Shakopee Historic District
The western end of the district has been developed into Shakopee's Memorial Park, while the eastern side is The Landing, a living history village operated by Three Rivers Park District.
History
Native Americans were using the site as far back as 300 BCE. Over the centuries they constructed numerous mounds. By the late 17th century, the occupants can be identified as members of the Santee band of Eastern Dakota. By at least 1800, the village was led by a series of successive chiefs named Shakopee. This village of bark lodges and cornfields is well represented in the writings of early Euro-American explorers and settlers, such as Stephen Harriman Long, who passed through in 1823. Beginning in 1839 a Native American trained in European agricultural methods was sent to the village. In 1844 Oliver Faribault, the biracial son of trader Jean-Baptiste Faribault, moved to the area and built the first European-style house in what would become Scott County. Two years later Chief Shakopee II invited Protestant missionary Samuel W. Pond to move there to open a school and mission. In 1858 a warband of Ojibwe attacked the village in what became known as the Battle of Shakopee. Samuel Pond's two sons built a gristmill in 1875 that remains extant.
The area began to be developed as an open-air museum in 1969. Oliver Faribault's cabin was moved onto the property, as were four buildings from the farm of an early German immigrant family, the Bergers. Numerous historical buildings and some replicas have been added since.
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Prehistoric burial mounds
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Site of Murphy's Landing
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Ruins of Murphy's Inn
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The Pond Gristmill
See also
References
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ Grossman, John (1970-03-10). National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form: Shakopee Historic District. National Park Service. Retrieved 2023-12-19. With five accompanying photos from 1972
- ^ Folwell, William Watts (1921). A History of Minnesota. Vol. 1. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society. pp. 197–8.
- ^ "History of Shakopee". City of Shakopee. Retrieved 2023-12-19.