Minnesota Vacation Guide System
Minnesota History
The history of the U.S. state of Minnesota is shaped by its original
Native American residents, European exploration and settlement, and the
emergence of industries made possible by the state's natural resources.
Minnesota achieved prominence through fur trading, logging, and
farming, and later through railroads, and iron mining. While those
industries remain important, the state's economy is now driven by
banking, computers, and health care.
The earliest known settlers
followed herds of large game to the region during the last glacial
period. They preceded the Anishinaabe, the Dakota, and other Native
American inhabitants. Fur traders from France arrived during the 17th
century. Europeans, moving west during the 19th century, drove out most
of the Native Americans. Fort Snelling, built to protect United States
territorial interests, brought early settlers to the area. Early
settlers used Saint Anthony Falls for powering sawmills in the area
that became Minneapolis, while others settled downriver in the area
that became Saint Paul.
Minnesota became a part of the United
States as Minnesota Territory in 1849, and became the 32nd U.S. state
on May 11, 1858. After the upheaval of the American Civil War and the
Dakota War of 1862, the state's economy started to develop when natural
resources were tapped for logging and farming. Railroads attracted
immigrants, established the farm economy, and brought goods to market.
The power provided by Saint Anthony Falls spurred the growth of
Minneapolis, and the innovative milling methods gave it the title of
the "milling capital of the world."
New industry came from iron
ore, discovered in the north, mined relatively easily from open pits,
and shipped to Great Lakes steel mills from the ports at Duluth and Two
Harbors. Economic development and social changes led to an expanded
role for state government and a population shift from rural areas to
cities. The Great Depression brought layoffs in mining and tension in
labor relations but New Deal programs helped the state. After World War
II, Minnesota became known for technology, fueled by early computer
companies Sperry Rand, Control Data and Cray. The Twin Cities also
became a regional center for the arts with cultural institutions such
as the Guthrie Theater, Minnesota Orchestra, and the Walker Art Center.
Native American inhabitation
Some of the oldest stone tools found in Minnesota
The
oldest known human remains in Minnesota, dating back about 9000 years
ago, were discovered near Browns Valley in 1933. "Browns Valley Man"
was found with tools of the Clovis and Folsom types. Some of the
earliest evidence of a sustained presence in the area comes from a site
known as Bradbury Brook near Mille Lacs Lake which was used around 7500
BC. Subsequently, extensive trading networks developed in the region.
The body of an early resident known as "Minnesota Woman" was discovered
in 1931 in Otter Tail County. Radiocarbon dating determined that she
had come through the area in approximately 6600 BC. She had a conch
shell from a snail species known as Busycon perversa, which had
previously only been known to exist in Florida.
Ojibwa women in canoe, Leech Lake, 1909
Several
hundred years later, the climate of Minnesota warmed significantly. As
large animals such as mammoths became extinct, native people changed
their diet. They gathered nuts, berries, and vegetables, and they
hunted smaller animals such as deer, bison, and birds. The stone tools
found from this era became smaller and more specialized to use these
new food sources. They also devised new techniques for catching fish,
such as fish hooks, nets, and harpoons. Around 5000 BC, people on the
shores of Lake Superior (in Minnesota and portions of what is now
Michigan, Wisconsin, and Canada) were the first on the continent to
begin making metal tools. Pieces of ore with high concentrations of
copper were initially pounded into a rough shape, heated to reduce
brittleness, pounded again to refine the shape, and reheated. Edges
could be made sharp enough to be useful as knives or spear points.
Archaeological
evidence of Native American settlements dates back to 3000 BC. The
Jeffers Petroglyphs site in southwest Minnesota contains carvings from
the Late Archaic Period and from the 1750 BC – 900 BC time period.
Pieces of pottery began to appear at short-lived settlements around
1000 BC. Around 700 BC, burial mounds were first created, and the
practice continued until the arrival of Europeans, when 10,000 such
mounds dotted the state.
The Hopewell culture is believed to
have lived along the banks of the Mississippi River from 200 BC to
about AD 400. By AD 800, wild rice became a staple crop in the region,
and corn farther to the south. Within a few hundred years, the
Mississippian culture reached into the southeast portion of the state,
and large villages were formed. The Dakota Native American culture may
have descended from some of the peoples of the Mississippian culture.
When
Europeans first started exploring Minnesota, the region was inhabited
primarily by tribes of Dakota, with the Ojibwa (sometimes called
Chippewa, or Anishinaabe) beginning to migrate westward into the state
around 1700. The economy of these tribes was chiefly based on
hunter-gatherer activities. There was also a small group of Ho-Chunk
(Winnebago) Native Americans near Long Prairie, who later moved to a
reservation in Blue Earth County in 1855.
European exploration
Ruins of old Fond du Lac trading post on the Saint Louis River in 1907
Though
highly controversial, an inscribed stone known as the Kensington
Runestone suggests that a group of Norse explorers may have ventured as
far inland as Minnesota as early as 1362. Though many consider it a
hoax, recent geological examinations point toward a pre-19th century
origin of the inscription.
It was a few more centuries before
contact between Europeans and Native Americans of Minnesota could be
confirmed. In the late 1650s, Pierre Esprit Radisson and Médard des
Groseilliers were probably the first to meet Dakota Native Americans
while following the southern shore of Lake Superior (which would become
northern Wisconsin). The north shore was explored in the 1660s. Among
the first to do this was Claude Allouez, a missionary on Madeline
Island. He made an early map of the area in 1671.
