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Brief History of the South Lake Minnetonka Area…
 The earliest
indication of human activity in and around South Lake Minnetonka
is evidenced by the burial mounds of ancient peoples located in
the area. A hunting and camping ground for many years, Lake Minnetonka
and its surrounding woods boasted sites considered by the Dakota
Indians to be sacred, many of them figuring prominently in their
legends. As pioneers moved west across the Mississippi in the mid-19th
century the Dakota feared increased encroachment. Tribal leaders
asked the national government in Washington to have the Lake Minnetonka
area included in the lands reserved for them in the 1851 Treaties
of Traverse des Sioux and Mendota. This request was denied, and
so the Dakota became silent bystanders as their hunting grounds
were opened to settlement.
 In 1852, tailor
George Bertram traveled from upstate New York in search of prime
western land to purchase and develop. When he arrived in the South
Lake Minnetonka area he wrote:
"I
have selected a site for a village and farming country, that for
healthfulness of climate, fertility of soil, beauty of scenery and
nearness to markets cannot be surpassed by any other locality in
the country, being within twelve or fifteen miles of two of the
most important towns in the territory, and having a front on a lake
navigable for steam and other boats over forty-one miles, its waters
clear as crystal and abounding with fish. The land around the lake
is also supplied with natural meadow, the country is gently rolling
and interspersed with the most beautiful growth of timber that the
eye could wish to look upon, consisting of sugar maple, black walnut,
butternut, white and red oak and a variety of others; also with
wild fruit, grapes and berries of almost every kind; the whole country,
in fact, possessing almost everything that the heart of man could
wish for."
In 1853 Bertram,
his recently formed “Excelsior Pioneer Association,” and builder
Robert McGrath, began to construct homes and businesses in what
is now the city of Excelsior. The origin of the city’s name is thought
to come either from Longfellow’s popular poem “Excelsior,” or New
York State’s motto “Excelsior” – meaning “Ever Upward.” In either
case, the name suggested the optimistic, striving nature of the
community the settlers from the East hoped to build.
The township
of Excelsior was organized in 1858 and originally included land
in what is now Excelsior, Greenwood, Shorewood, Tonka Bay and parts
of Deephaven and Orono.
Early area pioneers included the families of Rev. Charles Galpin
(Excelsior), Lydia and William Ferguson (Deephaven and Greenwood),
Henry Eddy (Shorewood), Peter M. Gideon (Shorewood), and Stephen
Hull (Orono).
 Blessed with
scenic beauty, plentiful game, rich soil, and the immense expanse
of water, the town flourished. Early on, when the town was first
platted, the lakeside “Excelsior Commons” were set aside by the
settlers as a “public pleasure ground,” to be owned and enjoyed
by the citizens of Excelsior in perpetuity. Now over 150 years old,
this expanse of green running along the shore is one of the few
pieces of publicly controlled land continuing to serve such a purpose
today.
Excelsior incorporated in 1877, and soon became an international
tourist mecca, complete with deluxe hotels and luxury excursion
steamboats. Summer homes and cottages sprouted up along the shores
of Lake Minnetonka, their owners often making the daily commute
from Minneapolis by streetcar, swelling the population during the
summer months. Although tourism was the area’s largest industry,
many residents were employed in agriculture, growing berries, apples
and other fruits which were then shipped by rail to markets across
the country. Lyman Lumber Company also employed many in Excelsior,
beginning as a small lumber yard in 1897. From 1925-1974 Excelsior
was home to the popular Excelsior Amusement Park attracting hundreds
of thousands to the area each summer. The park’s ballroom hosted
musical acts from Tommy Dorsey to Lawrence Welk, and in later years,
the Beach Boys (1963) and the Rolling Stones (1964). The Old Log
Theater in Greenwood opened in 1940 and continues today, having
entertained over six million people over the years.
As the years
passed, some areas began to break away from Excelsior Township –
Orono became a township in 1889, and Deephaven incorporated in 1900,
Tonka Bay in 1901, and Greenwood and Shorewood in 1956.
Today, Excelsior’s
historic business district serves the city’s 2,400 residents and
thousands of others from surrounding communities. Shops, services,
dining and entertainment on historic Water Street and the area’s
many historic homes offer a glimpse of the community’s beginnings
and continue to attract visitors today. |