Showing posts with label Enger Tower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Enger Tower. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Jerry Thoreson Talks About the Mission of Destination Duluth

Sunset departure by @schmiescary
Duluth, located here at the Westernmost tip of Lake Superior, has always been a beautiful part of the world. It's easy to find the setting inspirational and soul-lifting, so much so that over the past 30 years the city and its region have become the #1 tourist destination in Minnesota.

Destination Duluth, however, has a different kind of mission. They not only encourage folks to visit, they're hope is to see them fall in love with the place and stay.

According to their website, "Destination Duluth is a collaborative online resource dedicated to educating and inspiring the public about the beauty of Duluth, Minnesota, thereby shaping the City's positive growth." To accomplish this goal they have become adept at using social media and digital technology to a most exceptional degree. Their Facebook and web stats are nothing short of astonishing.

For this reason I reached out to their social media wizard Jerry Thoreson to learn more and share it here.

Ed Newman: What was the original vision for Destination Duluth and who was behind that?

Jerry Thoreson, Destination Duluth
Jerry Thoreson: For decades, Duluth has suffered from three misconceptions about the Zenith City:
1. That Duluth is too cold for human habitation.
2. There are no good jobs.
3. That it is an unwelcoming community.

Destination Duluth was formed to reshape and change the dialogue about Duluth. In short, the organization set out to help re-brand Duluth and surrounding region. In doing so, the ultimate goal is to attract new/returning residents – to grow Duluth. Our hashtag says it all – #befromDuluth.

Destination Duluth was the brainchild of Branden Robinson, the Manager of South Pier Inn. He grew up in Duluth, went to Cornell University, where the seeds of an endeavor that would help re-brand Duluth were planted. In 2012 he registered destinationduluth.org and recruited Tom Livingston and Chris Swanson to assist in organizing Destination Duluth. In 2013, they recruited Jerry Thoreson to help launch their social media, which went live on May 23, 2013. The Facebook page had remarkable growth, reaching 50,000 followers in the first 500 days. In October 2019 they reached 150,000 Likes with an average reach of 120,000 and 8,000 clicks of engagement daily (2019).

EN: How has it shifted over time?

Photo credit: Matthias Martin
JT: At first we were very careful to differentiate ourselves from tourism with their “heads in beds” goal. Destination Duluth’s ultimate outcome is “heads in homes.” However, we realize that the first step in someone relocating to Duluth is visiting Duluth. So, we’ve embraced that reality and are actively seeking sponsors from the tourism/hospitality industry.

EN: You’ve been with Destination Duluth since 2013. What is your role with the project?

JT: My role started as the content manager for their social media platforms. In 2019, I was promoted to managing director.

EN: How did you end up as part of the team?

JT: It’s a long story, but in 2012 an acquaintance suggested I connect with Chris Swanson, a Two Harbors entrepreneur who founded PureDriven, a digital marketing company. In the fall of 2013 Chris became familiar with my work and sought to recruit me.

EN: What would you say have been your biggest achievements to date?

JT: According to a 2018 survey of 1,000 of our followers, over 50% stated they have visited Duluth as a result of content they’ve seen on social media. But even more impressive, 50 respondents stated they are either have moved, or are in the processes of moving “because of Destination Duluth’s influence.”

High Bridge at dawn. Photo © Kenny Palmer.  
EN: It’s apparent that Destination Duluth is a big cheerleader for our region. How did the Destination Duluth Facebook page obtain 5 million views in a single week recently?

JT: We reposted a video by duluthharborcam.com of a ship coming into port that went viral with over 4 million views and 38,000 clicks of engagement. The rest of the week we were over the 120,000/day average which resulted in 5 million views for the week and over 8 million for the month of January, 2019.

Cloud Reflections by @educk3 Used with permission.
EN: You stated that tourism is delivering 12 million in tax dollars to the city today. Do you have a source for that?

JT: This story from the Minneapolis Star: Duluth rakes in record $12.4M in tourism revenue 

EN: What are the biggest tourist activities when people come here?