Around this
time, the Ojibwa Native Americans reached Minnesota as part of a
westward migration. Having come from a region around Maine, they were
experienced at dealing with European traders. They dealt in furs and
possessed guns. Tensions rose between the Ojibwa and Dakota in the
ensuing years.
In 1671, France signed a treaty with a number of
tribes to allow trade. Shortly thereafter, French trader Daniel
Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut arrived in the area and began trading with the
local tribes. Du Lhut explored the western area of Lake Superior, near
his namesake, the city of Duluth, and areas south of there. He helped
to arrange a peace agreement between the Dakota and Ojibwa tribes in
1679.
A painting of Father Hennepin discovering Saint Anthony Falls.
Father
Louis Hennepin with companions Michel Aco and Antoine Auguelle (aka
Picard Du Gay) headed north from the area of Illinois after coming into
that area with an exploration party headed by René Robert Cavelier,
Sieur de La Salle. They were captured by a Dakota tribe in 1680. While
with the tribe, they came across and named the Falls of Saint Anthony.
Soon, du Lhut negotiated to have Hennepin's party released from
captivity. Hennepin returned to Europe and wrote a book, Description of
Louisiana, published in 1683, about his travels where many portions
(including the part about Saint Anthony Falls) were strongly
embellished. As an example, he described the falls as being a drop of
fifty or sixty feet, when they were really only about sixteen feet.
Pierre-Charles Le Sueur explored the Minnesota River to the Blue Earth
area around 1700. He thought the blue earth was a source of copper, and
he told stories about the possibility of mineral wealth, but there
actually was no copper to be found.
Explorers searching for the
fabled Northwest Passage and large inland seas in North America
continued to pass through the state. In 1721, the French built Fort
Beauharnois on Lake Pepin. In 1731, the Grand Portage trail was first
traversed by a European, Pierre La Vérendrye. He used a map written
down on a piece of birch bark by Ochagach, an Assiniboine guide. The
North West Company, which traded in fur and competed with the Hudson's
Bay Company, was established along the Grand Portage in 1783–1784.
Jonathan
Carver, a shoemaker from Massachusetts, visited the area in 1767 as
part of another expedition. He and the rest of the exploration party
were only able to stay for a relatively short period, due to supply
shortages. They headed back east to Fort Michilimackinac, where Carver
wrote journals about the trip, though others would later claim the
stories were largely plagiarized from others. The stories were
published in 1778, but Carver died before the book earned him much
money. Carver County and Carver's Cave are named for him.
Until
1818 the Red River Valley was considered British and was subject to
several colonization schemes, such as the Red River Colony. The
boundary where the Red River crossed the 49th parallel was not marked
until 1823, when Stephen H. Long conducted a survey expedition. When
several hundred settlers abandoned the Red River Colony in the 1820s,
they entered the United States by way of the Red River Valley, instead
of moving to eastern Canada or returning to Europe. The region had been
occupied by Métis people, the children of voyageurs and Native
Americans, since the middle 17th century.
Several efforts were
made to determine the source of the Mississippi River. The true source
was found in 1832, when Henry Schoolcraft was guided by a group of
Ojibwa headed by Ozaawindib ("Yellow Head") to a lake in northern
Minnesota. Schoolcraft named it Lake Itasca, combining the Latin words
veritas ("truth") and caput ("head"). The native name for the lake was
Omashkooz, meaning elk. Other explorers of the area include Zebulon
Pike in 1806, Major Stephen Long in 1817, and George William
Featherstonhaugh in 1835. Featherstonhaugh conducted a geological
survey of the Minnesota River valley and wrote an account entitled A
Canoe Voyage up the Minnay Sotor.
Joseph Nicollet scouted the
area in the late 1830s, exploring and mapping the Upper Mississippi
River basin, the St. Croix River, and the land between the Mississippi
and Missouri Rivers. He and John C. Frémont left their mark in the
southwest of the state, carving their names in the pipestone quarries
near Winnewissa Falls (an area now part of Pipestone National Monument
in Pipestone County).
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow never explored
the state, but he did help to make it popular. He published The Song of
Hiawatha in 1855, which contains references to many regions in
Minnesota. The story was based on Ojibwa legends carried back east by
other explorers and traders (particularly those collected by Henry Rowe
Schoolcraft).
Territorial foundation and settlement
Main article: Territorial era of Minnesota
Land acquisition
Map of Minnesota Territory
(1849–1858)
All
of the land east of the Mississippi River was granted to the United
States by the Second Treaty of Paris at the end of the American
Revolution in 1783. This included what would become modern day Saint
Paul but only part of Minneapolis, including the northeast,
north-central and east-central portions of the state. The wording of
the treaty in the Minnesota area depended on landmarks reported by fur
traders, who erroneously reported an "Isle Phelipeaux" in Lake
Superior, a "Long Lake" west of the island, and the belief that the
Mississippi River ran well into modern Canada. Most of the state was
purchased in 1803 from France as part of the Louisiana Purchase. Parts
of northern Minnesota were considered to be in Rupert's Land. The exact
definition of the boundary between Minnesota and British North America
was not addressed until the Anglo-American Convention of 1818, which
set the U.S.–Canada border at the 49th parallel west of the Lake of the
Woods (except for a small chunk of land now dubbed the Northwest
Angle). Border disputes east of the Lake of the Woods continued until
the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842.
Throughout the first half
of the 19th century, the northeastern portion of the state was a part
of the Northwest Territory, then the Illinois Territory, then the
Michigan Territory, and finally the Wisconsin Territory. The western
and southern areas of the state were not formally organized until 1838,
when they became part of the Iowa Territory.
