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St. Croix River (Wisconsin–Minnesota)

The St. Croix River (literally "holy cross" in French) is a tributary of the Mississippi River, approximately 169 miles (272 km) long,[3] in the U.S. states of Wisconsin and Minnesota. The lower 125 miles (201 km) of the river form the border between Wisconsin and Minnesota. The river is a National Scenic Riverway under the protection of the National Park Service. A hydroelectric plant at the Saint Croix Falls Dam supplies power to the Minneapolis–St. Paul metropolitan area.

St. Croix River
The St. Croix River, looking downstream toward Stillwater, Minnesota
Map of the St. Croix watershed.
Location
CountryUnited States
StateWisconsin, Minnesota
CitiesSt. Croix Falls, WI, Taylors Falls, MN, Osceola, WI, Stillwater, MN, Hudson, WI, Afton, MN, Prescott, WI, Somerset, WI, River Falls, WI
Physical characteristics
SourceUpper St. Croix Lake
 • locationnear Solon Springs, Wisconsin, Douglas County, WI
 • coordinates46°23′19″N 91°45′34″W / 46.38861°N 91.75944°W / 46.38861; -91.75944
MouthMississippi River
 • location
Prescott, WI, Pierce County, Washington, Dakota, MN, WI
 • coordinates
44°44′45″N 92°48′10″W / 44.74583°N 92.80278°W / 44.74583; -92.80278Coordinates: 44°44′45″N 92°48′10″W / 44.74583°N 92.80278°W / 44.74583; -92.80278
Length169 mi (272 km)
Basin size7,700 sq mi (20,000 km2)[1]
Discharge 
 • locationPrescott, WI
 • average6,374 cu/ft. per sec.[2]
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftSunrise River, Snake River, Kettle River, Trout Brook
 • rightApple River, Yellow River, Namekagon River, Eau Claire River (St. Croix River), Kinnickinnic River
TypeScenic, Recreational
DesignatedOctober 2, 1968
Part ofSaint Croix National Scenic Riverway

Geography and hydrography

The St. Croix River rises in the northwestern corner of Wisconsin, out of Upper St. Croix Lake in Douglas County, near Solon Springs, approximately 20 miles (32 km) south of Lake Superior. It flows south to Gordon, then southwest. It is joined by the Namekagon River in northern Burnett County, where it becomes significantly wider. A few miles downstream the St. Croix meets the boundary between Minnesota and Wisconsin, which it demarcates for another 130 miles (209 km) until its confluence with the Mississippi River.

 
Aerial photo near Prescott, Wisconsin, where the clearer waters of the St. Croix meet the muddier Mississippi River.

Other major tributaries include the Kettle River, Snake River, and Sunrise River joining from the west, and the Apple River, Willow River, and Kinnickinnic River joining from the east. Just below Stillwater, Minnesota the river widens into Lake St. Croix, and eventually joins the Mississippi River at Prescott, Wisconsin, approximately 20 miles (32 km) southeast of St. Paul, Minnesota.

Geomorphology

The presence of older glacial deposits within the St. Croix River basin proves that the Laurentide Ice Sheet has repeated glaciated this region during the Pleistocene Epoch. Within this region these older deposits consist of gray calcareous tills associated with glaciofluvial yellowish-brown sand and gravel and glacial lacustrine silts and clays of the Pierce Formation and overlying reddish-brown tills and associated sand and gravel of the River Falls Formation. Any glacial landforms associated with these earlier glacial deposits have been destroyed by erosion. These earlier deposits occur as erosional remnants either capping hills or buried by the latest advance of the Laurentide Ice Sheet] over this area during the Last Glacial Maximum.[4][5]

The drainage basin of the St. Croix River last deglaciated between about 19,000 and 14,000 BP calibrated (16,000 and 12,000 14C uncalibrated). During this time, the Superior Lobe retreated from the maximum extent of the Superior Lobe at the Emerald moraine northeastward to Thompson and Nicherson moraine complex at the edge of the Lake Superior basin. During the retreat of the Superior Lobe, a blanket of reddish-brown tills containing beds of fine sand and silt was left behind by the melting of the retreating ice sheet. During glacial retreat, meltwater drainage from the intermediate St.Croix moraine established the precursor to the St. Croix River.[4][6]

