Holiday Cheer from the Landmark Center: Holiday Lights in Saint Paul Out of a Fairy Tale!

Holiday Cheer from the Landmark Center: Holiday Lights in Saint Paul Out of a Fairy Tale!

Holiday Cheer from the Landmark Center

Landmark Center — a dynamic cultural center for music, dance, theater, exhibitions, public forums, and more — hosts countless special events for the community. During COVID-19, our website will serve as primary host to engaging, enlightening virtual programs for every age! As we implement future events and activities at Landmark Center, we will continue to put the health and well being of our audience, artists, community partners, and volunteers as a foremost priority and ensure Landmark Center is a safe, clean and healthy environment.

Please join us online for Landmark Center social media pages – see below for virtual holiday events:
Best Places to See Holiday Lights in Saint Paul

Best Places to See Holiday Lights in Saint Paul

An insider guide on where to catch the most stunning light displays this holiday season.

Immerse yourself in the holiday spirit this winter by taking a journey through Saint Paul’s best light shows. From Summit Avenue to the East Side, these displays are sure to dazzle you with all of their festive glory.

Rice Park

A virtual park lighting was held in lieu of the annual tree lighting ceremony to flip the switch bringing Rice Park Powered by Xcel Energy to life. Make plans to enjoy this twinkling winter wonderland when you come downtown to shop, pick up takeout or simply to enjoy the lights.

Mears Park

Take a stroll through the colorful lights at this beautiful and beloved park. The signature tree this year is the spectacular blue Hope Tree, designed for you to admire its beauty and take a moment to reflect on what hope means for you.

Union Depot

Just down the block from Mears Park you’ll find Union Depot’s giant holiday tree, the perfect backdrop for some socially distanced photos! In place of the usual kickoff tree lighting, Union Depot will be sharing a Holiday Tree Lighting video special — premiering Fri., Dec. 4 at 7 p.m on the Union Depot website and Facebook. The tree will be lit through the remainder of December on the North Plaza.

Summit Avenue

Home to the Minnesota Governor’s Residence and some of the state’s most historic homes, the 4.5-mile stretch is a great destination for a cool winter walk or for those looking to experience the lights from the warmth of their cars.

Find a similarly lit tree a few blocks off Summit at Cathedral Hill’s Boyd Park.

Cathedral Illuminated: The Manger

This large-scale light mural projected on the front of the Cathedral of Saint Paul will tell the Christmas story. Accompanied by uplifting music, the production is 12 minutes long and will be shown on a continuous loop between 6-9 p.m on Dec. 17-19 and streamed live on Facebook.

Experience the Twin Cities All is Bright Holiday Lights Tour

Bundle up for this open-air fun bus tour — with a covered top and open sides, it’s the perfect way to view twinkling lights along brightly decorated streets in a fun safe way. Choose your date and time slot to book the bus for your private party of up to 13. Every weekend through Dec. 27.

York Avenue

Make a stop at 1526 York Ave. to see 60,000 lights choreographed to “Rockin’ Rudolph” on 91.5 FM. The display is put on by the Schultz Family and runs nightly from 5-10 p.m., Nov. 27 to Dec. 31. Don’t forget to bring some canned goods — the site supports the Greater East Side by collecting food for the Merrick Food Shelf.

GLOW Holiday Festival

This brilliant event for the whole family is a 1-mile drive-thru with a dozen seasonal scenes featuring over a million holiday lights, a 100-foot illuminated tree, icicle and art installations, a festive gingerbread house, and other attractions. The festival runs through Jan. 3. Purchase tickets.

Nature Illuminated

Minnesota Zoo has a magical world waiting for you with Nature Illuminated, a one-of-a-kind drive-thru experience featuring stunning light work and larger-than-life animal art installations. The display is up through Jan. 17. Purchase tickets here.

Saint Paul Park

While the judging of Saint Paul Park’s annual holiday lights contest only runs from Dec.16-20 (with lights on each night from 5-10 p.m.), you can enjoy the views all season long. Keep an eye on the city’s website for a complete list of nominated homes.

