St. Cloud
By Harold Zosel
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About this ebook
Harold Zosel
Harold Zosel is an active member of the Stearns History Museum, where he takes his hobby of deltiology (collecting of postcards) and digs through all the resources in the research center to learn the rest of the story. All of the postcards seen in St. Cloud are from Zosel�s extensive collection.
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St. Cloud - Harold Zosel
author.
INTRODUCTION
St. Cloud began as a multiple birth. At approximately the same time (1853–1855), three different men saw possibilities of a town on the west bank of the Mississippi River.
Gen. Sylvanus P. Lowry, a Protestant, Southern Democrat, and slaveholder, was a fur trader at nearby Watab. Lowry claimed the land from Fourth Street North, the northern ravine, all the way to the Sauk Rapids Bridge. The Upper Town
part of the combination was originally named Acadia, but later it was plotted as Lowry’s Addition.
The second founder, George Fuller Brott, was a professional town site promoter who persuaded other Protestant Republican Easterners to come to Lower Town,
the area between the southern ravine, flowing from Lake George to the Mississippi, and the present-day children’s home.
The third founder was a Protestant Yankee, John L. Wilson, who was here to erect a sawmill in Sauk Rapids on the east side of the Mississippi. Wilson persuaded German Roman Catholic immigrants headed for Sauk Valley to stay in his town, Middle Town,
which was between the other two towns.
Each town had its own steamboat landing, ferry, street names, post office, stores, and school. In March 1856, the Minnesota Legislature granted these towns the right to incorporate. They called the new community St. Cloud. The name came from John L. Wilson, who was fond of reading about Napoleon, who had a summer place in St. Cloud, a suburb of Paris, France.
Soon after, Brott left the community, Lowry died in 1865, but Wilson stayed on to his death in 1910, always working for and promoting his town.
Numerous events in those early years molded St. Cloud into the city that it is today, over 150 years later. In 1867, a private corporation built a toll bridge across the Mississippi on St. Germain Street. Two years later, the Minnesota State Normal School was established for the training of teachers. In 1878, the city purchased the toll bridge and made it free to the public. Four years later, St. Cloud’s main streets were first lighted by gas, and the town received its first public library. A year later, the first telephone exchange opened. In 1884, the city’s waterworks and sewer went online, and a dam was built across the Mississippi River. The town was shaken on April 14, 1886, when a cyclone tore through St. Cloud and Sauk Rapids, causing massive property damage and killing 73 people.
But St. Cloud kept growing. The very next year, the town’s first streetcar line, operated by horses, began regular service. A year later, the city streetlights were switched to electric, and in 1889, the town economy received a boon when the Minnesota State Reformatory was established in St. Cloud. In 1890 and 1891, the Great Northern car shops were built in Waite Park, and the first electric streetcar line began operations.
In 1917, Samuel Pandolfo announced his plan to start Pan Motor Company in St. Cloud. In 1930, the municipal golf course was opened to the public, and in 1934, Whitney Airport opened on land donated to the city five years earlier by Mrs. A. G. Whitney.
Here are a couple of bonus postcards that may stir the memory. Above is the St. Cloud Memorial Armory, which was built by Edward Hirt and Son in 1922. Many a dance was held here, and it was also the home of the city parks and recreation department. It was razed in 1982. Below is a card of the first Pan automobile sold in St. Cloud. It is a 1918 Model 250, which was named so from the fact they built 250 of these cars. In all, approximately 1,000 automobiles were assembled at the St. Cloud plant.
One
INDUSTRY AND TRANSPORTATION
Incorporated in August of 1875, the St. Cloud Granite Company was 1 of 75 different granite companies in the St. Cloud area. The slogan The Busy, Gritty, Granite City
was adopted in March 1913 to promote continuous growth of the industry and the St. Cloud community. The first successful granite company in Minnesota was Breen and Young, and their first order was for corners, steps, and trimmings for the U.S. Customs House and Post Office in St. Paul, Minnesota. The first use of the company’s granite locally was for the foundation and basement of Old Main at the St. Cloud Normal School, which