The retreat of the Superior lobe into the Lake Superior basin created small, proglacial lakes. Later, these lakes coalesced to form a large proglacial lake called proglacial Lake Duluth, within the western Superior basin. The multiple lake levels of proglacial Lake Duluth included the Duluth level and an older and smaller epi-Duluth level. At first, glacial meltwater drained from the epi-Duluth level and a smaller precursor proglacial lake, named Lake Nemadji through the Moose Lake (Portage) outlet into the Kettle River and into the St. Croix River. The flow of glacial meltwater from glacial Lake Nemadji and Lake epi-Duluth during the retreat of the Superior Lobe caused the rapid entrenchment of the St. Croix River and formation of a strath terrace, known as the Chengwatana surface. As the Superior Lobe retreated, the Duluth level was established when another outlet, the Brule outlet, opened and the Moose Lake outlet was abandoned. The opening of the Brule outlet allowed a massive and sudden outflow of glacial meltwater through the Brule outlet and down St. Croix River and excavation of a deep inner channel, which includes the Dalles, into the Chengwatana surface. This massive flow of meltwater also created the giant potholes of Interstate Park between 10,800 and 10,600 BP calibrated. The Brule outlet was abandoned when Lake Superior Lobe retreated from the Keweenaw Peninsula and opened lower eastward draining outlets. This caused the Duluth level to drop abruptly to post-Duluth levels and water to cease flowing into Brule outlet and down the St. Croix River. The cessation of water outflow through the Brule outlet disconnected the St. Croix River from the Lake Superior basin and created the northward flowing Bois Brule River.[5][6][7]

Conservation efforts

The St. Croix River was one of the original eight rivers to have significant portions placed under protection by the National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968. The upper reaches of the river in Wisconsin below the St. Croix Flowage, 15 miles (24 km) downstream from its source, as well as the Namekagon River, are protected as the St. Croix National Scenic Riverway. The free-flowing nature of the river is interrupted only by the hydroelectric Saint Croix Falls Dam operated by the Northern States Power Company at St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin.

The lower 27 miles (43 km) below the dam, including both sides of the river along the Minnesota-Wisconsin border, were protected as part of the Lower St. Croix National Scenic Riverway. This area includes the Dalles of the St. Croix River, a scenic gorge located near Interstate Park, south of St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin.

Although the addition of an interstate bridge connected to MN Highway 36 was objected to by residents, nearby communities, conservation groups, and the National Park Service, construction of the bridge was authorized by amending the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968.[8] Light and noise pollution are concerns of those opposed to the bridge, who cites the original act that kept such activity to the south along the Interstate 94 corridor. The St. Croix Crossing bridge was ultimately completed in August 2017.[9]

The Wild Rivers Conservancy of the St. Croix & Namekagon is a watershed-wide non-profit advocating for conservation throughout the watershed. Founded in 1911 as an all-volunteer citizens group, it has evolved into a staffed, mature nonprofit organization and official "friends group" of the St. Croix National Scenic Riverway. Its mission is to inspire stewardship to forever ensure the rare ecological integrity of the St. Croix and Namekagon Riverway.[10]

 
St Croix River, MN

Naming

 
St. Croix River Dalles at Interstate State Park, Wisconsin.

Father Louis Hennepin wrote in 1683, from information probably provided by Daniel Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut: "There is another River which falls ... into the Meschasipi ... We named it The River of the Grave, or Mausoleum because the Savages buried there one of their Men ... who was bitten by a Rattlesnake." In the original French, this is translated as "Rivière Tombeaux".[11]

Jean-Baptiste-Louis Franquelin's 1688 map recorded a "Fort St. Croix" on the upper reaches of the river.[12][13] The name "Rivière de Sainte-Croix" was applied to the river sometime in 1688 or 1689,[11]: 28  and this more auspicious name supplanted Father Hennepin's earlier designation.

On Carte de la Louisiane et du Cours du Mississipi (1718) by Guillaume Delisle and on A Map of North America (1768) by John Blair, the St. Croix River—more specifically what was then known as the east branch of the St. Croix River (known today as the Namekagon River)—is shown as the Ouasisacadeba, a French representation of the Dakota name for the St. Croix River. On the 1778 Mitchell Map, the river is simply titled "Ouadeba", which represents the Dakota watpá meaning "river".

The upper portion of the river—originally called the north branch of the St. Croix River—was known to the Ojibwa as Manoominikeshiinh-ziibi (Ricing-Rail River).[14][15] Downstream of its confluence with the Namekagon, the Ojibwa renamed the river as Gichi-ziibi (Big River)[15][16] or Okijii-ziibi (Pipestem River)[17]

At the time of the European settlement of the valley, Dakota and Ojibwe were engaged in a long and deadly war with each other. Consequently, the portion of the river below the confluence with Trade River is called Jiibayaatig-ziibi (Grave-marker River) in the Ojibwe language,[15] reinforcing the earlier "Rivière Tombeaux" name in their language.

