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Saint Anthony Falls

Saint Anthony Falls, or the Falls of Saint Anthony (Dakota: Owámniyomni, lit.'whirlpool'[3]) located at the northeastern edge of downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, is the only natural major waterfall on the Mississippi River. Throughout the mid-to-late 1800’s, various dams were built atop the east and west faces of the falls to support the milling industry that spurred the growth of the city of Minneapolis. In 1880, the central face of the falls was reinforced with a sloping timber apron to stop the upstream erosion of the falls. In the 1950s, the apron was rebuilt with concrete, which makes up the most visible portion of the falls today. A series of locks were constructed in the 1950s and 1960s to extend navigation to points upstream.[4]

Saint Anthony Falls
Saint Anthony Falls with the upper lock and dam, viewed from downstream
LocationMississippi River into the Mississippi River Gorge in Minneapolis, Minnesota
Coordinates44°58′54″N 93°15′31″W / 44.98167°N 93.25861°W / 44.98167; -93.25861Coordinates: 44°58′54″N 93°15′31″W / 44.98167°N 93.25861°W / 44.98167; -93.25861
TypeBlock
Total height49 ft (15 m)
Number of drops1
WatercourseMississippi River
Average
flow rate
13,000 cu ft/s (370 m3/s)
St. Anthony Falls Historic District[1]
LocationMinneapolis, Minnesota
NRHP reference No.71000438[2]
Added to NRHPMarch 11, 1971

The falls were renamed from their Dakota title in 1680 by Father Louis Hennepin after his patron saint, St. Anthony of Padua. The towns of St. Anthony and Minneapolis, which had developed on the east and west sides of the falls, respectively, merged in 1872 to fully use the power of the falls for milling operations. From 1880 to about 1930, Minneapolis was known as the "Flour Milling Capital of the World".[5]

Stereoscopic photograph of the falls by Benjamin Franklin Upton
In winter

Today, the falls are defined by the spillway, the upper dam and the locks, located just downstream of the 3rd Avenue Bridge, and the Lower Lock and Dam, just upstream of the I-35W Saint Anthony Falls Bridge.[6] These locks were built as part of the Upper Mississippi River 9-Foot Navigation Project. The area around the falls is designated the St. Anthony Falls Historic District[7] and features a 1.8-mile (2.9 km) self-guided walking trail with signs explaining the area's past.

History

 
Albert Bierstadt painted The Falls of St. Anthony in 1880, creating an artist's impression of how the falls looked prior to industrialization.

The falls hold cultural and spiritual significance for native tribes who frequented and lived in the area. The falls is an important and sacred site to the Mdewakanton Dakota and they called the Mississippi River, hahawakpa, "river of the falls". The falls (Haha) themselves were given specific names, mnirara "curling waters", owahmenah "falling waters", or owamni, "whirlpool" (mniyomni in the Eastern Dakota dialect and owamniyomni in the Teton Dakota (Lakota) dialect).[8] Dakota associate the falls with legends and spirits, including Oanktehi, god of waters and evil, who lived beneath the falling water.[9] A small island in the stream, called Spirit Island, was once a nesting ground for eagles that fed on fish below the falls. Dakota people camped on Nicollet Island upstream of the falls to fish and to tap the sugar maple trees.[10]

 
Stereoscopic photograph of the suspension bridge connecting St. Anthony and Minneapolis

Since the cataract had to be portaged, the area became one of the natural resting and trade points along the Mississippi between Dakota and Anishinaabe peoples. The Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) term was recorded as "kakabikah" (gakaabikaa, "split rock" or more descriptively, gichi-gakaabikaa, "the great severed rock" which referenced the jagged chunks of limestone constantly eroding by the falls).[8][11]

In 1680, the falls became known to the Western world when they were observed and published in a journal by Father Louis Hennepin, a Catholic friar of Belgian birth, who had earlier brought the Niagara Falls to the world's attention via a publication.[12] Hennepin named them the Chutes de Saint-Antoine or the Falls of Saint Anthony after his patron saint, Anthony of Padua.[12][13] Later explorers to document the falls include Zebulon Montgomery Pike and Jonathan Carver, the first Englishman to undertake an exploration of the west. According to the John Carter Brown Library, "Carver's purpose was to map the land, to befriend the native Americans, and to discover the Northwest passage. His journey began in 1766 and, in some ways, was the precursor of the Lewis and Clark expedition; his book was the first popular American travel book."[14] Carver created this early image, an engraving of the falls, in 1778.

 
Mississippi River at Minneapolis in 2008, looking downstream. The bridge in the foreground is the Third Avenue Bridge, behind it are the Upper St Anthony Falls to the left and the upper lock and dam to the right, followed by the Stone Arch Bridge. The new I-35W Saint Anthony Falls Bridge can be seen in the background.

Following the establishment of Fort Snelling in 1820, the falls became an attraction for tourists, writers, and artists who sought inspiration, even if Hennepin's descriptions were not as majestic as hoped for.[citation needed] By the 1850s a romantic "Indian legend" had become associated with the falls, describing a wife whose husband had taken a second bride. The offended first wife placed her child (or children) in a canoe and paddled toward the falls, plunging herself and her offspring to certain death as the husband looked on helplessly.[15][16]

By the 1860s, industrial waste had filled the area and marred the falls' majesty.[9] Further competition over the power of the falls on both banks of the river led to the Eastman tunnel disaster in 1869 which could have destroyed the falls. The disaster was fixed with a dike under the falls.

Industry

The first private land claim at the falls was made by Franklin Steele in 1838 — though he did not obtain financing for development until 1847, in the form of $12,000 for a nine-tenths stake in the property. On May 18, 1848, President James K. Polk approved the claims made in St. Anthony, and Steele was able to build his dam on the east side of the river above the Falls, blocking the east channel.

 
Mid 1850s Daguerreotype of St. Anthony Falls

The dam extended diagonally into the river 700 feet (210 m), was 16 feet (4.9 m) high, and was secured to the limestone riverbed. Its thickness tapered from 40 wide at its base to 12 feet (3.7 m) wide at the top. Steele dispatched logging crews to the Crow Wing River in December 1847 to supply pine for the sawmill, and by September 1, 1848, sawing commenced using two up-down saws. He was able to sell the lumber readily, supplying construction projects in the booming town.[17] The new community at the Falls attracted entrepreneurs from New England, many of whom had experience in lumber and milling. He had hired Ard Godfrey to help build and run the first commercial sawmill at the Falls. Godfrey knew the most efficient ways to use natural resources, like the falls, and the great pine forests, to make lumber products.[18] Godfrey built the first home in St. Anthony, Steele had the town platted in 1849, and it incorporated in 1855.[19][20]

 
Sawmills over Saint Anthony Falls, ca. 1860.

