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Industrial Exposition Building

The Industrial Exposition Building was located in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The building stood from 1886 to 1940 and was briefly the tallest structure in Minneapolis. In addition to smaller local exhibitions, it was the site of the 1892 Republican National Convention, the only major party convention to be held in Minnesota until the 2008 Republican National Convention.

Industrial Exposition Building
The Industrial Exposition Building as seen from the Pillsbury 'A' Mill, c. 1890
Alternative namesInternational Stock Food Company Warehouse
General information
StatusDemolished
Location101 Central Avenue Southeast,
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Coordinates44°59′9″N 93°15′24″W / 44.98583°N 93.25667°W / 44.98583; -93.25667
Completed1886
Destroyed1940
Height
Roof240 ft (73 m)
Technical details
Floor count8

The idea for an exposition in Minneapolis arose in 1885, when it became known that St. Paul had secured the permanent home of the Minnesota State Fair. Prominent citizens of Minneapolis such as Minneapolis Tribune owner Alden Blethen felt slighted, and an open meeting was called to gauge public support for an annual Minneapolis industrial fair, or exposition, to rival St. Paul's agricultural one.[1] Supporters raised funds throughout the fall of 1885 and reached their goal of $250,000 on December 15.

The structure was built on the site of the Winslow House Hotel (today the area bounded by Bank Street SE, Central Avenue SE, Main Street SE, and Ortman Street SE). Designed by Isaac Hodgson, the building had eight stories. Its modified Renaissance exterior was dominated by a 240-foot corner tower. The exterior walls were masonry and the interior had metal support structures. The building's capacity was estimated at between 11,000 and 15,000.[2]

The entire building was completed in just over three months: the cornerstone was laid on April 29, 1886, and the building was finished on August 3.[3] On August 23 there was a grand celebration for the opening of the new building and its first exposition. 50,000 people were estimated to have attended and much of downtown was turned over to the celebration.[4] Local dignitaries such as Senator Cushman K. Davis and Archbishop John Ireland spoke at the dedication. US President Grover Cleveland and his wife Frances could not attend. However, they sent a congratulatory telegram that was read publicly, and then in a dramatic moment, Mrs. Cleveland touched a special button in her New York location that started all of the machinery in the building.[5]

The initial 40-day exposition was very successful, attracting nearly 500,000 visitors. The latest technology and industrial developments were on display, along with a collection of art and sculpture estimated at $500,000 in value.[3] But in the following years, excitement lessened and the exposition began to lose money. Minneapolis could not have attracted the Republican National Convention of 1892 without the Industrial Exposition Building, but the convention was not enough to halt the exposition's decline. By 1893, exhibitors had evaporated and the fair had fallen apart.

In 1896, Thomas B. Janney bought the building at public auction for $25,000, a fraction of what it cost to build. For the next seven years, the space was used sporadically as a performance venue. It hosted the first concerts of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra which later became the Minnesota Orchestra and welcomed famous musicians and performers including Johann Strauss and New York's Metropolitan Opera. In 1903, Marion Savage, owner of race horse Dan Patch, bought the building and turned it into the International Stock Food Company.

The tower between 1940 and 1945

By the 1930s, it was used as a merchandise warehouse for the M.W. Savage Co. mail order company. The structure was finally torn down in 1940 for the construction of a Coca-Cola bottling plant. The bottling plant was torn down in the 1980s and the site has since been redeveloped into condominiums.