On Map of the Territories of Michigan and Ouisconsin (1830) by John Farmer, the St. Croix River is shown as the "Chippewa River". However, by 1843, Joseph Nicollet's Hydrographical Basin of the Upper Mississippi River reinforced the name provided by Franquelin's 1688 map.

History

The river is the result of geologic forces going back 1.1 billion years. At that time, the Mid-Continent Rift rendered the middle of North America apart, creating a volcanic zone. The lava spewed forth cooled into hard basalt. That basalt is what today creates the dramatic cliffs around the Interstate State Parks. About 500 million years ago, a shallow sea covered the area, laying down layers of sand and minerals that make up much of the sandstone bluffs now seen along the river. In the last 20,000 years, glaciers have scraped the landscape and released torrents of meltwater, which carved the St. Croix River's course.

The river has been home to people for thousands of years. A bison kill site in May Township, Washington County, Minnesota is believed to be about 4,000 years old.[citation needed] An Oneota village from about 1200 A.D. has been studied by archaeologists.

At the time of European arrival in the region, the river valley and the surrounding area was occupied by the semi-nomadic Ojibwe, Dakota and nine other American Indian tribes. The Indians lived mainly on wild rice, fish, and game. By the 18th century, the Ojibwe and Dakota were the two primary tribes that inhabited the area, until around 1745, when the Dakota have driven out from the St. Croix Valley as a result of the Battle of Kathio.[11]

Fur trade

The first Europeans to arrive in the area were Sieur du Lhut and his men in the fall and winter of 1679–1680. For the next eighty years, the area was primarily under French influence, and the fur trade grew throughout the first half of the 18th century, with beaver pelts as the prize trade good. French trade in the upper valley was dominated by the Ojibwe and tied to Lake Superior traders, whereas in the lower valley the Dakota assisted in trading with merchants based out of St. Louis downstream.[18] After the end of the French and Indian War in 1763, British traders entered the area and grew in numbers and influence with the help of the powerful North West Company.[11]: 32–35 

Logging

The 1837 Treaty of St. Peters with the Ojibwe was signed at St. Peters (now Mendota) which ceded to the United States government a vast tract of land in what today is north central Wisconsin and central Minnesota, roughly bounded by the Prairie du Chien Line in the south, Mississippi River in the west, St. Croix and Chippewa River watersheds in the north, and a 25-mile parallel east of the Wisconsin River in the east. This opened the region to logging. The river was important to the transportation of lumber downstream, from the areas where it was being cut to the sawmills that processed it. During the 1840s, important sawmills were located at St. Croix Falls and Marine on St. Croix, but as the 1850s progressed Stillwater became the primary lumber destination. During this time the population of Stillwater boomed, several additional sawmills were opened, and the town saw an influx of capital, primarily from lumber companies based downriver in St. Louis, Missouri.

 
Stereoscopic photograph of logging along the St. Croix

In 1856 construction began on a booming site two miles north of Stillwater, which was used to store and sort the lumber floating downstream and remained in operation for over fifty years.[11]: 102  The St. Croix Boom Site is now a wayside rest and National Historic Landmark along Minnesota State Highway 95.

The vast white pine forests in the upper valley provided the forest products that built the towns along with Lake St. Croix, Minneapolis , and St. Paul; the St. Croix along with the forest reserves in the river valleys of the nearby Red Cedar, Chippewa, and Rum provided supplies for the building of Winona, Minnesota, Davenport, Iowa, Rock Island, Illinois, and St. Louis.[18]

The lumber industry continued to grow throughout the latter half of the 19th century, with progressively larger spring drives and consequent dangers to navigation on the river above Stillwater. Logs were frequently caught in log jams at the narrow Dalles of the St. Croix River, and in 1883 the blockade was so severe it took almost two months before the flow of logs was re-established.[11]: 76  The 1886 jam, described as the "jammedest jam", required the use of steamboats and dynamite to clear. At its peak in 1890, logging in the St. Croix River valley produced 450,000,000 board feet (1,100,000 m3) of lumber and logs.[18] The lumber industry continued until the last major log drive in 1912 marked the end of the rich white pine forests of the area.

It was along the banks of the St. Croix, in the milltown of Stillwater, that the state of Minnesota was first proposed in 1848.

Cities and towns

Bridge crossings

 
Train crossing the Soo Line High Bridge
 
A crossing of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad at the mouth of the St. Croix in 1891

Significant bridge crossings of the St. Croix River are listed below, ordered from source to mouth.[19][20]

Commerce and recreation

The St. Croix is a popular recreational river. Common uses include boating, fishing, camping and canoeing. Highways along both sides of the river offer scenic drives punctuated by small towns offering restaurants, shopping (especially antiques, books and gifts), bed and breakfasts, historical tours and other common tourist activities.

