Lyn-Lake
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Thatcher Imboden
Local authors Thatcher Imboden and Cedar Imboden Phillips draw upon both private and public collections to bring together this compilation of seldom-seen images from Lyn-Lake�s long and often quirky past. Cedar Phillips is an author and an independent historian. Thatcher Imboden is a local business district leader and a Minneapolis commercial real estate development specialist. The siblings grew up in the area and together authored Images of America: Uptown Minneapolis, also published by Arcadia Publishing.
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Lyn-Lake - Thatcher Imboden
Lyn-Lake.
INTRODUCTION
The Lyn-Lake neighborhood of Minneapolis encompasses one of the city’s oldest commercial districts and serves as home for thousands of residents of all ages and backgrounds. Although it defies formal definitions, for the purpose of this book we intend to cover the portions of Lake Street, Lyndale Avenue, and neighboring streets that we view as within the greater Lyn-Lake sphere of influence. Formal neighborhoods within the boundaries of Lyn-Lake include Lyndale, Lowry Hill East (the Wedge), CARAG, and Whittier; given that the city’s formal neighborhoods are so often defined by major commercial corridors, in this case Lyn-Lake’s namesake Lyndale Avenue and Lake Street, it is easy to see why Lyn-Lake as an informal district or neighborhood can truly be called a crossroads.
Lyn-Lake’s strategic location between several streetcar lines connecting downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul with Minneapolis’s chain of lakes helped it to develop as one of the oldest commercial districts in Minneapolis outside of downtown. Even today its commercial core is filled with buildings dating to the 1880s and 1890s. The Lyn-Lake district experienced another boom decade following 1905, when a new and improved streetcar was laid the length of Lake Street. The residential streets in the neighborhood soon filled in, with thousands of people living in a blend of apartments, duplexes, and single-family homes. Everything they needed was within an easy walk from home—stores, work, churches, schools, and entertainment.
Just one block north of Lake Street, the Twenty-ninth Street rail corridor was to play an essential role in Lyn-Lake’s history, past and present. A rail corridor made it possible for the Lyn-Lake district to develop a bustling industrial economy. Businesses of all sorts lined the corridor, and in the first decade of the 20th century an ambitious project lowered the railway into a deep trench (now the Midtown Greenway). Grain elevators, lumberyards, dairies, stables, and manufacturers of all types—everything and anything that needed a location with rail access—found a home along the Twenty-ninth Street Corridor. The Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railroad Grade Separation is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. After trains stopped using the tracks in the late 1990s, it was reconfigured for use as an urban biking and walking highway,
and while some industry remains, now much of its Lyn-Lake frontage is lined with new and adapted condos and retail businesses.
By the 1960s, Lyn-Lake had also started to take on a distinctive artistic flavor. Lured by cheap rent and the variety of housing, artists and musicians began to flock to the area. Acts such as Peter, Paul, and Mary performed in so-called 3.2 joints
lining Lake Street, and record shops proliferated. In the 1980s, Lyn-Lake was the background for the vibrant Minneapolis music scene; The Replacements was just one of many groups to have Lyn-Lake roots. Visual and performing arts have also long been a presence; the Jungle Theater has been at Lyndale Avenue and Lake Street for nearly 20 years, and the area is now one of the most artist-intensive neighborhoods in the country.
Today Lyn-Lake is a mixture of the old and the new. Many of its oldest buildings remain, and its historic nature (including its industrial background) contributes to its reputation as a regional destination for those looking for something unique and distinctive. It has built upon its artistic past to establish itself firmly as an artistic center of the Twin Cities. Its diversity has also continued to evolve and shift; the greater Lyn-Lake district was home to one of the metropolitan area’s first pizza places (considered ethnic
in its day), the state’s first and oldest Ethiopian restaurant, and in more recent years the country’s first Somali mall.
One
INDUSTRY
After a rail line was built through the area along Twenty-ninth Street between 1879 and 1881, Lyn-Lake became home to many manufacturers, wholesalers, and other industry.
Upon construction of the Twenty-ninth Street railroad depression in the first decade of the 20th century, most buildings adjacent to the tracks were retrofitted. The result was a period of massive investment along the tracks, with many buildings adding new storehouses, mills, or docks. The area boasted a central location, industrial land and buildings, a strong workforce, and a railroad corridor.
In the early 1900s, the need to provide coal to buildings and building materials to nearby construction sites made the land adjacent to the railroad tracks attractive as a distribution point. In the years following World War II, some businesses moved to the suburbs because of a need for additional space that was cheaper, newer, and more accessible.
Industrial businesses along the main commercial corridors, Lyndale Avenue and Lake Street, were slowly replaced by retailers and restaurateurs who wanted foot traffic and higher visibility and were willing to pay more for it. The conversion of the railroad track to a bike trail and the city’s interest in revitalizing the industrial land, increasing the tax base, and expanding housing options led to direct action by the city and subsequent market forces to convert the industrial land into new housing. Today very few industrial businesses are left in Lyn-Lake.
In 1913, the Philadelphia and Reading Coal Company excavated the property located on the northwest corner of the Milwaukee Road railroad tracks and Dupont Avenue so that the company could directly serve its coal elevator via a siding on its property. The coal elevator was converted into a warehouse in 1951, and the Minneapolis Star and Tribune built a small newspaper distribution building there in 1965. (Hennepin County Library.)
This photograph, taken around 1915, shows the Leigh Valley Coal site at 2835–2847 Colfax Avenue. The first coal elevator was built there in 1905; a new one was constructed in 1914 with the construction of the Milwaukee Road railroad depression. In 1931, Rex Oil Company built oil storage tanks on the property and occupied it for several decades until it was purchased by the Sowles Crane Company. (Hennepin County Library.)
A huge fire destroyed the Bruer Brothers Lumber Company’s buildings and yard in October 1914. The blaze brought every engine company in the city to the site, located between Lyndale and Aldrich Avenues on the north side of the Milwaukee Road