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Coldwater Spring

Coldwater Spring (Dakota: Mní Ówe Sní) is a spring in the Fort Snelling unorganized territory of the U.S. state of Minnesota, that is considered a sacred site by the Dakota people, and was also the site of the U.S. Army's Camp Coldwater for troops that constructed Fort Snelling. Coldwater Spring is located on the west bluffs of the Mississippi River directly south of Minnehaha Park and adjacent to Fort Snelling State Park. Waters from the naturally occurring spring flow continuously year round and remain unfrozen in winter months. The spring and surrounding area is managed as a protected historic site and natural park by the National Park Service as part of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area.

Coldwater Spring
Mní Ówe Sní
Coldwater Spring in July 2014
LocationFort Snelling unorganized territory in the U.S. state of Minnesota
Nearest cityMinneapolis
Coordinates44°53.96′N 93°11.77′W / 44.89933°N 93.19617°W / 44.89933; -93.19617
Governing bodyU.S. National Park Service
WebsiteColdwater Spring

History edit

First people edit

For hundreds of years, Dakota people have considered the spring and area around it to be a place of spiritual importance.[1] The confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers was a neutral and sacred place where the Ojibwe, Dakota, Sauk, Meskwaki and Potowatamie tribes moved freely.[2]

Camp Coldwater edit

The spring area was explored by early European-American settlers who were interested in expanding the fur trade. In September 1805, the area was part of a 100,000-acre (400 km2) land purchased from the Mdewakanton Sioux Indians by Zebulon Pike.[3] The land was designated as a military reservation.

On May 5, 1820, Lieutenant Colonel Henry Leavenworth moved his troops to the spring area because their former encampment, on the Minnesota River, was causing unhealthy conditions. Leavenworth was succeeded by Colonel Josiah Snelling in August of that year. The soldiers lived in tents and huts on the site during three summers while they built the permanent stone fort south of the location, which was completed in 1825 and named Fort Snelling. The spring continued to supply water to the fort, first via water wagons and then via a stone water tower and underground pipes.

Settlers who had left the Red River Colony settled near the spring location in 1821, but were forced to leave in 1840. They moved down the Mississippi River and settled in what eventually became Saint Paul, Minnesota. The Coldwater area once housed blacksmith shops, stables, trading posts, a hotel, and a steamboat landing, but nearly all of those buildings were gone by the time of the American Civil War.[4]

With the re-opening of Fort Snelling during the Civil War, Coldwater Spring was once again used to supply water to the fort. In the 1880s, the Army built a formal waterworks at the site, including the extant springhouse and reservoir.[5]

 
Coldwater Spring circa 1900

Mines research center edit

Following the closing of Fort Snelling after World War II, the site was turned over to the United States Bureau of Mines as their Twin Cities Research Center, where mining research was carried out for over 40 years. Several buildings were constructed in the 1960s for over 200 workers. Researchers at the site were credited with developing an air filtration system to eliminate black lung disease among coal miners, and creating a beeping device to alert people when a heavy truck is backing up.[6] The Twin Cities Research Center closed in 1996 and several buildings were left abandoned.[7]

Highway construction edit

For many years, efforts to protect the spring delayed planned freeway construction in the area.[6] The Minnesota Department of Transportation set a national precedent in 2003 by welding 28,000 square yards of eight-layer synthetic liner, covering approximately six acres to protect the water flow to the spring. The liner isolated the interchange of Minnesota highways 55 and 62, allowing it to sit below the water table and remain dry, while also letting the water flow beneath the interchange to the spring.[8][9][10][6]

Ownership transition edit

The National Park Service led an environmental impact statement process in 2006 to consider potential future uses of the site that had been largely abandoned for the past ten years. If disposing of the site, the federal government was required by law to sell the land to a state or local government, American Indian tribe, or an academic institution. Some of the vacant mine research buildings may been have eligible for National Register for Historic Places status, but would have required expensive repairs. Hennepin County officials wanted to convert the site to a suburban business park. Conservationists argued that the spring area should be repurposed as a publicly accessible natural park.[6]

