Minnesota Historical Society - State Historic Sites

State Historic Sites

The Minnesota Historical Society operates 31 historic sites and museums, 26 of which are open to the public. MHS manages 14 sites directly and eight in partnerships where the society maintains the resources and provides funding. Five sites are being held for preservation but are closed to public access, and three are self-guided sites with interpretive signage. Seven of the sites are National Historic Landmarks and 16 others are on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). Seven sites lie within Minnesota state parks, and three are elements of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area.

Site name Image Location Era of features Year added to MHS Management Remarks
Alexander Ramsey House St. Paul 1872–1964 1964 Direct Home of Minnesota governor and U.S. Congressman Alexander Ramsey with original furnishings. NRHP
Birch Coulee Battlefield Morton 1862 !September 2, 1862 Self-guided Site of the Battle of Birch Coulee, the deadliest battle for U.S. troops in the Dakota War of 1862. NRHP.
Charles A. Lindbergh House Charles A. Lindbergh State Park 1906–1920 Direct House of U.S. Congressman Charles August Lindbergh and his son, aviator Charles Lindbergh. National Historic Landmark
Comstock House Moorhead 1882 Partnership Restored home of U.S. Congressman and businessman Solomon Comstock with its original furnishings. NRHP
Folsom House Taylors Falls 1854–1968 1968 Partnership Restored home of businessman, politician, and historian W.H.C. Folsom with its original furnishings. NRHP contributing property
Forest History Center Grand Rapids 1900–1934 Direct Recreated logging camp and exhibits on humankind's relationship with Minnesota's forests.
Fort Renville Lac qui Parle State Park 1822–1846 1973 Preservation Location of a fur trading post established by Joseph Renville.
Fort Ridgely Fort Ridgely State Park 1853–1867 Partnership Fort built to keep the peace around a Dakota reservation, but attacked twice during the Dakota War of 1862. NRHP
Grand Mound International Falls -3 !200 BCE–1400 1971 Preservation Five burial mounds include the largest prehistoric structure remaining in the Upper Midwest, 25 feet (7.6 m) high and 100 feet (30 m) in diameter. National Historic Landmark
Harkin Store New Ulm 1870–1901 1973 Partnership General store with much of the original inventory still on display. NRHP
Historic Forestville Forestville Mystery Cave State Park 1853–1899 1978 Direct Restored town with living history reenactors. NRHP
Historic Fort Snelling Fort Snelling State Park 1820–1946 Direct Portions of the fort have been restored to their original frontier appearance, while later additions served as barracks for soldiers training during World War II. A National Historic Landmark and part of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area.
James J. Hill House St. Paul 1891–1921 1978 Direct Mansion of railroad magnate James J. Hill. National Historic Landmark
Jeffers Petroglyphs Jeffers -1 !3000 BCE–1750 1966 Direct Exposed rocks bear ancient Native American petroglyphs. NRHP
Lac qui Parle Mission Montevideo 1835–1854 1973 Partnership Reconstructed wooden church where missionaries worked to convert the Dakota. NRHP
Lower Sioux Agency Lower Sioux Indian Reservation 1853– Partnership Museum depicting the lives of Dakota people before and after the Dakota War of 1862. NRHP
Marine Mill Marine on St. Croix 1839–1895 Self-guided Ruins of Minnesota's first commercial sawmill. NRHP
Mill City Museum Minneapolis 1874–1965 Museum of the flour milling industry that built Minneapolis, within the ruins of the Washburn "A" Mill, a National Historic Landmark. Part of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area.
Mille Lacs Indian Museum Mille Lacs Indian Reservation 0 !Prehistory–present Direct Museum of the history and culture of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe.
Minnehaha Depot Minneapolis 1875–1963 1964 Partnership Former train station near Minnehaha Falls with "gingerbread" Victorian architecture. Operated by the Minnesota Transportation Museum.
Minnesota History Center St. Paul 0 !Prehistory–present Direct Minnesota Historical Society's headquarters, with permanent exhibits about Minnesota, changing exhibits about national history, and a library.
Minnesota State Capitol St. Paul 1905–present 1969 Direct Tours and exhibits of the state's seat of government. NRHP
Morrison Mounds Battle Lake -2 !690 BCE 1968 Preservation Includes the oldest burial mound in Minnesota. NRHP
North West Company Post Pine City 1804 Direct Recreated North West Company trading post and Ojibwe encampment. NRHP
Oliver H. Kelley Farm Elk River 1850–1901 1961 Direct Frontier farmstead of Oliver Hudson Kelley, one of the founders of the National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry. National Historic Landmark
Sibley House Historic Site Mendota 1838–1910 Direct Homes of Henry Hastings Sibley, Minnesota's first state governor, and fur trader Jean-Baptiste Faribault. NRHP and part of the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area.
Split Rock Lighthouse Split Rock Lighthouse State Park 1910–1969 1976 Direct Clifftop lighthouse on Lake Superior restored to its 1920s appearance. National Historic Landmark
Stumne Mounds Pine City 1968 Preservation Group of linear burial mounds near the Snake River. NRHP
Traverse des Sioux St. Peter 0 !Prehistory–1869 1981 Self-guiding Site of a river ford, the signing of the Treaty of Traverse des Sioux, and a former town. NRHP
Upper Sioux Agency Upper Sioux Agency State Park 1854–1862 1969 Preservation Location of a federal agency established to convert Dakotas to a Euro-American farming lifestyle, but destroyed in the Dakota War of 1862. NRHP
W.W. Mayo House Le Sueur 1859– Partnership Home built by William Worrall Mayo, founder of the Mayo Clinic, and later home of Carson Nesbit Cosgrove, founder of the Green Giant food company. NRHP

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