Tidbits

Minnesota Trivia & Tidbits - Page 2

Looking for Minnesota trivia? Try our list Minnesota little know facts, tidbits and trivia.

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—With 12 city parks covering more than 115 acres, Montevideo (pop. 5,346) has earned the nickname “City of Parks.”
—The “Lost 40” in Big Fork State Forest near Alvwood (pop. 74), so-called because of a surveying slip in 1882, contains acres of virgin old-growth red pine and spruce-fir.
—Galactic Pizza, a restaurant in Minneapolis, uses wind-powered electricity and employs servers clad in superhero costumes who deliver pizza in electric-powered cars.
—A 44-foot-tall stucco snowman, billed as the world’s largest snowman, has been a landmark since 1974 in North St. Paul (pop. 11,929). The 20-ton snowman was a gift from the late Lloyd Koesling and is the city’s official logo.
—Online images of streets and homes in North Oaks (pop. 3,883), a private community where residents own the roads, no longer are available on Google Maps’ street view feature. The town successfully enforced its no-trespassing rule on the Internet-based company.
—A popular treat in Tyler (pop. 1,218) are aebleskivers, Danish pancakes shaped like tennis balls, often filled with fruit, and cooked in special aebleskiver pans. The town holds an Aebleskiver Days festival in July.
—The official state fruit is the honeycrisp apple, developed by University of Minnesota plant breeders, and popular for its crispy and juicy texture.
—Karlstad (pop. 794) proclaims itself the “Moose Capital of the North.” Swedish settlers named the town after Karlstad, Sweden.
—The 14,000-acre Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge in Bloomington is near the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and the Mall of America, and is one of a handful of urban wildlife refuges in the United States.
—Immigrants from Luxembourg founded Rollingstone (pop. 697), and the town’s former city hall, built in 1900, now houses the Rollingstone Luxembourg Heritage Museum.
—Married in 1925, Clarence and Mayme Vail of White Bear Lake (pop. 24,325) celebrated their 83rd wedding anniversary in February, making them among the longest married couples in the nation.
—Since 1897, the 102-foot Hermann Monument of a German folk hero with upraised sword has adorned a hilltop in the German settlement of New Ulm (pop. 13,594). In 2000, Congress designated the Hermann Monument to be an official symbol for the contributions of Americans of German heritage.
—For 50 years, Ed Krueger of Wykoff (pop. 460) saved everything—magazines, matchbooks, junk mail, his gallstones and a dead cat—and upon his death in 1989 willed his entire collection to the town. Ed’s Museum is an autobiography of one man’s life.
—In 1878, Swedish immigrant Alfred Josephson opened Josephson’s Clothing Store in Red Wing (pop. 16,116). The store, with its original cabinets and old pine floor, is believed to be the oldest men’s clothing store in the state.
—Founded in 1910, Olsen Fish Co. in Minneapolis is the world’s largest lutefisk processor. The company processes about 650,000 pounds of the Norwegian dried cod each year, then ships it mostly to Scandinavian communities across the nation for lutefisk suppers held during the Christmas season.
—Minneapolis ranks No. 1 in a study of “America’s Most Literate Cities” of 2007. The annual ranking of reading habits in major U.S. cities examines newspaper circulation, number of bookstores, library resources, periodical publishing resources, educational attainment and Internet resources.
—The fabric roof on the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis is 10 acres of Teflon-coated fiberglass and requires 20 electric fans, blowing 250,000 cubic feet of air pressure per minute, to remain inflated. Spectators enter through revolving doors that prevent release of the air that keeps the dome upright.
—The state’s coldest day on record was set on Feb. 2, 1996, when the thermometer dropped to minus 60 degrees in Tower.
—The total area of Orono (pop. 7,538) is about 24 square miles. Land area is 16 square miles and lake area is about 8 square miles.
—Mrs. Stewart’s Bluing has been brightening white laundry since 1883 and is manufactured in Bloomington. A traveling salesman, Al Stewart, began mixing the liquid bluing in his home in the 1870s and sold the rights to the formula to Luther Ford in 1883.
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