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Photos


Diann Warta (shown) owned the popcorn wagon with her uncle in the early ’70s. She sold popcorn during busy times, and sold the wagon, built in 1914, to Sylvia Hopkins in 1973 or 1974.
Dan Linehan / The Free Press


Myra Bauermeister (inside the wagon) holds a photo of Thomas Dewey, Republican presidential candidate in 1944 and 1948, while Gloria Thiede holds a picture of John Bricker, Dewey’s running mate in 1944. Myra’s father, Bernard, owned the wagon from 1940 to 1970.
Photo Courtesy of Brown County Historical Society / The Free Press


Published May 12, 2008 12:17 am -

Wagon pops with New Ulm history
Dedication part of ‘Capitol for a Day’

By Dan Linehan
The Free Press

NEW ULM

The only boss, Sylvia Hopkins used to say, is the kettle.

For 30 years, she was behind the counter of the popcorn wagon at the corner of Center and Minnesota streets in downtown New Ulm.

And while it’s the historic wagon — bought for $1,200 in 1914 — that will be the draw Thursday during its dedication ceremony, for Barb Marti it will be about her late mother, Sylvia.

Marti and her sister, Marcia, reluctantly sold the wagon to the Brown County Historical Society in 2002.

After that, Barb would cry as she drove past the society’s annex, where the wagon is kept.

“It was so much a part of my mother,” she said. “She was the popcorn lady those 30 years.”

As the popcorn lady, good care of the kettle was axiomatic to Sylvia Hopkins, her daughter said.

The kettle is where the corn kernels are popped, eventually pushing up a hinge and flowing into a heated base unit. The unpopped kernels, called “old maids,” fall through small holes into another compartment.

Every time Sylvia used the kettle, she’d clean it thoroughly. Remnants of the fried grease were nowhere to be found.

Eventually, though, the woman known around town as the Popcorn Lady had to retire. Business had slowed in the past two decades, after the outdoor theater closed, businesses began offering free popcorn and people popped their own corn at home.

The historical society had its eye on the piece of Americana for quite some time, though the sale didn’t come easily.

For complete story, see the Monday, May 12, 2008, print edition of The Free Press or sign onto our e-edition.

Click here to access Free Press e-edition



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