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The Minnesota State Fair is the state fair of the U.S. state of Minnesota.Also known by its slogan, "The Great Minnesota Get-Together", it is the largest state fair in the United States by average daily attendance [2] and the second-largest state fair in the United States by total attendance, [3] trailing only the State Fair of Texas, which generally runs twice as long as the Minnesota State ...
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) This is a list of sites in Minnesota which are included in the National Register of Historic Places. There are more than 1,700 properties and historic districts listed on the NRHP; each of Minnesota's 87 counties has at least 2 listings. Twenty-two ...
300 yards (270 m) to the west an additional three conical mounds and a linear embankment were recorded in 1887 but had also been obliterated by 1911. In 1947 a researcher excavated a trench through one of the mounds but found nothing. He also noted a ring of rocks that may have marked a dwelling, but that too disappeared in ensuing years. [5]
Minneapolis Post Office, Minneapolis, 1933; Minnesota Veterans Home, Minneapolis, 1911; ... Rochester Minnesota State Fair 4-H Building, Falcon Heights. Other cities
Clinton Morrison agreed to donate the old family estate to the Minneapolis Society of Fine Arts. The house was demolished in 1911, and the Minneapolis Institute of Art, designed by the New York firm of McKim, Mead, and White was completed in 1915. [2] The neighborhood surrounding the mansion district is now home to many young professionals and ...
Oldest stone house in Minnesota; Home of Henry Hastings Sibley. [1] Faribault House: Mendota, Minnesota: 1839 Residence Residence for fur trader Jean-Baptiste Faribault; made of stone. [1] Norway Lutheran Church: St. Paul, Minnesota: 1843 Church Oldest Protestant church building in Minnesota; moved to St. Paul from Wind Lake, Wisconsin in 1904
Dangerous Man Brewing Co. in Minneapolis closed its taproom but continues to operate its production facility. Beer Advocate also tallied the openings of 16 new taprooms and brewpubs last year for ...
Bdóte ('meeting of waters' or 'where two rivers meet') [6] is considered a place of spiritual importance to the Dakota. [7] A Dakota-English Dictionary (1852) edited by missionary Stephen Return Riggs originally recorded the word as mdóte, noting that it was also "a name commonly applied to the country about Fort Snelling, or mouth of the Saint Peters," [8] now known as the Minnesota River.