Fort Snelling and the establishment of Minneapolis and Saint Paul
See also: History of Saint Paul, Minnesota and History of Minneapolis, Minnesota
Fort Snelling
Fort
Snelling was the first major U.S. military presence in the state. The
land for the fort, at the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi
rivers, was acquired in 1805 by Zebulon Pike. When concerns mounted
about the fur trade in the area, construction of the fort began in
1819. Construction was completed in 1825, and Colonel Josiah Snelling
and his officers and soldiers left their imprint on the area. One of
the missions of the fort was to mediate disputes between the Ojibwa and
the Dakota tribes. Lawrence Taliaferro was an agent of the U.S. Bureau
of Indian Affairs. He spent 20 years at the site, finally resigning in
1839.]
Dred Scott
In the 1850s, Fort Snelling played a key
role in the infamous Dred Scott court case. Slaves Dred Scott and his
wife were taken to the fort by their master, John Emerson. They lived
at the fort and elsewhere in territories where slavery was prohibited.
After Emerson's death, the Scotts argued that since they had lived in
free territory, they were no longer slaves. Ultimately, the U.S.
Supreme Court sided against the Scotts. Dred Scott Field, located just
a short distance away in Bloomington, is named in the memory of Fort
Snelling's significance in one of the most important legal precedents
in U.S. History.
By 1851, treaties between Native American
tribes and the U.S. government had opened much of Minnesota to
settlement, so Fort Snelling no longer was a frontier outpost. It
served as a training center for soldiers during the American Civil War
and later as the headquarters for the Department of Dakota. A portion
has been designated as Fort Snelling National Cemetery where over
160,000 are interred. During World War II, the fort served as a
training center for nearly 300,000 inductees. After World War II, the
fort was threatened with demolition due to the building of freeways
Highway 5 and Highway 55, but citizens rallied to save it. Fort
Snelling is now a historic site operated by the Minnesota Historical
Society.
Fort Snelling was largely responsible for the
establishment of the city of Minneapolis. In an effort to be
self-sufficient, the soldiers of the fort built roads, planted crops,
and built a grist mill and a sawmill at Saint Anthony Falls. Later,
Franklin Steele came to Fort Snelling as the post sutler (the operator
of the general store), and established interests in lumbering and other
activities. When the Ojibwa signed a treaty ceding lands in 1837,
Steele staked a claim to land on the east side of the Mississippi River
adjacent to Saint Anthony Falls. In 1848, he built a sawmill at the
falls, and the community of Saint Anthony sprung up around the east
side of the falls. Steele told one of his employees, John H. Stevens,
that land on the west side of the falls would make a good site for
future mills. Since the land on the west side was still part of the
military reservation, Stevens made a deal with Fort Snelling's
commander. Stevens would provide free ferry service across the river in
exchange for a tract of 160 acres (0.65 km2) at the head of the falls.
Stevens received the claim and built a house, the first house in
Minneapolis, in 1850. In 1854, Stevens platted the city of Minneapolis
on the west bank. Later, in 1872, Minneapolis absorbed the city of
Saint Anthony.
The city of Saint Paul, Minnesota owes its
existence to Fort Snelling. A group of squatters, mostly from the
ill-fated Selkirk Colony in what is now the Canadian province of
Manitoba, established a camp near the fort. The commandant of Fort
Snelling, Major Joseph Plympton, found their presence problematic
because they were using timber and allowing their cattle and horses to
graze around the fort. Plympton banned lumbering and the construction
of any new buildings on the military reservation land. As a result, the
squatters moved four miles downstream on the Mississippi River. They
settled at a site known as Fountain Cave. This site was not quite far
enough for the officers at the fort, so the squatters were forced out
again. Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant, a popular moonshiner among the
group, moved downriver and established a saloon, becoming the first
European resident in the area that later became Saint Paul. The
squatters named their settlement "Pig's Eye" after Parrant. The name
was later changed to Lambert's Landing and then finally Saint Paul.
However, the earliest name for the area comes from a Native American
colony Im-in-i-ja Ska, meaning "White Rock" and referring to the
limestone bluffs nearby.
Minneapolis and Saint Paul are
collectively known as the "Twin Cities". The cities enjoyed a rivalry
during their early years, with Saint Paul being the capital city and
Minneapolis becoming prominent through industry. The term "Twin Cities"
was coined around 1872, after a newspaper editorial suggested that
Minneapolis could absorb Saint Paul. Residents decided that the cities
needed a separate identity, so people coined the phrase "Dual Cities",
which later evolved into "Twin Cities". Today, Minneapolis is the
largest city in Minnesota, with a population of 382,618 in the 2000
census. Saint Paul is the second largest city, with a population of
287,151. Minneapolis and Saint Paul anchor a metropolitan area with a
population of 2,968,806 as of 2000, with a total state population of
4,919,479.
Early European settlement and development
Home of Henry Hastings Sibley
Henry
Hastings Sibley built the first stone house in the Minnesota Territory
in Mendota in 1838, along with other limestone buildings used by the
American Fur Company, which bought animal pelts at that location from
1825 to 1853. Another area of early economic development in Minnesota
was the logging industry. Loggers found the white pine especially
valuable, and it was plentiful in the northeastern section of the state
and in the St. Croix River valley. Before railroads, lumbermen relied
mostly on river transportation to bring logs to market, which made
Minnesota's timber resources attractive. Towns like Marine on St. Croix
and Stillwater became important lumber centers fed by the St. Croix
River, while Winona was supplied lumber by areas in southern Minnesota
and along the Minnesota River. The unregulated logging practices of the
time and a severe drought took their toll in 1894, when the Great
Hinckley Fire ravaged 480 square miles (1,200 km2) in the Hinckley and
Sandstone areas of Pine County, killing over 400 residents. The
combination of logging and drought struck again in the Baudette Fire of
1910 and the Cloquet Fire of 1918.