Public lands along the St. Croix River include:

Further reading

  • Dunn, James Taylor. The St. Croix: Midwest Border River. (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1965, 309 pp. ISBN 978-0-873-51141-4
  • McMahon, Eileen M., and Theodore J. Karamanski. North Woods River: The St. Croix River in Upper Midwest History. (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2009. xii, 338 pp. ISBN 978-0-299-23424-9

See also

References

  1. ^ Minnesota Forests Resources Council (2013). "St. Croix River Basin" (PDF). St. Croix River Association. Retrieved May 17, 2021.
  2. ^ "St. Croix River". USGS. Retrieved May 17, 2021.
  3. ^ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map. Retrieved October 5, 2012
  4. ^ a b Syverson, K.M., Clayton, L., Attig, J.W. and Mickelson, D.M., 2011. Lexicon of Pleistocene stratigraphic units of Wisconsin. Wisconsin geological and natural history survey technical report, 1, p.180.
  5. ^ a b Syverson, K.M. and Colgan, P.M., 2011. The Quaternary of Wisconsin: an updated review of stratigraphy, glacial history and landforms. Developments in Quaternary Sciences, 15, pp.537-552.
  6. ^ a b Hobbs, H.C., Breckenridge, A., Miller, J.D., Hudak, G.J., Wittkop, C. and McLaughlin, P.I., 2011. Ice advances and retreats, inlets and outlets, sediments and strandlines of the western Lake Superior basin. The Geological Society of America Field Guide, 24, pp.299-315
  7. ^ Johnson, M.D., 2000. Pleistocene geology of Polk County, Wisconsin, vol. 92). Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey. 70 pp.
  8. ^ "Obama gives his approval to bridge across St. Croix River". Star Tribune. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  9. ^ "Thousands celebrate as new St. Croix River bridge opens, Lift Bridge closes". Star Tribune. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  10. ^ "St. Croix River". St. Croix River Association. Retrieved May 17, 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Dunn, James Taylor (1979). The St. Croix: Midwest Border River. Minnesota Historical Society Press. p. 28. ISBN 0-87351-141-7.
  12. ^ Holland, Robert A. Chicago in Maps: 1612-2002
  13. ^ Franquelin, Jean-Baptiste Service historique de la Marine, Vincennes, France
  14. ^ Verwyst, Chrysostom Adrian. "Reminiscences of a Pioneer Missionary" in Proceedings of the Society at its Sixty-fourth Annual Meeting (Madision, WI: Wisconsin Historical Society, 1916). p. 174
  15. ^ a b c Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission. Gidakiiminaan = Our Earth. (Odanah, WI: Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission, 2007) ISBN 978-0-9665820-4-8
  16. ^ Treuer, Anton. Living our language: Ojibwe tales & oral histories (St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2001) ISBN 0-87351-404-1
  17. ^ Armstrong, Benjamin G., and Thomas P. Wentworth. Early life among the Indians : reminiscences from the life of Benj. G. Armstrong. Treaties of 1835, 1837, 1842 and 1854. Habits and customs of the red men of the forest. Incidents, biographical sketches, battles, &c. (Ashland, WI. : Press of A.W. Bowron, 1892) p.254.
  18. ^ a b c McMahon, Eileen M.; Theodore J. Karamanski (2002). Time and the River: A History of the Saint Croix. Omaha, Nebraska: National Park Service, Midwest Regional Office. Retrieved September 2, 2010.
  19. ^ County Maps (Map). Minnesota Department of Transportation. Retrieved September 2, 2010.
  20. ^ Saint Croix National Scenic Riverway: Brochures, Section Maps (Map). National Park Service. Retrieved September 2, 2010.
  21. ^ "Saint Croix National Scenic Riverway: Boating Checklist". National Park Service. August 30, 2010. Retrieved September 2, 2010.

External links

  • Saint Croix National Scenic River (National Park Service)
  • Detailed River Maps (National Park Service)
  • St. Croix River Association

