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• <br /> The confluence of the Elk and Mississippi rivers was a well- <br /> known locale to Indians,fur traders and explorers for centuries <br /> before permanent Euro-American settlement.Historian <br /> Warren Upham wrote that Elk River was called the St.Francis <br /> River by eighteenth-and nineteenth-century explorers <br /> including Carver,Pike,Long and Schoolcraft.Beltrami and <br /> Nicollet,he notes,"used a Ojibway name for Elk River, <br /> translated as Double River,or by Allen as Parallel River, <br /> alluding to its course nearly parallel with the Mississippi.i' <br /> Upham suggests that the herds of elk found in the vicinity by <br /> Pike and later explorers and fur traders account for the present <br /> name,and both Elk River and Elk Lake appear on the first map <br /> of Minnesota Territory published in 1850. <br /> This glacial landscape occupies an area of marginal terrain, <br /> where woodlands edge prairies.Gravel deposits are common, <br /> and the soils are not rich and do not retain moisture well.Like <br /> much of surrounding Sherburne County,the relatively flat, <br /> sandy soils of Elk River Township provided good acreage for <br /> grazing and crop raising,and particularly potatoes. <br /> Early permanent Euro-American settlers seeking farmland <br /> found a hilly,forested belt in the northern part of the <br /> township,while there was level prairie in much of the <br /> southeastern corner.Trott and Tibbett's brooks drain the <br /> township from east to west;early historians noted that hay <br /> meadows gathered along their edges.' There are several small, <br /> shallow lakes,such as Twin Lakes in Section 24 and Eagle Lake <br /> • in Section 13. Small ponds persisted within the Elk River <br /> townsite after settlement.One was located at Jackson and Main <br /> streets and another at Minnesota and Main. <br /> The steep bluffs and island and marsh landscape found by <br /> early settlers has undergone great transformation. The natural <br /> action of erosion and flooding has been greatly accelerated by <br /> mill,dam,and road construction as well as agricultural land <br /> use and gravel mining. The dam built by Ard Godfrey and <br /> John Jameson in 1851 immediately flooded a large portion of <br /> Section 32 above the river,a feature now known as Lake <br /> Orono.Sedimentation and debris from log booms and saw <br /> milling infilled the channels of the Elk and Mississippi during <br /> the first decades of settlement. <br /> There are several islands in the main channel of the Mississippi <br /> at Elk River.The largest,opposite downtown,encompassed <br /> about sixty acres in 1900.W.H.Houlton,J.B.Rogers,and <br /> • <br /> Elk River Historic Contexts and Phase II Downtown Commercial Area Study <br /> 8 <br />