By 1854, 300 squatters occupied the west bank of the river, and in 1855, Congress recognized the squatters' right to purchase the land they had claimed. The west side quickly developed scores of new mills and consortia. They built a dam diagonally into the river to the north, which, along with Steele's dam created the inverted V-shape, still apparent today. Steele created the St. Anthony Falls Water Power Company in 1856 with three New York financiers, Davis, Gebhard, and Sanford. The company struggled for several years, due to poor relations with the financiers, a depression, and the Civil War. In 1868, the firm reorganized with new officers including John Pillsbury, Richard and Samuel Chute, Sumner Farnham, and Frederick Butterfield.[17]

 
Looking northeast across the river ca. 1868

As Minneapolis (and its former neighbor across the river, St. Anthony) developed, the water power at the falls became a source of power for several industries including textile mills, wool, machinery, paper, and wood products, of which the North Star Woolen Mill was successful. Sawmills made the falls a major lumber producing area, with the mills largely built on platforms above the limestone cap forming the falls. But the dominant industry became flour milling.

The falls industrialization was also a problem. Logs, sometimes a hundred at a time, escaped from log booms and hammered the falls. Diversion of water left parts of the limestone cap dry, increasing weathering effects. Shafts and tunnels from sawmills and other users weakened the limestone and its sandstone foundation, accelerating the falls' upriver erosion to 26 feet (7.9 m) per year between 1857 and 1868. The falls quickly approached the edge of the limestone cap; once the limestone had completely eroded away, the falls would degenerate into sandstone rapids unsuitable for waterpower.[9] To protect the falls and stop upstream progression a protective wood timber apron was built from the edge of the falls sloping downstream. The apron dissipated the energy of the falling water and moved it away from the base of the falls. It also protected from errant logs. An apron built in 1866 lasted until 1867. The Corps of Engineers completed one in 1880 that lasted until destroyed in 1952.[21] It was replaced with a concrete apron.[22]

The usual flour milling techniques did not work well for "spring wheat", which is the only kind that could be dependably grown on the rapidly expanding wheat farms in Minnesota and the Dakotas. In the late 1860s, major milling innovations at the falls were a "middlings purifier" and "gradual-reduction" grinding, both borrowed from Europe. Metal rollers replaced grindstones. The changes not only solved the spring wheat problem but produced high quality flour in a milling process that was highly profitable.[23][24] As the result of the new technology, flour mills began to dominate the falls after 1870.[25]

 
A diagram showing the recession of the falls between 1680 and 1887

Millers on the Minneapolis side formed a consortium to extract power with the "Lowell model" in which water was supplied in a large headrace "power canal" connecting to the millpond above the falls and extending 950 feet (290 m) parallel to the river below the falls. Mills built on both sides of the power canal diverted upper-level water into waterwheel-equipped vertical shafts (driven through the limestone bedrock into the soft, underlying sandstone) and then through horizontal tailrace tunnels to the falls' lower level. This system was very effective and mills lined the canal. "turning the west side of the river into the country's most densely industrialized, direct-drive waterpower district."[26] The mills on the St. Anthony (east) side of the river were less-well organized for harnessing the power, and therefore industry developed at a slower pace on that side. But the Pillsbury A-Mill, built on the east bank and completed in 1881, was the world's largest flour mill for 18 years.[27] It produced about 1/3 as much flour as the entire west side.[28] The mills at the falls were very large and substantially automated.[29] "By the end of the century, they had created the country's greatest waterpower industrial district, which was also the country's leading flour milling center from 1880 to 1930."[30]

By the early 1900s, three companies controlled 97% of the falls flour production. They were the Pillsbury-Washburn Flour Mills Company (later Pillsbury Flour Mills Company and now General Mills), the Washburn-Crosby Company (later General Mills), and Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company (later Standard Milling Company)."[31][29] The Pillsbury and Washburn-Crosby companies were started at the falls.

1869 collapse of the Eastman tunnel

 
The falls in the early 20th century

The early dams built to harness the waterpower exposed the limestone to freezing and thawing forces, narrowed the channel, and increased damage from floods. A report in 1868 found that only 1,100 feet (340 m) of the limestone remained upstream, and if it were eroded away, the falls would turn into a rapids that would no longer be useful for waterpower.[32] Meanwhile, as the result of a lawsuit, the St. Anthony Falls Water Power Company approved a plan for the firm of William W. Eastman and John L. Merriam to build a tailrace tunnel from below the falls, under Hennepin Island, under the riverbed to Nicollet Island. Nicollet Island is 700 feet (210 m) or more above the falls. The tailrace tunnel would allow waterpower development at the Island. This plan met with disaster on October 5, 1869, when the limestone cap was breached.[9][33]

The leak turned into a torrent of water coming out the tunnel. The water blasted Hennepin Island, causing a 150-foot (46 m) section to collapse into the tunnel. Believing that the mills and all the other industries around the falls would be ruined, hundreds of people rushed to view the impending disaster. Groups of volunteers started shoring up the gap by throwing trees and timber into the river, but that was ineffective. They then built a huge raft of timbers from the milling operations on Nicollet Island. This worked briefly, but also proved ineffective. A number of workers worked for months to build a dam that would funnel water away from the tunnel. The next year, an engineer from Lowell, Massachusetts, recommended completing a wooden apron, sealing the tunnel, and building low dams above the falls to avoid exposing the limestone to the weather.[33]

The fix for the tunnel disaster was a concrete dike constructed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. The dike was just above the falls and Hennepin Island, from right under the limestone cap down as much as 40 feet (12 m), and 1,850 feet (560 m) long across the entire river channel. The dike, completed 1876, cut off the tunnel and any possible future bypass channels. A separate problem was damage to the falls and its upstream progression. To stop the damage the Corps built a protective wood timber apron completed 1880. The Corps also built two low dams, completed by 1880, on top of the limestone cap to keep the cap wet.[9] The federal government spent $615,000 on this effort, while the two cities spent $334,500.[34][9]

Hydroelectric power production

Hydroelectric power production also developed early at the falls. In 1881, the Pillsbury "A" Mill added a Brush Electric arc light plant powered from their turbines; some other mills did so also. In 1882, a Brush hydroelectric central station plant was in use, the third central station in the country.[35] (Edison's Pearl Street Station also started producing electric power in 1882 - using steam.) The waterpower companies encouraged or developed hydroelectric plants. Major plants were completed in 1894. 1895, and 1908. (The first large scale production of electricity in the world was at the Adams (Tesla) plant at Niagara Falls starting 1895). As waterpower became available it was used to generate electricity. After the third plant was in operation in 1908, 45% of the waterpower being used was for hydroelectric.[36] One of the historic St. Anthony Falls plants is still operating.

River flow is variable and flour production may have to be decreased with low flow rates. In the winter, mills may shut down because there is not enough water flow. So many mills supplemented water power with steam, starting with a 1,400 HP steam engine at the Pillsbury A mill in 1884. By 1892 ten of the fifteen mills had supplementary steam power. As electricity developed as a power source, some electricity was generated from steam to run equipment. Using electricity from the St. Anthony Falls hydroelectric plants was not very practical because those plants competed for the same water flow. But about 1910 electric power was available from St. Croix Falls and it was used in combination with waterpower and steam, and electricity eventually took over. [37]

The Mississippi river flow rate changes based on how much rain there is its watershed. Starting 1880, dams were created on the Mississippi further north to create reservoirs - water could be released to increase flow at times when it would be low. This helped both waterpower industries and river navigation. The dams were at Lake Winnibigoshish, Leech Lake, Pokegama Falls, Pine River, Sandy Lake, and Gull Lake.[38]

Locks and dams

 
The concrete apron over St. Anthony Falls is engineered to produce the pronounced hydraulic jump evident in this photo.