 

42nd Annual Landmark Center Old-Fashioned Holiday Bazaar – Online Only

 

Out of a fairy tale.
St. Paul, MN
Landmark Center
Rice Park
JJ Hill Library

 

The 42nd Annual Landmark Center Old-Fashioned Holiday Bazaar is moving online for the 2020 event, December 3-13. Would-be shoppers can still find the perfect gifts for everyone on their lists by visiting Landmark Center’s Old-Fashioned Holiday Bazaar webpage, exploring a linked list of vendors and visiting their online stores directly.

The bazaar features items such as jewelry, décor, woven and wearable art, children’s toys and clothes, handmade lotions, soaps, food items and more. This year, in addition to online shopping, Landmark Center will include links to some favorite local musicians that regularly perform at the Holiday Bazaar, and a recipe for a festive holiday cocktail and mocktail for guests to make at home and enjoy while they shop.

The online-only 42nd Annual Landmark Center Old-Fashioned Holiday Bazaar will go ‘live’ December 3, and remain open on Landmark Center’s website through December 13. For more information visit: LandmarkCenter

Minnesota Zoo: Opening Day of Nature Illuminated!

Minnesota Zoo: Opening Day of Nature Illuminated!

 This week is the opening day of Nature Illuminated!
This winter, there’s a magical world waiting for you at the Minnesota Zoo. Join us for Nature Illuminated: a one-of-a-kind drive-thru experience featuring stunning light work and larger-than-life animal art installations. Nature Illuminated invites you on a spectacular journey into a world of art, awe and light, all from the comfort of your own vehicle. Join us as we shine the spotlight on some of the world’s most endearing and endangered animals, and learn how our collective actions can help save our planet’s wildlife.
We hope you can join us for this new seasonal event. We’re excited to be partnering with local businesses to bring this completely custom, Minnesota-made event to life to help fuel the #MNZoo and our wildlife conservation efforts around the world. Purchase your ticket today.
Thank you for your support of the Minnesota Zoo and our mission to connect people, animals, and the natural world to save wildlife.

 

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About: Founded in 1978, the Minnesota Zoo exists to connect people, animals, and the natural world to save wildlife. Cutting-edge exhibits provide exciting experiences with animals and their habitats introducing guests to species from around the globe. Education programs engage audiences at the Zoo, throughout the region, and around world. Conservation programs protect endangered species and preserve critical ecosystems.
For more about the Minnesota Zoo, visit mnzoo.org.
WalkerNOW: Holiday Festival of Lights – Walker, MN

WalkerNOW: Holiday Festival of Lights – Walker, MN

Festival of Lights this year will look different!

We are encouraging Eat – Shop – Explore and Decorate LOCAL

-spend time eating, drinking & relaxing at one of our delicious local restaurants

-find that perfect Christmas gift at one of our amazing Local businesses-

-Get out and explore our Great town!  From the shops to the trails.

-Light up and decorate your house and businesses.

 

Participants in the GGCG for 2020:

513 @ Mainstream

Art & Antique Mall of Walker

Bayside Bar & Grill

Chase on the Lake

Charlies Up North

Christmas Point Wild Rice Co.

Frizzell Furniture Gallary

Green Scene Organic Market

Heritage

Jenny & Company Walker

Lakes Area Powersports

Leech Lake Area Chamber of Commerce

Loney Sales & Service

Lundrigans Clothing

Nistler Floor Covering Inc.

Orton’s Walker Cenex

Orton’s Y mart/Y Bait

Piggy BBQ

Reeds Family Outdoor Outfitters

Super One

TJ’s Floral & Design

Verizon/ Select Communications Walker location

Village Square Pizza & Ice Cream Palor

Walker General Store

Walker Home Center

Wilkening Fireplaces

Thank you for our sponsors:  Pro West Associates – Northern Lights Event Center – Spencer Ross American Legion – Walker Bay Theater – SuperOne – Traveling Art Pub

2020 Rules and Regulations

Festival of Lights

WalkerNOW

Santa Claus is Visiting Rochester for his Yearly Health Check-Up at Mayo Clinic – Minnesota

Santa Claus is Visiting Rochester for his Yearly Health Check-Up at Mayo Clinic – Minnesota

 While he’s here, he’ll also visit some of his favorite downtown places to shop, play, and eat. His reindeer are just as excited to visit….maybe a little too excited. Follow this jolly old elf’s journey with some surprises along the way during the 12 Days of Magic beginning November 16.