References edit

  1. ^ "The City: Enthusiastic Mass Meeting in Favor of the Industrial Exposition". Minneapolis Tribune. 17 Oct 1885.
  2. ^ Holmquist, June Drenning (June 1956). "Convention City: The Republicans in Minneapolis, 1892" (PDF). Minnesota History: 65. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  3. ^ a b "The Old Exposition Building". Greater Minneapolis: 31. January 1956.
  4. ^ Millett, Larry (1992). Lost Twin Cities. Minnesota Historical Society Press. p. 126.
  5. ^ "Exposition". Minneapolis Tribune. 24 Aug 1886.
Attribution
  This article incorporates text from MNopedia, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

industrial, exposition, building, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Industrial Exposition Building news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Industrial Exposition Building was located in Minneapolis Minnesota The building stood from 1886 to 1940 and was briefly the tallest structure in Minneapolis In addition to smaller local exhibitions it was the site of the 1892 Republican National Convention the only major party convention to be held in Minnesota until the 2008 Republican National Convention Industrial Exposition BuildingThe Industrial Exposition Building as seen from the Pillsbury A Mill c 1890Alternative namesInternational Stock Food Company WarehouseGeneral informationStatusDemolishedLocation101 Central Avenue Southeast Minneapolis MinnesotaCoordinates44 59 9 N 93 15 24 W 44 98583 N 93 25667 W 44 98583 93 25667Completed1886Destroyed1940HeightRoof240 ft 73 m Technical detailsFloor count8The idea for an exposition in Minneapolis arose in 1885 when it became known that St Paul had secured the permanent home of the Minnesota State Fair Prominent citizens of Minneapolis such as Minneapolis Tribune owner Alden Blethen felt slighted and an open meeting was called to gauge public support for an annual Minneapolis industrial fair or exposition to rival St Paul s agricultural one 1 Supporters raised funds throughout the fall of 1885 and reached their goal of 250 000 on December 15 The structure was built on the site of the Winslow House Hotel today the area bounded by Bank Street SE Central Avenue SE Main Street SE and Ortman Street SE Designed by Isaac Hodgson the building had eight stories Its modified Renaissance exterior was dominated by a 240 foot corner tower The exterior walls were masonry and the interior had metal support structures The building s capacity was estimated at between 11 000 and 15 000 2 The entire building was completed in just over three months the cornerstone was laid on April 29 1886 and the building was finished on August 3 3 On August 23 there was a grand celebration for the opening of the new building and its first exposition 50 000 people were estimated to have attended and much of downtown was turned over to the celebration 4 Local dignitaries such as Senator Cushman K Davis and Archbishop John Ireland spoke at the dedication US President Grover Cleveland and his wife Frances could not attend However they sent a congratulatory telegram that was read publicly and then in a dramatic moment Mrs Cleveland touched a special button in her New York location that started all of the machinery in the building 5 The initial 40 day exposition was very successful attracting nearly 500 000 visitors The latest technology and industrial developments were on display along with a collection of art and sculpture estimated at 500 000 in value 3 But in the following years excitement lessened and the exposition began to lose money Minneapolis could not have attracted the Republican National Convention of 1892 without the Industrial Exposition Building but the convention was not enough to halt the exposition s decline By 1893 exhibitors had evaporated and the fair had fallen apart In 1896 Thomas B Janney bought the building at public auction for 25 000 a fraction of what it cost to build For the next seven years the space was used sporadically as a performance venue It hosted the first concerts of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra which later became the Minnesota Orchestra and welcomed famous musicians and performers including Johann Strauss and New York s Metropolitan Opera In 1903 Marion Savage owner of race horse Dan Patch bought the building and turned it into the International Stock Food Company The tower between 1940 and 1945By the 1930s it was used as a merchandise warehouse for the M W Savage Co mail order company The structure was finally torn down in 1940 for the construction of a Coca Cola bottling plant The bottling plant was torn down in the 1980s and the site has since been redeveloped into condominiums References edit The City Enthusiastic Mass Meeting in Favor of the Industrial Exposition Minneapolis Tribune 17 Oct 1885 Holmquist June Drenning June 1956 Convention City The Republicans in Minneapolis 1892 PDF Minnesota History 65 Retrieved 14 November 2014 a b The Old Exposition Building Greater Minneapolis 31 January 1956 Millett Larry 1992 Lost Twin Cities Minnesota Historical Society Press p 126 Exposition Minneapolis Tribune 24 Aug 1886 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from MNopedia which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Industrial Exposition Building amp oldid 1158853907, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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