St. Paul was effectively the upper limit of commercial navigation on the Mississippi.[9] High bluffs on both sides of the river from the River Waren falls and the falls progressing up the Mississippi, made access difficult. In addition the rapid descent of the river from the falls to below what is now the Ford Dam (lock and dam #1) made the river shallow and fast running.[39] The Ford dam, completed 1917, extended navigation to a little above the Washington Ave. bridge, with a shipping terminal on the west bank. Locks completed in 1956 at the lower dam and around the falls in 1963 extended navigation out of the river gorge to north Minneapolis.[9] Since those two locks are smaller than most of the locks on the rest of the river, the practical limit for many commercial tows was still further downriver. In 2015, the Upper St. Anthony Falls lock was permanently closed to stop the spread of invasive species, namely Asian carp.[40][41][42][43][44]

 
In 1963 the Stone Arch Bridge was altered to allow clearance for the upper lock

The St. Anthony Falls and the Upper Dam. The upper dam ("horseshoe dam"), built on top of the limestone cap forming the falls, is successor to dams built in the 1850s. The dam increases the head for two[45] hydroelectric plants and increases the water level above the falls.[46] The water level rise from the falls is 35 feet (11 m) and from the dam is 14 feet (4.3 m). The lift at this lock, 49 feet (15 m), is the highest of any lock on the Mississippi.[47] The upper pool has a normal capacity of 3,150 acre-feet (3,890,000 m3) and a normal level of 799 feet (244 m) above sea level. The navigation channel required alteration of the historic Stone Arch Bridge, which now has a metal truss section to allow ships to pass below.

 
The lower lock

The Lower St. Anthony Falls Dam, located about a half mile below the falls, was completed 1897 with a water level rise of 20 feet (6.1 m).[48] The dam was built for hydroelectric production, and included a power plant. There never was a falls at this location. The dam was rebuilt and locks added in 1956. The rise was increased to 25 feet (7.6 m).[49] The new dam is a gravity-type hydro-electric dam 26 feet (7.9 m) in height, consisting of a 275-foot (84 m) long concrete spillway with four tainter gates. The upper pool (sometimes called the intermediate pool) has a normal capacity of 375 acre-feet (463,000 m3) and a normal level of 750 feet (229 m) above sea level.

The upper and lower locks are each 56 feet (17 m) wide by 400 feet (120 m) long.

The current around the spillway/falls is often swift and dangerous. In 1991, a small boat drifted too close and fell over one part of the dam. One person on board was killed, and one had to be rescued by helicopter.[50] Rescues at the site are usually much less dramatic, but continue to happen occasionally.

 
Panoramic photo from the new Water Power Park, visible from this vantage: the lower portion of Saint Anthony Falls; the concrete wall on the far side of the falls is part of the locks to allow ships to pass the waterfall; to the left is the Stone Arch Bridge, above it is the Guthrie Theater; to the right of the Guthrie are the white silos and reconstructed shell of the former Washburn "A" Mill, now the Mill City Museum; to the right of the museum are a series of redeveloped flour and grain mills making up a significant portion of the city's Mills District.

Geology

 
Sandstone layered under limestone

Geologists say that the falls first appeared roughly 12,000 years ago about 10 miles (16 km) downstream at the confluence of the glacial River Warren (at present-day Fort Snelling).[9] Estimates are that the falls were about 180 feet (55 m) high when the River Warren Falls receded past the confluence of the Mississippi River and the glacial River Warren. Over the succeeding 10,000 years, the falls moved upstream to its present location. The water churning at the bottom of the falls ate away at the soft sandstone, eventually breaking off the hard limestone cap in chunks as the falls receded. From its origins near Fort Snelling, St. Anthony Falls relocated upstream at a rate of about 4 feet (1.2 m) per year until it reached its present location in the early 19th century. In the 6 miles (9.7 km) from the top of the falls (not including the horseshoe dam) to below the Ford dam the river drops 97 feet (30 m), all of it the remnant of the original 180 feet (55 m) falls. The limestone cap gets thinner upriver from the falls, and the cap disappears about 1,200 feet (370 m) upstream. In a short time, geologically speaking, the falls will reach the end of the cap and become a rapids.[9][51] Tributaries such as Minnehaha Creek begot their own waterfalls as the Mississippi River valley was cut into the landscape.[52]

When Father Louis Hennepin documented the falls he estimated the falls' height to be 50 to 60 feet (15 to 18 m). Later explorers described it as being in the range of 16 to 20 feet (4.9 to 6.1 m) high.[9] The height of the falls, not including the upper dam, is now 35 feet (11 m). The river descends downstream from the falls, which might add another 10 feet (3.0 m) to the falls where they were when Hennepin saw them.

The geological formation of the area consisted of a hard thin layer of Platteville Formation, a limestone, overlaying the soft St. Peter Sandstone subsurface.[53] These layers were the result of an Ordovician Period sea which covered east-central Minnesota 500 million years ago.[54]

Historic and commemorative markers

 
The St. Anthony Falls with upper lock on the left. The Third Avenue Bridge can be seen in the background. Photo taken in October 2005.

The area around the river was added to the National Register of Historic Places as the St. Anthony Falls Historic District in 1971. It includes 8th Avenue Northeast extending downstream to 6th Avenue Southeast and approximately two city blocks on both shoreline.[55][9][56][57] The falls are a contributing resource to the Historic District.[22] The district's archaeological record is one of the most-endangered historic sites in Minnesota.[58] The National Register of Historic Places is facilitated by the National Park Service. The national significance of the Saint Anthony Falls Historic District is a major reason why the National Park Service's Mississippi National River and Recreation Area was established along the Mississippi River in the Minneapolis – Saint Paul metropolitan area.

 
Stereoscopic photo of the falls by William H. Jacoby
 
Another view by Jacoby

A Heritage Trail plaque nearby says,

For untold generations of Indian people the Mississippi River was an important canoe route. To pass around the falls, the Dakota (Sioux) and Ojibway (Chippewa) used a well-established portage trail. Starting at a landing below the site now occupied by the steam plant, the trail climbed the bluff to this spot. From here it followed the east bank along what is now Main Street to a point well above the falls.