croix, river, wisconsin, minnesota, croix, river, literally, holy, cross, french, tributary, mississippi, river, approximately, miles, long, states, wisconsin, minnesota, lower, miles, river, form, border, between, wisconsin, minnesota, river, national, scenic. The St Croix River literally holy cross in French is a tributary of the Mississippi River approximately 169 miles 272 km long 3 in the U S states of Wisconsin and Minnesota The lower 125 miles 201 km of the river form the border between Wisconsin and Minnesota The river is a National Scenic Riverway under the protection of the National Park Service A hydroelectric plant at the Saint Croix Falls Dam supplies power to the Minneapolis St Paul metropolitan area St Croix RiverThe St Croix River looking downstream toward Stillwater MinnesotaMap of the St Croix watershed Show map of the United StatesShow map of MinnesotaLocationCountryUnited StatesStateWisconsin MinnesotaCitiesSt Croix Falls WI Taylors Falls MN Osceola WI Stillwater MN Hudson WI Afton MN Prescott WI Somerset WI River Falls WIPhysical characteristicsSourceUpper St Croix Lake locationnear Solon Springs Wisconsin Douglas County WI coordinates46 23 19 N 91 45 34 W 46 38861 N 91 75944 W 46 38861 91 75944MouthMississippi River locationPrescott WI Pierce County Washington Dakota MN WI coordinates44 44 45 N 92 48 10 W 44 74583 N 92 80278 W 44 74583 92 80278 Coordinates 44 44 45 N 92 48 10 W 44 74583 N 92 80278 W 44 74583 92 80278Length169 mi 272 km Basin size7 700 sq mi 20 000 km2 1 Discharge locationPrescott WI average6 374 cu ft per sec 2 Basin featuresTributaries leftSunrise River Snake River Kettle River Trout Brook rightApple River Yellow River Namekagon River Eau Claire River St Croix River Kinnickinnic RiverNational Wild and Scenic RiverTypeScenic RecreationalDesignatedOctober 2 1968Part ofSaint Croix National Scenic Riverway Contents 1 Geography and hydrography 1 1 Geomorphology 2 Conservation efforts 3 Naming 4 History 4 1 Fur trade 4 2 Logging 5 Cities and towns 6 Bridge crossings 7 Commerce and recreation 8 Further reading 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksGeography and hydrography EditThe St Croix River rises in the northwestern corner of Wisconsin out of Upper St Croix Lake in Douglas County near Solon Springs approximately 20 miles 32 km south of Lake Superior It flows south to Gordon then southwest It is joined by the Namekagon River in northern Burnett County where it becomes significantly wider A few miles downstream the St Croix meets the boundary between Minnesota and Wisconsin which it demarcates for another 130 miles 209 km until its confluence with the Mississippi River Aerial photo near Prescott Wisconsin where the clearer waters of the St Croix meet the muddier Mississippi River Other major tributaries include the Kettle River Snake River and Sunrise River joining from the west and the Apple River Willow River and Kinnickinnic River joining from the east Just below Stillwater Minnesota the river widens into Lake St Croix and eventually joins the Mississippi River at Prescott Wisconsin approximately 20 miles 32 km southeast of St Paul Minnesota Geomorphology Edit The presence of older glacial deposits within the St Croix River basin proves that the Laurentide Ice Sheet has repeated glaciated this region during the Pleistocene Epoch Within this region these older deposits consist of gray calcareous tills associated with glaciofluvial yellowish brown sand and gravel and glacial lacustrine silts and clays of the Pierce Formation and overlying reddish brown tills and associated sand and gravel of the River Falls Formation Any glacial landforms associated with these earlier glacial deposits have been destroyed by erosion These earlier deposits occur as erosional remnants either capping hills or buried by the latest advance of the Laurentide Ice Sheet over this area during the Last Glacial Maximum 4 5 The drainage basin of the St Croix River last deglaciated between about 19 000 and 14 000 BP calibrated 16 000 and 12 000 14C uncalibrated During this time the Superior Lobe retreated from the maximum extent of the Superior Lobe at the Emerald moraine northeastward to Thompson and Nicherson moraine complex at the edge of the Lake Superior basin During the retreat of the Superior Lobe a blanket of reddish brown tills containing beds of fine sand and silt was left behind by the melting of the retreating ice sheet During glacial retreat meltwater drainage from the intermediate St Croix moraine established the precursor to the St Croix River 4 6 The retreat of the Superior lobe into the Lake Superior basin created small proglacial lakes Later these lakes coalesced to form a large proglacial lake called proglacial Lake Duluth within the western Superior basin The multiple lake levels of proglacial Lake Duluth included the Duluth level and an older and smaller epi Duluth level At first glacial meltwater drained from the epi Duluth level and a smaller precursor proglacial lake named Lake Nemadji through the Moose Lake Portage outlet into the Kettle River and into the St Croix River The flow of glacial meltwater from glacial Lake Nemadji and Lake epi Duluth during the retreat of the Superior Lobe caused the rapid entrenchment