It is with heavy heart I must relay the following news, Rich “Fritz” Bold has passed away from injuries due to a rollover near Hudson Wisconsin on October 30, 2020.
Someone sent a note to me around the end of October saying Rich Bold had died. Rich was a bit older than me and I knew he was a respiratory therapist who worked in Western Wisconsin. I couldn’t believe what I was reading in the note. “Not Fritz, he is too young and healthy,” I thought.
I looked online for any information about this and I couldn’t find anything. Then almost a month since his passing I found it and I had to write this article, to remember him.
Rich “Fritz” Bold was a gregarious guy so full of life. He was quick with a joke and he was the guy who would walk down the Harvest Fest Parade on Payne Avenue with a Sousaphone playing the “Baby Elephant Walk” on it. He was a member of Brio Brass for many years and later was part of Minnesota Brass.
Rich Bold with the Sousaphone in the back on the right. Rich was a member of Brio Brass for many years.
I met Rich through the Republican Caucusing just before redistricting in 2012. He was a member of the old HD 67A Republicans and had run for office and or had been a HD Republican Officer. When he became part of the new HD 66B Republicans I encouraged him to run for Chair in 2012. In 2014 Rich was Lizz Paulson’s Campaign Manager against John Lesch.
He was a fellow Veteran. He had served as an MP in the US Army and at the time I met him he had been a long time security guard. Rich had a contagious bearded smile.
I remember one evening how he taught a friend of mine how to play Spades. He introduced me to whiskey (in moderation) that night too. Politics to him was all about relationships with other people, sharing their beliefs and supporting them when they needed help.
Rich Bold will be missed by many people. If you would like to add a memory about Rich Bold, please send a comment and it’ll get posted after review. Only those that follow the website will be able to comment (website policy).
Women’s Suffrage was borne out of the American Abolitionism Movement
On August 18, 1920 the State of Tennessee became the 36th state to pass the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution guaranteeing Women the Right to Vote. Minnesota was the 15th State to pass it on September 8, 1919.
Seneca Falls Convention & Declaration of Sentiments
It wasn’t the first attempt at passing an amendment for women to be allowed to vote, in fact it started up about 72 years earlier in Seneca Falls, New York at a Women’s Rights Convention started by Lucretia Mottand Elizabeth Cady Stanton. They were abolitionists who turned to advocate for women’s rights. At the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention Mott, Stanton and other women put together a list modeled after the Declaration of Independence called the “The Declaration of Sentiments.”
The Declaration of Sentimentsoffered examples of how men oppressed women such as:
preventing them from owning land or earning wages
preventing them from voting
compelling them to submit to laws created without their representation
giving men authority in divorce and child custody proceedings and decisions
preventing them from gaining a college education
preventing them from participating in most public church affairs
subjecting them to a different moral code than men
aiming to make them dependent and submissive to men
Stanton read the Declaration of Sentiments at the convention and proposed women be given the right to vote, among other things. Sixty-eight women and 32 men signed the document—including prominent abolitionist Frederick Douglass—but many withdrew their support later when it came under public scrutiny. (source History.com)
Post Civil War and Reconstruction Period
Following the Civil War the late President Abraham Lincoln’s Reconstruction plan had been altered as he was no longer around to over see it. The 13th Amendment had been passed in 1865 ending slavery officially, the 14th and 15th Amendments had been passed to grant Civil Rights and Equal Protection under the law; and Voting Rights to former slaves respectively.
At the time Women thought they could register to vote with the passage of the 15th Amendment’s language allowing voting rights. The language of the article did not mention gender so it was vague, but since it wasn’t explicitly directing women to be able to vote, any woman who did was arrested. This is when Susan B Anthony was arrested in 1872.
Susan B Anthony was an abolitionist who was also a member of the Temperance Movement. The Temperance Movement was a social movement to curb alcohol consumption and eventually they succeeded to prevent the sale and production of alcohol. So before you shout hooray for Susan B Anthony think of how she helped to organize crime in America in an indirect way by helping bootleggers to smuggle illegal alcohol in the early part of the 20th century. The amount of misery heaped upon Americans not being able to have a drink of alcohol makes today’s social distancing and mask wearing pale in comparison.
Susan B Anthony died in 1906 at the age of 86, and 14 years later the 19th Amendment was named in her honor.
Split in Suffrage Movements
During Reconstruction the Suffrage for Black Men went one way and Women’s Suffrage went another way. There was a difference in the abolitionists. Most advocated for Voting Rights for Black Men which resulted in the 15th Amendment.
