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Historic Contexts Study and Phase II Inventory (Downtown Elk River) 2022
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Historic Contexts Study and Phase II Inventory (Downtown Elk River) 2022
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translated as Double river, or b Allen as Parallel river, alluding to its course nearly <br />parallel with the Mississippi. " Upham suggests that the herds of elk found in the <br />vicinity by Pike and later explorers and fur traders account for the present name, and <br />both Elk River and Elk Lake appear on the first map of Minnesota Territory published in <br />1850. <br />This glacial landscape occupies an area of marginal terrain, where woodlands edge <br />prairies. Gravel deposits are common, and the soils are not rich and do not retain <br />moisture well. In general, Sherburne County's soils rank 73`d out of 87 counties in soil <br />productivity' Like much of surrounding Sherburne County, the relatively flat, sandy <br />soils of Elk River Township provided good acreage for grazing and crop raising, and <br />particularly potatoes. Early permanent white settlers seeking farmland found a hilly, <br />forested belt in the northern part of the township, while there was level prairie in much <br />of the southeastern corner. Trott and Tibbett's brooks drain the township from east to <br />west; early historians noted that hay meadows gathered along their edges.' There are <br />several small, shallow lakes, such as Twin Lakes in Section 24 and Eagle Lake in Section <br />13. Small ponds persisted within the Elk River townsit after settlement. One was located <br />at Princeton and Main streets and another at Minnesota and Main. <br />The steep bluffs, island and marsh landscape found by early settlers has undergone <br />great transformation. The natural action of erosion and flooding has been greatly <br />accelerated by mill, dam, and road construction as well as agricultural land use. The <br />dam built by Ard Godrey and John Jameson in 1851 immediately flooded a large portion <br />of Section 32 above the river, a feature now known as Lake Orono. Sedimentation and <br />debris from log booms and sawmilling infilled the channels of the Elk and Mississippi <br />over the first decades of settlement. <br />There are several islands in the main channel of the Mississippi at Elk River. The largest, <br />opposite downtown, encompassed about sixty acres in 1900. W. H. Houlton, J.B. Rogers, <br />and Chase and Frye owned three other islands to the west. In 1902, the Davis Island <br />Boom Company diverted the Mississippi River channel around the Chase and Frye <br />Island, but erosion threatened the riverbank; the channel was subsequently restored. <br />Between 1916 and 1978, Lake Orono served as the generators of electricity for the Elk <br />River Power and Light Company. The lake level was lowered in 1978 to preserve the <br />deteriorating dam. In 1980 the dam was rebuilt. Ice businesses, swimming and boating <br />have also been also enjoyed here.' <br />As noted in the Transportation context, A.W. Jesperson of Elk River had another vision <br />for the Elk River that involved elaborate re -engineering at his Camp Cozy resort to <br />accommodate a golf course and recreational canal. Camp Cozy was west of Lake Orono <br />near a former mineral spring that once supplied bottled water.' <br />Elk River Historic Contexts Study Draft 412002 <br />1I <br />
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