Logging pine c. 1860s–1870s
Saint
Anthony, on the east bank of the Mississippi River later became part of
Minneapolis, and was an important lumber milling center supplied by the
Rum River. In 1848, businessman Franklin Steele built the first private
sawmill on the Saint Anthony Falls, and more sawmills quickly followed.
The oldest home still standing in Saint Anthony is the Ard Godfrey
house, built in 1848, and lived in by Ard and Harriet Godfrey. The
house of John H. Stevens, the first house on the west bank in
Minneapolis, was moved several times, finally to Minnehaha Park in
south Minneapolis in 1896.
Minnesota Territory
Stephen A.
Douglas (D), the chair of the Senate Committee on Territories, drafted
the bill authorizing Minnesota Territory. He had envisioned a future
for the upper Mississippi valley, so he was motivated to keep the area
from being carved up by neighboring territories. In 1846, he prevented
Iowa from including Fort Snelling and Saint Anthony Falls within its
northern border. In 1847, he kept the organizers of Wisconsin from
including Saint Paul and Saint Anthony Falls. The Minnesota Territory
was established from the lands remaining from Iowa Territory and
Wisconsin Territory on March 3, 1849. The Minnesota Territory extended
far into what is now North Dakota and South Dakota, to the Missouri
River. There was a dispute over the shape of the state to be carved out
of Minnesota Territory. An alternate proposal that was only narrowly
defeated would have made the 46th parallel the state's northern border
and the Missouri River its western border, thus giving up the whole
northern half of the state in exchange for the eastern half of what
later became South Dakota.
With Alexander Ramsey (W) as the
first governor of Minnesota Territory and Henry Hastings Sibley (D) as
the territorial delegate to the United States Congress, the populations
of Saint Paul and Saint Anthony swelled. Henry M. Rice (D), who
replaced Sibley as the territorial delegate in 1853, worked in Congress
to promote Minnesota interests. He lobbied for the construction of a
railroad connecting Saint Paul and Lake Superior, with a link from
Saint Paul to the Illinois Central.
Statehood
In December
1856, Rice brought forward two bills in Congress: an enabling act that
would allow Minnesota to form a state constitution, and a railroad land
grant bill. Rice's enabling act defined a state containing both prairie
and forest lands. The state was bounded on the south by Iowa, on the
east by Wisconsin, on the north by Canada, and on the west by the Red
River of the North and the Bois de Sioux River, Lake Traverse, Big
Stone Lake, and then a line extending due south to the Iowa border.
Rice made this motion based on Minnesota's population growth.
At
the time, tensions between the northern and the southern United States
were growing, in a series of conflicts that eventually resulted in the
American Civil War. There was little debate in the United States House
of Representatives, but when Stephen A. Douglas introduced the bill in
the United States Senate, it caused a firestorm of debate. Northerners
saw their chance to add two senators to the side of the free states,
while Southerners were sure that they would lose power. Many senators
offered polite arguments that the population was too sparse and that
statehood was premature. Senator John Burton Thompson of Kentucky, in
particular, argued that new states would cost the government too much
for roads, canals, forts, and lighthouses. Although Thompson and 21
other senators voted against statehood, the enabling act was passed on
February 26, 1857.
After the enabling act was passed,
territorial legislators had a difficult time writing a state
constitution. A constitutional convention was assembled in July 1857,
but Republicans and Democrats were deeply divided. In fact, they formed
two separate constitutional conventions and drafted two separate
constitutions. Eventually, the two groups formed a conference committee
and worked out a common constitution. The divisions continued, though,
because Republicans refused to sign a document that had Democratic
signatures on it, and vice versa. One copy of the constitution was
written on white paper and signed only by Republicans, while the other
copy was written on blue-tinged paper and signed by Democrats. These
copies were signed on August 29, 1857. An election was called on
October 13, 1857, where Minnesota residents would vote to approve or
disapprove the constitution. The constitution was approved by 30,055
voters, while 571 rejected it.
The state constitution was sent
to the United States Congress for ratification in December 1857. The
approval process was drawn out for several months while Congress
debated over issues that had stemmed from the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
Southerners had been arguing that the next state should be pro-slavery,
so when Kansas submitted the pro-slavery Lecompton Constitution, the
Minnesota statehood bill was delayed. After that, Northerners feared
that Minnesota's Democratic delegation would support slavery in Kansas.
Finally, after the Kansas question was settled and after Congress
decided how many representatives Minnesota would get in the House of
Representatives, the bill passed. The eastern half of the Minnesota
Territory, under the boundaries defined by Henry Mower Rice, became the
country's 32nd state on May 11, 1858. The western part remained
unorganized until its incorporation into the Dakota Territory on March
2, 1861.
Civil War era and Dakota War of 1862
Although
Minnesota was a new state when the American Civil War started, it was
the first to contribute troops to the Union effort, with about 22,000
Minnesotans serving. Alexander Ramsey (R), the second governor of
Minnesota, was in Washington on April 13, 1861, when the war broke out.
He sent a telegram back to Saint Paul urging his lieutenant governor,
Ignatius L. Donnelly (R), to call out volunteers. The 1st Minnesota
Volunteer Infantry was particularly important to the Battle of
Gettysburg.
Mass hanging in Mankato, Minnesota.
