepped into the Plum Run gap. We track the brutal math of their service, detailing the charge that cost 215 lives in six minutes, the stru...
When the Lights Went Out: The 20-Day Shutdown That Changed Minnesota Politics 01.07.2026 9:26
In July 2011, Minnesota faced an unprecedented crisis: the total shutdown of state government. For twenty days, partisan gridlock brought essential services to a halt, shuttered state parks, and left 19,000 public employees in limbo. This episode explores the administrative chaos of that summer, from court-ordered mediation to the failure of new procurement systems, and examines how a single budge...
The Nemadji River Derailment: The 1992 Evacuation that Stopped Two Cities 30.06.2026 8:50
At 2:50 AM on a humid June night, a mechanical failure on a Burlington Northern bridge turned a quiet river basin into a regional crisis. When a tanker derailed, it unleashed a plume of toxic benzene vapors, forcing 80,000 residents across the Minnesota-Wisconsin border to evacuate in the largest train-related exodus in American history. This episode uncovers the cross-state coordination that defi...
The Paper Frontier: How Railroad Graft Built and Broke Early Minnesota 29.06.2026 9:39
Progress often arrives with a price tag, and in 1854, Minnesota learned exactly how high that cost could be. In this episode, we pull back the curtain on the Minnesota and Northwestern Railroad scandal, exploring how territorial elites and federal lobbyists used "paper rail" schemes to carve up the state’s landscape for private gain. From the halls of Washington D.C. to the empty, planned roadbeds...
The Neutral Ground: How Ely Ended Minnesota’s Wolf War 26.06.2026 9:05
In 1993, a remote Minnesota town became the unlikely battleground for the future of the gray wolf. Discover how the International Wolf Center turned a fierce ideological war into a blueprint for scientific diplomacy. This episode explores the struggle to build a sanctuary on the front lines of the "Wolf War," navigating the needs of rural livestock producers, conservationists, and federal regulato...
Alexander Ramsey, the Birth of Minnesota: Progress and the Price of Power 25.06.2026 7:13
Alexander Ramsey was the architect of modern Minnesota, but his legacy is defined by a brutal collision of ambition and displacement. In this episode of Pionerd , we step into the chaotic, unpolished frontier of 1849 St. Paul. From his arrival in a makeshift room above a saloon to his role in the 1851 land treaties and the harsh legislative directives during the U.S.–Dakota War, we trace the full...
Corruption and Accountability: The Case of U.S. v. Wadena 24.06.2026 7:12
In 1996, the federal prosecution of White Earth Chairman Darrell "Chip" Wadena brought a twenty-year era of reservation politics to a sudden close. This episode maps the financial trail uncovered by federal auditors and the human impact of widespread voter intimidation. Join us as we analyze the institutional fallout of this case and the permanent shift toward transparency it forced upon the White...
Viking Heritage on the Great Lakes: The Story of the Leif Erikson 23.06.2026 7:16
Why would a group of sailors bring a replica Viking ship through the St. Lawrence Seaway to the heart of North America? This episode dives into the history of the Leif Erikson , a wooden vessel that navigated the Atlantic and the Great Lakes in the early 20th century. We discuss the realities of its construction, the navigation of inland waterways, and the long-term efforts required to preserve th...
The Fergus Falls Windstorms of 1919 22.06.2026 5:55
We reconstruct the events of a series of violent windstorms that affected Fergus Falls, Minnesota, leaving a trail of destruction that reshaped the city’s landscape. When three successive storms damaged or destroyed 44 city blocks, the community faced a test of survival. Explore the human response, the mobilization of local volunteer groups, and the legacy of a town working to rebuild in the wake...
The Rise of the University of Minnesota: A History of Innovation and Survival 19.06.2026 7:05
Explore the transformative history of the University of Minnesota. This episode of Pionerd tracks the university’s journey from a defunct 19th-century school to a top-tier global land-grant institution. We examine the economic impact, the scientific breakthroughs, including John J. Ryan’s work on crash safety and E.C. Stakman’s rust research, and the complex land-grant origins that shaped the scho...
