Myre-Big Island State Park
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Myre-Big Island State Park is a 1,578 acre Minnesota state park just outside the city of Albert Lea. The park protects 8 miles of shoreline on Albert Lea Lake. The nucleus of the park is Big Island, a 117 acre island attached to the mainland by a causeway. In turn a causeway connects Big Island to Small Island.
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[edit] Natural history
The park is situated on the Bemis Moraine, which marks the southern extent of a glacial lobe during the Wisconsin glaciation 10,000 years ago. As the glacier retreated, the moraine caused the meltwater to back up behind it. Albert Lea Lake was created as a moraine dammed lake and today covers 2,600 acres. The park also contains an esker, a sinuous ridge of sand and gravel dropped by a stream running under the glacier.
The mainland is primarily vegetated in oak savanna with several wetlands. Restoration ecology projects, including controlled burning and water retention strategies, are ongoing to maintain and improve these habitats. Big Island, protected from the wildfires that suppressed tree growth in the savannas and prairie of southern Minnesota, bears an old growth hardwood forest. It is comprised of maple, basswood, elm, green ash, ironwood, and red oak, with willows along the lakeshore. Albert Lea Lake is highly eutrophic. Moraine dammed lakes typically fill in, but this process has been exacerbated by agricultural runoff.
Myre-Big Island State Park is known for its birdwatching opportunities, especially during the spring and fall migration. One particularly notable species the white pelicans which congregate on Albert Lea Lake.
[edit] Cultural history
Artifacts, many of them collected by a local amateur archaeologist named Owen Johnson in the mid-1940s, reveal that humans have been living around the area’s lakes for 9,000 years. Johnson became an advocate for protecting Big Island as a state park, as did state Senator Helmer Myre, another resident of Albert Lea. At the time Big Island was divided into seventeen privately owned lots, and some of the owners were considering logging their trees. In 1947 a bill backed by Myre easily passed through the Minnesota Legislature which authorized the Department of Conservation to acquire the 117 acre island. An organization of local supporters raised additional funds to buy out the current owners and develop a picnic ground and trails. While referred to as Big Island State Park, the park did not receive an official name until 1953, when it was formally dubbed Myre State Park to honor the senator, who had died two years previously.
In the early 1960s a campground was added, but Big Island was too small to support much visitation. When it was announced that Interstates 90 and 35 would intersect near Albert Lea, a new local organization began pushing for more land to be added to the park. 839 additional acres on the mainland were authorized in 1963. In 1974 a real estate company acquired for development a 560 acre tract northeast of the park, which included lakeshore and the esker. Again strong local support was the driving force in adding this land to the park, overcoming legal and financial constraints over a two-year advocacy.
Owen Johnson donated his collection of Native American surface artifacts to the park in 1972. They are housed in the Owen Johnson Interpretive Center at the park entrance, where they are available for research but are not currently on public display. In 1990 the park’s previous names were combined into the new official moniker, Myre-Big Island State Park.
[edit] Recreation
- Boating:
- Boat ramp on Little Island.
- Rental canoes available.
- Boat tours of Albert Lea Lake embark from town.
- Camping:
- Big Island Campground: 34 wooded sites (17 with electrical hookups), 1 camper cabin.
- White Fox Campground: 59 open sites (15 electrical).
- Little Island Pioneer Group Camp: 50 person capacity, tenting only.
- New York Point Group Camp: Tent or vehicle camping with access to kitchen/mess hall & showers/restrooms.
- 4 backpacking sites.
- Fishing: Black bullhead, carp, northern pike, and various panfish in Albert Lea Lake.
- Trails: 16 miles of hiking, 7 miles of mountain biking, 8 miles of cross-country skiing, and 7 miles of snowmobiling trails.
- Blazing Star State Trail: 6.5 miles of paved, multi-use trail begin in Frank Hall Park in Albert Lea and end near the esker. The trail is planned to extend 20 miles to Austin, Minnesota.
- Lake is too shallow and weedy for swimming.
[edit] External links
- Myre-Big Island State Park website
- Maps and aerial photos
- WikiSatellite view at WikiMapia
- Street map from MapQuest or Google Local
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA
- Satellite image from Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth
[edit] References
- Arthur, Anne. Minnesota's State Parks. Adventure Publications, Inc.: Cambridge, MN, 1998.
- Bewer, Tim. Moon Handbooks: Minnesota. Avalon Travel Publishing: Emeryville, CA, 2004.
- Meyer, Roy W. Everyone's Country Estate: A History of Minnesota's State Parks. Minnesota Historical Society Press: St. Paul, 1991.
- Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2006. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Web Site (online).