Whitewater State Park

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Sign at the south entrance to the park on Minnesota State Highway 74.
Sign at the south entrance to the park on Minnesota State Highway 74.

Whitewater State Park is a Minnesota state park in Winona County in the southeastern blufflands area of the state. The 2,700-acre park features scenic overlooks and excellent trout fishing in the spring fed Whitewater River and Trout Run Creek. It has about 300,000 visitors annually, and is located 7 miles (11 km) north of St. Charles, Minnesota on Minnesota State Highway 74 which runs through the park.

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[edit] Wildlife

Nearly 50 kinds of mammals and 250 kinds of birds use the Whitewater River Valley during the course of a year. Wild turkeys are in the valley and bald eagles can be found year-round. In the spring, listen and look for the rare bird, the Louisiana waterthrush. Of Minnesota's rare animals and plants, 43 percent live in the Blufflands.

The branches of the river are stocked with Rainbow Trout and have naturally reproducing populations of Brown Trout. The middle branch of the river, located in the park, is a popular destination for fly fishing in southeast Minnesota.

[edit] Geology

Nearly 450 million years ago, shallow seas covered most of North America, including southeastern Minnesota. On its bed, sediment accumulated that turned into rock hundreds of feet thick. When the sea withdrew, erosion carved through the bedrock, creating the original valleys and bluffs found in what is now Whitewater State Park. More recently, glacial meltwaters sculpted the cliffs and valleys.

[edit] History

Whitewater River flowing under a bridge in the park.
Whitewater River flowing under a bridge in the park.

Lakota Indians named the river Whitewater because it turned milky white in the spring as high water eroded light-colored clay deposits along its banks. In 1851, a treaty opened up most of southern Minnesota for white settlement, including the Whitewater area. Settlers removed much of the native vegetation in order to farm and graze the land. In 1900, flooding related to land use began. Almost two decades later, local citizens lobbied successfully to establish Whitewater State Park to protect some of the most beautiful parts of the valley. Many of the facilities in the park were developed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in two separate camps between 1934 and 1935. Later, the Works Progress Administration established a camp in the state park and continued development of the park. Twenty-nine Rustic Style buildings and structures are listed in a historic district as part of the National Register of Historic Places. After World War II started, German prisoners of war who worked at local farms were housed in the CCC/WPA camp buildings. These buildings were later destroyed in a tornado in 1953.

Due to land use practices that were unsuited to the Blufflands rough landscape, flooding increased through the 1920s and 1930s leading to the abandonment of valley farms and towns. In 1938 the nearby town of Beaver flooded 28 times, marking the worst year of flooding in Whitewater Valley. In the early 1940s, state and federal conservation officials worked with local landowners and implemented sweeping conservation measures. Richard Dorer of the Minnesota Department of Conservation (now the Department of Natural Resources) designed a plan for the revival of the Whitewater River Valley. Grass, shrubs, and trees were planted on the slopes. On the uplands, contoured fields and terraces were laid out. Dikes were built forming ponds. The burning of hillside forests was banned. Some erosion-prone lands were purchased, which now makes up the 28,000 acre Whitewater Wildlife Management Area adjacent to Whitewater State Park. Today, through the Whitewater Watershed Project, citizens and conservation staff are working together to create a healthier future for the land, water, and people of the Whitewater watershed.

[edit] Landscape

When settlers arrived, they found a great diversity of plant life in the Blufflands Landscape Region. In the valleys, they discovered a rich, bottomland forest with clean, spring-fed streams teeming with native brook trout. Oaks grew on some slopes with maple and basswood trees on other slopes. South facing hillsides were covered with prairie. Much of the uplands contained oak savanna, gently rolling prairie with scattered oaks. This Southern Oak Barrens Landscape Region is one of the rarest vegetative community types in Minnesota.

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