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King Field, Minneapolis


FieldValue
official_nameKing Field
other_nameKingfield
native_name
settlement_typeNeighborhood
image_skylineKing Field Minneapolis.jpg
image_captionKing Field neighborhood in Minneapolis
image_mapMinneapolisKingFieldNeighborhood.PNG
mapsize200px
map_captionLocation of King Field within the U.S. city of Minneapolis
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_type3City
subdivision_type4Community
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_name1Minnesota
subdivision_name2Hennepin
subdivision_name3Minneapolis
subdivision_name4Southwest
seat_typeCity Council Ward
seat8
leader_titleCouncil Member
leader_nameSoren Stevenson
established_titleFounded
established_date1849
named_forWilliam S. King
unit_prefUS
area_total_sq_mi0.828
area_footnotes
population_as_of2020
population_total7,576
population_density_sq_miauto
population_footnotes
timezoneCST
utc_offset-6
timezone_DSTCDT
utc_offset_DST-5
coordinates
postal_code_typeZIP code
postal_code55409
area_code612
demographics

King Field (alternately, Kingfield) is a neighborhood in the Southwest community in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Its boundaries are 36th Street to the north, Interstate 35W to the east, 46th Street to the south, and Lyndale Avenue to the west. King Field, within the King Field neighborhood, is a park named after Martin Luther King Jr.

Kingfield is a part of Minneapolis City Council ward 8 and state legislative districts 62A and 62B.

History

King Field is named after Colonel William S. King. The neighborhood is in Minneapolis's Southwest community between Interstate 35W on the east and Lyndale Avenue on the west. The northern boundary is 36th Street and the southern boundary is 46th Street.

In 1885, the southern border of the city of Minneapolis was 38th Street. By 1887 the city had expanded its borders to 54th street, and thus the area which is now King Field became part of Minneapolis. King Field is mainly a residential area, with three-fourths of its single-family houses built before 1920. The King Field neighborhood has a number of amenities, including churches, schools, a park named after Martin Luther King Jr., and three to four dozen small businesses.

Early history

The area was farm country in the second half of the 19th century. Transportation was by horse and buggy. Fewer than 20 farms had been established by 1874. C.C. Garvey owned a dairy farm near 44th Street and Grand Ave. George Bichnell farmed 18 acre of land from Lyndale to Pleasant, 42nd to 43rd Streets. Hiram Van Nest farmed 28 acre of land from 40th to 42nd, Pleasant to Lyndale. The Farmsworth farm occupied 57 acre south of 47th Street and East of Nicollet.

The area between Lake Street and 40th Street was largely built between 1903 and 1914 with Colonial Revival houses and Craftsman bungalows. After World War I, the area south of 40th Street and north of Minnehaha Creek was developed. The Church of the Incarnation opened in 1918 at the intersection of 38th Street and Pleasant Avenue. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2022 and is a city of Minneapolis historic district.

Street names

The following is a list of streets in King Field, and the origin of their names:

  • Blaisdell Ave. named in honor of Robert Blaisdell, Sr. and his three sons, who were early pioneers here and lumbermen on the upper Mississippi river
  • Garfield Ave. named after President James Garfield
  • Grand Ave. from the French, meaning "great" or "noble"
  • Harriet Ave. named after the wife of Colonel Leavenworth, whose maiden name was Harriet Lovejoy. (She is also the source of the name Lake Harriet.) Leavenworth was the first commandant of a temporary fort known in 1819 as Fort St. Anthony.
  • Lyndale Avenue named after the 1400 acre Lyndale farm owned by William S. King, which bordered Lake Harriet and Bde Maka Ska. The farm was named in honor of King’s father, Reverend Lyndon King.
  • Pleasant Ave. as the name implies
  • Pillsbury Ave. named in honor of Governor John S. Pillsbury.
  • Wentworth Ave.
  • Van Nest Ave. named after Hiram Van Nest, one of the earliest settlers in the vicinity of Saint Anthony Falls, the birthplace of Minneapolis. He invested in real estate almost as soon as Minneapolis was open to settlement.
  • Nicollet Avenue commemorates Joseph Nicollet, geographer and explorer whose maps of the area, now Minnesota and the eastern part of North and South Dakota, were published in 1843.
  • Stevens Ave. named after Colonel John H. Stevens, a pioneer who built Minneapolis's first permanent dwelling in 1850

Taken from “Early History of the Kingfield Neighborhood”, a new resident handout circa 1992 via Kingfield Neighborhood Association Web Site [2]

Schools

References

References

  1. (2011). "King Field neighborhood in Minneapolis, Minnesota (MN), 55409 detailed profile". [[City-Data]].
  2. "King Field neighborhood data". Minnesota Compass.
  3. ''Kingfield, Minneapolis, MN.'' [[Google Earth]]. Retrieved 2011-03-09.
  4. "Find My Ward".
  5. "Metro Area Legislative Districts".
  6. Anderson, Lauren. (June 2021). "National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form: Church of the Incarnation and Rectory".
  7. (April 2018). "Church of the Incarnation Historic District". City of Minneapolis.
  8. "About".
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