Santa Claus will come with a bound to down(town) Rochester for Here Comes Santa Claus presented by Altra Federal Credit Union November 27! We hear he’s anxious to visit Rochester and to do some safe, local shopping this year.

This beloved holiday event, which typically includes in-person family-friendly activities, rescuing Santa Claus from the Old City Hall rooftop, and the Peace Plaza tree lighting, will get a magical makeover in 2020 to include a 12 Days of Magic downtown scavenger hunt and a drive-thru parade featuring lighted trees and an appearance by Santa.

 

Prior to the 12 Days of Magic, Santa will arrive in a surprise fashion to provide the scavenger hunt clues. Follow this jolly old elf’s journey with a few surprises along the way!

 

Dates:

  • Monday, November 16, 2020
  • Tuesday, November 17, 2020
  • Wednesday, November 18, 2020
  • Thursday, November 19, 2020
  • Friday, November 20, 2020
  • Saturday, November 21, 2020
  • Sunday, November 22, 2020
  • Monday, November 23, 2020
  • Tuesday, November 24, 2020
  • Wednesday, November 25, 2020
  • Thursday, November 26, 2020
  • Friday, November 27, 2020

 

Here Comes Santa Claus

 

St. Anthony Beneath the Banks: Caves and Tunnels Along the Riverfront – Minneapolis, MN

St. Anthony Beneath the Banks: Caves and Tunnels Along the Riverfront – Minneapolis, MN

Courtesy of the Hennepin History Museum
A 19th-century map shows the properties of the St. Anthony Falls Water Power Company and the Minneapolis Mill Company.
The dotted lines indicate the location of the various tunnels that powered the mills.

Micheal Rainvelle Jr / Mill City TImes: Five hundred million years ago a giant, shallow, tropical sea covered the vast majority of what later became North America, including the central and eastern portions of Minnesota. This resulted in a very thick layer of St. Peter Sandstone developing with a thinner layer of Platteville Limestone forming on top of it. These layers made it possible for St. Anthony Falls to erode upstream to where it sits today along the downtown riverfront. However, these geological layers are also the perfect recipe for caves and tunnels to naturally form. Once European settlers established the towns of St. Paul, St. Anthony, and Minneapolis, they too took advantage of the soft sandstone and dug out cave systems for various uses. It is because of this that some say the subterranean world of the Twin Cities is comparable, if not grander, than the catacombs of Paris. These next three stories are just a small portion of what lies beneath our feet.

 

 

Chute’s Cave

 

Photo of a collapsed section of Chute’s Cave taken in 2000 by urban explorers, Action Squad.It didn’t take a well-learned person to figure out that the exposed sandstone along the bluffs of the Mississippi can be easily manipulated. Once the riverbanks were filled with lumber and flour mills, entrepreneurs began exploring the possibility of using tunnels to power their mills. One of the first to try this out was Samuel H. Chute, namesake of Chute Square, the location of the oldest house in the city, and an agent for the St. Anthony Falls Water Power Company. He wanted to dig a tunnel underneath Main Street of over 1,100 feet. Workers digging out Chute’s Tunnel were stopped a few hundred feet in from the shoreline when they broke through into a large cavern.

 

Photo of the formation “Chute’s Medusa” taken in 2001 by Action Squad. It measures roughly six feet wide.

 

Originally, Chute’s Cave was 200 feet long and 100 feet wide, and in the middle was a large geological formation, likely a stalagmite, that was dubbed the Tower of St. Anthony. In 1866, the St. Paul Daily Press reported that some explorers lifted up a slab of malachite in the cave, and underneath was a spiral staircase. After descending 123 steps, it opened up into Chute’s Cave, where they saw human-sized stalagmites rising up, and diamond-like stalactites glistening on the ceiling. The columnist then ended their report by saying that Chute’s Cave “is supposed to be the place where good St. Antonians go when they die.” It must’ve been a slow news day.

 

Woman entering Chute’s Cave by boat, photo courtesy of Dr. Greg Brick

 

The Eastman Tunnel Collapse of 1869

A resort was opened on the bluffs near the cave’s entrance and even offered torchlight boat tours of the stunning cave system. