2011 News Tribune archive photo calendar

As mentioned a couple days ago, the News Tribune has published a 2011 calendar featuring 14 photos from the newspaper’s archives, including the one you see above, showing downtown Duluth in 1970.

The calendars are printed on glossy paper, and the photos are sharp and full of detail. They date from the 1950s through the 1980s.

The calendar sells for $7 at the News Tribune office, or $10 shipping included. If you can’t stop by the News Tribune, you can order online here.

Proceeds from the calendar sales will go to the local Newspapers in Education program, which gets newspapers into local classrooms.

If you have any questions, send me an e-mail at akrueger@duluthnews.com.

Lenox Hotel, 1957

The Lenox Hotel (also known as the Hotel Lenox – the building’s signs refer to it both ways), stood in downtown Duluth on the corner of Superior Street and Sixth Avenue West, where the Incline Station bowling alley is today. The photo above is dated December 1957, although it doesn’t look like winter; apparently the hotel was getting a delivery of Coca-Cola at that moment.

The hotel was built in 1904 by the Ribenack brothers – Henry, Albert and Edward. Edward Ribenack went on to have a long career in the Minnesota Legislature, representing Duluth first in the House and then for many years in the Senate.

According to the text of a Senate memorial service held for Ribenack after he died in 1957, just before his 88th birthday, the Ribenack brothers owned and operated the Lenox until 1947.

Here’s an excerpt about the Lenox Hotel from the 1910 “History of Duluth and St. Louis County”:

The Lenox Hotel, while a comparatively new house, having been built in 1905, has already taken a leading rank among the city’s hotels. It was built by the Ribenack brothers, Henry C, Edward R. and Albert O., who are associated in its management. The Ribenacks are no tyros in hotel management, their father having for many years been a hotel proprietor in Wisconsin.

When the brothers first came to Duluth they entered the restaurant business, but finding this field too restricted for their activities they decided to enter the hotel business. When the hotel was first built it was but four stories high, but in a little more than a year after it was opened they found themselves cramped for room and were compelled to add two additional stories. At the same time they enlarged the dining room and lobby, and added many other improvements. There is telephone connection between every room and the office.

The hotel contains 230 rooms, and ever since it was completed its popularity has been unquestioned. It has been filled to its capacity winter and summer, and during the rush season it has been necessary to turn guests away almost every day in the week. The hotel is run on the American and European plans, and about half the rooms are furnished with private baths, while there are public bath rooms and lavatories on every floor. The hotel and furnishings represent an investment of about $250,000. Its location on Superior street, directly opposite the “Soo” railroad depot, makes it most convenient for the traveling public, and the excellence of its table appeals to the most fastidious appetite.

As noted in the excerpt, the hotel was located across the street from the Soo Line railroad depot, and you can see a corner of the depot in this photo, which was taken earlier than the one above:

The Lenox was located in the heart of Duluth’s “Bowery” district – and you can see the hotel in the distance in the photo with this earlier post on the Bowery.

Obviously, the Lenox was torn down at some point in the 1950s, 1960s or early 1970s. The present-day Lenox Place apartment complex, located a bit west of where the hotel was located, carries on the Lenox name.

Now, I’ll rely on you to fill in the gaps about just when the Lenox Hotel was torn down. Share any information and stories you have by posting a comment.

Duluth’s Bowery, 1950s

1950s

This undated photo of Superior Street, at the west end of downtown Duluth, is captioned "Old Bowery in Duluth" in the News Tribune files.

Most of the buildings in this view were demolished in the late 1950s and early 1960s as part of the Gateway redevelopment project, and the cars suggest a date in the early to mid-1950s. Among the few buildings in the photo to survive today is the Duluth Bethel building, located up on the hill at 1st and Mesaba.

Looking back at Superior Street, the photo was probably taken from up in the Medical Arts Building. The roof of the Spalding Hotel is visible at lower left, and the Lyceum Theater building is at lower right. Next to the Lyceum, across Fifth Avenue West, is the Holland Hotel. Other hotels visible along the "Bowery" include the Hill Hotel and the Hotel Liberty. The term "Bowery," by the way, refers to the street of that name in New York – and its reputation as a stretch of cheap hotels and dive bars.

Here are a few zoomed-in views from the photo:

Hill Hotel and ad for Wrigley’s Spearmint Gum

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Hotel Liberty (rooms 75 cents and up), M&C gas station and Blatz beer sign

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Billboards for Conoco gasoline and Blatz, "Milwaukee’s Finest Beer"

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Billboard on the hillside for Master Bread – "Fresh as a daisy!"

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Duluth Bethel building – note the three big homes in front that once stood where Mesaba Avenue runs today.

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Do you have any memories of Duluth’s "Bowery"? Post a comment.

- Andrew Krueger

Adams School, 1885-1951

adams

Adams School at 18th Avenue West and Superior Street in Duluth was built in 1885 and closed in 1951.

I found this photo in the News Tribune archives and immediately wanted to post it. There’s no year listed to mark when the photo was taken, but the dates June 12, 1986, and July 3, 1986, appear on the back. Clearly this photo was taken long before 1986.

Does anyone have information to add about Adams School?

Building Woodland School, late 1950s

Late 1950s

This undated aerial photo by the News-Tribune’s Earl Johnson shows Woodland Middle School under construction in the late 1950s. The school opened in 1958.

This view is looking west; Woodland Avenue runs from top center to center right; Eighth Street cuts from top to bottom across the right side of the photo.

Here is a zoomed-in view: