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History
About 2000 years ago the Hopewell culture Native Americans lived
in the vicinity, burying their dead in mounds, now located in Indian
Mounds Park. The Dakota Indians later used the same site to bury
their dead. From about 1600 to 1837 the Dakota Indians lived near
the site of the Mounds.In the early 1800s a disparate group of fur
traders, explorers, and missionaries came to the area for the protection
that Fort Snelling offered. Many of these people had come south
from Canada and were of French descent; others had come from the
east after treaties with Native Americans officially opened the
area.
In the early years, the settlers lived close to the fort along the
confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers, but as a whiskey
trade started to flourish, the military officers in Fort Snelling
banned them from the lands the fort controlled, with one retired
fur trader turned bootlegger, Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant
particularly irritating the officials. By the early 1820s the area
had become important as a trading center, a destination for settlers
heading west, and was known as Pig's Eye Landing. In 1837, a treaty
between Henry Schoolcraft and about 200 Dakota Indians displaced
the natives from the site. In 1841 Father Galtier established the
Saint Paul Catholic Church and the name of the settlement was formally
changed to Saint Paul in honor of the newly constructed church and
Father Galtier's favorite saint.
The next 10 years saw continued growth in the area and in response
to that, the Minnesota Territory was formalized in 1849 with St
Paul named as its capital. In 1850, the city narrowly survived a
proposed law to move the capital to Saint Peter when territorial
legislator, Joe Rolette disappeared with the approved bill. In 1854,
Saint Paul incorporated as a city and, in 1858, Minnesota was admitted
to the union with Saint Paul becoming the 32nd state capital.
Natural geography played a role in the settlement and development
of Saint Paul as a trade and transportation center. The Mississippi
River valley in this area is defined by a series of stone bluffs
that line both sides of the river. Saint Paul grew up around Lambert's
Landing, the last place to unload boats coming upriver at an easily
accessible point, some seven miles downstream from Saint Anthony
Falls, the geographic feature that defined the location of Minneapolis
and its prominence as the Mill City. This made Saint Paul a gateway
to the Upper Midwest for westbound settlers heading for the Minnesota
frontier or the Dakota Territory. A cart and wagon road to the Red
River valley was the first manifestation, followed by the establishment
of numerous railroads that were headquartered in Saint Paul, such
as the Great Northern Railway and Northern Pacific Railway, which
are today part of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway. For
well over a hundred years, Saint Paul was a frontier town and a
railroad town. Today it is more influenced by commerce and its function
as the state capital. It has been called "The Last City of
the East. |
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