Sixty-one years ago, amid the Pronto Pups and Machinery Hill at the Minnesota State Fair, people lined up to peer into a glass-walled room filled with toys, a swing set, cribs -- and four toddlers.
They were the Seifert quadruplets, the first quads known to have survived in Minnesota, who lived on the grounds for the run of the fair.
For 25 cents, fairgoers looked upon these biological marvels as they played, cried, napped and laughed. The kids balked, however, at eating under such scrutiny, moving into a back room for meals. The four were so much of a sensation they returned for the next two fairs. The fascination continued. Newspapers marked their progress through birthdays, baptisms, first communions, graduations and marriages.
"When we were born, there were only 10 other sets in the U.S.," said Marti (Seifert) Andersen, now 62, who lives in Albert Lea, Minn. She has no memories of living at the fair, but remembers her mother telling how people would come to their Sleepy Eye farm from across the country.
"They would just show up at the farm place and peek in the windows," she said.
Two years ago, on Sept. 28, 2010, another set of quadruplets was born in Minnesota -- the Broskoff kids of Geneva, a small town just south of Owatonna. Likely, you've never heard of them.
The world has changed over the past six decades, what with fertility drugs, shifting ideas about celebrity, and spectacles such as the California woman known as Octomom, who had octuplets using in vitro fertilization.
Multiple births, while still unusual, are more common. In 1980, 24 sets of triplets, quadruplets and quints were born in Minnesota, according to state records. In 2003, there were 157. That's an increase of 554 percent.