The Syndicate That Burned the Tracks 18.06.2026 10:41
In the early 1950s, the Twin Cities possessed one of the cleanest, most efficient electric streetcar networks in North America. By 1954, it was completely gone. Its cars stripped, doused in gasoline, and burned in massive junk piles. This wasn't an organic evolution of technology. It was a hostile corporate takeover orchestrated by a Wall Street speculator and a notorious local mob boss, Kid Cann....
The Rotation-Heavy Horizon 17.06.2026 12:02
Mid-June began like any typical summer vacation across the Upper Midwest, but a massive atmospheric vacuum over the Dakotas quickly tore open the region’s weather record books. This episode reconstructs the timeline of an unprecedented atmospheric breakout that launched a battery of simultaneous supercells across the landscape. From a localized hail cell at a northern campground to an elite tier o...
The Fugitive of Highland Park 16.06.2026 14:22
For over a decade, Sara Jane Olson was known to her St. Paul neighbors as a dedicated soccer mom, local theater actress, and progressive church volunteer, but behind this conventional facade lay a twenty-five-year secret. We trace the incredible underground journey of Kathleen Soliah, from the violent 1970s campaigns of the Symbionese Liberation Army in California to her quiet reinvention and dram...
The Day the Law Broke: The Duluth Lynchings and Their Legacy 15.06.2026 15:02
On this date in Minnesota history, a lawless mob overran the Duluth city jail, bypassing a medical report that cleared the suspects of any crime. Minnesota’s legal system failed entirely. Three young Black circus workers, Elias Clayton, Elmer Jackson, and Isaac McGhie, were stolen from their cells by a mob of thousands and hung from a downtown lamppost. We unpack the raw history of one of the stat...
The White Pine Empire and the Tentacles of "The Octopus" 12.06.2026 14:59
For seventy-five years, a ruthless timber monopoly controlled the St. Croix River, driving billions of feet of old-growth pine and altering the Midwest forever. But on June 13, 1886, a catastrophic, two-mile log jam choked the river gorge, sparking an unprecedented battle between corporate greed and a community fighting to reclaim its wild waters. This is the story of the dangerous lives of the ri...
St. Paul's War on Bikes 11.06.2026 14:02
On June 11, 1899, St. Paul deployed a twelve-man bicycle police squad to hunt down fast riders on downtown sidewalks. Discover how a massive transit monopoly, a fierce women’s fashion rebellion, and treacherous streetcar tracks triggered a municipal panic, and how those early everyday wheelmen accidentally drew the literal blueprint for modern paved highways.
The Blood of the Ninth: Disaster and Devotion at Brice’s Cross Roads 10.06.2026 15:34
When an incompetent Union general ran his infantry division to the point of collapse in a suffocating Mississippi swamp, the raw farmers and woodsmen of the 9th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry were handed a death sentence: hold the line alone or watch an entire army get massacred. Discover the grueling reality of the frontier regiment that chose to stand firm, covering a catastrophic retreat at the a...
The Iron Horse Trap: How Tiny Cottonwood, MN Took On Big Oil 09.06.2026 14:36
When American farmers rapidly traded their workhorses for internal combustion tractors in the early 1920s, they unknowingly stepped into a beautifully engineered corporate trap. Overnight, they went from self-sufficient energy producers to captive corporate consumers. This episode tracks the incredible, forgotten history of June 9, 1921, when a handful of Lyon County neighbors staged an act of raw...
The Day the Millionaires Invaded St Paul 08.06.2026 14:18
On June 8, 1854, the remote Minnesota Territory woke up to a logistical nightmare: a surprise fleet of luxury steamboats packed with former U.S. President Millard Fillmore, Wall Street barons, and the nation's top editors. Arriving 24 hours ahead of schedule, this high-society invasion triggered a frantic mad dash in the mud that permanently accelerated Minnesota's path to statehood. Robert Thomas...
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