Coldwater Spring park edit

The property was transferred to the National Park Service in 2010, and made a unit of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area. Plans to restore the native landscape led to discussion about Dakota history and ownership of the area.[1] The community at the Lower Sioux Indian Reservation designated Coldwater as a traditional cultural property, making an official statement that the area "has been used for traditional, spiritual, religious and cultural ceremonies by the MN. Mdewakanton and their hereditary descendents [sic] for thousands of years" and that "the water of Coldwater Spring has been traditionally utilized for healing of Dakota people and others."[11] The National Park Service held the view that while there were Dakota villages along the lower Minnesota River, there is little evidence the spring itself was a ceremonial site.[12]

National Park Service crews at Coldwater Spring repaired the springhouse structure, restored the creek and wetlands, removed invasive species like buckthorn, and removed several abandoned buildings. The result was a savanna landscape said to resemble pre-settlement by European-American people.[13] The National Park Service opened Coldwater Spring park to the public in 2012.[14]

Geology and hydrology edit

Coldwater Spring emanates from Platteville limestone bedrock near the river gorge that was formed over 10,000 years ago by glacier melt at the end of the most recent ice age. Water flows at 144,000 gallons per day at 47 °F (8 °C), remaining ice free in the winter with ducks present. Waters exit the spring into a reservoir before tumbling into a wetlands waterfall and eventually reaching the Mississippi River.[15] Water from Coldwater Spring is not considered drinkable.[16]

Landscape edit

The site was extensively re-landscaped in 2012 with native grasses and wildflowers in an attempt to restore the original oak savanna landscape.[17] Prairie restoration efforts had the similar aim as those at Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary in Saint Paul a few years prior. Much of the restored landscape is maintained by NPS biological staff in partnership with biweekly volunteer crews. [14]

Recreation edit

The main features of Coldwater Spring park are walking paths through a tallgrass prairie, the naturally occurring spring, and the historic springhouse and reservoir.[18] There is a .25-mile (0.40 km) crushed limestone path from the entrance that winds through the restored savanna to the historic springhouse structure. Beyond the springhouse, a 1-mile (1.6 km) hiking trail crosses the creek into the nearby woodlands and connects with the multi-use Minnehaha Trail, leading northward to Minnehaha Park or southward to Fort Snelling State Park. Bird watching and wildlife viewing are popular activities for visitors. The park has limited parking and there is no visitor's center or restroom facility.[19]

Quotes edit

Early in the Spring [of 1820] Col. Leavenworth discovered the fountain of water where the troops now are, & to which they moved as soon as the ice would permit. It is a healthy situation, about 200 feet above the river, and the water gushing out of a lime stone rock is excellent. It is called "Camp Cold Water."

— James Duane Doty, Camp Cold Water, July 31, 1820

[It is] a situation which is extremely salubrious, and where they will remain until the permanent works [Fort St. Anthony, later Fort Snelling] are completed upon the bluff at the junction of the two rivers.

— Henry Schoolcraft, July 29, 1820

I was a little surprised on arriving here, to find that there is no such place as St. Peters proper. Fort Snelling, New Hope, and Camp Coldwater, comprise all the settlements here; and St. Peters seems to have been used, by common consent, as a name for the whole settlement around the mouth of the St. Peters river (Minnesota River), which empties into the Mississippi here, seven miles below the falls of St. Anthony.

— Benjamin T. Kavanaugh, November 5, 1839

In sight of Fort Snelling is a beautiful hill called Morgan’s Bluff: the Indians call it ‘Gods House. They have a tradition that it is the residence of their god of the waters, whom they call Unk-ta-he.[20]

— Mary Henderson Eastman, page ii 1849.