At the same
time, the state faced another crisis as the Dakota War of 1862 broke
out. The Dakota had signed the Treaty of Traverse des Sioux and Treaty
of Mendota in 1851 because they were concerned that without money from
the United States government, they would starve, due to the loss of
habitat of huntable game. They were initially given a strip of land of
ten miles (16 km) north and south of the Minnesota River, but they were
later forced to sell the northern half of the land. In 1862, crop
failures left the Dakota with food shortages, and government money was
delayed. After four young Dakota men, searching for food, shot a family
of white settlers near Acton, the Dakota leadership decided to continue
the attacks in an effort to drive out the settlers. Over a period of
several days, Dakota attacks at the Lower Sioux Agency, New Ulm and
Hutchinson, as well as in the surrounding farmlands, resulted in the
deaths of at least 300 to 400 white settlers and government employees,
causing panic in the settlements and provoking counterattacks by state
militia and federal forces which spread throughout the Minnesota River
Valley and as far away as the Red River Valley. The ensuing battles at
Fort Ridgely, Birch Coulee, Fort Abercrombie, and Wood Lake punctuated
a six-week war, which ended with the trial of 425 Native Americans for
their participation in the war. Of this number, 303 men were convicted
and sentenced to death.
Episcopal Bishop Henry Benjamin Whipple
pled to President Abraham Lincoln for clemency, and the death sentences
of all but 39 men were reduced to prison terms. On December 26, 1862,
38 men were hanged in the largest mass execution in the United States.
Many of the remaining Dakota Native Americans, including
non-combatants, were confined in a prison camp at Pike Island over the
winter of 1862–1863, where more than 300 died of disease. Survivors
were later exiled to the Crow Creek Reservation, then later to a
reservation near Niobrara, Nebraska. A small number of Dakota Native
Americans managed to return to Minnesota in the 1880s and establish
communities near Granite Falls, Morton, Prior Lake, and Red Wing.
Economic and social development
Farming and railroad development
After
the Civil War, Minnesota became an attractive region for European
immigration and settlement as farmland. Minnesota's population in 1870
was 439,000; this number tripled during the two subsequent decades. The
Homestead Act in 1862 facilitated land claims by settlers, who regarded
the land as being cheap and fertile. The railroad industry, led by the
Northern Pacific Railway and Saint Paul and Pacific Railroad,
advertised the many opportunities in the state and worked to get
immigrants to settle in Minnesota. James J. Hill, in particular, was
instrumental in reorganizing the Saint Paul and Pacific Railroad and
extending lines from the Minneapolis-Saint Paul area into the Red River
Valley and to Winnipeg. Hill was also responsible for building a new
passenger depot in Minneapolis, served by the landmark Stone Arch
Bridge which was completed in 1883. During the 1880s, Hill continued
building tracks through North Dakota and Montana. In 1890, the
railroad, now known as the Great Northern Railway, started building
tracks through the mountains west to Seattle. Other railroads, such as
the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad and the Milwaukee Road, also
played an important role in the early days of Minnesota's statehood.
Later railways, such as the Soo Line and Minneapolis and St. Louis
Railway facilitated the sale of Minneapolis flour and other products,
although they were not as involved in attracting settlers.
The remains of the Washburn "A" Mill are now part of a milling museum on the Mississippi River.
Oliver
Hudson Kelley played an important role in farming as one of the
founders of the National Grange, along with several other clerks in the
United States Department of Agriculture. The movement grew out of his
interest in cooperative farm associations following the end of the
Civil War, and he established local Grange chapters in Elk River and
Saint Paul. The organization worked to provide education on new farming
methods, as well as to influence government and public opinion on
matters important to farmers. One of these areas of concern was the
freight rates charged by the railroads and by the grain elevators.
Since there was little or no competition between railroads serving
Minnesota farm communities, railroads could charge as much as the
traffic would bear. By 1871, the situation was so heated that both the
Republican and Democratic candidates in state elections promised to
regulate railroad rates. The state established an office of railroad
commissioner and imposed maximum charges for shipping. Populist
Ignatius L. Donnelly also served the Grange as an organizer.
Saint
Anthony Falls, the only waterfall of its height on the Mississippi,
played an important part in the development of Minneapolis. The power
of the waterfall first fueled sawmills, but later it was tapped to
serve flour mills. In 1870, only a small number of flour mills were in
the Minneapolis area, but by 1900 Minnesota mills were grinding 14.1%
of the nation's grain. Advances in transportation, milling technology,
and water power combined to give Minneapolis a dominance in the milling
industry. Spring wheat could be sown in the spring and harvested in
late summer, but it posed special problems for milling. To get around
these problems, Minneapolis millers made use of new technology. They
invented the middlings purifier, a device that used jets of air to
remove the husks from the flour early in the milling process. They also
started using roller mills, as opposed to grindstones. A series of
rollers gradually broke down the kernels and integrated the gluten with
the starch. These improvements led to the production of "patent" flour,
which commanded almost double the price of "bakers" or "clear" flour,
which it replaced. Pillsbury and the Washburn-Crosby Company (a
forerunner of General Mills) became the leaders in the Minneapolis
milling industry. This leadership in milling later declined as milling
was no longer dependent on water power, but the dominance of the mills
contributed greatly to the economy of Minneapolis and Minnesota,
attracting people and money to the region.
Industrial development
Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway ore docks loading ships, circa 1900–1915.
At
the end of the 19th century, several forms of industrial development
shaped Minnesota. In 1882, a hydroelectric power plant was built at
Saint Anthony Falls, marking one of the first developments of
hydroelectric power in the United States. Iron mining began in northern
Minnesota with the opening of the Soudan Mine in 1884. The Vermilion
Range was surveyed and mapped by a party financed by Charlemagne Tower.