Water Works park overlooking the falls opened in 2021.[59]

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. ^ The St. Anthony Falls are a contributing resource to the Historic District. The District includes, for example, 20 houses on Nicollet Island and the main post office
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 15, 2006.
  3. ^ Westerman, Gwen; White, Bruce (2012). Mni Sota Makoce: The Land of the Dakota. Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 9780873518833.
  4. ^ "St. Paul District > Missions > Navigation > Locks & Dams > Upper St. Anthony Falls". www.mvp.usace.army.mil.
  5. ^ . Mill City Museum. 2005. Archived from the original on May 13, 2007.
  6. ^ "St. Paul District > Missions > Navigation > Locks & Dams > Lower St. Anthony Falls". www.mvp.usace.army.mil.
  7. ^ "St. Anthony Falls Historic District". City of Minneapolis. 2006.
  8. ^ a b (PDF). Minnesota Historical Society. 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 25, 2008.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Engineering the Falls: The Corps of Engineers' Role at St. Anthony Falls". US Army Corps of Engineers. Retrieved July 1, 2021.
  10. ^ , Minneapolis: St. Anthony Falls Heritage Board, archived from the original on February 21, 2020
  11. ^ Susu Jeffrey (2000). . Archived from the original on February 7, 2020. Retrieved June 11, 2008.
  12. ^ a b . Minneapolis Public Library. Archived from the original on April 20, 2007. Retrieved May 18, 2007.
  13. ^ Serge Jodra (2004). "L'exploration de l'Amérique du Nord" [Exploring North America] (in French).
  14. ^ "The falls of St. Anthony in the River Mississippi, near 2400 Miles from its entrance into the Gulf of Mexico". jcb.lunaimaging.com. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  15. ^ Horsford, Mary (1855), "The laughing water", Indian legends and other poems, New York: J.C. Derby, pp. 23–26, OCLC 697796912
  16. ^ Skinner, Charles M. (1896), "Falls of St. Anthony", Myths and legends of our own land, vol. 2, Philadelphia: J.P. Lippincott Co., pp. 166–167, OCLC 1049906656
  17. ^ a b (PDF). National Park Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 8, 2007. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  18. ^ . Timeline. Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on May 3, 2003. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  19. ^ . Bridges. Minneapolis Riverfront District. Archived from the original on June 20, 2007. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  20. ^ . Mississippi River Design Initiative. University of Minnesota. Archived from the original on June 28, 2007. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  21. ^ Kane 1987, p. 64, 68, 69, 79.
  22. ^ a b Nomination 1971, p. pdf 2.
  23. ^ Nomination 1971, p. pdf 91-93.
  24. ^ Danbom 2003, pp. 275–278.
  25. ^ Nomination 1971, p. pdf 33, 90, 91.
  26. ^ Nomination 1971, p. pdf 87, 71, 90.
  27. ^ Lissandrello, Stephen (April 24, 1979). "NRHP Nomination - Pillsubury "A" Mill". US-DOI-NPS. Retrieved July 1, 2021. except for one month
  28. ^ Nomination 1971, p. pdf 94.
  29. ^ a b Danbom 2003, p. 278.
  30. ^ Nomination 1971, p. pdf 87.
  31. ^ Nomination 1971, p. pdf 92, 93.
  32. ^ Kane 1987.
  33. ^ a b Kane 1987, p. 63-79.
  34. ^ Pennefeather, Shannon M. (2003). Mill City: A Visual History of the Minneapolis Mill District. St. Paul, Minnesota: Minnesota Historical Society.
  35. ^ Hess, Jeffrey (February 1, 1991). "Minnesota Hydroelectric Generating Facilities, 1881-1928". NPS. Retrieved June 1, 2019. Multiple sources, including Kane, say this was the first. Hess names two earlier ones, and says this was probably the first central station in its own building
  36. ^ Kane 1987, p. 172.
  37. ^ "Washburn-Crosby Milling Complex, West Engine House". HABS MN-69-C. Historic American Buildings Survey. Retrieved February 1, 2022. "Data pages" provide documentation of the West Engine House of the Washburn A Mill Complex in 1986 and an addendum in 2005(?) after a disastrous 1991 fire. The building housed one of two 1000 HP steam engines that provided some of the power for the mill. The addendum has history of milling and power technology at the falls, particularly for the A Mill. It details the use of waterpower and steam and electricity.
  38. ^ Anfinson 2003, "Leech".
  39. ^ Anfinson 2003,
    "He learned that Minneapolis"
    "construct a lock and dam at Meeker Island".
  40. ^ "H.R.3080 – Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014". congress.gov. June 10, 2014. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
  41. ^ . hometownsource.com. Archived from the original on June 10, 2015. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
  42. ^ "Upper St. Anthony Falls Lock Closing To Stop Invasive Carp". minnesota.cbslocal.com. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  43. ^ "Upper St. Anthony lock closing after half a century; blame the carp". mprnews.org. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  44. ^ . US Army Corps of Engineers. 2015. Archived from the original on June 10, 2015.
  45. ^ Hennepin Island Hydroelectric Plant
    A-Mill
  46. ^ Higher water level was used for navigation and is used by the Riverside steam-electric plant upstream.
  47. ^ Anfinson 2003, "highest lift".
  48. ^ Kane 1987, p. 154.
  49. ^ Feasibility 1984, pp. 28, 32, 37.
  50. ^ "Minneapolis Police Honor Four Lock Operators For Rescue Effort" (PDF). August 1991. Retrieved December 15, 2019.
  51. ^ Feasibility 1984, p. 133.
  52. ^ The river previously split, with two channels around an island where the Minnesota Veterans Home now is. Falls on the east channel progressed faster and cut off the west channel. Minnehaha falls has cut upstream about 600 feet (180 m) from the west channel.
  53. ^ . University of Minnesota. Archived from the original on May 2, 2015. Retrieved July 20, 2021. Multiple sections can be linked through the menu at top right.
  54. ^ Anfinson, Scott (1989). "Archaeology of the central minneapolis riverfront". The Institute for Minnesota Archaeology. Retrieved May 8, 2007.
  55. ^
  56. ^ Nomination 1971, p pdf 21-30 These boundaries were modified in a 1991 revision to the 1971 nomination. The revised boundary is shortened at the upstream end..
  57. ^ "St. Anthony Falls District Map" (PDF). Minneapolis HPC. Retrieved July 1, 2021. Current boundary map
  58. ^ . Preservation Alliance of Minnesota. 2008. Archived from the original on January 21, 2018. Retrieved January 20, 2018.
  59. ^ Du, Susan; Eler, Alicia (September 20, 2022). "Water Works artist Inkpa Mani resigned amid charges of cultural appropriation". Star Tribune. Retrieved September 12, 2022.

References cited

  • Coddington, Donn; Hess, Jeffrey. "Nomination of the St. Anthony Falls Historic District to be on the National Register of Historic Places". (1971, 1991). US-DOI-NPS. Retrieved April 1, 2019.
The application from the City of Minneapolis to the National Park Service to place the St. Anthony Falls Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places (it was placed there). Consists of the original 1971 section and a much longer 1991 addition. Has extensive information on the significance of the district and descriptions of "contributing resources".
A heavily footnoted standard history of the development at the Falls.
  • Anfinson, John; et al. (2003). (PDF). NPS. COE & NPS - National River and Recreation Area. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2017. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
  • Danbom, David. "Flour Power - the significance of flour milling at the falls" (PDF). Minnesota History (Spring/Summer 2003). Retrieved July 1, 2021.
  • * "Feasibility Report for Hydropower St. Anthony Falls". Corps of Engineers. 1984. pp. 37, 138–140. from the original on April 19, 2019. Retrieved April 1, 2019.