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Meersman, Tom (2011-10-24). "Ransacked Minnesota historic site to be reborn as park". Star Tribune. Retrieved 2020-11-19.
  2. ^ Jeffrey, Susu (2020). "Coldwater Springs". Sacred Sites International Foundation. Retrieved 2020-11-19.
  3. ^ Upham, Warren (1920). Minnesota Geographic Names: Their Origin and Historic Significance. Minnesota Historical Society. p. 441.
  4. ^ Rubenstein, Sarah P. (2003). Minnesota History Along the Highways. Minnesota Historical Society. ISBN 0-87351-456-4.
  5. ^ "Water for 100 Years". www.nps.gov. National Park Service. 2015-04-10. Retrieved 2016-07-29.
  6. ^ a b c d Hughes, Art (2006-09-25). "Historic Camp Coldwater spring and government buildings on the sales block". Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved 2016-07-29.
  7. ^ "From Deep in the Earth to High on the Moon". www.nps.gov. National Park Service. 2015-04-10. Retrieved 2016-07-26.
  8. ^ Lindberg, Donna (2006-06-21). "Monitoring of Camp Coldwater Spring completed; no permanent impacts from Hwy 62/Hwy 55 detected". www.newsline.dot.state.mn.us. Minnesota Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2020-11-22.
  9. ^ "Tuesday Feb 11th, MnDOT presented their 90% plan for the redesign of the HWY. 55/62 interchange". www.preservecampcoldwater.org. 2003-02-11. Retrieved 2020-11-22.
  10. ^ "Hiawatha Avenue (TH55) / Crosstown (TH62) Interchange Receives 2006 A…". www.sehinc.com. SEH. 2006-01-01. Retrieved 2013-02-02.
  11. ^ Disposition of Bureau of Mines Property, Twin Cities Research Center Main Campus: Environmental Impact Statement. National Park Service. 2009. pp. 206–207.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  12. ^ "A Confluence of Dakota Indian History". www.nps.gov. National Park Service. 2015-04-10. Retrieved 2016-07-29.
  13. ^ Schettler, Joel (2012-07-19). "Coldwater Spring: A Minnesota Historic Landmark". Minnesota Monthly. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  14. ^ a b "Coldwater Spring". Mississippi Park Connection. Retrieved 2020-11-22.
  15. ^ White, Bruce; Lindberg, Dean. "Facts: Coldwater Springs". friendsofcoldwater.org. Friends of Coldwater. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
  16. ^ "Coldwater Spring Water Quality" (PDF). National Park Service. United States Department of the Interior. 2005. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  17. ^ Meersman, Tom (2012-09-03). "Coldwater Spring debuts with a new look". Star Tribune. Minneapolis. Retrieved 2019-08-02.
  18. ^ "Cold Water Spring: Mississippi National River and Recreation Area" (PDF). www.nps.gov. National Park Service. 2020. Retrieved 2020-11-11.
  19. ^ "Walks and Hikes: Mississippi National River and Recreation Area". www.nps.gov. National Park Service. 2019-11-22. Retrieved 2020-11-02.
  20. ^ Eastman, Mary, Dahcotah: or Life and Legends of the Sioux Around Fort Snelling. https://books.google.com/books?id=u4gIAAAAQAAJ


