• CH-ch-ch-ch-Changes!

    25 April 2010

    New developments at Carleton– get excited!

  • Dacie Moses House is one of the beloved traditions of Carleton College, right up there with traying, a capella, and our infatuation with a certain German poet.  The house belonged to Dacie Moses, a longtime Carleton employee in the middle of the twentieth century.  During her life, her house served as a warm and welcoming place for college students freshly away from home.  She willed her house to the college so it could continue to serve the community that way after her death.

    Read more about Dacie’s…

  • A Mysterious Story

    29 September 2008

    About an hour ago, I set out with a few adventurous confederates on a short journey. Our destination was a place called Dacie Moses House. None of us had ever been there, but we had heard stories about it–fables about what goes on within its walls, and legends of what awaits those who make the pilgrimage there…

  • “Dacie’s House” Waltz A Favorite Of Northfield Contra Dancers

    18 February 2008

    Carleton, along with the Northfield Community Contra Dance Association, will present the second annual Winter Stomp! on Friday, February 22 at the Northfield Armory.

    Featuring the music of Contratopia, the evening begins with a half-hour lesson at 7 p.m. followed by three hours of folk dancing from 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Students and members of the community are invited to participate. No dance partner is needed, however event organizers recommend bringing comfortable shoes and festive, swing-ready attire.

    Contra dance is a form of English folk dance that involves dance callers and the music of fiddles, banjos, pianos and guitars. Contra has been popular in Northfield and on the Carleton campus since the late 1970s. The Dacie Moses House Waltz (a commission to honor Carleton’s legendary “cookie house”) is a testament to Carleton’s love for contra dance. Northfield contra dancers continue to dance to this waltz today.

  • Recently I was invited to the celebration brunch of the 124th birthday anniversary of Dacie Moses, held in the house she occupied for many years at 110 Union St. Dacie, whom I am old enough to remember well, would really have liked the celebration.

    There was lots of music. The house was stuffed with young people and long-time friends. There was plenty to eat.

    Dacie, whose real first name was Candace, worked for Carleton College many years and lived less than a block from the campus. If you don’t know the house, it has a wagon wheel adjacent to its front sidewalk.

  • Knightingales, the second oldest acappella group at Carleton, celebrated its 25th anniversary January 26 to 28. The highlight was a joint concert of former and current Knightingales.

  • For students spending their summer at Carleton, Dacie Moses House is often a home away from home.

  • Dacie Moses House included in “Cows In The Kitchen”

    1 July 2005

    Dacie Moses House is one of several communal dining spots in Northfield listed in the book “Cows In The Kitchen, An Anecdotal History of Food and Eating in Northfield, Minnesota,” published as part of Northfield’s sesquicentennial celebration. Other communal dining centers in Northfield include Carleton and St. Olaf college dining halls, the Laura Baker School, the Senior Congregate Dining program at the Northfield Community Resource Center, and dinners held at the ABC (A Better Chance) House for academically talented minority high school students between the years 1968 and 1988.

  • On January 30th, dozens of students, faculty, staff, alumni and Northfield
    community members pack the former home of Dacie Moses for a birthday
    celebration of her dedication to the Carleton.

  • Dacie cited in “Six Feet Under”

    1 July 2004

    Dacie Moses is one of six Northfielders whose graves are listed in the book “Six Feet Under: A Graveyard Guide To Minnesota” by Stew Thornley and published by the Minnesota Historical Society. The book is “a haunting tour of the final resting places of famous and infamous Minnesotans in their home state.” The Northfielders listed in addition to Dacie are Joseph Lee Heywood and Nicolaus Gustafson, both of whom were killed in the Jesse James bank robbery, governors Karl Rolvaag and Edward Thye, and author Ole Rolvaag.