External links

  • St. Anthony Falls page within the NPS Mississippi National River and Recreation Area website
  • St. Anthony Falls Heritage Board, outlining Heritage Trail and walking tours
  •   Media related to Saint Anthony Falls at Wikimedia Commons
  • U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul District: Upper St. Anthony Falls Lock and Dam
  • U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul District: Lower St. Anthony Falls Lock and Dam

saint, anthony, falls, falls, saint, anthony, dakota, owámniyomni, whirlpool, located, northeastern, edge, downtown, minneapolis, minnesota, only, natural, major, waterfall, mississippi, river, throughout, late, 1800, various, dams, were, built, atop, east, we. Saint Anthony Falls or the Falls of Saint Anthony Dakota Owamniyomni lit whirlpool 3 located at the northeastern edge of downtown Minneapolis Minnesota is the only natural major waterfall on the Mississippi River Throughout the mid to late 1800 s various dams were built atop the east and west faces of the falls to support the milling industry that spurred the growth of the city of Minneapolis In 1880 the central face of the falls was reinforced with a sloping timber apron to stop the upstream erosion of the falls In the 1950s the apron was rebuilt with concrete which makes up the most visible portion of the falls today A series of locks were constructed in the 1950s and 1960s to extend navigation to points upstream 4 Saint Anthony FallsSaint Anthony Falls with the upper lock and dam viewed from downstreamLocationMississippi River into the Mississippi River Gorge in Minneapolis MinnesotaCoordinates44 58 54 N 93 15 31 W 44 98167 N 93 25861 W 44 98167 93 25861 Coordinates 44 58 54 N 93 15 31 W 44 98167 N 93 25861 W 44 98167 93 25861TypeBlockTotal height49 ft 15 m Number of drops1WatercourseMississippi RiverAverageflow rate13 000 cu ft s 370 m3 s St Anthony Falls Historic District 1 U S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtLocationMinneapolis MinnesotaNRHP reference No 71000438 2 Added to NRHPMarch 11 1971The falls were renamed from their Dakota title in 1680 by Father Louis Hennepin after his patron saint St Anthony of Padua The towns of St Anthony and Minneapolis which had developed on the east and west sides of the falls respectively merged in 1872 to fully use the power of the falls for milling operations From 1880 to about 1930 Minneapolis was known as the Flour Milling Capital of the World 5 Stereoscopic photograph of the falls by Benjamin Franklin Upton In winter Today the falls are defined by the spillway the upper dam and the locks located just downstream of the 3rd Avenue Bridge and the Lower Lock and Dam just upstream of the I 35W Saint Anthony Falls Bridge 6 These locks were built as part of the Upper Mississippi River 9 Foot Navigation Project The area around the falls is designated the St Anthony Falls Historic District 7 and features a 1 8 mile 2 9 km self guided walking trail with signs explaining the area s past Contents 1 History 1 1 Industry 1 2 1869 collapse of the Eastman tunnel 1 3 Hydroelectric power production 2 Locks and dams 3 Geology 4 Historic and commemorative markers 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 References cited 9 External linksHistory Edit Albert Bierstadt painted The Falls of St Anthony in 1880 creating an artist s impression of how the falls looked prior to industrialization The falls hold cultural and spiritual significance for native tribes who frequented and lived in the area The falls is an important and sacred site to the Mdewakanton Dakota and they called the Mississippi River hahawakpa river of the falls The falls Haha themselves were given specific names mnirara curling waters owahmenah falling waters or owamni whirlpool mniyomni in the Eastern Dakota dialect and owamniyomni in the Teton Dakota Lakota dialect 8 Dakota associate the falls with legends and spirits including Oanktehi god of waters and evil who lived beneath the falling water 9 A small island in the stream called Spirit Island was once a nesting ground for eagles that fed on fish below the falls Dakota people camped on Nicollet Island upstream of the falls to fish and to tap the sugar maple trees 10 Stereoscopic photograph of the suspension bridge connecting St Anthony and Minneapolis Since the cataract had to be portaged the area became one of the natural resting and trade points along the Mississippi between Dakota and Anishinaabe peoples The Anishinaabe Ojibwe term was recorded as kakabikah gakaabikaa split rock or more descriptively gichi gakaabikaa the great severed rock which referenced the jagged chunks of limestone constantly eroding by the falls 8 11 In 1680 the falls became known to the Western world when they were observed and published in a journal by Father Louis Hennepin a Catholic friar of Belgian birth who had earlier brought the Niagara Falls to the world s attention via a publication 12 Hennepin named them the Chutes de Saint Antoine or the Falls of Saint Anthony after his patron saint Anthony of Padua 12 13 Later explorers to document the falls include Zebulon Montgomery Pike and Jonathan Carver the first Englishman to undertake an exploration of the west According to the John Carter Brown Library Carver s purpose was to map the land to befriend the native Americans and to discover the Northwest passage His journey began in 1766 and in some ways was the precursor of the Lewis and Clark expedition his book was the first popular American travel book 14 Carver created this early image an engraving of the falls in 1778 Mississippi River at Minneapolis in 2008 looking downstream The bridge in the foreground is the Third Avenue Bridge behind it are the Upper St Anthony Falls to the left and the upper lock and dam to the right followed by the Stone Arch Bridge The new I 35W Saint Anthony Falls Bridge can be seen in the background Following the establishment of Fort Snelling in 1820 the falls became an attraction for tourists writers and artists who sought inspiration even if Hennepin s descriptions were not as majestic as hoped for citation needed By the 1850s a romantic Indian legend had become associated with the falls describing a wife whose husband had taken a second bride The offended first wife placed her child or children in a canoe and paddled toward the falls plunging herself and her offspring to certain death as the husband looked on helplessly 15 16 By the 1860s industrial waste had filled the area and marred the falls majesty 9 Further competition over the power of the falls on both banks of the river led to the Eastman tunnel disaster in 1869 which could have destroyed the falls The disaster was fixed with a dike under the falls Industry Edit The first private land claim at the falls was made by Franklin Steele in 1838 though he did not obtain financing for development until 1847 in the form of 12 000 for a nine tenths stake in the property On May 18 1848 President James K Polk approved the claims made in St Anthony and Steele was able to build his dam on the east side of the river above the Falls blocking the east channel Mid 1850s Daguerreotype of St Anthony Falls The dam extended diagonally into the river 700 feet 210 m was 16 feet 4 9 m high and was secured to the limestone riverbed Its thickness tapered from 40 wide at its base to 12 feet 3 7 m wide at the top Steele dispatched logging crews to the Crow Wing River in December 1847 to supply pine for the sawmill and by September 1 1848 sawing commenced using two up down saws He was able to sell the lumber readily supplying construction projects in the booming town 17 The new community at the Falls attracted entrepreneurs from New England many of whom had experience in lumber and milling He had hired Ard Godfrey to help build and run the first commercial sawmill at the Falls Godfrey knew the most efficient ways to use natural resources like the falls and the great pine forests to make lumber products 18 Godfrey built the first home in St Anthony Steele had the town platted in 1849 and it incorporated in 1855 19 20 Sawmills over Saint Anthony Falls ca 1860 By 1854 300 squatters occupied the west bank of the river and in 1855 Congress recognized the squatters