External links edit

  • Coldwater Spring park map


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Coldwater Spring Dakota Mni owe Sni is a spring in the Fort Snelling unorganized territory of the U S state of Minnesota that is considered a sacred site by the Dakota people and was also the site of the U S Army s Camp Coldwater for troops that constructed Fort Snelling Coldwater Spring is located on the west bluffs of the Mississippi River directly south of Minnehaha Park and adjacent to Fort Snelling State Park Waters from the naturally occurring spring flow continuously year round and remain unfrozen in winter months The spring and surrounding area is managed as a protected historic site and natural park by the National Park Service as part of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area Coldwater SpringMni owe SniIUCN category II national park Coldwater Spring in July 2014LocationFort Snelling unorganized territory in the U S state of MinnesotaNearest cityMinneapolisCoordinates44 53 96 N 93 11 77 W 44 89933 N 93 19617 W 44 89933 93 19617Governing bodyU S National Park ServiceWebsiteColdwater Spring Contents 1 History 1 1 First people 1 2 Camp Coldwater 1 3 Mines research center 1 4 Highway construction 1 5 Ownership transition 1 6 Coldwater Spring park 2 Geology and hydrology 3 Landscape 4 Recreation 5 Quotes 6 Gallery 7 References 8 External linksHistory editFirst people edit For hundreds of years Dakota people have considered the spring and area around it to be a place of spiritual importance 1 The confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers was a neutral and sacred place where the Ojibwe Dakota Sauk Meskwaki and Potowatamie tribes moved freely 2 Camp Coldwater edit The spring area was explored by early European American settlers who were interested in expanding the fur trade In September 1805 the area was part of a 100 000 acre 400 km2 land purchased from the Mdewakanton Sioux Indians by Zebulon Pike 3 The land was designated as a military reservation On May 5 1820 Lieutenant Colonel Henry Leavenworth moved his troops to the spring area because their former encampment on the Minnesota River was causing unhealthy conditions Leavenworth was succeeded by Colonel Josiah Snelling in August of that year The soldiers lived in tents and huts on the site during three summers while they built the permanent stone fort south of the location which was completed in 1825 and named Fort Snelling The spring continued to supply water to the fort first via water wagons and then via a stone water tower and underground pipes Settlers who had left the Red River Colony settled near the spring location in 1821 but were forced to leave in 1840 They moved down the Mississippi River and settled in what eventually became Saint Paul Minnesota The Coldwater area once housed blacksmith shops stables trading posts a hotel and a steamboat landing but nearly all of those buildings were gone by the time of the American Civil War 4 With the re opening of Fort Snelling during the Civil War Coldwater Spring was once again used to supply water to the fort In the 1880s the Army built a formal waterworks at the site including the extant springhouse and reservoir 5 nbsp Coldwater Spring circa 1900Mines research center edit Following the closing of Fort Snelling after World War II the site was turned over to the United States Bureau of Mines as their Twin Cities Research Center where mining research was carried out for over 40 years Several buildings were constructed in the 1960s for over 200 workers Researchers at the site were credited with developing an air filtration system to eliminate black lung disease among coal miners and creating a beeping device to alert people when a heavy truck is backing up 6 The Twin Cities Research Center closed in 1996 and several buildings were left abandoned 7 Highway construction edit For many years efforts to protect the spring delayed planned freeway construction in the area 6 The Minnesota Department of Transportation set a national precedent in 2003 by welding 28 000 square yards of eight layer synthetic liner covering approximately six acres to protect the water flow to the spring The liner isolated the interchange of Minnesota highways 55 and 62 allowing it to sit below the water table and remain dry while also letting the water flow beneath the interchange to the spring 8 9 10 6 Ownership transition edit The National Park Service led an environmental impact statement process in 2006 to consider potential future uses of the site that had been largely abandoned for the past ten years If disposing of the site the federal government was required by law to sell the land to a state or local government American Indian tribe or an academic institution Some of the vacant mine research buildings may been have eligible for National Register for Historic Places status but would have required expensive repairs Hennepin County officials wanted to convert the site to a suburban business park Conservationists argued that the spring area should be repurposed as a publicly accessible natural park 6 Coldwater Spring park edit The property was transferred to the National Park Service in 2010 and made a unit of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area Plans to restore the native landscape led to discussion about Dakota history and ownership of the area 1 The community at the Lower Sioux Indian Reservation designated Coldwater as a traditional cultural property making an official statement that the area has been used for traditional spiritual religious and cultural ceremonies by the MN Mdewakanton and their hereditary descendents sic for thousands of years and that the water of Coldwater Spring has been traditionally utilized for healing of Dakota people and others 11 The National Park Service held the view that while there were Dakota villages along the lower Minnesota River there is little evidence the spring itself was a ceremonial site 12 National Park Service crews at Coldwater Spring repaired the springhouse structure restored the creek and wetlands removed invasive species like buckthorn and removed several abandoned buildings The result was a savanna landscape said to resemble pre settlement by European