Difference between revisions of "Powderhorn Park"

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For most of human existence, Powderhorn Park was a wetland surrounded by oak savannas--army surveyors had difficulty establishing where the lake ended and ground began in 1839. This sketch prompted officials at Fort Snelling to name the lake "Powderhorn," after an animal tusk used to hold 19th century gunpowder.<small>(1)</small>
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[[Image:Svc_mayday.jpg]]
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</div> <div style="text-align: center;"><small>'''The May Day Celebration in Powderhorn Park, 2008.  Image courtesy of the Wikimedia Commons.'''</small>
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| For most of human existence, Powderhorn Park was a wetland surrounded by oak savannas--army surveyors had difficulty establishing where the lake ended and ground began in 1839. They sketched approximate boundaries of the lake, and this drawing  prompted officials at Fort Snelling to name the lake "Powderhorn," after an animal tusk used to hold 19th century gunpowder.<small>(1)</small>
  
  
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After a dredging project in the early 1920s,<small>(2)</small> Powderhorn Park raised surrounding land values, and financially permitted apartment building construction around the Park’s periphery—just blocks from the popular Lake Street and Chicago Avenue trolley lines.
 
After a dredging project in the early 1920s,<small>(2)</small> Powderhorn Park raised surrounding land values, and financially permitted apartment building construction around the Park’s periphery—just blocks from the popular Lake Street and Chicago Avenue trolley lines.
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Queer women undoubtedly settled in the Powderhorn park area shortly after this apartment construction.  At the time, the Chicago Avenue Trolley carried commuters into downtown and passed three hospitals<small>(3)</small>, one college, and the “Print District” along the way.  Medical, teaching, and clerical work offered women financial freedom long before equal employment laws—queer women likely took advantage of these occupations to escape the threat of heterosexual marriage. (see also: [[Foxy’s Bar]])
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Queer women undoubtedly settled in the Powderhorn park area shortly after this apartment construction.  At the time, the Chicago Avenue Trolley carried commuters into downtown and passed three hospitals<small>(3)</small>, one college, and the “Print District” along the way.  Medical, teaching, and clerical work offered women financial freedom long before equal employment laws—queer women likely took advantage of these occupations to escape the threat of heterosexual marriage. (see also: [[Foxy's Bar]])
  
  
By the 1970s, the park served as the locus of a separatist “Lesbian” district, one that stood at odds with the “Gay Ghetto” in [[Loring Park]].  In 1982,  Powderhorn was the site of  a “Lesbian” Twin Cities Pride Festival after Pride Committee members removed “Lesbian” from the event’s title.(4)  This split only lasted for the year—the Committee added the “L” word back to its title. Content with this, Powderhorn women returned their focus to the annual May Day Celebration, which has arguably served as a “Lesbian Pride” since its inception in 1975.<small>(4)</small>
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By the 1970s, the park served as the locus of a separatist “Lesbian” district, one that stood at odds with the “Gay Ghetto” in [[Loring Park]].  In 1982,  Powderhorn was the site of  a “Lesbian” [[Twin Cities Pride Festival]] after Pride Committee members removed “Lesbian” from the event’s title.(4)  This split only lasted for the year—the Committee added the “L” word back to its title. Content with this, Powderhorn women returned their focus to the annual May Day Celebration, which has arguably served as a “Lesbian Pride” since its inception in 1975.<small>(4)</small>
  
  
 
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==This entry is part of:==
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== [[Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN: 100 Queer Places in Minnesota History, (1860-2010)]]==
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<small>(1)</small>Akre, John.  "Building a Park Out of a Swamp" From ''Powderhorn Park: Nature, People, and Community.'' Minneapolis: ''THE HORN'' Newspaper, Powderhorn Park Neighborhood Association (PPNA, and the Powderhorn Park Activities Council, 1990.  Page 14.
 
<small>(1)</small>Akre, John.  "Building a Park Out of a Swamp" From ''Powderhorn Park: Nature, People, and Community.'' Minneapolis: ''THE HORN'' Newspaper, Powderhorn Park Neighborhood Association (PPNA, and the Powderhorn Park Activities Council, 1990.  Page 14.

Latest revision as of 05:33, 2 February 2012

Irregularly shaped: roughly between 10th Avenue, 35th Street, 15th Avenue, 14th Avenue, and Powderhorn Terrace

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Svc mayday.jpg

The May Day Celebration in Powderhorn Park, 2008. Image courtesy of the Wikimedia Commons.
For most of human existence, Powderhorn Park was a wetland surrounded by oak savannas--army surveyors had difficulty establishing where the lake ended and ground began in 1839. They sketched approximate boundaries of the lake, and this drawing prompted officials at Fort Snelling to name the lake "Powderhorn," after an animal tusk used to hold 19th century gunpowder.(1)


Urban development extended to this area in the 1910s and 1920s, when the Sears Roebuck Company encouraged individual homeownership and small apartment construction. Consumers could order a fully-furnished home or four-plex using the infamous Sears catalog and pay for it in installments. Large tracts of south Minneapolis contain thousands of these houses and small apartment buildings.


After a dredging project in the early 1920s,(2) Powderhorn Park raised surrounding land values, and financially permitted apartment building construction around the Park’s periphery—just blocks from the popular Lake Street and Chicago Avenue trolley lines.


Queer women undoubtedly settled in the Powderhorn park area shortly after this apartment construction. At the time, the Chicago Avenue Trolley carried commuters into downtown and passed three hospitals(3), one college, and the “Print District” along the way. Medical, teaching, and clerical work offered women financial freedom long before equal employment laws—queer women likely took advantage of these occupations to escape the threat of heterosexual marriage. (see also: Foxy's Bar)


By the 1970s, the park served as the locus of a separatist “Lesbian” district, one that stood at odds with the “Gay Ghetto” in Loring Park. In 1982, Powderhorn was the site of a “Lesbian” Twin Cities Pride Festival after Pride Committee members removed “Lesbian” from the event’s title.(4) This split only lasted for the year—the Committee added the “L” word back to its title. Content with this, Powderhorn women returned their focus to the annual May Day Celebration, which has arguably served as a “Lesbian Pride” since its inception in 1975.(4)



This entry is part of:

Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN: 100 Queer Places in Minnesota History, (1860-2010)


(1)Akre, John. "Building a Park Out of a Swamp" From Powderhorn Park: Nature, People, and Community. Minneapolis: THE HORN Newspaper, Powderhorn Park Neighborhood Association (PPNA, and the Powderhorn Park Activities Council, 1990. Page 14.

(2)Akre, Page 16.

(3)The City Hospital, Swedish Hospital, and Abbott Hospital.

(4)Van Cleve, Stewart. "Twin Cities Pride: History of the Parade and Festival: 1969-2009." Pamphlet: Minneapolis, University of Minnesota, 2009.

(5)http://www.hobt.org/mayday/history/index.html. Retrieved 3/7/2010.

Part of Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN: 100 Queer Places in Minnesota History, (1860-1969), (1969-2010)