right to purchase the land they had claimed The west side quickly developed scores of new mills and consortia They built a dam diagonally into the river to the north which along with Steele s dam created the inverted V shape still apparent today Steele created the St Anthony Falls Water Power Company in 1856 with three New York financiers Davis Gebhard and Sanford The company struggled for several years due to poor relations with the financiers a depression and the Civil War In 1868 the firm reorganized with new officers including John Pillsbury Richard and Samuel Chute Sumner Farnham and Frederick Butterfield 17 Looking northeast across the river ca 1868 As Minneapolis and its former neighbor across the river St Anthony developed the water power at the falls became a source of power for several industries including textile mills wool machinery paper and wood products of which the North Star Woolen Mill was successful Sawmills made the falls a major lumber producing area with the mills largely built on platforms above the limestone cap forming the falls But the dominant industry became flour milling The falls industrialization was also a problem Logs sometimes a hundred at a time escaped from log booms and hammered the falls Diversion of water left parts of the limestone cap dry increasing weathering effects Shafts and tunnels from sawmills and other users weakened the limestone and its sandstone foundation accelerating the falls upriver erosion to 26 feet 7 9 m per year between 1857 and 1868 The falls quickly approached the edge of the limestone cap once the limestone had completely eroded away the falls would degenerate into sandstone rapids unsuitable for waterpower 9 To protect the falls and stop upstream progression a protective wood timber apron was built from the edge of the falls sloping downstream The apron dissipated the energy of the falling water and moved it away from the base of the falls It also protected from errant logs An apron built in 1866 lasted until 1867 The Corps of Engineers completed one in 1880 that lasted until destroyed in 1952 21 It was replaced with a concrete apron 22 The usual flour milling techniques did not work well for spring wheat which is the only kind that could be dependably grown on the rapidly expanding wheat farms in Minnesota and the Dakotas In the late 1860s major milling innovations at the falls were a middlings purifier and gradual reduction grinding both borrowed from Europe Metal rollers replaced grindstones The changes not only solved the spring wheat problem but produced high quality flour in a milling process that was highly profitable 23 24 As the result of the new technology flour mills began to dominate the falls after 1870 25 A diagram showing the recession of the falls between 1680 and 1887 Millers on the Minneapolis side formed a consortium to extract power with the Lowell model in which water was supplied in a large headrace power canal connecting to the millpond above the falls and extending 950 feet 290 m parallel to the river below the falls Mills built on both sides of the power canal diverted upper level water into waterwheel equipped vertical shafts driven through the limestone bedrock into the soft underlying sandstone and then through horizontal tailrace tunnels to the falls lower level This system was very effective and mills lined the canal turning the west side of the river into the country s most densely industrialized direct drive waterpower district 26 The mills on the St Anthony east side of the river were less well organized for harnessing the power and therefore industry developed at a slower pace on that side But the Pillsbury A Mill built on the east bank and completed in 1881 was the world s largest flour mill for 18 years 27 It produced about 1 3 as much flour as the entire west side 28 The mills at the falls were very large and substantially automated 29 By the end of the century they had created the country s greatest waterpower industrial district which was also the country s leading flour milling center from 1880 to 1930 30 By the early 1900s three companies controlled 97 of the falls flour production They were the Pillsbury Washburn Flour Mills Company later Pillsbury Flour Mills Company and now General Mills the Washburn Crosby Company later General Mills and Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company later Standard Milling Company 31 29 The Pillsbury and Washburn Crosby companies were started at the falls 1869 collapse of the Eastman tunnel Edit Main article Eastman tunnel The falls in the early 20th century The early dams built to harness the waterpower exposed the limestone to freezing and thawing forces narrowed the channel and increased damage from floods A report in 1868 found that only 1 100 feet 340 m of the limestone remained upstream and if it were eroded away the falls would turn into a rapids that would no longer be useful for waterpower 32 Meanwhile as the result of a lawsuit the St Anthony Falls Water Power Company approved a plan for the firm of William W Eastman and John L Merriam to build a tailrace tunnel from below the falls under Hennepin Island under the riverbed to Nicollet Island Nicollet Island is 700 feet 210 m or more above the falls The tailrace tunnel would allow waterpower development at the Island This plan met with disaster on October 5 1869 when the limestone cap was breached 9 33 The leak turned into a torrent of water coming out the tunnel The water blasted Hennepin Island causing a 150 foot 46 m section to collapse into the tunnel Believing that the mills and all the other industries around the falls would be ruined hundreds of people rushed to view the impending disaster Groups of volunteers started shoring up the gap by throwing trees and timber into the river but that was ineffective They then built a huge raft of timbers from the milling operations on Nicollet Island This worked briefly but also proved ineffective A number of workers worked for months to build a dam that would funnel water away from the tunnel The next year an engineer from Lowell Massachusetts recommended completing a wooden apron sealing the tunnel and building low dams above the falls to avoid exposing the limestone to the weather 33 The fix for the tunnel disaster was a concrete dike constructed by the United States Army Corps of Engineers The dike was just above the falls and Hennepin Island from right under the limestone cap down as much as 40 feet 12 m and 1 850 feet 560 m long across the entire river channel The dike completed 1876 cut off the tunnel and any possible future bypass channels A separate problem was damage to the falls and its upstream progression To stop the damage the Corps built a protective wood timber apron completed 1880 The Corps also built two low dams completed by 1880 on top of the limestone cap to keep the cap wet 9 The federal government spent 615 000 on this effort while the two cities spent 334 500 34 9 See also Mills District Minneapolis Pillsbury A Mill Washburn A Mill Mill Ruins Park Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company North Star Woolen Mill and History of Minneapolis Minnesota Hydroelectric power production Edit Further information St Anthony Falls Hydroelectric Development Hydroelectric power production also developed early at the falls In 1881 the Pillsbury A Mill added a Brush Electric arc light plant powered from their turbines some other mills did so also In 1882 a Brush hydroelectric central station plant was in use the third central station in the country 35 Edison s Pearl Street Station also started producing electric power in 1882 using steam The waterpower companies encouraged or developed hydroelectric plants Major plants were completed in 1894 1895 and 1908 The first large scale production of electricity in the world was at the Adams Tesla plant at Niagara Falls starting 1895 As waterpower became available it was used to generate electricity After the third plant was in operation in 1908 45 of the waterpower being used was for hydroelectric 36 One of the historic St Anthony Falls plants is still operating River flow is variable and flour production may have to be decreased with low flow rates In the winter mills