JT: Canal Park, ship watching and the Aerial lift bridge are without a doubt the biggest draw for tourists. Glensheen has seen explosive growth over the last few years and Skyline Drive and Enger Tower are also high on the list. Up the shore top favorites would be Gooseberry Falls and Split Rock Lighthouse.

* * * *
For More Information visit: https://www.destinationduluth.org/
To follow on Twitter: #BefromDuluth

© ‎David Schauer‎. Used with permission.

Sunday, July 1, 2018

Rolling Stone Writer Skewers Duluth; Duluth Mayor Trumps Her With Grace

Mayor Larson on the porch of first home
of Robert Zimmerman on May 24.
A number of years ago someone in the media business told me that if I really wanted to make money as an arts critic, I needed to be more merciless. Look at so-and-so who used to be theater critic for the Trib. He lacerated local theater and now he's critic in a major city making good money, I was told.

I said, "Thank you," and ignored the advice. But I never forgot the exchange and it all came back this past week after Rolling Stone sent an armed gunslinger, I mean journalist, to shoot up the town while covering the Trump rally that took place here on June 20.

A few friends from out of town sent inquiries asking about details related to the event, but I thought I'd let it all percolate before posting anything here. And I'm glad I did, because the big story turned out not to be the rally so much as the abuse Duluth received from a Rolling Stone correspondent who drove up from Minneapolis to cover the president's visit. The bigger story may well be the graciousness with which Mayor Emily Larson wrote her Open Letter in response.

* * * *
A Trump rally in Duluth was the occasion for Rolling Stone
to assign a correspondent to drop into town to do a story.
Below are links to some of the opinion pieces that have appeared in the Duluth News Tribune regarding this matter. I found it telling that Rolling Stone writer Ana Marie Cox so openly hostile to Duluth even before she arrived, tweeting "Beautiful day to drive to Duluth in order to experience ugliness."

The weirdest line in the article was where she described the city as "languishing under a thin layer of grime." I've lived in Cleveland, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, Mexico and been to nearly every major city in the U.S. and I know of no cleaner city anywhere, so I've no idea what she is talking about. I go to the library every other day which is right where all the construction is taking place twenty feet away,  and even there I've not noticed anything grimy. Yet the amazing thing was how kind Mayor Larson was. She does not deny that there may have been some grime (which I still find doubtful) but explains why Ms. Cox may have encountered this.

I found it intriguing that Rolling Stone later removed some of the more venomous lines from the piece Ms. Cox wrote after the pushback. Here are some letters and opinion pieces that appeared in our local paper after the flare-up.

Magazine didn't only disparage Duluth

Mayor's response to mag prompts pride

Local reporters got the whole story, outshined national media

Favorite title and a good read:
Nasty column, heartfelt response both reminders of what's great about Duluth

Mayor Larson's open letter to Ana Marie Cox and Rolling Stone was in one of the articles above, but if you didn't have time to follow all the links, here below is the letter in full. (I took the liberty of highlighting and underlining a few of my favorite parts.)  I've personally enjoyed Mayor Larson's unpretentiousness and accessibility, her support for the arts and genuine concern for the people of Duluth.

Celebrating Bob Dylan's birthday in front of his first home
during Duluth Dylan Fest 2018, May 24.
* * * * 

Friday, June 22nd, 2018

An Open Letter to Ana Marie Cox and Rolling Stone:

Those of us here on our “...lonely island of electoral blue” wish to respond to your Rolling Stone article on your recent Duluth visit covering the president’s political rally.

Reading your experience in our hillside city, we can only say this: We see things differently. And it’s not just our rose-colored sunglasses needed for the brilliantly glittering sun off Lake Superior.

You see, it’s not necessarily what you wrote that’s at issue here. Some of the points you raised are actually spot-on. Like many communities around the country, we have serious issues as it relates to opioid abuse and domestic violence. And it’s true we are not the economic hub for the steel industry we once were.

What may be lacking, however, is context.

