17.03.159
Print, Photographic
1928
Visitors in the Fields of Waseca Experiment Station. 3 1/4" x 5 1/2" black and white photo. Field trip to flax fields and experiment plots at Waseca Experiment Station.
Photograph located in 1928 Annual Report, Waseca County, Minnesota booklet, U4, Box 223, Folder 4413. Photographs attached to 17.03 are from the 1928 4-H scrapbook documenting the activities and people of the Waseca County 4-H Clubs, including the Woodville Hustlers, the Palmer Sunbeams, Waldorf Peppy Peppers. There are photos at the Minnesota State Fair and the Waseca County Fair showing all kinds of competitions, demonstrations of home and farm learning of skills. In August 1912, the University of Minnesota’s Board of Regents purchased 246 acres of land half a mile to the south and west of Waseca on the edge of the city limits. The Southeast Demonstration Farm and Experiment Station began operations in 1913. In 1925, the Southeast Demonstration and Experiment Station became the Southeast Experiment Station. In 1941, with an additional land purchase, the station totaled 598 acres. Land was set aside for the Southern School of Agriculture (SSA) which admitted its first students in 1953. In 1969, the Southern School of Agriculture evolved into the University of Minnesota Technical College-Waseca then it was renamed as the University of Minnesota-Waseca (UMW), sharing land with the newly named Southern Experiment Station (SES). In 1992, UMW graduated its final class and then the UMW campus buildings were sold to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. In 1999, the Southern Experiment Station became the Southern Research and Outreach Center (SROC).