may shut down because there is not enough water flow So many mills supplemented water power with steam starting with a 1 400 HP steam engine at the Pillsbury A mill in 1884 By 1892 ten of the fifteen mills had supplementary steam power As electricity developed as a power source some electricity was generated from steam to run equipment Using electricity from the St Anthony Falls hydroelectric plants was not very practical because those plants competed for the same water flow But about 1910 electric power was available from St Croix Falls and it was used in combination with waterpower and steam and electricity eventually took over 37 The Mississippi river flow rate changes based on how much rain there is its watershed Starting 1880 dams were created on the Mississippi further north to create reservoirs water could be released to increase flow at times when it would be low This helped both waterpower industries and river navigation The dams were at Lake Winnibigoshish Leech Lake Pokegama Falls Pine River Sandy Lake and Gull Lake 38 Locks and dams Edit The concrete apron over St Anthony Falls is engineered to produce the pronounced hydraulic jump evident in this photo St Paul was effectively the upper limit of commercial navigation on the Mississippi 9 High bluffs on both sides of the river from the River Waren falls and the falls progressing up the Mississippi made access difficult In addition the rapid descent of the river from the falls to below what is now the Ford Dam lock and dam 1 made the river shallow and fast running 39 The Ford dam completed 1917 extended navigation to a little above the Washington Ave bridge with a shipping terminal on the west bank Locks completed in 1956 at the lower dam and around the falls in 1963 extended navigation out of the river gorge to north Minneapolis 9 Since those two locks are smaller than most of the locks on the rest of the river the practical limit for many commercial tows was still further downriver In 2015 the Upper St Anthony Falls lock was permanently closed to stop the spread of invasive species namely Asian carp 40 41 42 43 44 In 1963 the Stone Arch Bridge was altered to allow clearance for the upper lock The St Anthony Falls and the Upper Dam The upper dam horseshoe dam built on top of the limestone cap forming the falls is successor to dams built in the 1850s The dam increases the head for two 45 hydroelectric plants and increases the water level above the falls 46 The water level rise from the falls is 35 feet 11 m and from the dam is 14 feet 4 3 m The lift at this lock 49 feet 15 m is the highest of any lock on the Mississippi 47 The upper pool has a normal capacity of 3 150 acre feet 3 890 000 m3 and a normal level of 799 feet 244 m above sea level The navigation channel required alteration of the historic Stone Arch Bridge which now has a metal truss section to allow ships to pass below The lower lock The Lower St Anthony Falls Dam located about a half mile below the falls was completed 1897 with a water level rise of 20 feet 6 1 m 48 The dam was built for hydroelectric production and included a power plant There never was a falls at this location The dam was rebuilt and locks added in 1956 The rise was increased to 25 feet 7 6 m 49 The new dam is a gravity type hydro electric dam 26 feet 7 9 m in height consisting of a 275 foot 84 m long concrete spillway with four tainter gates The upper pool sometimes called the intermediate pool has a normal capacity of 375 acre feet 463 000 m3 and a normal level of 750 feet 229 m above sea level The upper and lower locks are each 56 feet 17 m wide by 400 feet 120 m long The current around the spillway falls is often swift and dangerous In 1991 a small boat drifted too close and fell over one part of the dam One person on board was killed and one had to be rescued by helicopter 50 Rescues at the site are usually much less dramatic but continue to happen occasionally Panoramic photo from the new Water Power Park visible from this vantage the lower portion of Saint Anthony Falls the concrete wall on the far side of the falls is part of the locks to allow ships to pass the waterfall to the left is the Stone Arch Bridge above it is the Guthrie Theater to the right of the Guthrie are the white silos and reconstructed shell of the former Washburn A Mill now the Mill City Museum to the right of the museum are a series of redeveloped flour and grain mills making up a significant portion of the city s Mills District Geology Edit Sandstone layered under limestone Geologists say that the falls first appeared roughly 12 000 years ago about 10 miles 16 km downstream at the confluence of the glacial River Warren at present day Fort Snelling 9 Estimates are that the falls were about 180 feet 55 m high when the River Warren Falls receded past the confluence of the Mississippi River and the glacial River Warren Over the succeeding 10 000 years the falls moved upstream to its present location The water churning at the bottom of the falls ate away at the soft sandstone eventually breaking off the hard limestone cap in chunks as the falls receded From its origins near Fort Snelling St Anthony Falls relocated upstream at a rate of about 4 feet 1 2 m per year until it reached its present location in the early 19th century In the 6 miles 9 7 km from the top of the falls not including the horseshoe dam to below the Ford dam the river drops 97 feet 30 m all of it the remnant of the original 180 feet 55 m falls The limestone cap gets thinner upriver from the falls and the cap disappears about 1 200 feet 370 m upstream In a short time geologically speaking the falls will reach the end of the cap and become a rapids 9 51 Tributaries such as Minnehaha Creek begot their own waterfalls as the Mississippi River valley was cut into the landscape 52 When Father Louis Hennepin documented the falls he estimated the falls height to be 50 to 60 feet 15 to 18 m Later explorers described it as being in the range of 16 to 20 feet 4 9 to 6 1 m high 9 The height of the falls not including the upper dam is now 35 feet 11 m The river descends downstream from the falls which might add another 10 feet 3 0 m to the falls where they were when Hennepin saw them The geological formation of the area consisted of a hard thin layer of Platteville Formation a limestone overlaying the soft St Peter Sandstone subsurface 53 These layers were the result of an Ordovician Period sea which covered east central Minnesota 500 million years ago 54 Historic and commemorative markers Edit The St Anthony Falls with upper lock on the left The Third Avenue Bridge can be seen in the background Photo taken in October 2005 The area around the river was added to the National Register of Historic Places as the St Anthony Falls Historic District in 1971 It includes 8th Avenue Northeast extending downstream to 6th Avenue Southeast and approximately two city blocks on both shoreline 55 9 56 57 The falls are a contributing resource to the Historic District 22 The district s archaeological record is one of the most endangered historic sites in Minnesota 58 The National Register of Historic Places is facilitated by the National Park Service The national significance of the Saint Anthony Falls Historic District is a major reason why the National Park Service s Mississippi National River and Recreation Area was established along the Mississippi River in the Minneapolis Saint Paul metropolitan area Stereoscopic photo of the falls by William H Jacoby Another view by Jacoby A Heritage Trail plaque nearby says For untold generations of Indian people the Mississippi River was an important canoe route To pass around the falls the Dakota Sioux and Ojibway Chippewa used a well established portage trail Starting at a landing below the site now occupied by the steam plant the trail climbed the bluff to this spot From here it followed the east bank along what is now Main Street to a point well above the falls Water Works park overlooking the falls opened in 2021 59 In popular culture Edit The Falls of Saint Anthony Alto Mississippi Henry Lewis 1847 Thyssen Bornemisza Museum The Falls of Saint Anthony George Catlin 1871 Thyssen Bornemisza Museum See also EditI 35W Mississippi River bridge which