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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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National Eagle Center

The National Eagle Center is a nonprofit educational, interpretive center and museum located on the banks of the Mississippi River in Wabasha, Minnesota, United States, that focuses on education about eagles and the Upper Mississippi River watershed. In addition to opportunities to view wild eagles throughout the year from viewing decks, non-releasable bald eagles are on exhibit at the center as well as interactive exhibits on eagle science and history.

History

The site is located where hundreds of bald eagles congregate to scavenge and hunt fish year round due to a geographic anomaly at the confluence of the Mississippi and Chippewa Rivers. The Chippewa River's sedimentary deposits formed a delta creating Lake Pepin, a naturally occurring lake on the Mississippi formed by the backup of water. The fast running water exiting the Chippewa delta prevents ice from being able to form on much of the Mississippi River in that area during the winter making it a good fishing ground for migrating eagles.

Original eagle observation deck in 2006

In 1989, an informal group of local volunteers called EagleWatch led by Mary Rivers partnered with the Wabasha Chamber of Commerce to develop an abandoned deck built for paddleboats to disembark passengers on the river for eagle enthusiasts coming to see bald eagles. In their first year of operation they tallied more than a thousand people who showed up in the middle of winter to look at bald eagles.

In 1989, EagleWatch incorporated as a nonprofit and worked with the City of Wabasha which functioned as the fiscal agent for both State and Federal funds. The National Eagle Center received Federal recognition in 1998 which cleared the way for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Fish and Wildlife Service and other agencies to assist in its development. The City of Wabasha later dropped its cooperative venture with EagleWatch to manage the Eagle Center, partnering instead with the National Audubon Society. In June 1999 the City of Wabasha contracted with the National Audubon Society to take over operations of the National Eagle Center from EagleWatch for eighteen months but later declined to renew the contract and "severed the ties" when it was discovered that most of the membership fees and donations raised were going to the support the National Audubon Society's State and National programs rather than to the National Eagle Center. The city was also alarmed over the National Audubon Society's decision to change the vision of the project substantially. The City of Wabasha then resumed its partnership with EagleWatch to take over the management of the National Eagle Center in July 2001.

National Eagle Center's former location on Main Street in 2006

In 1999, under its then executive director Mary Beth Garrigan, the National Eagle Center opened a temporary year-round interpretive center in downtown Wabasha in a storefront building that formerly housed a bar. The center included two live permanently injured and non-releasable bald eagles, named Harriet and Angel.

In May 2007, in a partnership with the City of Wabasha, the National Eagle Center opened 14,200-square-foot (1,320 m) interpretive center on the banks of the Mississippi River on the site of the Big Jo Flour Mill at the corner of Pembroke Avenue and Lawrence Boulevard in Wabasha. The facility, designed by LHB, Inc., includes a living aviary, environmental and cultural exhibits, classrooms, auditorium, indoor and outdoor viewing space, and gift shop. In its new building the National Eagle Center provides programming on Environmental Stewardship, Native American history, the culture of the region, and the important symbolic role of the bald eagle in the American military.

Facilities

Aviary and eagles

The National Eagle Center, which houses both permanently injured and non-releasable bald call their resident eagles "ambassadors." The eagles are housed in a climate-controlled interior aviary with glass panels that allow visitors to watch the eagles from a distance. Visitors are also able to enter the aviary when permitted.

Eagle ambassadors

  • Angel - Found on the ground with a broken wing near Grantsburg, WI 1999. Arrived at the Center in 2000.
  • Was'aka - Blind in his left eye due to a tumor, since removed. Arrived at the Center in 2009.
  • Latsch - Blind in his left eye. Was found in the summer of 2016 on the ground near Jacksonville, FL. Arrived at the Center in 2018.
  • Perseus - Traumatic left wing injury (cause unknown). Rescued in the summer of 2021 in Audrain County, MO. He was treated by the Raptor Rehabilitation Project of the University of Missouri. Arrived at the Center in 2023.

Past eagle ambassadors

Bald eagle

  • Harriet - The first eagle ambassador and arrived at the National Eagle Center in 2000. A vehicle collision in 1998 left her left wing badly dislocated and was partly amputated. Harriet died in May 2016 at the age of 35.
  • Columbia - Injured in a vehicle collision that fractured her right shoulder and was found to have nearly twice the lethal dose of lead in her blood. Arrived at the Center in 2003. Columbia died in January 2024 at the age of 22 due to complications resulting from her lead exposure.

Golden eagle

  • Donald - Hit by a car and his right wing was broken in two places. Arrived at the Center in 2008. He died on March 16, 2020, due to suspected complications of a stroke.

Riverfront Amphitheater

In 2023 the National Eagle Center debuted the new Riverfront Amphitheater. This community venue, developed in partnership with the City of Wabasha can seat approximately 250 people and is used for outdoor eagle programs during the summer season. It is also used for private events and concerts and is administered by the National Eagle Center.

The exhibit features a buffalo hide depicting the Dakota creation story and a video commentary featuring the Mexican-American artist Javier Lara-Ruiz (who painted under the Inkpa Mani), the staff of the National Eagle Center (gifted by the Prairie Island Indian Community), a land acknowledgment, and the story of the Dakota People of the Prairie Island Indian Community.

