Minnesota
      Introduction   States


Hamline University - School of Law

Capital: St. Paul

State abbreviation/Postal code: Minn./MN

Governor: Tim Pawlenty, R (to Jan. 2011)

Lieut. Governor: Carol Molnau, R (to Jan. 2011)

Senators: Norm Coleman, R (to Jan. 2009)Amy Klobuchar, D (to Jan. 2013)

U.S. Representatives: 8

Secy. of State: Mark Ritchie, D (to Jan. 2011)

Atty. General: Lori Swanson, D (to Jan. 2011)

State Auditor: Rebecca Otto, D (to Jan. 2011)

Organized as territory: March 3, 1849

Entered Union (rank): May 11, 1858 (32)

Present constitution adopted: 1858

Motto: L'Étoile du Nord (The North Star)

State Symbols:

flower
lady slipper (1902)
tree
red (or Norway) pine (1953)
bird
common loon (also called great northern diver) (1961)
song
"Hail Minnesota" (1945)
fish
walleye (1965)
mushroom
morel (1984)

 

Discover Minnesota

  Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New York
New Mexico
North Carollina
Noth Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
Washington D.C
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

Following the visits of several French explorers, fur traders, and missionaries, including Jacques Marquette, Louis Joliet, and sieur de la Salle, the region was claimed for Louis XIV by Daniel Greysolon, sieur Duluth, in 1679.

The U.S. acquired eastern Minnesota from Great Britain after the Revolutionary War and 20 years later bought the western part from France in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. Much of the region was explored by U.S. Army Lt. Zebulon M. Pike before the northern strip of Minnesota bordering Canada was ceded by Britain in 1818.

The state is rich in natural resources. A few square miles of land in the north in the Mesabi, Cuyuna, and Vermillion ranges produce more than 75% of the nation's iron ore. The state's farms rank high in yields of corn, wheat, rye, alfalfa, and sugar beets. Other leading farm products include butter, eggs, milk, potatoes, green peas, barley, soybeans, oats, and livestock.

Minnesota's factory production includes nonelectrical machinery, fabricated metals, flour-mill products, plastics, electronic computers, scientific instruments, and processed foods. It is also one of the nation's leaders in the printing and paper-products industries.

Minneapolis is the trade center of the Midwest, and the headquarters of the world's largest super-computer and grain distributor. St. Paul is the nation's biggest publisher of calendars and law books. These "twin cities" are the nation's third-largest trucking center. Duluth has the nation's largest inland harbor and now handles a significant amount of foreign trade. Rochester is the home of the Mayo Clinic, an internationally famous medical center.

Today, tourism is a major revenue producer in Minnesota, with arts, fishing, hunting, water sports, and winter sports bringing in millions of visitors each year.

Among the most popular attractions are the St. Paul Winter Carnival; the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre, the Institute of Arts, Walker Art Center, and Minnehaha Park, in Minneapolis; Boundary Waters Canoe Area; Voyageurs National Park; North Shore Drive; the Minnesota Zoological Gardens; and the state's more than 10,000 lakes.

Nickname: North Star State; Gopher State; Land of 10,000 Lakes

Origin of name: From a Dakota Indian word meaning "sky-tinted water"

10 largest cities (2005 est.): Minneapolis, 372,811; St. Paul, 275,150; Rochester, 94,950; Duluth, 84,896; Bloomington, 81,164; Plymouth, 69,701; Brooklyn Park, 68,550; St. Cloud, 65,792; Eagan, 63,665; Coon Rapids, 62,417

Land area: 79,610 sq mi. (206,190 sq km)

Geographic center: In Crow Wing Co., 10 mi. SW of Brainerd

Number of counties: 87

Largest county by population and area: Hennepin, 1,119,364 (2005); St. Louis, 6,226 sq mi.

State forests: 58 (nearly 4 million ac.)

State parks: 72

Residents: Minnesotan

2005 resident population est.: 5,132,799

2000 resident census population (rank): 4,919,479 (21). Male: 2,435,631 (49.5%); Female: 2,483,848 (50.5%). White: 4,400,282 (89.4%); Black: 171,731 (3.5%); American Indian: 54,967 (1.1%); Asian: 141,968 (2.9%); Other race: 65,810 (1.3%); Two or more races: 82,742 (1.7%); Hispanic/Latino: 143,382 (2.9%). 2000 percent population 18 and over: 73.8; 65 and over: 12.1; median age: 35.4.

 

[an error occurred while processing this directive]