Minnesota
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Welcome to the Minnesota Collection
This collection serves as a dedicated repository for academic research, historical documentation, and case studies related to Minnesota. It focuses on the historical evolution, cultural developments, and legal frameworks within the state of Minnesota. This collection offers valuable resources for scholars, researchers, and individuals interested in the rich heritage and historical significance of Minnesota.
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Item Open Access An Ordinance to Prevent the Carrying of Concealed Weapons, §§ 1-3, THE WORTHINGTON ADVANCE, Feb. 9, 1882, at 3 (Worthington, Minnesota).(General Publisher, 1882)That it shall be unlawful for any person within the corporate limits of the village of Worthington to carry any pistol, dirk, slung shot or other dangerous weapon, concealed on his person.Item Open Access Ordinance no. 22, §§ 1-6, NEW ULM, CHARTER AND ORDINANCES (New Ulm Post Print 1887).(General Publisher, 1888)It shall be unlawful for any person, within the limits of this city to carry or wear under his clothes or concealed about his person, any pistol, dirk, sling-shot, or knuckle of brass or other metal, or any other dangerous or deadly weaponItem Open Access An Ordinance Relating to Offences Affecting Public Peace and Quiet, §§ 1-4 & 8, MOORHEAD, MINNESOTA, CHARTER AND ORDINANCES OF THE CITY (The Daily News Print 1892) (Law Passed 1882).(General Publisher, 1882)SECTION 1. Any person who shall be found in a state or condition of drunkenness or intoxication, or who shall make or assist in making any improper noise, disturbance or diversion, or shall conduct himself in a disorderly manner, or shall be guilty of firing any gun or guns or any pistol or revolver or revolvers, or fighting in this city, shall, on conviction before one of the justices of the peace of this city, pay a fine of not less than three dollars nor more than one hundred dollars and costs of prosecution.Item Open Access MINNEAPOLIS, CHARTER, ACTS, & ORDINANCES, ch.4, § 5, nos. 5 & 15 (Johnson, Smith & Harrison 1883).(General Publisher, 1883)To regulate the storage of gun powder and discharge of firearmsItem Open Access Annual Reports of the City Officers and City Boards of the City of Saint Paul, for the Fiscal Year Ending December 31, 1888, at 689, no. 6 (1888)(General Publisher, 1888)Prohibited carrying fire arms, throwing stones, or other missiles in any park or within fifty yards thereof.Item Open Access W.P. Murray, City Attorney, The Municipal Code of Saint Paul: Comprising the Laws of the State of Minnesota Relating to the City of Saint Paul, and the Ordinances of the Common Council; Revised to December 1, 1884, pg. 39, no. 19 (1884)(General Publisher, 1884)To provide for the receipt, storage, transportation, safe keeping and dealing and traffic in gun powder, gun cotton, petroleum, kerosene or other dangerous, explosive or inflammable oils or substances within said city, or within one mile of the corporate limits thereof, and to provide for the summary condemnation or destruction of any of said articles as may be kept, stored, dealt in, transported through or received in said city, contrary to such ordinance s said city may enact for the safety of life and property therein.]Item Open Access SAINT PAUL, MUNICIPAL CODE, art. 18, §§ 1, 7 (Daily Globe 1884) (Passed 1882).(General Publisher, 1882)"Sec 1. It shall be unlawful for any person, within the limits of the city of St. Paul, to carry or wear under his clothes, or concealed about his person, any pistol or pistols, dirk, dagger, sword, slungshot, cross-knuckles, or knuckles of lead, brass or other metal, bowie-knife, dirk-knife or razor, or any other dangerous or deadly weapon. Sec. 7. The Mayor of the city of St. Paul may grant to so many, and to such persons as he may think proper, licenses to carry concealed weapons; and may revoke any and all of such licenses at his pleasure.Item Open Access General Statutes of the State of Minnesota in Force January 1, 1889. Complete in Two Volumes, Vol. 2, pg. 1012, § 367 (1888)(General Publisher, 1888)A person who willfully discharges any species of firearms, air-gun, or other weapon, or throws any deadly missile in any public place, or in any place where there is any person to be endangered thereby, although no injury to any person shall ensue, is guilty of a misdemeanor.Item Open Access General Statutes of the State of Minnesota in Force January 1, 1889, at 1006 (Vol. 2, 1888), Making, Selling, etc., Dangerous Weapons, §§ 333-34(General Publisher, 1888)Prohibited manufacturing, selling, giving, or disposing of a slungshot, sandclub, or metal knuckles, or selling or giving a pistol or firearm to a minor without magistrate consent. Also prohibited carrying a concealed slungshot, sandclub, or metal knuckles, or a dagger, dirk, knife, pistol or other fire-arm, or any dangerous weapon.Item Open Access Keeping Gunpowder Unlawfully, The Penal Code of the State of Minnesota, § 323 (1885).(General Publisher, 1885)A person who makes, or keeps, gunpowder, nitro-glycerine, or any other explosive or combustible material, within a city or village, or carries such materials through the streets thereof, in a quantity or manner prohibited by law, or by ordinance of the city or village, is guilty of a misdemeanor. And a person who, by the careless, negligent or unauthorized use or management of gunpowder or other explosive substance, injures, or occasions the injury of, the person or property of another, is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one (1) year."