One could question why this was so but the industrial revolution had not hit full stride yet, which one could argue was the reason why it took so long for the cessation of slavery to occur. During the industrial age it really didn’t matter who was pushing a button on an assembly line. Also sentiments about what a woman’s place in the household was tied to family life and traditions held in the church.
World War 1 and Suffragette Parades
After World War 1 a lot of the old world had fallen away. You can see this in the period piece on PBS’ Downton Abbey. Limited Automation, and women working in traditional men’s fields to produce war material for the war effort brought out a freedom women had not seen before.
One of the ways in which women pushed their cause was to hold massive Suffragette Parades in some of the larger cities in the United States. Many women were arrested after these parades for demonstrating in public which was still illegal.
Suffragette Parade in NY CityDr. Anna Shaw and Carrie Chapman Catt, founder of the League of Women Voters, lead an estimated 20,000 supporters in a women’s suffrage march on New York’s Fifth Ave. in 1915 . (AP Photo)
100 Years Later, Women on the Ballot is Common Place
Its been one hundred years since women were given the right to vote and it’s not a big deal as it was then. There have been many women candidates, legislators, businesswomen, and even astronauts. Women have come a long way in this country.
Here are a list of current women legislators and candidates from the Republican Party:
Rep Mary Franson, Senator Carrie Ruud, Senator Julie Rosen, Senator Carla Nelson, Senator & Former Secretary of State Mary Kiffmeyer, Senator Karin Housley, Rep Deb Kiel, Senator Michelle Benson, former Mayor of Woodbury Mary Stephens, Margaret Stokely, Georgia Dietz, Amy Anderson, Sharon Anderson, to name a few.
And our very own HD 66B Republican Candidate Mikki Murray.
Information for this article came from History.com, and from the Secretary of State of Minnesota’s Candidate Filing website.
Initially when I started posting recipes here it was to help people turn down the stress level they were facing. A high stress level will actually weaken one’s immune system.
Here are the recipes I’ve posted so far and the links are here so you don’t have to rummage through the posts to find them.
Our Chair, Tom Polachek, has an older brother who is allergic to peanuts. His brother carries a shot to save his life if he should ever eat something with peanuts in it. So growing up Tom never really had anything with peanut butter in it until his brother went off to college when Tom started 7th grade.
This recipe seems to have a lot less peanut butter in it than others. The Reese’s Peanut Butter Chips are great. One thing I don’t do from the recipe is I don’t roll the sugar on the dough as the instructions say to do.
Ingredients
A. 1 cup packed brown sugar
B. 1/2 cup peanut butter
C. 1/2 cup butter softened
D. 1 egg
E. 1 1/4 cups Gold Medal® all-purpose flour
F. 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
G. 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
H. 1/4 teaspoon salt
J. 1 cup peanut butter chips
K. Granulated sugar (optional)
Directions
1. In a large bowl, beat A, B, C, and D with electric mixer on medium speed until creamy, or mix with spoon.
2. Stir in E, F*, G*, and H.
3. Stir in with mixing spoon J.
4. Heat oven to 375°F and prepare cookie sheets. Roll 1 1/2 inch dough into white sugar and drop on ungreased cookie sheet.
5. Bake cookies 9 to 10 minutes or until light brown.
6. Cool 5 minutes; remove from cookie sheet to wire rack.
* Many Recipes have either Baking Soda or Baking Powder in them, not both. You might wonder what is the difference and what do they do separately and together. It may be a good separate post. Briefly they are used as leavening agents and they deal with acid in the recipe. For now Click on the highlighted link Baking Soda & Baking Powder together.
Directions with Photos
1. In a large bowl, beat together A-D.
Add Peanut Butter (B)
Add Softened Butter (C)
Beat together add 1 egg (D)
2. Stir in E, F*, G*, and H. (You can sift these ingredients together before adding to the mixture)
Stir Flour in (E). I keep my flour in an old Nesquick Canister.
Add Baking Soda (F)
Add Baking Powder (G)
Add Salt (H)
3. Stir in with mixing spoon J.
Sampling some chips
I snapped my old mixing spatula so I had to use “Woody” to finish
4. Heat oven to 375°F and prepare cookie sheets.
I like using the SILPAT Baking Mat on the right. The one on the left, the blue one I got to test for Cooking Club of America. It’s okay, but I like the SILPAT better.
5. Bake cookies 9 to 10 minutes or until light brown.
6. Cool 5 minutes; remove from cookie sheet to wire rack.