Another mining town, Ely began with the foundation of the Chandler Mine
in 1888. Soon after, the Mesabi Range was established when ore was
found just under the surface of the ground in Mountain Iron. The Mesabi
Range ultimately had much more ore than the Vermilion Range, and it was
easy to extract because the ore was closer to the surface. As a result,
open-pit mines became well-established on the Mesabi Range, with 111
mines operating by 1904. To ship the iron ore to refineries, railroads
such as the Duluth, Missabe and Iron Range Railway were built from the
iron ranges to Two Harbors and Duluth on Lake Superior. Large ore docks
were used at these cities to load the iron ore onto ships for transport
east on the Great Lakes. The mining industry helped to propel Duluth
from a small town to a large, thriving city. In 1904, iron was
discovered in the Cuyuna Range in Crow Wing County. Between 1904 and
1984, when mining ceased, more than 106 million tons of ore were mined.
Iron from the Cuyuna Range also contained significant proportions of
manganese, increasing its value.
Mayo Clinic
Statue of Dr. William Worrall Mayo near the Mayo Clinic in Rochester
Dr.
William Worrall Mayo, the founder of the Mayo Clinic, emigrated from
Salford, United Kingdom to the United States in 1846 and became a
medical doctor in 1850. In 1864, Mayo and his two sons, William James
Mayo (1861–1939) and Charles Horace Mayo (1865–1939) moved to
Rochester. In the summer of 1883, an F5 tornado struck, dubbed the 1883
Rochester tornado, causing a substantial number of deaths and injuries.
Dr. W. W. Mayo worked with nuns from the Sisters of St. Francis to
treat the survivors. After the disaster, Mother Alfred Moes and the
Drs. Mayo recognized the need for a hospital and joined together to
build the 27-bed Saint Marys Hospital which opened in 1889; today, the
hospital has 1,157 beds. Dr. Henry Stanley Plummer joined the Mayo
Brothers' practice in 1901. Plummer developed many of the systems of
group practice which are universal around the world today in medicine
and other fields, such as a single medical record and an
interconnecting telephone system.
Urbanization and government
As
a result of industrialization, the population became more concentrated
into urban areas. By 1900, the Twin Cities were becoming a center of
commerce, led by the Minneapolis Grain Exchange and the foundation of
the Federal Reserve Bank with its ninth district in Minneapolis. Many
of the businessmen who had made money in the railroad, flour milling,
and logging industries lived in the Twin Cities and personified the
gilded age. They started to donate money for cultural institutions such
as the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra (now the Minnesota Orchestra).
The parks of Minneapolis, under the direction of Theodore Wirth became
famous, and the new Minnesota State Capitol building and the Cathedral
of Saint Paul attracted attention to Saint Paul.
The role of
government also grew during the early 20th century. In the rural areas,
most people obtained food and manufactured goods from neighbors and
other people they knew personally. As industry and commerce grew, goods
such as food, materials, and medicines were no longer made by
neighbors, but by large companies. In response, citizens called on
their government for consumer protection, inspection of goods, and
regulation of public utilities. The growth of the automobile spurred
calls to develop roads and to enforce traffic laws. The state
officially started its trunk highway system in 1920, with the passage
of the Babcock Amendment that established 70 Constitutional Routes
around the state. New regulation was necessary for banking and
insurance. The safety of industrial workers and miners became an
increasing concern, and brought about the workers' compensation system.
Since government was getting more complex, citizens demanded more of a
role in their government, and became more politically active.
Great Depression
Wilbur
Foshay, an owner of several utility companies, built the Foshay Tower
in 1929, just before the Wall Street Crash of 1929. The building was
the tallest building in Minnesota at the time. It remained the tallest
building in Minneapolis until 1973, when the IDS Tower surpassed it.
The tower was a symbol of the wealth of the times, but when the stock
market crashed, Foshay lost his fortune in the crash.
The Great
Depression had several effects on Minnesota, with layoffs on the Iron
Range and a drought in the Great Plains from 1931 through 1936. While
the Depression had several causes, one most relevant to Minnesota was
that United States businesses in the 1920s had improved their
efficiency through standardizing production methods and eliminating
waste. Business owners were reaping the benefits of this increase in
productivity, but they were not sharing it with their employees because
of the weakness of organized labor, nor were they sharing it with the
public in the form of lowered prices. Instead, the windfall went to
stockholders. The eventual result was that consumers could no longer
afford the goods that factories were producing.
Floyd B. Olson
of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party was elected as the governor in the
1930 election. In his first term, he signed a bonding bill that
authorized $15 million ($200 million as of 2011) for highway
construction, in an effort to provide work for the unemployed. He also
signed an executive order that provided for a minimum wage of 45 cents
per hour for up to 48 hours weekly. This effort predated the Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938 that established a nationwide minimum wage. By
1932, with the Depression worsening, the Farmer-Labor Party platform
was proposing a state income tax, a graduated tax on nationwide chain
stores (such as J.C. Penney and Sears, Roebuck and Company),
low-interest farm loans, and a state unemployment insurance program.
The progressive 1933 legislative session saw a comprehensive response
to the depression including a moratorium on mortgage foreclosures, a
reduction in property taxes for farmers and homeowners, the state
income tax, and chain store taxes, tavern reform, ratification of a
child labor amendment, a state old-age pension system, and steps toward
preserving the area that later became the Boundary Waters Canoe Area
Wilderness.