In Duluth, we own our problems - and we do something about them. There’s no doubt that we are an imperfect community, but allow me to shed some light on who we are and what it is we’re about. Because it seems to have gotten lost in the article. You saw our downtown as a place where “…every surface is covered with a thin layer of grime…” What you call grime, we call reconstruction dust and progress. Just blocks from the Arena where you spent your time, we are embarking on a bright future for our main street, replacing 100-year-old pipes, improving our infrastructure to advance our city’s energy system and building towards a more efficient Duluth. There’s a reason we call it Superior Street.

The focus on red and blue politics overshadowed all of our green. In our city of 86,000, we boast 7,000 acres of parkland, over 225 miles of trails and a 7-mile sandy beach for sailing, surfing and just soaking in the wondrous good that blows in off our great unsalted sea. Which happens to hold 10% of the world’s fresh water.

And while you saw all that beautiful freshwater crashing “…against a town whose shoreside skyline is dominated by stolid, brutalist mid-century relics and precarious-seeming industrial shipping contraptions, rusty and mostly silent,” we see vital industry. Our international port is the conduit for moving 35-million tons of cargo annually — that’s heartland grains that cross oceans to feed the world, taconite pellets which becomes America’s steel, and colossal wind turbine blades that create green energy to run our country.

We aren’t buying the label of Trump Country. We are more than one person. We are teachers, health care workers, and police officers. Bus drivers, engineers, and planners. We’re also musicians. Isn’t your magazine named after a song by some guy? Yeah. He was born here.

We are magazine buyers, too.

Here in Duluth, we aren’t anyone’s country. Simply put, we are America — where changing industry meets innovation. Where mental health and drug addiction hit home. Where cities roll up their sleeves to take care of the many problems that federal inefficiency leaves on our lap.

Of course, like all cities we have problems. But unlike some places, we are boldly facing them with political will and getting real results. We’re putting our attention where our issues are — like investing in sexual assault victims advocacy and our opioid crisis.

In the 1980s, Duluth pioneered a new response to domestic violence, which is now the most practiced model of domestic violence intervention in the country. The. Most. And while we have no shelter “...in the shadow of the AMSOIL arena…,” our shelters take domestic violence victims from all over the country, as an innovative leader in the field. It was because of this status that Duluth was the first anywhere to use a Direct-to-DNA technology to start clearing a shameful backlog of sexual assault test kits. I’m proud to say on behalf of our victim-survivors, we will be caught up by fall.

Now, let’s talk opioid crisis for a minute. Yep — you’re right; it’s bad here. So, we’re applying our successes in domestic violence prevention to our nation’s fevered use of opioids and heroin.

Our commitment has been to work with our county, the Center for Alcohol and Drug Treatment, courts, local hospitals and other partners to create an Opioid Withdrawal Unit: a safe place for those who overdose and want help to medically withdraw and be connected seamlessly to other support and resources. This is the first such program in the state. This safe place and support system is the first step in disrupting the cycle of addiction.

Just to be clear, you’re not the first national media we’ve received. Duluth has been voted “Best Outdoor City” by Outside Magazine, and just last month was featured in The Atlantic for our “unfolding saga of start-up businesses as the crucial creators of new jobs ...like craft breweries (along with tech incubators, arts companies, manufacturing “maker spaces,” and others) in bringing life to fringe areas of recovering cities…”. James Fallows wrote that - and I was able to thank him in person after he also chose to feature us on CBS Sunday Morning.

Come to think of it, I’d like to thank you, too, Ms. Cox. Nothing brings a community together more than being dismissed by others. We are proud of who we are. We’d like you to see and experience why. So come on back for another visit. We’ll leave the Enger Tower light on for you. Who knows? You might find that you like it here in Duluth.

We sure do.

Sincerely Yours,
Emily Larson,
Mayor, City of Duluth

* * * *

We're a city of mixed peoples from here, there and everywhere, people from all wall walks of life, all variety of backgrounds, all political persuasions, with a wide range of dreams, in one of the most beautiful places in the world. Not perfect, mind you. I don't think there are any illusions about that. But there's much to appreciate and value. It's not just flyover country.

For the record, here is the piece that generated this response.