of the St Croix River and formation of a strath terrace known as the Chengwatana surface As the Superior Lobe retreated the Duluth level was established when another outlet the Brule outlet opened and the Moose Lake outlet was abandoned The opening of the Brule outlet allowed a massive and sudden outflow of glacial meltwater through the Brule outlet and down St Croix River and excavation of a deep inner channel which includes the Dalles into the Chengwatana surface This massive flow of meltwater also created the giant potholes of Interstate Park between 10 800 and 10 600 BP calibrated The Brule outlet was abandoned when Lake Superior Lobe retreated from the Keweenaw Peninsula and opened lower eastward draining outlets This caused the Duluth level to drop abruptly to post Duluth levels and water to cease flowing into Brule outlet and down the St Croix River The cessation of water outflow through the Brule outlet disconnected the St Croix River from the Lake Superior basin and created the northward flowing Bois Brule River 5 6 7 Conservation efforts EditThe St Croix River was one of the original eight rivers to have significant portions placed under protection by the National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968 The upper reaches of the river in Wisconsin below the St Croix Flowage 15 miles 24 km downstream from its source as well as the Namekagon River are protected as the St Croix National Scenic Riverway The free flowing nature of the river is interrupted only by the hydroelectric Saint Croix Falls Dam operated by the Northern States Power Company at St Croix Falls Wisconsin The lower 27 miles 43 km below the dam including both sides of the river along the Minnesota Wisconsin border were protected as part of the Lower St Croix National Scenic Riverway This area includes the Dalles of the St Croix River a scenic gorge located near Interstate Park south of St Croix Falls Wisconsin Although the addition of an interstate bridge connected to MN Highway 36 was objected to by residents nearby communities conservation groups and the National Park Service construction of the bridge was authorized by amending the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968 8 Light and noise pollution are concerns of those opposed to the bridge who cites the original act that kept such activity to the south along the Interstate 94 corridor The St Croix Crossing bridge was ultimately completed in August 2017 9 The Wild Rivers Conservancy of the St Croix amp Namekagon is a watershed wide non profit advocating for conservation throughout the watershed Founded in 1911 as an all volunteer citizens group it has evolved into a staffed mature nonprofit organization and official friends group of the St Croix National Scenic Riverway Its mission is to inspire stewardship to forever ensure the rare ecological integrity of the St Croix and Namekagon Riverway 10 St Croix River MNNaming Edit St Croix River Dalles at Interstate State Park Wisconsin Father Louis Hennepin wrote in 1683 from information probably provided by Daniel Greysolon Sieur du Lhut There is another River which falls into the Meschasipi We named it The River of the Grave or Mausoleum because the Savages buried there one of their Men who was bitten by a Rattlesnake In the original French this is translated as Riviere Tombeaux 11 Jean Baptiste Louis Franquelin s 1688 map recorded a Fort St Croix on the upper reaches of the river 12 13 The name Riviere de Sainte Croix was applied to the river sometime in 1688 or 1689 11 28 and this more auspicious name supplanted Father Hennepin s earlier designation On Carte de la Louisiane et du Cours du Mississipi 1718 by Guillaume Delisle and on A Map of North America 1768 by John Blair the St Croix River more specifically what was then known as the east branch of the St Croix River known today as the Namekagon River is shown as the Ouasisacadeba a French representation of the Dakota name for the St Croix River On the 1778 Mitchell Map the river is simply titled Ouadeba which represents the Dakota watpa meaning river The upper portion of the river originally called the north branch of the St Croix River was known to the Ojibwa as Manoominikeshiinh ziibi Ricing Rail River 14 15 Downstream of its confluence with the Namekagon the Ojibwa renamed the river as Gichi ziibi Big River 15 16 or Okijii ziibi Pipestem River 17 At the time of the European settlement of the valley Dakota and Ojibwe were engaged in a long and deadly war with each other Consequently the portion of the river below the confluence with Trade River is called Jiibayaatig ziibi Grave marker River in the Ojibwe language 15 reinforcing the earlier Riviere Tombeaux name in their language On Map of the Territories of Michigan and Ouisconsin 1830 by John Farmer the St Croix River is shown as the Chippewa River However by 1843 Joseph Nicollet s Hydrographical Basin of the Upper Mississippi River reinforced the name provided by Franquelin s 1688 map History EditThe river is the result of geologic forces going back 1 1 billion years At that time the Mid Continent Rift rendered the middle of North America apart creating a volcanic zone The lava spewed forth cooled into hard basalt That basalt is what today creates