Meanwhile, formerly quiet labor unions began
asserting themselves rather forcefully. The Minneapolis Teamsters
Strike of 1934 turned ugly, with the union demanding the right to speak
for all trucking employees. As a result of this strike and many others
across the nation, Congress passed the National Labor Relations Act in
1935. Government programs such as the Civilian Conservation Corps and
Works Progress Administration brought much-needed work projects to the
state. Congress passed the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934, giving
Minnesota's Ojibwa and Dakota tribes more autonomy over their own
affairs.
Modern Minnesota
Arts and culture
The Minneapolis
Institute of Arts was established in 1883. The present building, a
neoclassical structure, was opened in 1915, with additions in 1974 by
Kenzo Tange and in 2006 by Michael Graves.
The Minnesota
Orchestra dates back to 1903 when it was founded as the Minneapolis
Symphony Orchestra. It was renamed the Minnesota Orchestra in 1968 and
moved into its own building, Orchestra Hall, in downtown Minneapolis in
1974. The building has a modern look with a brick, glass, and steel
exterior, in contrast to the old-world look of traditional concert
halls. The interior of the building features more than 100 large cubes
that deflect sound and provide excellent acoustics. Later the Saint
Paul Chamber Orchestra became the second full-time professional
orchestral ensemble in the cities.
The Walker Art Center was
established in 1927 as the first public art gallery in the Upper
Midwest. In the 1940s, the museum shifted its focus toward modern art,
after a gift from Mrs. Gilbert Walker made it possible to acquire works
by Pablo Picasso, Henry Moore, Alberto Giacometti, and others. The
museum continued its focus on modern art with traveling shows in the
1960s.
The Guthrie Theater, opened in 1963, was the brainchild
of Sir Tyrone Guthrie, who wanted to found a regional theater without
the commercial constraints of Broadway. The high cost of staging
Broadway productions meant that shows had to be immediately successful
and return a high amount of revenue. This discouraged innovation and
experimentation, and made it difficult to stage important works of
literature. These ideas were first disseminated in a 1959 article in
the drama section of the New York Times, and citizens in the
Minneapolis-Saint Paul area were eager to support the idea. The theater
served as a prototype for other resident non-profit theaters.
Minnesota in World War II
Most of the 400 structures at Fort Snelling began falling into disrepair after the fort closed in 1946.
Like
other U.S. States, Minnesota made its contributions to the effort of
World War II in wartime manufacturing and other areas. The United
States Navy contracted with Cargill to build ships after seeing their
success in building ships and barges used to haul grain. Cargill built
facilities in Savage, Minnesota on the south bank of the Minnesota
River and turned out 18 refueling ships and four towboats in four
years. After the war, the Cargill facilities became a major grain
shipping terminal. Honeywell built airplane control systems and
periscope sights for submarines, and also developed a proximity fuse
for anti-aircraft shells. The United States government built the Twin
Cities Ordnance Plant to produce munitions. The plant employed 8,500
workers in 1941, and since there was a shortage of male workers during
the war, more than half of the workers at the munitions plant were
women. The plant also employed nearly 1000 African American workers, as
President Roosevelt had issued an executive order forbidding racial
discrimination in defense industries. Native American workers also
found opportunities due to workforce shortages in wartime.
During
the wartime years, Savage was also the home of Camp Savage, a school
designed to improve the foreign language skills of Japanese-American
soldiers and to train them in military intelligence gathering. The
school was originally established in San Francisco, but moved to
Minnesota after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Eventually, the school
outgrew its facilities in Savage and was moved to Fort Snelling.[90]
Fort Snelling itself served a major role as a reception center for
newly drafted recruits after the Selective Service Act was passed in
1940. New recruits were given a physical exam and the Army General
Qualification Test to determine their fitness for service in a
particular branch. The most intelligent recruits, about 37% of
Minnesotans going through Fort Snelling, were assigned to the Army Air
Corps. Recruits were also issued uniforms and sent from the fort to
other training centers. Over 300,000 recruits were processed through
Fort Snelling during the World War II years.
Modern economy
Main article: Economy of Minnesota
The UNIVAC 1218, a computer built for military applications, was designed in the early 1960s.
Agriculture
evolved from an individual occupation into a major industry after World
War II. Technological developments increased productivity on farms,
such as automation of feedlots for hogs and cattle, machine milking at
dairy farms, and raising chickens in large buildings. Planting also
became more specialized with hybridization of corn and wheat,
fertilization, and mechanical equipment such as tractors and combines
became the norm. University of Minnesota professor Norman Borlaug
contributed to this knowledge as part of the Green Revolution. Large
canneries such as the Minnesota Valley Canning Company fed the country
from Minnesota's productive farmland.
The Minnesota Mining and
Manufacturing Company (3M) was founded in 1902 in Two Harbors,
Minnesota, and was later moved to Duluth, Saint Paul, and then
Maplewood. The founders of 3M got their start by manufacturing
sandpaper. Under the leadership of William L. McKnight, the company
established product lines such as abrasives for wet sanding, masking
tape and other adhesives, roofing granules, resins, and films.
Suburban
development intensified after the war, fueled by the demand for new
housing. In 1957, the Legislature created a planning commission for the
Twin Cities metropolitan area. This became the Metropolitan Council in
1967. Minnesota also became a center of technology after the war.
Engineering Research Associates was formed in 1946 to develop computers
for the United States Navy. It later merged with Remington Rand, and
later became Sperry Rand. William Norris left Sperry in 1957 to form
Control Data Corporation (CDC). Cray Research was formed when Seymour
Cray left CDC to form his own company. Medical device maker Medtronic
also was founded in the Twin Cities in 1949.
