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Sauk Rapids (/ s ɔː k / SAWK) [4] is a city in Benton County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 13,862 at the 2020 census [ 5 ] and is 13,896 according to 2021 census estimates, [ 6 ] about a third of Benton County's population.
The Sauk Rapids Regional Bridge is a bridge spanning the Mississippi River in the U. S. city of Sauk Rapids, Minnesota. Construction began on September 26, 2005; the bridge was completed in September 2007 and opened to traffic on October 23, 2007. The official dedication and ribbon-cutting ceremony took place on November 16, 2007.
Sauk Rapids Township, Benton County, Minnesota, a township in Benton County, Minnesota, United States Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sauk Rapids .
Its county seat for many years was Sauk Rapids, at the confluence of the Sauk and Mississippi Rivers. The county seat moved to Watab in 1856 and returned to Sauk Rapids in 1859. Sauk Rapids became the terminus of a railroad line in 1874, but was destroyed by a tornado in 1886. In 1897 the county seat moved to Foley, where it remains.
With the opening of the new Sauk Rapids Regional Bridge, located a short distance upstream, on October 23, 2007, the Sauk Rapids Bridge had been closed to all traffic. After the collapse of the I-35W Mississippi River bridge in Minneapolis on August 1, 2007, Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty ordered the Sauk Rapids Bridge and two other bridges in ...
More: Sauk Rapids halts rental property permits due to overconcentration, neighborhood impact. Heat Hog is the only tiltable portable heater allowing you to direct the heat; it helps you stay warm ...
Sauk Rapids Township is a township in Benton County, Minnesota, United States near the Mississippi River. The population was 584 at the 2010 census. [3] History
Municipal auditorium built 1933–34, one of Minnesota's few surviving projects by the short-lived Civil Works Administration, and an example of the refined but low-cost public buildings the New Deal brought to small Minnesota towns. [40] 4: Anna J. Scofield Memorial Auditorium and Harold E. Thorson Memorial Library