Meantime, life goes on all around you. Get into it.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Duluth Library Book Sale, the Enger Tower Celebration and Anne Labovitz's Conversant Portraits

What did you think of that sky last night? So bright! At two a.m. here in the North Country it seemed as if the dawn were already about to break. I know that it has something to do with the tilt of the earth this time of year as we approach the summer solstice, but I had the feeling that the whole earth like a crowning infant bowed sunward so that the light was spilling over us all. Is the earth closer to the sun this year?

This week's activities are many but at the front of the line is our Friends of the Library Book Sale which begins today with a Members Only scavenger hunt. Oh, it's not really that but it is a closed session so that library members can riffle through the stacks. Just another example of how membership has its privileges.

The Duluth Library Book Sale runs through Friday the 13th. That last day is when I usually make an effort to explore as they have a Bag Sale. Inflation on used books has hit the bag sale though. It used to be a dollar for a bag of books and now it is four dollars. But then, have you seen the price of new books these days? Four buck is a great bargain as any reader well knows. And you can still find classics right up till the last. So make an effort to be there one day or another and you will be pleased. Ten a.m. in the Green Room, till seven tomorrow, till five Thursday and till three Friday. Enjoy!

* * * *

Anne Labovitz is at it again with another event involving faces. This show is called Conversant Portraits and is taking place at the Weisman Art Museum Plaza in Minneapolis. If you've never been to the Weisman, located on the U of MN campus, you owe it to yourself.

I personally get mesmerized by the expressiveness of faces that my art blog may is called The Many Faces of Ennyman, but I can see Anne Labovitz is equally enamored of this theme as this show/event is called Conversant Portraits. Indeed, faces are endlessly fascinating. Labovitz is taking this project to spaces even I have not considered. While you're being painted, she will also be interviewing you, much like carnival portrait painters, except in this case she'll be incorporating your words into the larger painting as abstract compositional elements. Your conversation will become part of many conversations, much like our singular lives become part of the larger river of human experience that flows through time.

Conversant Portraits is a pilot project in preparation for an international travelling exhibition in conjunction with the Tweed Museum here in Duluth. Can't be there in person? You can participate remotely by following @annelabovitz or #labovitz, or posting your own selfie on #nspkF17 on Twitter.

* * * *

On Father's Day, this coming Sunday, there will be a celebration in honor of Enger Tower's 75th anniversary. All kinds of activities are planned including a birthday cake in honor of Bert Enger's 150th birthday. How cool is that?

A couple years back the Rotary and the City took the lead on the restoration of the park in anticipation of a visit from the King and Queen of Norway who remembered stories from his dad who visited here when the tower was built.

For me it was especially fun painting a picture of the tower that year as part of the fund raising that went on. Crystal Taylor, who also helped spearhead the fund raising, asked John Heino to take photos that would become a calendar people could purchase. One photo was a picture of me painting the tower. That proved to be a fun photo shoot. People who bought the calendar were then eligible to win the painting, which ultimately went to a woman in Iowa.

Meantime, life goes on all around you. Embrace it.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Twin Ports Arts Scene Gears Up for the Holidays

"One thing I have begun to notice around here is that starving artists are not an endangered species."

Last night after hours I was able to attend two events involving art as a nice kick-off to a busy weekend of opportunities for gallery hoppers here in the Twin Ports. Immediately after work I slid over to the Blackwater Lounge where another Enger Tower Calendar Release Party was in progress. Blackwater is a chic establishment with live jazz many nights of the week. Calendar buyers are eligible to win the painting of Enger Tower which was on display again here. The drawing will be January 1. Details at the end of this blog post.

From there I slipped up around the corner to the first of several holiday related art openings this week. This one was called “the amazing Crystal Pelkey and the Ochre Ghost Gallery present their Holiday Art Sale Extravaganza." I got the text message reminder an hour before and was glad I did. Featuring art of Adam Swanson, Crystal Pelkey, Dick Rosvall, Emily Ostos, Jessica Liszewski, Jodi Wittkopf, Mary Bishop and Samantha Goodall… the space was jam-packed with friends of the artists and people who dropped in for a peek. The opening gala last night ran from 6-10 p.m. The gallery, located at 22 North 2nd Avenue East, will be open through December 9.

