Blue Mounds State Park

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For the similarly-named state park in Wisconsin, see Blue Mound State Park

Coordinates: 43°42′25″N 96°11′13″W / 43.7069134, -96.1869728

Blue Mounds State Park WPA/Rustic Style Historic Resources
(U.S. Registered Historic District)
Quartzite bedrock in Blue Mounds State Park
Quartzite bedrock in Blue Mounds State Park
Location: Off US 75 N of Luverne
Nearest city: Luverne, Minnesota
Added to NRHP: October 25, 1989
NRHP Reference#: 89001657
MPS: Minnesota State Park CCC/WPA/Rustic Style MPS
Governing body: Minnesota Department of Natural Resources

Blue Mounds State Park is a 1,826 acre Minnesota state park in Rock County, Minnesota near the town of Luverne. It protects an American bison herd which grazes on one of the state's largest prairie remnants.

The state park is named after a linear escarpment of Precambrian quartzite bedrock, which although pink in color, is said to have appeared blueish in the distance to early settlers. Parts of the cliff are up to 100 feet high. Unusual in the surrounding prairie landscape, they are a popular site for rock climbing.

The park also preserves a 1,250 foot (380 meter) long line of rocks aligned by Plains Indians which marks where the sun rises and sets on the spring and fall equinoxes. It also has a small reservoir for swimming, the only lake in Rock County. The park's interpretive center was once the home of the author Frederick Manfred.

Four structures and one building in the park, built by the Works Progress Administration in the 1930s, are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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[edit] The bison herd

Bison herd in the park in spring
Bison herd in the park in spring

The park's bison herd began in 1961 with the purchase of three animals from Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge in Nebraska. Today there are over 100 bison in the park. To keep age and sex ratios close to that of a natural herd, individuals are sold in a fall auction. The bison range is fenced off, and visitors are warned not to approach when these strong and unpredictable animals are near the fenceline.

[edit] Cultural history

According to local folklore the mound was used as a buffalo jump before European settlement, but no archaeological evidence has yet been found as verification. The soil of the mound was too thin and boulder-strewn for farming, saving it from the plow, although it was grazed.

Parkland was originally established north of the Blue Mound for the purpose of providing work relief during the Great Depression and water recreation. WPA crews built two dams on Mound Creek, creating Upper and Lower Mound Lake (18 and 28 acres respectively), and facilities such as picnic grounds and a beach house. The 195 acre Mound Springs Recreational Reserve opened in 1937. In the 1950s trees were planted around the lakes and campground.

Land was added in 1955 and 1961, at which point the name was changed to Blue Mounds State Park. More lands were authorized in 1963 and 1965 to include the whole of Blue Mound and property to either side. The state bought Frederick Manfred's house in 1972 to turn into an interpretive center, although they let him live there for three more years. Because the house was at the southern end of the mound and the developed part of the park was at the north end, a connecting road was surveyed across the top. Local conservationists argued the state out of this plan several times in the 1970s, citing the impact to the environment atop the mound. In 1986 a road was paved from the house south to a county highway instead, so that visitors to the interpretive center must hike in from the north or drive around the edge of the park to the south entrance.

[edit] Crime scene

Blue Mounds State Park was the scene of a murder May 20, 2001, when Carrie Nelson, then 20, was beaten to death while working alone in the park office. A coroner said the wounds to her head appeared as if she'd been struck with a rock. The killer apparently stole about $2,000 from the park coffers. The case went unsolved for six years until May 2007 when, in a routine check of DNA samples of prison inmates in South Dakota, police found a match with DNA samples gathered from the crime scene. The samples linked Randy Leeroyal Swaney, 35, to the murder. He was serving time for a 2004 burglary.1

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