American people 13 The National Park Service opened Coldwater Spring park to the public in 2012 14 Geology and hydrology editColdwater Spring emanates from Platteville limestone bedrock near the river gorge that was formed over 10 000 years ago by glacier melt at the end of the most recent ice age Water flows at 144 000 gallons per day at 47 F 8 C remaining ice free in the winter with ducks present Waters exit the spring into a reservoir before tumbling into a wetlands waterfall and eventually reaching the Mississippi River 15 Water from Coldwater Spring is not considered drinkable 16 Landscape editThe site was extensively re landscaped in 2012 with native grasses and wildflowers in an attempt to restore the original oak savanna landscape 17 Prairie restoration efforts had the similar aim as those at Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary in Saint Paul a few years prior Much of the restored landscape is maintained by NPS biological staff in partnership with biweekly volunteer crews 14 Recreation editThe main features of Coldwater Spring park are walking paths through a tallgrass prairie the naturally occurring spring and the historic springhouse and reservoir 18 There is a 25 mile 0 40 km crushed limestone path from the entrance that winds through the restored savanna to the historic springhouse structure Beyond the springhouse a 1 mile 1 6 km hiking trail crosses the creek into the nearby woodlands and connects with the multi use Minnehaha Trail leading northward to Minnehaha Park or southward to Fort Snelling State Park Bird watching and wildlife viewing are popular activities for visitors The park has limited parking and there is no visitor s center or restroom facility 19 Quotes editEarly in the Spring of 1820 Col Leavenworth discovered the fountain of water where the troops now are amp to which they moved as soon as the ice would permit It is a healthy situation about 200 feet above the river and the water gushing out of a lime stone rock is excellent It is called Camp Cold Water James Duane Doty Camp Cold Water July 31 1820 It is a situation which is extremely salubrious and where they will remain until the permanent works Fort St Anthony later Fort Snelling are completed upon the bluff at the junction of the two rivers Henry Schoolcraft July 29 1820 I was a little surprised on arriving here to find that there is no such place as St Peters proper Fort Snelling New Hope and Camp Coldwater comprise all the settlements here and St Peters seems to have been used by common consent as a name for the whole settlement around the mouth of the St Peters river Minnesota River which empties into the Mississippi here seven miles below the falls of St Anthony Benjamin T Kavanaugh November 5 1839 In sight of Fort Snelling is a beautiful hill called Morgan s Bluff the Indians call it Gods House They have a tradition that it is the residence of their god of the waters whom they call Unk ta he 20 Mary Henderson Eastman page ii 1849 Gallery edit nbsp Springhouse and pond May 2007 nbsp Springhouse and landscape in June 2010 before the National Park Service undertook re landscaping on the property nbsp The entrance gate at Coldwater Spring on the day that the newly re landscaped park opened to the public September 2012 nbsp Coldwater Spring on the day that the newly re landscaped park opened to the public September 2012 nbsp A spring house and a small reservoir mark the outlet of Coldwater Spring April 2016References edit a b Meersman Tom 2011 10 24 Ransacked Minnesota historic site to be reborn as park Star Tribune Retrieved 2020 11 19 Jeffrey Susu 2020 Coldwater Springs Sacred Sites International Foundation Retrieved 2020 11 19 Upham Warren 1920 Minnesota Geographic Names Their Origin and Historic Significance Minnesota Historical Society p 441 Rubenstein Sarah P 2003 Minnesota History Along the Highways Minnesota Historical Society ISBN 0 87351 456 4 Water for 100 Years www nps gov National Park Service 2015 04 10 Retrieved 2016 07 29 a b c d Hughes Art 2006 09 25 Historic Camp Coldwater spring and government buildings on the sales block Minnesota Public Radio Retrieved 2016 07 29 From Deep in the Earth to High on the Moon www nps gov National Park Service 2015 04 10 Retrieved 2016 07 26 Lindberg Donna 2006 06 21 Monitoring of Camp Coldwater Spring completed no permanent impacts from Hwy 62 Hwy 55 detected www newsline dot state mn us Minnesota Department of Transportation Retrieved 2020 11 22 Tuesday Feb 11th MnDOT presented their 90 plan for the redesign of the HWY 55 62 interchange www preservecampcoldwater org 2003 02 11 Retrieved 2020 11 22 Hiawatha Avenue TH55 Crosstown TH62 Interchange Receives 2006 A www sehinc com SEH 2006 01 01 Retrieved 2013 02 02 Disposition of Bureau of Mines Property Twin Cities Research Center Main Campus Environmental Impact Statement National Park Service 2009 pp 206 207 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link A Confluence of Dakota Indian History www nps gov National Park Service 2015 04 10 Retrieved 2016 07 29 Schettler Joel 2012 07 19 Coldwater Spring A Minnesota Historic Landmark Minnesota Monthly Retrieved 2020 11 01 a b Coldwater Spring Mississippi Park Connection Retrieved 2020 11 22 White Bruce Lindberg Dean Facts Coldwater Springs friendsofcoldwater org Friends of Coldwater Retrieved 2020 11 16 Coldwater Spring Water Quality PDF National Park Service United States Department of the Interior 2005 Retrieved 2020 11 24 Meersman Tom 2012 09 03 Coldwater Spring debuts with a new look Star Tribune Minneapolis Retrieved 2019 08 02 Cold Water Spring Mississippi National River and Recreation Area PDF www nps gov National Park Service 2020 Retrieved 2020 11 11 Walks and Hikes Mississippi National River and Recreation Area www nps gov National Park Service 2019 11 22 Retrieved 2020 11 02 Eastman Mary Dahcotah or Life and Legends of the Sioux Around Fort Snelling https books google com books id u4gIAAAAQAAJExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coldwater Spring Coldwater Spring park map Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coldwater Spring amp oldid 1197566760, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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