the dramatic cliffs around the Interstate State Parks About 500 million years ago a shallow sea covered the area laying down layers of sand and minerals that make up much of the sandstone bluffs now seen along the river In the last 20 000 years glaciers have scraped the landscape and released torrents of meltwater which carved the St Croix River s course The river has been home to people for thousands of years A bison kill site in May Township Washington County Minnesota is believed to be about 4 000 years old citation needed An Oneota village from about 1200 A D has been studied by archaeologists At the time of European arrival in the region the river valley and the surrounding area was occupied by the semi nomadic Ojibwe Dakota and nine other American Indian tribes The Indians lived mainly on wild rice fish and game By the 18th century the Ojibwe and Dakota were the two primary tribes that inhabited the area until around 1745 when the Dakota have driven out from the St Croix Valley as a result of the Battle of Kathio 11 Fur trade Edit The first Europeans to arrive in the area were Sieur du Lhut and his men in the fall and winter of 1679 1680 For the next eighty years the area was primarily under French influence and the fur trade grew throughout the first half of the 18th century with beaver pelts as the prize trade good French trade in the upper valley was dominated by the Ojibwe and tied to Lake Superior traders whereas in the lower valley the Dakota assisted in trading with merchants based out of St Louis downstream 18 After the end of the French and Indian War in 1763 British traders entered the area and grew in numbers and influence with the help of the powerful North West Company 11 32 35 Logging Edit The 1837 Treaty of St Peters with the Ojibwe was signed at St Peters now Mendota which ceded to the United States government a vast tract of land in what today is north central Wisconsin and central Minnesota roughly bounded by the Prairie du Chien Line in the south Mississippi River in the west St Croix and Chippewa River watersheds in the north and a 25 mile parallel east of the Wisconsin River in the east This opened the region to logging The river was important to the transportation of lumber downstream from the areas where it was being cut to the sawmills that processed it During the 1840s important sawmills were located at St Croix Falls and Marine on St Croix but as the 1850s progressed Stillwater became the primary lumber destination During this time the population of Stillwater boomed several additional sawmills were opened and the town saw an influx of capital primarily from lumber companies based downriver in St Louis Missouri Stereoscopic photograph of logging along the St Croix In 1856 construction began on a booming site two miles north of Stillwater which was used to store and sort the lumber floating downstream and remained in operation for over fifty years 11 102 The St Croix Boom Site is now a wayside rest and National Historic Landmark along Minnesota State Highway 95 The vast white pine forests in the upper valley provided the forest products that built the towns along with Lake St Croix Minneapolis and St Paul the St Croix along with the forest reserves in the river valleys of the nearby Red Cedar Chippewa and Rum provided supplies for the building of Winona Minnesota Davenport Iowa Rock Island Illinois and St Louis 18 The lumber industry continued to grow throughout the latter half of the 19th century with progressively larger spring drives and consequent dangers to navigation on the river above Stillwater Logs were frequently caught in log jams at the narrow Dalles of the St Croix River and in 1883 the blockade was so severe it took almost two months before the flow of logs was re established 11 76 The 1886 jam described as the jammedest jam required the use of steamboats and dynamite to clear At its peak in 1890 logging in the St Croix River valley produced 450 000 000 board feet 1 100 000 m3 of lumber and logs 18 The lumber industry continued until the last major log drive in 1912 marked the end of the rich white pine forests of the area It was along the banks of the St Croix in the milltown of Stillwater that the state of Minnesota was first proposed in 1848 Cities and towns EditAfton Minnesota Bayport Minnesota Danbury Wisconsin Gordon Wisconsin Hudson Wisconsin Lake St Croix Beach Minnesota Lakeland Minnesota Lakeland Shores Minnesota Marine on St Croix Minnesota North Hudson Wisconsin Oak Park Heights Minnesota Osceola Wisconsin Pine City Minnesota Point Douglas Minnesota Prescott Wisconsin St Croix Falls Wisconsin St Marys Point Minnesota Scandia Minnesota Solon Springs Wisconsin Stillwater Minnesota Taylors Falls MinnesotaBridge crossings Edit Train crossing the Soo Line High Bridge A crossing of the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad at the mouth of the St Croix in 1891 Significant bridge crossings of the St Croix River are listed below ordered from source to mouth 19 20 Scott Bridge in Douglas County Wisconsin County Road T bridge in Douglas County Wisconsin C C C Bridge in Burnett County Wisconsin Wisconsin State Highway 35 bridge near Danbury Wisconsin Minnesota State Highway 48 to Wisconsin State