Friday evening Zeitgeist Arts Café is hosting "An Evening of Art and Awareness" from 7-10 p.m. Also, Friday and Saturday evening the Play Ground is hosting the Avalon Dance Troupe in a show titled Radiance, featuring dance, martial arts and poetry . The show is based on colors and emotions, beginning with black and white, eventually unfolding into a full-spectrum finale. Beforehand the lobby will showcase artwork by John Heino, Melanie Sternberg and Ed Newman.

Then there is the Artist Kamikaze Reunion event which is on display for the duration of December at Jitters on Superior Street downtown. Not to be outdone, Beaners Central, Jason Wussow's primo java joint, is hosting a Unique Art Sale on Saturday featuring Green Blacksmith Demonstrations, Glasswork, Mosaics, Pottery, Textile Flowers, Elegant candles, Jewelry, Photography, Ceramics, Hand-made Soap & Lotion... all from local artists. Plus a "Kids Corner" with games, activities, & wreath making!

On Saturday, December 3 there will be the Annual Holiday Gallery Shop & Stroll. Participating galleries include Blue Lake, Just for the Season, Lizzard’s, Sivertson’s & Waters of Superior, from 11 a.m. till 4 in the afternoon.

Then from 6-8 p.m. you can visit the opening for Gage Salyards’ The World Through My Eyes, a photography opening at the Zeitgeist Arts Building. The show will feature past and present work from all around the Northland, the country and the world. States Salyards in his invitation, “Every day we choose to see the world in our own way. This is the world through my eyes.” This show is sponsored by Zeitgeist Arts, Dubrue and Lizzards.

And let’s not leave off from mentioning next weekend’s event at Goin’ Postal in Superior. Mark your calendar for the evening of the tenth for the December Art Show featuring works by Jeredt Runions, Tara Stone, Andrew Perfetti, Gustave Campanini, myself and perhaps two dozen more, with live music and lots of warm hearts. If you’re seeking stocking stuffer ideas, I will try to bring my Art Cards, Editions and Orginals. 816 Tower Avenue, Superior. 6-9 pm.

As for this weekend’s shows, I half wish I could do everything but there are still weekend chores to do… so we’ll have to see what time permits.


To order your Enger Tower calendar featuring photography of John Heino, please go to http://www.engertowerduluth.com. The link to donate for the tower is on left side of the page. Or locally, visit any of these great businesses: Fitger's Book Store, Happy Space, Douglas County Historical Society, Utopia Salon & Spa, Duluth Playhouse, Thirsty Pagan, Jitters: a Lake Superior Coffee & Tea House, Lake Superior Magazine gift store, Takk for Maten, Evolve Duluth, and Larsmont Cottages.

EdNote: Photos on this page are from the Ochre Ghost.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Enger Tower Calendar Release Party at Hanabi

Tuesday evening I was able to attend the Enger Tower Calendar release party at the Hanabi Restaurant in downtown Duluth. The visit of King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway last month created quite the stir and resulted in a much needed renovation of Enger Tower and the park that is its home overlooking the perhaps the most beautiful vista in the upper midwest. Quick note: the Midwest is relatively flat so there are not an abundance of vistas to compete with on that score. Truth be told, however, this view can hold its own with nearly any in the world when the full moon rises over the waters of Lake Superior or the skies open up for an evening sunset.

As part of the renovation the Duluth Rotary raised and contributed over $100,000 for the king's visit. Crystal Taylor served as official fund-raiser for the City of Duluth to help deliver additional quantities of cash for this purpose, which included re-paving a portion of Skyline Drive and additions to the park itself.

One of the fund-raising projects involved the production of a 2012 Enger Tower Calendar, featuring the tower and park with all photography donated by John Heino and printing by Dean Casperson's Service Printers.

