Records of the Environmental Protection Agency. 1944 - 2006. DOCUMERICA: The Environmental Protection Agency's Program to Photographically Document Subjects of Environmental Concern. 1972 - 1977. COWS FEEDING ON A FAMILY FARM NEAR NEW ULM, MINNESOTA, A COUNTY SEAT TRADING CENTER OF 13,000 IN A FARMI

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Records of the Environmental Protection Agency. 1944 - 2006. DOCUMERICA: The Environmental Protection Agency's Program to Photographically Document Subjects of Environmental Concern. 1972 - 1977. COWS FEEDING ON A FAMILY FARM NEAR NEW ULM, MINNESOTA, A COUNTY SEAT TRADING CENTER OF 13,000 IN A FARMING AREA IN THE SOUTH CENTRAL PART OF THE STATE. CORN AND SOYBEANS ARE THE STAPLE CROPS ONE FAMILY FARMS ARE STILL COMMON ALTHOUGH MANY ARE RUN BY TWO OR THREE GENERATIONS OF PEOPLE. NEW ULM WAS FOUNDED IN 1854 BY A GERMAN IMMIGRANT LAND COMPANY THAT ENCOURAGED ITS KINSMEN TO EMIGRATE FROM EUROPE. THE TOWN POPULATION CLIMBED FROM ABOUT 9,000 AFTER WORLD WAR II

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SNAC Resource ID: 6474151

National Archives at College Park

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Schulke, Flip, 1930-2008

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6t54h15 (person)

Flip Schulke (b. Graeme Phelps Schulke, June 24, 1930, Cornish, N.H.-d. May 15, 2008, West Palm Beach, Fla.), was one of America’s premier photojournalists for more than 40 years. A native of New Ulm, Minnesota and a graduate of Macalester College in St. Paul, Schulke moved to Miami in the 1950s, where he developed specialties in underwater photography, auto racing, the space program and the history of the Berlin Wall. Through his close friendship with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Schulke became ...