The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Graduation 2025
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide
The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result

July 4 TriCap Kennedy Community School Mechanical Energy Systems Woodcrest of Country Manor
Home News

Molitor plans paper-mill information placards

Dennis Dalman by Dennis Dalman
May 19, 2016
in News, Sartell – St. Stephen
0
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

by Dennis Dalman

editor@thenewsleaders.com

Dennis Molitor is determined to keep the memory of the Sartell paper mill alive and well.

He is working on a project to put informational plaques on the wrought-iron fence at Veterans Park to inform people who visit there about the historic paper mill that functioned across the river for more than 100 years.

Molitor worked at that mill for 38 years until May 2013. On Memorial Day that month, an explosion and fire at the mill killed one employee and shut down the plant. Later, Verso Paper, the corporate owner of the mill, announced it would shut down permanently. The news rocked Sartell and surrounding cities because generations of people made a good living by working at the mill. Through the years it went through many ownerships and various names, including Watab Paper Co, St. Regis Paper Mill, Champion Paper, International Paper and its last incarnation as Verso Paper Mill.

To commemorate the mill, several years ago an ambitious art project began. Various local artists, with the help of grants and contributions, used metal parts of the mill discarded during its demolition and recycling to re-fashion into art works for Sartell, such as benches, bike racks and free-standing monumental sculptures.

One of the art works was created by Joe Schulte, the industrial arts teacher at Sartell High School whose father worked at the mill, as did his grandfather. Schulte’s art work is now affixed to the top of the wrought-iron fence in Veterans Park, just across the river where the imposing paper plant stood for so many decades.

Schulte’s flat sculpture, created from a flat piece of heavy-duty steel from the mill, is about six feet wide. It’s a powder-blue color, the same color as the later additions to the mill, such as its tall condensation tower that could be seen for miles. The sculpture is a “profile” of the entire paper mill, designed “to scale,” the way it looked to viewers standing in Veterans Park. In fact, if visitors stand on a designated piece of steel in front of the sculpture (a standing place that is also a cast-off piece from the mill), they will see the almost exact outline of what used to be there across the river – the historic mill that brought so many jobs, taxes and economic success to the City of Sartell for so long.

Schulte, with a series of ingenious stencils in the steel sculpture, presents the viewer with the stenciled names of the years and names of the ownership changes of the mill, from 1906 to 2014, the year of its demolition.

Schulte based his paper-mill steel silhouette sculpture on a photo taken in 2013 by his wife, Tracy.

Dennis Molitor thinks Schulte’s sculpture is a fitting tribute to the now vanished paper mill. But at an April city-council meeting, he told the council it would be good to add six to eight information placards along the fence so that, together with Schulte’s profile art work, visitors could learn a bit more about the mill and its importance to the city, the area and the entire world with the quality paper products that were made there.

The informational placards, made of sun-proof, vandal-proof and nearly indestructible metal, would give facts about some of the plant’s operations, such as the wood yard, the hydroelectric plant, the paper machines, the power plant and so forth. The placards would be affixed to the wrought-iron fence, probably by the parking lot area on the south end of Veterans Park. Each plaque would be about 12 inches by 18 inches.

Molitor said Bill Morgan, a Sartell resident and eminent local historian, would help write the information for the placards, and artist Schulte will also have input.

The cost of doing the placard project would be anywhere between $3,000 and $4,000, adding there is no request for funding from the city. Molitor said he would have no trouble raising those funds.

photo by Dennis Dalman This stylized steel art work by Sartell resident and teacher Joe Schulte gives visitors to Sartell’s Veterans Park an eerie glance backward in memory to the historic paper mill that used to stand across the Mississippi River. Schulte used a piece of steel from the dismantled mill to create this “sculpture” in honor of the plant’s historical and social significance.
photo by Dennis Dalman
This stylized steel art work by Sartell resident and teacher Joe Schulte gives visitors to Sartell’s Veterans Park an eerie glance backward in memory to the historic paper mill that used to stand across the Mississippi River. Schulte used a piece of steel from the dismantled mill to create this “sculpture” in honor of the plant’s historical and social significance.
photo by Dennis Dalman This is another close-up view of Joe Schulte’s sculpture showing an approximation of how the paper mill and its tall condensation tower stood on the east side of the Mississippi River.
photo by Dennis Dalman
This is another close-up view of Joe Schulte’s sculpture showing an approximation of how the paper mill and its tall condensation tower stood on the east side of the Mississippi River.
photo by Dennis Dalman A close up of Joe Schulte’s art work shows the cut-outs that give viewers the names and dates of how the Sartell paper mill changed ownership and names through its hundred-year-plus history. This cut-out shows part of the word “International” for “International Paper,” which owned the plant from 2000 to 2006.
photo by Dennis Dalman
A close up of Joe Schulte’s art work shows the cut-outs that give viewers the names and dates of how the Sartell paper mill changed ownership and names through its hundred-year-plus history. This cut-out shows part of the word “International” for “International Paper,” which owned the plant from 2000 to 2006.
Previous Post

Abuse victim files suit against ‘person of interest’ in Wetterling case

Next Post

CSB commencement ceremony is bittersweet

Dennis Dalman

Dennis Dalman

Dalman was born and raised in South St. Cloud, graduated from St. Cloud Tech High School, then graduated from St. Cloud State University with a degree in English (emphasis on American and British literature) and mass communications (emphasis on print journalism). He studied in London, England for a year (1980-81) where he concentrated on British literature, political science, the history of Great Britain and wrote a book-length study of the British writer V.S. Naipaul. Dalman has been a reporter and weekly columnist for more than 30 years and worked for 16 of those years for the Alexandria Echo Press.

Next Post

CSB commencement ceremony is bittersweet

Please login to join discussion

Murphy Granite St. Joseph Catholic School Sal's Bar Scherer Trucking Sentry Bank Serenity Place on 7th Snap Fitness

Century Link WACOSA (2) NIB (Tania & Chris) St. Cloud Ortho Auto Body 2000 Pediatric / Welch Pine Cone Pet Hospital Albany Recycling

Search

No Result
View All Result

Categories

Recent Posts

  • City of St. Stephen annual budget planning meeting
  • Regular School Board Meeting, May 19, 2025
  • Annual disclosure of Tax Increment Districts, City of Saint Joseph, Minnesota
  • Fire in Holdingford destroys garage
  • SummerFest floats range from royalty to karate

City Links

Sartell
St. Joseph
St. Stephen

School District Links

Sartell-St. Stephen school district
St. Cloud school district

Chamber Links

Sartell Chamber
St. Joseph Chamber

Community

Calendar

Citizen Spotlight

Criers

People

Notices

Funerals/Visitions

Obituary

Police Blotter

Public Notices

Support Groups

About Us

Contact Us

News Tips

Submissions

Advertise With Us

Print Advertising

Digital Advertising

2024 Promotions

Local Advertising Rates

National Advertising Rates

© 2025 Newleaders

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Graduation 2025
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide

© 2025 Newleaders