There will actually be several 2012 Celebration of Enger Tower calendar release events. Tuesday's party featured Hanabi's famously delicious sushi. Heino, on hand to sign the calendars, undoubtedly had a say in selecting the location, as I happen to know he loves Hanabi for both atmosphere and the quality of its cuisine.

December 1 from 4:30 till 6:30 there will be a second calendar launch/signing event at Blackwater, downtown on Superior Street. And a third event is being planned for an as yet unnamed date.

There are actually three reasons to purchase a calendar. First, because everyone needs a calendar and this one is very nice. Second, because you will feel good inside knowing you've helped contribute to a good cause. City parks are never free. They all require tax dollars for upkeep. The aesthetic beauty of Enger Park will be enjoyed by countless numbers of people in the coming yers because of your contribution. And third, buying a calendar makes you eligible to win this original painting of the tower by local artist Ed Newman. Heino conceived the picture at the top of this page with artist painting his vision of the tower. Bert Enger, whose generous giving helped build the tower in the 1930's, looks on approvingly from the clouds.

Northland News Center was on hand and did a story on the event.

To order your calendar online, please go to http://www.engertowerduluth.com. The link to donate for the tower is on left side of the page. Or locally, visit any of these great businesses: Fitger's Book Store, Happy Space, Douglas County Historical Society, Utopia Salon & Spa, Duluth Playhouse, Thirsty Pagan, Jitters: a Lake Superior Coffee & Tea House, Lake Superior Magazine gift store, Takk for Maten, Evolve Duluth, and Larsmont Cottages.

Photo Captions
Top right: Cover of the calendar showing the King and Queen of Norway at the October 17 dedication ceremony.
Middle photo: John and Wendy Heino, Tony Rubin and Crystal Taylor.
Lower right: Ed Newman adds finishing touch to painting of the tower to be given away to a lucky winner of in the drawing.
Click images to enlarge.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Enger Tower Awaits Coming of the King


It's 6:00 a.m. and if I were a true Enger Park Restoration enthusiast I would not be here typing this, but would instead be at Enger Tower for this morning's celebration of the 72nd anniversary of the Tower. I did set my alarm a wee bit early, just in case I woke with a desire to go for it.

For those who don't know our city, Duluth has one of the most beautiful skylines in the world. The city itself snakes along Lake Superior and stretches south along the St. Louis River bay for a spell. From one end to the other the city fathers set aside lands for parks and we have 29 of them. One of these is on a knob above the Lincoln Park area just a few hundred yards from Twin Ponds, encircled by Skyline Parkway.

Years ago our family took a vacation to the Black Hills region of South Dakota. I had my AAA maps in tow and studied them to make sure our days would be seasoned with highlights. In one section I found a list of the most scenic drives in the U.S. citing Duluth's Skyline Drive with the highest rank that could be given. The views from the our skyline are everything you'll ever want from a great view. Whether by day or by night, morning or evening, the ever shifting angles of light and even temperature changes make the view something new every day.

Of all the views on the skyline, Enger Tower offers the most enriching of all. Here's an amateur video of the 36o degree view from the tower which includes the harbor and the bay, the lake and the unique Aerial Lift Bridge in one vista. On the back side you overlook the rolling hills of Enger Park Golf Course which for me includes memories of golfing in the rain with my dad.

This past year our local Rotary Clubs raised $100,000 to restore Enger Tower, including the addition of special lighting to make it alive again. The occasion for which this effort was undertaken is the return visit of the King and Queen of Norway. I say return because the original tower was dedicated in 1939 by the Crown Prince Olav and Crown Princess Martha of Norway at that time. They enjoyed our city so much that they shared memories of the visit with their children, hence King Harald's desire to return in October.

Like all good cities, every attempt is being made to put its best face forward for this return visit. In addition to the facelift for the tower itself, The Enger Park Restoration Committee has been raising funds to re-build and expand the gazebo and other structures in the park. You can read more about all that here.

In the meantime, thank you to Bert Enger for the generous donations from his estate which started it all. You can also follow on Facebook the events leading up to October's return of the king.

TOP: Map of Enger Park

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