collapsed in 2007 List of contributing properties in the St Anthony Falls Historic District Mississippi National River and Recreation Area Saint Anthony Main shopping area St Anthony Falls Hydroelectric DevelopmentReferences Edit The St Anthony Falls are a contributing resource to the Historic District The District includes for example 20 houses on Nicollet Island and the main post office National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 15 2006 Westerman Gwen White Bruce 2012 Mni Sota Makoce The Land of the Dakota Minnesota Historical Society Press ISBN 9780873518833 St Paul District gt Missions gt Navigation gt Locks amp Dams gt Upper St Anthony Falls www mvp usace army mil Mill City Museum History of St Anthony Mill City Museum 2005 Archived from the original on May 13 2007 St Paul District gt Missions gt Navigation gt Locks amp Dams gt Lower St Anthony Falls www mvp usace army mil St Anthony Falls Historic District City of Minneapolis 2006 a b Recipe for a Mill City A Curriculum Kit for Minneapolis Third Grade Students PDF Minnesota Historical Society 2002 Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l Engineering the Falls The Corps of Engineers Role at St Anthony Falls US Army Corps of Engineers Retrieved July 1 2021 Twelve Thousand Years Ago Minneapolis St Anthony Falls Heritage Board archived from the original on February 21 2020 Susu Jeffrey 2000 Preserve Camp Coldwater Coalition Archived from the original on February 7 2020 Retrieved June 11 2008 a b A History of Minneapolis Minneapolis Public Library Archived from the original on April 20 2007 Retrieved May 18 2007 Serge Jodra 2004 L exploration de l Amerique du Nord Exploring North America in French The falls of St Anthony in the River Mississippi near 2400 Miles from its entrance into the Gulf of Mexico jcb lunaimaging com Retrieved September 20 2020 Horsford Mary 1855 The laughing water Indian legends and other poems New York J C Derby pp 23 26 OCLC 697796912 Skinner Charles M 1896 Falls of St Anthony Myths and legends of our own land vol 2 Philadelphia J P Lippincott Co pp 166 167 OCLC 1049906656 a b St Anthony Falls Timber Flour and Electricity PDF National Park Service Archived from the original PDF on August 8 2007 Retrieved May 29 2007 1838 Franklin Steele claims land at the Falls Timeline Minnesota Historical Society Archived from the original on May 3 2003 Retrieved May 29 2007 History of the Minneapolis Riverfront District and vicinity Bridges Minneapolis Riverfront District Archived from the original on June 20 2007 Retrieved May 29 2007 Old St Anthony Mississippi River Design Initiative University of Minnesota Archived from the original on June 28 2007 Retrieved May 29 2007 Kane 1987 p 64 68 69 79 a b Nomination 1971 p pdf 2 Nomination 1971 p pdf 91 93 Danbom 2003 pp 275 278 Nomination 1971 p pdf 33 90 91 Nomination 1971 p pdf 87 71 90 Lissandrello Stephen April 24 1979 NRHP Nomination Pillsubury A Mill US DOI NPS Retrieved July 1 2021 except for one month Nomination 1971 p pdf 94 a b Danbom 2003 p 278 Nomination 1971 p pdf 87 Nomination 1971 p pdf 92 93 Kane 1987 a b Kane 1987 p 63 79 Pennefeather Shannon M 2003 Mill City A Visual History of the Minneapolis Mill District St Paul Minnesota Minnesota Historical Society Hess Jeffrey February 1 1991 Minnesota Hydroelectric Generating Facilities 1881 1928 NPS Retrieved June 1 2019 Multiple sources including Kane say this was the first Hess names two earlier ones and says this was probably the first central station in its own building Kane 1987 p 172 Washburn Crosby Milling Complex West Engine House HABS MN 69 C Historic American Buildings Survey Retrieved February 1 2022 Data pages provide documentation of the West Engine House of the Washburn A Mill Complex in 1986 and an addendum in 2005 after a disastrous 1991 fire The building housed one of two 1000 HP steam engines that provided some of the power for the mill The addendum has history of milling and power technology at the falls particularly for the A Mill It details the use of waterpower and steam and electricity Anfinson 2003 Leech Anfinson 2003 He learned that Minneapolis construct a lock and dam at Meeker Island H R 3080 Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014 congress gov June 10 2014 Retrieved June 9 2015 President Obama approves closure of Upper St Anthony Falls lock hometownsource com Archived from the original on June 10 2015 Retrieved June 9 2015 Upper St Anthony Falls Lock Closing To Stop Invasive Carp minnesota cbslocal com Retrieved June 10 2015 Upper St Anthony lock closing after half a century blame the carp mprnews org Retrieved June 10 2015 Upper St Anthony Falls Lock Closure US Army Corps of Engineers 2015 Archived from the original on June 10 2015 Hennepin Island Hydroelectric PlantA Mill Higher water level was used for navigation and is used by the Riverside steam electric plant upstream Anfinson 2003 highest lift Kane 1987 p 154 Feasibility 1984 pp 28 32 37 Minneapolis Police Honor Four Lock Operators For Rescue Effort PDF August 1991 Retrieved December 15 2019 Feasibility 1984 p 133 The river previously split with two channels around an island where the Minnesota Veterans Home now is Falls on the east channel progressed faster and cut off the west channel Minnehaha falls has cut upstream about 600 feet 180 m from the west channel A history of the St Anthony falls University of Minnesota Archived from the original on May 2 2015 Retrieved July 20 2021 Multiple sections can be linked through the menu at top right Anfinson Scott 1989 Archaeology of the central minneapolis riverfront The Institute for Minnesota Archaeology Retrieved May 8 2007 Minneapolis official promotional site for the riverfront district Nomination 1971 p pdf 21 30 These boundaries were modified in a 1991 revision to the 1971 nomination The revised boundary is shortened at the upstream end St Anthony Falls District Map PDF Minneapolis HPC Retrieved July 1 2021 Current boundary map 10 Most Endangered Places Preservation Alliance of Minnesota 2008 Archived from the original on January 21 2018 Retrieved January 20 2018 Du Susan Eler Alicia September 20 2022 Water Works artist Inkpa Mani resigned amid charges of cultural appropriation Star Tribune Retrieved September 12 2022 References cited EditCoddington Donn Hess Jeffrey Nomination of the St Anthony Falls Historic District to be on the National Register of Historic Places 1971 1991 US DOI NPS Retrieved April 1 2019 The application from the City of Minneapolis to the National Park Service to place the St Anthony Falls Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places it was placed there Consists of the original 1971 section and a much longer 1991 addition Has extensive information on the significance of the district and descriptions of contributing resources Kane Lucile 1987 The Falls of St Anthony The Waterfall That Built Minneapolis Minnesota Historical Society A heavily footnoted standard history of the development at the Falls Anfinson John et al 2003 River of History A Historic Resources Study of the Mississippi PDF NPS COE amp NPS National River and Recreation Area Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2017 Retrieved January 1 2023 Danbom David Flour Power the significance of flour milling at the falls PDF Minnesota History Spring Summer 2003 Retrieved July 1 2021 Feasibility Report for Hydropower St Anthony Falls Corps of Engineers 1984 pp 37 138 140 Archived from the original on April 19 2019 Retrieved April 1 2019 External links EditWheat Farms Flour Mills and Railroads A Web of Interdependence a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan St Anthony Falls page within the NPS Mississippi National River and Recreation Area website St Anthony Falls Heritage Board outlining Heritage Trail and walking tours Media related to Saint Anthony Falls at Wikimedia Commons U S Army Corps of Engineers St Paul District Upper St Anthony Falls Lock and Dam U S Army Corps of Engineers St Paul District Lower St Anthony Falls Lock and Dam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Anthony Falls amp oldid 1146812240, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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