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Lake Minnetonka - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lake Minnetonka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lake Minnetonka
Lake Minnetonka -
Lake Minnetonka - Map
Map
Location Minnesota
Coordinates 44°56′00″N, 93°34′00″WCoordinates: 44°56′00″N, 93°34′00″W
Primary inflows Six Mile Creek
Primary outflows Minnehaha Creek
Basin countries United States
Surface area 14,000 acres (57 km²)
Max. depth 113 ft (34 m)
Shore length1 140 mi (230 km)
Surface elevation 929 ft (283 m)
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Lake Minnetonka is a 14,000-acre (57 km²) lake in the U.S. state of Minnesota. Throughout its recorded history, the lake has been a resort destination. It is located west-southwest of Minneapolis-St. Paul. The lake's irregular shape with numerous bays means that it has about 140 miles (230 km) of shoreline.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] Early history

The first people of European descent known to have visited the lake were two 14-year-old boys from Fort Snelling, Joe Brown and Will Snelling. They found the lake in 1822 by paddling up Minnehaha Creek, though few people visited the lake in the following 30 years.

In 1852, the lake was given its name by Minnesota's territorial governor Alexander Ramsey. He had been told that American Indians in the area used a phrase sounding like minn-ni-tanka, meaning “big water,” to refer to the lake. The same year, the first settlements were constructed around it, and in 1853, the first hotel was built.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote the epic poem The Song of Hiawatha in 1855, which referred to Minnesota and landmarks of the area such as Minnehaha Falls. This gave the area national interest.

1861 saw the introduction of steamboats; the first one was the Governor Ramsey, named to honor the man who named the lake. Following the Civil War, a rail line operated by St. Paul & Pacific Co. connected to the area in 1867.

The first inland steamboat to have electric lights, the City of St. Louis, was built in Wayzata in 1881. The next year, the largest ship to ever sail the lake was launched; the Belle of Minnetonka was 300 feet long and could carry 2500 passengers. The 1880s marked the steamboats' heyday as tourist destinations. By 1892, the Belle stayed moored at her dock all summer long.

[edit] 20th century

In 1905, Twin City Rapid Transit first connected streetcar lines to the lake. This marked a golden age for the lake, with more rapid growth as TCRT added more resorts to the area and launched their “streetcar boats.” Actually named Express Boats, they were steamboats that shared the appearance of streetcars. At first six, and then seven, such boats would take arriving streetcar passengers and steam them to over twenty different endpoints on the lake. For a time, one destination was the Big Island Amusement Park, about the same size as today's Valleyfair, but it only lasted about five years before it was shut down. Later, Excelsior Amusement Park had greater success, with seasonal operations running from 1925 through 1973.

Crane Island, on the western side of the lake, was organized as a summer cottage retreat in 1907. The Crane Island Association platted a number of lots on the shores of the island and dedicated a commons area in the center of the island. The island had originally been a heron rookery until a storm blew down most of the trees in the center of the island in 1906. The island is now a historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[1]

President William Howard Taft made Lake Minnetonka his summer home in 1911, but business in the area had started going down again by that time. In 1926, most of the Express Boats were scuttled in deep water near the lake's Big Island. On October 26 of the same year, architect Frank Lloyd Wright was arrested for violating the Mann Act while vacationing at a cottage near the lake with a woman who would later become his wife.

In 1946, Mound Metalcraft was created in Mound, Minnesota, a town along the northwestern end of the lake (an area known as "Westonka"), and later changed their name to Tonka Toys.

Express Boat Hopkins on Lake Minnetonka in the early 20th century
Express Boat Hopkins on Lake Minnetonka in the early 20th century

As the century drew on, many visitors came, although some were unwanted. Environmental concerns started to become important after Curled Pondweed (Potamogeton crispus L.) was discovered in 1900. Following decades brought Purple Loosestrife in 1940 and Eurasian Water Milfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) in 1987. The lake also experienced problems with pollution, both from sewage and fertilizer runoff. Lake Minnetonka is now closely monitored.

Even with the troubles, the lake remained a fairly popular destination, with tourist boats from one company or another still operating in the warmer months. One of the old streetcar boats that had been scuttled in 1926, the Minnehaha, was even raised to the surface in 1980 so it could be restored. After many years of volunteer restorative work, it returned to limited service on the lake in 1996 as an exhibit of the Minnesota Transportation Museum, now part of the Museum of Lake Minnetonka.

[edit] Recent history

The lake is mentioned in the Prince film Purple Rain and a scene is featured in which Prince's love interest attempts to "purify" herself in the lake. After she has entered the water, Prince reveals that the water she has entered is not in fact Lake Minnetonka. Dave Chappelle (as Prince) mocked that part of the film in an episode of Chappelle's Show, saying, "Why don't you purify yourself in the waters of Lake Minnetonka?" Since his rise to fame in the 1980s, Prince has lived around the lake area but never on the lake itself. He has had a home on Lake Ann in Chanhassen.

In 2005 Lake Minnetonka gained national attention due to the scandal involving members of the Minnesota Vikings football team. On October 6, 2005, during a cruise on a pair of chartered boats on Lake Minnetonka, certain members of the team were alleged to have performed and received sexual favors with a variety of individuals, leading to widespread criticism of the players and embarrassment within the organization.

[edit] Fishing on the lake

Lake Minnetonka is a premier location in the southern section of the state, and especially the metro area, for fishing tournaments. Its game species include yellow perch, sunfish, largemouth bass, northern pike, walleye, and especially muskellunge (or muskies). There are dozens of fishing tournaments every year, and several of the largest bass in the state have been taken from Lake Minnetonka. Regarding muskies, few lakes near Minneapolis have more, bigger fish. Big Island, a popular lounging island near Excelsior, holds many large fish. Common methods for Lake Minnetonka muskies include bucktails, surface lures and spoons. The best spot for bass and northern pike are quiet coves or bays where there is medium vegetation and zero to very few boaters. Fish these areas with topwaters or suspending baits to get the fish to bite. If that doesn't work, try soft baits like salamanders, worms, or crawdads to get fish in the boat.

According to a popular legend, a sturgeon in excess of 10 feet (3 m) in length has been sighted on more than one occasion in the lake. These sightings have persisted over the last 30 years. The sturgeon is often referred to as "Lou."

[edit] Lake Cruises

Lake Minnetonka is popular for lake cruises. The lake cruises offer views of the lake and dining on a Al & Alma's Supper Club & Charters.

[edit] Geography

Gray's Bay Dam on the lake's east end helps to control the water level. This structure is also called the Headwaters Control Structure of Gray's Bay. The flow over the dam ranges from zero to 300 cu ft (8.495 ) per second or a daily rate of up to 26 million US gallons (98,421 m³). Evaporation from Lake Minnetonka can be as high as 50 million US gallons (189,270.6 m³) a day. According the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District, annual evaporation from the lake is about 30 inches (760 mm) of water, or 11.5 billion US gallons (43,532,235 m³). This is countered by an average rate of 28 inches (710 mm) of rainfall, and 20 inches (508 mm) of run off water.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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