The American Eagle Gallery is the permanent home and exhibition space for the Preston Cook American Eagle Collection. It features curated, regularly updated exhibits showcasing items from the vast 40,000+ piece collection, including original works by John James Audubon and other fine art, historical artifacts and ephemera, government artifacts, pieces representing pop-culture, commerce, the military, and more.

Past exhibits

Native American artifact exhibit

The Dakota Family Theater featured ancestral artifacts of the late Jim Stokes, a descendant of Chief Wapasha III and an active supporter of the Eagle Center. The objects are in a darkened room, when people are present, a light over an item will comes on and the recorded voice of Stokes provides information on the object, then the light will dim and another will activate featuring another object.

Observation decks

The facility provides an exterior 25' high deck, as well as a river-level deck for viewing bald eagles complete with spotting scopes provide opportunity to view wild eagles over the adjoining Mississippi River and backwaters, as well as river traffic and other species of wildlife.

Other facilities

  • Classrooms, lecture facilities and community gathering area
  • Exhibit areas to allow a variety of exhibits
  • preserved animal specimens
  • preserved birds in flight

Events

SOAR with the Eagles

SOAR With the Eagles is a three-part annual festival that takes place during one weekend in March, June, and September and celebrates the Bald Eagle spring migration along the Mississippi River. The festival includes wild eagle viewing, animal presentations, flying bird shows, special exhibits, and educational programs.

Directors

  • Heidi Hughes, 1996-1998
  • Mary Beth Garrigan, 2000-2012
  • Rolf Thompson, 2012-2019
  • Meg Gammage-Tucker, 2020–2023
  • Karlin Symons, 2023–present

References

  1. ^ "Eaglewatch, Inc. - GuideStar Profile". www.guidestar.org. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  2. ^ "National Eagle Center, Wabasha | MNopedia". www.mnopedia.org. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  3. ^ "Minnesota museum tours to take". Star Tribune. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  4. ^ Fremling, Calvin (2004). Immortal River: The Upper Mississippi in Ancient and Modern Times. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 85–86. ISBN 978-0-299-20294-1.
  5. ^ "Lake Pepin". Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 18 November 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  6. ^ "How the National Eagle Center took flight in Wabasha". Twin Cities. 29 June 2019. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  7. ^ Todd, Brian (9 February 2019). "National Eagle Center ready to hatch next big step". PostBulletin.com. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  8. ^ "Both sides proclaim budget victory: Details of the agreement". Star Tribune. 16 October 1998. p. 1A.
  9. ^ White, Ruby (27 June 2001). "Eagle Center breaks ties with Audubon Society". Wabasha County Herald. p. 1 and 2.
  10. ^ "The Eagle is back And Wabasha plans special recognition". Star Tribune. 7 July 1999. p. 14A.
  11. ^ Smith, Michael (2 August 2000). "Grand Opening held for temporary home of the National Eagle Center". Wabasha County Herald.
  12. ^ "National Eagle Center". LHB. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  13. ^ Smith, Mike (9 May 2007). "The National Eagle Center: More than a building, this one has...a "soul'". Wabasha County Herald. No. 5. Wabasha, Minnesota. pp. 1 and 3.
  14. ^ Jun 1st 2007 - 12am, Red Wing Newsroom | (31 May 2007). "National Eagle Center opens in Wabasha". RiverTowns. Retrieved 18 January 2020. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Center, National Eagle (12 September 2014). "Our Eagles". National Eagle Center. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  16. ^ Schmitz, Rob (16 January 2003). "Eagle Center considers its future". Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved 5 September 2007.
  17. ^ "Meet Our Eagles". National Eagle Center. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  18. ^ Du, Susan; Eler, Alicia (12 September 2022). "Artist Inkpa Mani resigns from Minneapolis park project amid claims of cultural appropriation". Sahan Journal. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
  19. ^ "Exhibits". National Eagle Center. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
  20. ^ "A multimillion-dollar donation to Wabasha's National Eagle Center". Star Tribune. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
  21. ^ "He has a real eagle eye — Wabasha man's collection is the largest in the country". Twin Cities. 29 June 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
  22. ^ Jun 1st 2007 - 12am, Red Wing Newsroom | (31 May 2007). "National Eagle Center opens in Wabasha". RiverTowns. Retrieved 19 January 2020. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ McLernon, Lianna Matt (20 March 2019). "SOAR with the Eagles". Minnesota Monthly. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  24. ^ "SOAR With the Eagles returning to National Eagle Center". La Crosse Tribune. 15 February 2023. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
  25. ^ Smith, Michael (23 February 2000). "Eagle Center hires Exec. Director". Wabasha County Herald.
  26. ^ Red Wing Newsroom (22 May 2012). "Business notebook: National Eagle Center introduces new director". RiverTowns. Retrieved 18 January 2020. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  27. ^ Todd, Brian (10 January 2020). "'I check on the birds every day': National Eagle Center welcomes new CEO". PostBulletin.com. Retrieved 18 January 2020.