At the same time, state WPA Director Hubert Humphrey was starting an educational project where he hired unemployed teachers to teach free after-hours classes in empty schools and libraries. The object of these classes was obviously to employ the teachers, but was also to train the unemployable for earning money. Besides the usual classes such as typing and shorthand, Humphrey approved two classes in “Writing to Sell,” suggested by the director of the Writers’ Project. Many of the college graduates from the Writers’ Project, impressed by a $200 prize Meridel Lesueur won in a writing contest, enrolled in the classes.
The classes were taught at the main public library in downtown Minneapolis, at Hennepin and 10th St. The first two teachers were Milo Oblinger and Mabel Oren. Shortly after the classes began, some of the students asked to organize one of the classes into a workshop format. It is the workshop, moderated and also taught by Milo Oblinger, that survives as our Minneapolis Writers’ Workshop of today. Some of the people in that first workshop were Mary Nolan, Winifred Robinson, Hellen Connelly, Laura Baker, Curtis Erickson, Roland Angval, Annette Turngren, and her sister Ellen Turngren.
Federal funding for most of the arts project was discontinued beginning in 1939 as World War II approached. At that time Max Winter, owner of the well-known 620 Club on Hennepin, invited the MWW to meet in his establishment on a regular rent-free basis. They accepted and agreed everyone would pay a nickel at each meeting for Oblinger’s efforts. The Workshop met at the 620 Club every Wednesday at 8 pm for the next 28 years. By that time the membership roster included Harold Sandberg, Neil Messick (owner of the former Nicollet Hotel), Rae Oetting Helgeson, Marguerite McClain, Mabel Robinson, and Clifford Simak, a nationally-known sci-fi writer. Other members who soon joined were Robert Lyle Sr. of the Minneapolis Tribune, Evelyn Bergman, Josephine Byrne, Annalee Wolff, Dan Brennan, Edythe Warner, and Benedict Harman, head of the English Department at the College of St. Catherine.
Beginning in 1954, the group began a 20 year association with a writing program at the state prison in Stillwater. Called “The Inkweavers,” this educational program met monthly at the prison to spend an evening working with ambitious prisoners on their manuscripts. Two of the prisoners became published authors—Frank Elli, whose novel “The Riot” was made into a movie, and E. Richard Johnson, who eventually published nine mystery books.
During this same period, the Minneapolis Vocational Night School called on MWW for teachers to conduct their writing class. Called “Writing for Profit,” the class was taught by Mabel Robinson, Rae Oetting Helgeson, Marilyn Granbeck, Mary Montgomery, and Grace Riger, as well as others.
In 1970, The University of Wisconsin at River Falls started a summer Writers’ Conference and they turned to the MWW talent for workshop leaders. Herb Montgomery was one of those involved, along with Marilyn Granbeck, Phyllis Figge Pantell, and Sharon Longfellow Meko.