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7.1. HRSR 07-29-2002
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7.1. HRSR 07-29-2002
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City Government
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HRSR
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7/29/2002
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• <br /> Elk River Historic Context: <br /> Transportation,1848-1950 <br /> From the time of its earliest permanent Euro-American <br /> settlement,Elk River has enjoyed a good location along well- <br /> traveled river and land routes.The transportation context <br /> extends from the construction of Pierre Bottineau's trading <br /> post to the completion of Highway 10 after World War II. <br /> The town sites of Orono and Elk River were adjacent to the Red <br /> River Trail,an oxcart route used by fur traders that followed <br /> the east bank of the Mississippi River between St.Paul and <br /> Sauk Rapids and then west along the Sauk River to the <br /> Canadian farming region at Pembina.It was in steady use by <br /> the time that the Minnesota Territory was organized in 1849. <br /> Travelers forded the Elk River near its mouth and followed the -=- ? ', <br /> Mississippi to Sauk Rapids and north. By the mid-1850s,a 150- <br /> mile military road was constructed from Point Douglas near <br /> Hastings to Fort Ripley,on approximately the same route. k <br /> Pierre Bottineau is credited with establishing a trading post at <br /> the mouth of the Elk River,in what became Orono,or <br /> Uppertown.There is no evidence today of the log building � -( <br /> erected on Block 2,lots 5 and 6 of the Auditor's Addition to Elk <br /> TSItp4 �''-u ! J <br /> .: ,..4., �F <br /> River. (Some accounts credit David Faribault with establishing _ . :M_ <br /> • p the post here in 1846,which he reportedly sold to Bottineau.)30 '=_ _ ,, <br /> p Y <br /> The presence of a trading post and the military road was r = -- <br /> attractive to those who made the first farm and mill claims in 7'=` <br /> the area.Bottineau,ever on the move,remained long enough <br /> to build a hotel south of his trading post in Lowertown,or Elk Map of General Government <br /> River. Roads in the Territory of <br /> Minnesota,September 1854. <br /> Pierre Bottineau appears in many developing locales in the A saw mill is shown on the Elk <br /> Minnesota Territory as a trader and speculator. Born in what is River.(MHS) <br /> now Grand Forks,North Dakota in 1817,he was of French and <br /> Ojibwe ancestry.He worked as a guide for Henry Hastings <br /> Sibley and the American Fur Company,for army and <br /> geological expeditions throughout his career,and as a hunter, <br /> trapper,and land speculator and promoter of settlement. <br /> About the time he set up the trading post at Elk River he was <br /> an investor in the original plat of St.Anthony,and was <br /> working as a guide on explorations and hunts. <br /> 31 <br /> Following the routes of explorers and traders,those seeking <br /> good waterpower sites were attracted to the Falls of St. <br /> Anthony as well as other places where tributary <br /> rivers met the Mississippi.Steamboat and then rail <br /> transportation was essential to the distribution of their <br /> products.Steamboat traffic above the Falls of St.Anthony was <br /> initiated in 1850-51 with the Governor Ramsey,which made <br /> the hundred-mile trip between St.Anthony and Sauk Rapids in <br /> six hours.32 <br /> III <br /> Elk River Historic Contexts and Phase II Downtown Commercial Area Study <br /> 17 <br />
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