Northwest Airlines,
the dominant airline at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport,
was founded in 1926 carrying mail from the Twin Cities to Chicago. The
airline, long headquartered in Eagan, merged with Delta Air Lines in
October 2008. The company will keep the Delta name and will be
headquartered in Atlanta.
Postwar politics
See also: Politics of Minnesota
Hubert Humphrey
Hubert
Humphrey was a Minnesotan who became a nationally prominent politician.
He first ran for mayor of Minneapolis in 1943, but lost the election to
the Republican candidate by just a few thousand votes. As a Democrat,
Humphrey recognized that his best chance for political success was to
obtain the support of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party. Other members
of the Farmer-Labor Party had been considering the idea, as encouraged
by Franklin D. Roosevelt, but the merger only became reality after
Humphrey traveled to Washington, D.C. to discuss the issue. Rather than
simply absorbing the Farmer-Labor party, with its constituency of
200,000 voters, Humphrey suggested calling the party the Minnesota
Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. He was elected mayor of Minneapolis in
1945, and one of his first actions was to propose an ordinance making
racial discrimination by employers subject to a fine. This ordinance
was adopted in 1947, and although few fines were issued, the city's
banks and department stores realized that public relations would
improve by hiring blacks in increasing numbers. Humphrey delivered an
impassioned speech at the 1948 Democratic National Convention
encouraging the party to adopt a civil rights plank in their platform.
He was elected to the United States Senate in 1948 and was re-elected
in 1954 and 1960.
In the early 1960s, the topic of civil rights
was coming to national prominence with sit-ins and marches organized by
Martin Luther King Jr. and other black leaders. In 1963, President John
F. Kennedy sent a comprehensive civil rights bill to Congress, based
largely on the ideas that Humphrey had been placing before the Senate
for the previous fifteen years. The bill passed the House in early
1964, but passage through the Senate was more difficult, due to
southern segregationists who filibustered for 75 days. Finally, in June
1964, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 became law. Humphrey called this his
greatest achievement. Lyndon B. Johnson recruited Humphrey for his
running mate in the 1964 presidential election, and Humphrey became
Vice President of the United States. Governor Karl Rolvaag (DFL)
appointed Walter Mondale to fill Humphrey's Senate seat. Humphrey
voiced doubts about the 1965 bombings of North Vietnam, which alienated
him from Johnson. He later defended Johnson's conduct of the Vietnam
War, alienating himself from liberals, who were beginning to oppose the
war around 1967. In the 1968 presidential election, Humphrey ran
against Richard Nixon and Independent candidate George Wallace and lost
the popular vote by only 0.7%. Humphrey later returned to the Senate in
1971 after Eugene McCarthy left office.
Eugene McCarthy (DFL)
served in the United States House of Representatives from 1949 through
1959 and in the United States Senate from 1959 through 1971. He gained
a reputation as an intellectual with strong convictions and integrity.
In 1967, he challenged Lyndon B. Johnson for the presidential
nomination, running on an anti-war platform in contrast to Johnson's
policies. His strong support in the New Hampshire primary convinced
Johnson to leave the race.
Democrat Walter Mondale also achieved
national prominence as Vice President under Jimmy Carter. He served in
the Senate from his appointment in 1964 until becoming Vice President
in 1977. In 1984, he ran for President of the United States, choosing
Geraldine Ferraro as his running mate. The election proved to be a
landslide victory for popular incumbent Ronald Reagan. In 2002, just 11
days before election day, when incumbent Senator Paul Wellstone was
killed in a plane crash, Mondale stepped into the race as the
Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate. He lost the bid by two
percentage points to the Republican, Norm Coleman.
In 1970,
Wendell Anderson (DFL) was elected as governor of Minnesota. He spent
two years working with a split Minnesota Legislature to enact a tax and
school finance reform package that shifted the source of public
education funding from local property taxes to state sales taxes, as
well as adding excise taxes to liquor and cigarettes. This achievement,
dubbed the "Minnesota Miracle", was immensely popular. In the next few
years, the Legislature enacted other facets of their "new liberalism",
including ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, strong
environmental laws, increases in workers' compensation and unemployment
benefits, and elimination of income taxes for the working poor. Time
Magazine featured Wendell Anderson and the state in an article
entitled, "Minnesota: A State That Works". In 1976 when Mondale
resigned his Senate seat to become Jimmy Carter's running mate,
Anderson resigned the governor's seat and turned it over to Lieutenant
Governor Rudy Perpich (DFL), who promptly appointed Anderson to fill
Mondale's vacant Senate seat. Voters turned Perpich and Anderson out of
office in 1978, in an election dubbed the "Minnesota Massacre". Perpich
was again elected as governor in 1983 and served until 1991.
Paul
Wellstone (DFL) was elected to the United States Senate in 1990,
defeating incumbent Rudy Boschwitz (R) in one of the biggest election
upsets of the decade. In 1996, he defeated Boschwitz again in a rematch
of the 1990 election. Wellstone was known for being a liberal activist,
as evidenced by his books How the Rural Poor Got Power: Narrative of a
Grassroots Organizer, describing his work with the group Organization
for a Better Rice County, and The Conscience of a Liberal: Reclaiming
the Compassionate Agenda. He explored a possible presidential bid in
1998, telling people he represented the "Democratic wing of the
Democratic Party". On October 25, 2002, he was killed in a plane crash
near Eveleth, Minnesota, along with his wife, his daughter, three
campaign staffers, and the two pilots.
Jesse Ventura, elected
governor in 1998, had a colorful past as a Navy SEAL, a professional
wrestler, an actor, mayor of Brooklyn Park, and a radio and TV
broadcaster. He left office after one term. His election brought
international attention to the Independence Party.


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