Highway 77 bridge near Danbury Wisconsin Minnesota State Highway 70 to Wisconsin State Highway 70 bridge near Grantsburg Wisconsin U S Highway 8 bridge between Taylors Falls Minnesota and St Croix Falls Wisconsin Minnesota State Highway 243 bridge at Osceola Wisconsin Soo Line High Bridge north of Stillwater Minnesota This private rail only bridge is 2 682 feet 817 m long and 184 feet 56 m above the river It roughly marks the northern limit of zebra mussel infestation in the St Croix 21 The Stillwater lift bridge built 1931 between Stillwater Minnesota and Houlton Wisconsin St Croix Crossing bridge near Stillwater Minnesota and Houlton Wisconsin Union Pacific Railroad swing bridge at Hudson Wisconsin Interstate 94 bridge at Hudson Wisconsin Prescott Drawbridge U S Highway 10 at Prescott Wisconsin BNSF Railway lift bridge at Prescott Wisconsin Commerce and recreation Edit William O Brien State Park The St Croix is a popular recreational river Common uses include boating fishing camping and canoeing Highways along both sides of the river offer scenic drives punctuated by small towns offering restaurants shopping especially antiques books and gifts bed and breakfasts historical tours and other common tourist activities Public lands along the St Croix River include Governor Knowles State Forest Wisconsin Saint Croix State Forest Minnesota Saint Croix State Park Minnesota Chengwatana State Forest Minnesota Wild River State Park Minnesota Interstate Park Minnesota and Wisconsin William O Brien State Park Minnesota Afton State Park Minnesota St Croix Boom Site Minnesota Further reading EditDunn James Taylor The St Croix Midwest Border River New York Holt Rinehart and Winston 1965 309 pp ISBN 978 0 873 51141 4 McMahon Eileen M and Theodore J Karamanski North Woods River The St Croix River in Upper Midwest History Madison University of Wisconsin Press 2009 xii 338 pp ISBN 978 0 299 23424 9See also EditList of rivers of Minnesota List of longest streams of Minnesota List of rivers of WisconsinReferences Edit Minnesota Forests Resources Council 2013 St Croix River Basin PDF St Croix River Association Retrieved May 17 2021 St Croix River USGS Retrieved May 17 2021 U S Geological Survey National Hydrography Dataset high resolution flowline data The National Map Retrieved October 5 2012 a b Syverson K M Clayton L Attig J W and Mickelson D M 2011 Lexicon of Pleistocene stratigraphic units of Wisconsin Wisconsin geological and natural history survey technical report 1 p 180 a b Syverson K M and Colgan P M 2011 The Quaternary of Wisconsin an updated review of stratigraphy glacial history and landforms Developments in Quaternary Sciences 15 pp 537 552 a b Hobbs H C Breckenridge A Miller J D Hudak G J Wittkop C and McLaughlin P I 2011 Ice advances and retreats inlets and outlets sediments and strandlines of the western Lake Superior basin The Geological Society of America Field Guide 24 pp 299 315 Johnson M D 2000 Pleistocene geology of Polk County Wisconsin vol 92 Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey 70 pp Obama gives his approval to bridge across St Croix River Star Tribune Retrieved March 15 2018 Thousands celebrate as new St Croix River bridge opens Lift Bridge closes Star Tribune Retrieved March 15 2018 St Croix River St Croix River Association Retrieved May 17 2021 a b c d e f Dunn James Taylor 1979 The St Croix Midwest Border River Minnesota Historical Society Press p 28 ISBN 0 87351 141 7 Holland Robert A Chicago in Maps 1612 2002 Franquelin Jean Baptiste Service historique de la Marine Vincennes France Verwyst Chrysostom Adrian Reminiscences of a Pioneer Missionary in Proceedings of the Society at its Sixty fourth Annual Meeting Madision WI Wisconsin Historical Society 1916 p 174 a b c Great Lakes Indian Fish amp Wildlife Commission Gidakiiminaan Our Earth Odanah WI Great Lakes Indian Fish amp Wildlife Commission 2007 ISBN 978 0 9665820 4 8 Treuer Anton Living our language Ojibwe tales amp oral histories St Paul MN Minnesota Historical Society Press 2001 ISBN 0 87351 404 1 Armstrong Benjamin G and Thomas P Wentworth Early life among the Indians reminiscences from the life of Benj G Armstrong Treaties of 1835 1837 1842 and 1854 Habits and customs of the red men of the forest Incidents biographical sketches battles amp c Ashland WI Press of A W Bowron 1892 p 254 a b c McMahon Eileen M Theodore J Karamanski 2002 Time and the River A History of the Saint Croix Omaha Nebraska National Park Service Midwest Regional Office Retrieved September 2 2010 County Maps Map Minnesota Department of Transportation Retrieved September 2 2010 Saint Croix National Scenic Riverway Brochures Section Maps Map National Park Service Retrieved September 2 2010 Saint Croix National Scenic Riverway Boating Checklist National Park Service August 30 2010 Retrieved September 2 2010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Croix River Wisconsin Minnesota Saint Croix National Scenic River National Park Service Detailed River Maps National Park Service St Croix River Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Croix River Wisconsin Minnesota amp oldid 1131026156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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