St. Anthony West, Minneapolis
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The Saint Anthony West Neighborhood is located in northeast Minneapolis, the birthplace of the city.
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[edit] History
The historic neighborhood was established in 1849 on the banks of the Mississippi River as the Village of Saint Anthony Falls. These falls were seen in 1680 by Father Louis Hennepin, a Jesuit who is credited with being the first European to explore the area that is now Minneapolis. He named the falls after his patron saint, St. Anthony of Padua. The neighborhood merged with the new city of Minneapolis in the late 1850s.
[edit] Geography
The neighborhood is within walking distance of downtown and the University of Minnesota. St. Anthony West is also host to Boom Island Park, a 14-acre riverside park. Broadway Street NE is the northern boundary, and the neighborhood extends to Second Avenue on the south. The Mississippi River makes up the western extent and Washington and Fifth streets NE define the eastern boundary. [1]
[edit] Growth
Despite its status as one of the city's oldest neighborhoods, the Saint Anthony West Neighborhood is part of the transformation taking place along the river. Developers have discovered Northeast Minneapolis as a prime location for new upscale housing and commercial projects.[2] To balance the new development in other Northeast neighborhoods, St.Anthony West residents in 2004 revived an arrangement with the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board and the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency to reclaim the 12-acre B.F. Nelson site as a public open space along the Mississippi riverfront.[3]
The Saint Anthony West Neighborhood is also home to the world headquarters of Graco Inc., a manufacturer of fluid handling systems and components.[4]
[edit] Neighborhood Organizations
The Saint Anthony West Neighborhood Organization (STAWNO) is the designated citizen participation organization for the neighborhood. Monthly meetings are open to the public. [5]
[edit] Political Representation
Saint Anthony West is represented by the following people:
City Council (3rd Ward): Diane Hofstede[6]
Minneapolis Park Board (District 1): Walt Dziedzic[7]
Minneapolis Mayor: RT Rybak[8]
Hennepin County Commissioner: Peter McLaughlin [9]
Minnesota House of Representatives (District 59A): Diane Loeffler[10]
Minnesota Senate (District 59): Lawrence J. Pogemiller[11]
[edit] See Also
Armatage · Audubon Park · Bancroft · Beltrami · Bottineau · Bryant · Bryn Mawr · Calhoun Area Residents Action Group · Webber-Camden · Cedar-Riverside · Cedar-Isles-Dean · Central · Cleveland · Columbia Park · Como · Corcoran · Diamond Lake · Downtown East · Downtown West · East Harriet · East Isles · East Calhoun · East Phillips · Elliot Park · Ericsson · Field · Folwell · Fulton · Hale · Harrison · Hawthorne · Hiawatha · Holland · Jordan · Kenny · Kenwood · Kingfield · Lind-Bohanon · Linden Hills · Logan Park · Longfellow · Loring Park · Lowry Hill · Lowry Hill East · Lyndale · Lynnhurst · Marcy-Holmes · Marshall Terrace · McKinley · Midtown Phillips · Near North · Nicollet Island/East Bank · Nokomis East · North Loop · Northeast Park · Northrop · Page · Powderhorn Park · Prospect Park · Regina · Seward · Sheridan · Shingle Creek · St. Anthony West · St. Anthony East · Standish · Stevens Square · Sumner-Glenwood · Tangletown · Ventura Village · Victory · Waite Park · West Calhoun · Phillips West · Whittier · Willard-Hay · Windom · Windom Park
Communities
Calhoun-Isles · Camden · Central · Longfellow · Near North · Nokomis · Northeast · Phillips · Powderhorn · Southwest · University
Commercial areas
Dinkytown · Downtown · Eat Street · 50th & France · Midtown · Stadium Village · Uptown