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[[Image:Lake_Louise_Minnesota.jpg|thumb|The [[dam]] on the [[Upper Iowa River|Little Iowa River]] that creates Lake Louise.|300px|right]]
[[Image:Lake_Louise_Minnesota.jpg|thumb|The [[dam]] on the [[Upper Iowa River|Little Iowa River]] that creates Lake Louise.|300px|right]]
'''Lake Louise State Park''' is a [[List of Minnesota state parks|Minnesota State Park]] just north of the [[Iowa]] border near the small town of [[Le Roy, Minnesota|Le Roy]] in [[Mower County, Minnesota|Mower County]], [[Minnesota]], directly south of [[Rochester, Minnesota|Rochester]]. It has a 25 [[acre]] man-made [[lake]] and 1,168 acres of mixed [[prairie]] and [[deciduous]] forest. It is used for [[picnic]]s, [[camping]], [[hiking]], [[horseback riding]], and other outdoor recreation. It is noted for [[butterfly watching]], as some rare species have been seen. It features a picnic shelter which dates to the [[Public Works Administration]] era.
'''Lake Louise State Park''' is a [[Minnesota]] [[List of Minnesota state parks|state park]] just north of the [[Iowa]] border near the small town of [[Le Roy, Minnesota|Le Roy]] in [[Mower County, Minnesota]], directly south of [[Rochester, Minnesota|Rochester]]. It has a 25 [[acre]] man-made [[lake]] and 1,168 acres of mixed [[prairie]] and [[deciduous]] forest. It is used for [[picnic]]s, [[swimming]], [[camping]], [[hiking]], [[horseback riding]], and other outdoor recreation. It is noted for [[butterfly watching]], as some rare species have been seen. It features a picnic shelter which dates to the [[Public Works Administration]] era.

==History==
==History==
Sometime in the late [[1850s]] of early [[1860s]], Conrad Hambrecht settled in section 21 of [[Le Roy Township, Minnesota|Le Roy Township]] on the [[Upper Iowa River]] near the [[Le Roy Township, Minnesota#History|Old Village of Leroy]]. An [[earthen dam]] was later built on the river and Hambrecht's land sat along the small [[lake]] that was created. Hambrecht set aside this part of land for [[recreation]] and he later donated the land, then called '''Wildwood Park''', to the city of [[Le Roy, Minnesota|Le Roy]] with the [[stipulation]] that it be used as a [[park]]. The original dam was washed away and the citizens of Le Roy rebuilt it and named the body of water "''Lake Louise''" for Hambrecht's sister. In [[1963]] the land was transferred to the state of [[Minnesota]] and in [[1963]] '''Lake Louise State Park''' was created by an act of the [[Minnesota State Legislature]]. At that time it contained only the lake and 636 acres.
Sometime in the late [[1850s]] or early [[1860s]], Conrad Hambrecht settled in section 21 of [[Le Roy Township, Minnesota|Le Roy Township]] on the [[Upper Iowa River]] near the [[Le Roy Township, Minnesota#History|Old Village of Leroy]]. An [[earthen dam]] was later built on the river and Hambrecht's land sat along the small [[lake]] that was created. Hambrecht set aside this part of land for [[recreation]] and he later donated the land, then called '''Wildwood Park''', to the city of [[Le Roy, Minnesota|Le Roy]] with the [[stipulation]] that it be used as a [[park]]. The original dam was washed away and the citizens of Le Roy rebuilt it and named the body of water "Lake Louise" for Hambrecht's sister. In [[1961]] local advocates arranged a visit by state park officials, who agreed that Wildwood Park could be expanded into a state park. The land was transferred to the state of [[Minnesota]] and in [[1963]] '''Lake Louise State Park''' was created by an act of the [[Minnesota State Legislature]]. At that time it contained only the lake and 636 acres. The boundaries have been expanded since, but usage remains primarily local. A 1971 internal study recommended that the park be remanded to the county as a regional recreation area, but no such action was ever taken.

==References==
*Meyer, Roy W. ''Everyone’s Country Estate: A History of Minnesota’s State Parks''. Minnesota Historical Society Press: St. Paul, 1991.
*"Mill on the Willow: A History of Mower County, Minnesota" by various authors. Library of Congress No. 84-062356


==Reference==
"Mill on the Willow: A History of Mower County, Minnesota" by various authors. Library of Congress No. 84-062356
==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/state_parks/lake_louise/narrative.html Lake Louise State Park website]
*[http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/state_parks/lake_louise/index.html Lake Louise State Park website]
*[http://www.leroy-mn.org/interest/lake_louise.html LeRoy, Minnesota - Lake Louise]
*[http://www.leroy-mn.org/interest/lake_louise.html LeRoy, Minnesota - Lake Louise]



{{Minnesota-geo-stub}}
[[Category:Minnesota state parks]]
[[Category:Minnesota state parks]]
[[Category:Mower County, Minnesota]]

Revision as of 17:01, 13 August 2006

File:Lake Louise Minnesota.jpg
The dam on the Little Iowa River that creates Lake Louise.

Lake Louise State Park is a Minnesota state park just north of the Iowa border near the small town of Le Roy in Mower County, Minnesota, directly south of Rochester. It has a 25 acre man-made lake and 1,168 acres of mixed prairie and deciduous forest. It is used for picnics, swimming, camping, hiking, horseback riding, and other outdoor recreation. It is noted for butterfly watching, as some rare species have been seen. It features a picnic shelter which dates to the Public Works Administration era.

History

Sometime in the late 1850s or early 1860s, Conrad Hambrecht settled in section 21 of Le Roy Township on the Upper Iowa River near the Old Village of Leroy. An earthen dam was later built on the river and Hambrecht's land sat along the small lake that was created. Hambrecht set aside this part of land for recreation and he later donated the land, then called Wildwood Park, to the city of Le Roy with the stipulation that it be used as a park. The original dam was washed away and the citizens of Le Roy rebuilt it and named the body of water "Lake Louise" for Hambrecht's sister. In 1961 local advocates arranged a visit by state park officials, who agreed that Wildwood Park could be expanded into a state park. The land was transferred to the state of Minnesota and in 1963 Lake Louise State Park was created by an act of the Minnesota State Legislature. At that time it contained only the lake and 636 acres. The boundaries have been expanded since, but usage remains primarily local. A 1971 internal study recommended that the park be remanded to the county as a regional recreation area, but no such action was ever taken.

References

  • Meyer, Roy W. Everyone’s Country Estate: A History of Minnesota’s State Parks. Minnesota Historical Society Press: St. Paul, 1991.
  • "Mill on the Willow: A History of Mower County, Minnesota" by various authors. Library of Congress No. 84-062356

External links