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Bridge No. 1811 over Kettle River: 1916 1998-08-28 removed 2005-05-17 Rutledge: Pine: Pratt through truss Bridge No. 6422-Saint Peter: 1948 1999-08-05 removed 2003-08-08 St. Peter: Nicollet: Deck girder Bridge No. L1409: 1895 1990-07-05 removed 2016-11-07 Winona: Winona: Stone arch; destroyed in 2007 by flooding Bridge No. L3040: 1878 1989-11 ...
The Intercity Bridge, more commonly known as the Ford Parkway Bridge (and sometimes referred to as the 46th Street Bridge by residents of Minneapolis), is a reinforced concrete arch bridge that spans the Mississippi River between Minneapolis, Minnesota and St. Paul, Minnesota, United States. It connects 46th Street in Minneapolis with Ford ...
Minnesota State Highway 76 over the south fork of the Root River: Houston vicinity: 1949 steel cantilever bridge—at 300 feet (91 m) the longest in Minnesota upon completion—exemplifying a major post-war advancement in bridge design. [5] 3
Pine Creek is a 23.7-mile-long (38.1 km) [1] tributary of the Mississippi River in Winona and Houston counties, Minnesota, United States. Pine Creek joins the Mississippi southeast of La Crescent, Minnesota , directly across from La Crosse, Wisconsin .
Watersheds [1] of Minnesota. Minnesota has 6,564 natural rivers and streams that cumulatively flow for 69,000 miles (111,000 km). The Mississippi River begins its journey from its headwaters at Lake Itasca and crosses the Iowa border 680 mi (1,094 km) downstream.
In November 2008 the Houston Hurricanes won the Minnesota 9-Man Football State Championship. They ended their season with a 14–0 mark. They ended their season with a 14–0 mark. This was the first state championship in school history, with the exception of five state appearances by the girls track team, which included a state title in 2006.
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Ruins of the 1861 house of influential Minnesota settler Joseph R. Brown (1805–1870). Also associated with native–white relations, white settlement and reservation establishment on the upper Minnesota River, and the outbreak of the Dakota War of 1862. [112] Now the Joseph R. Brown State Wayside. [113] 3: Heins Block: Heins Block: August 8, 2001
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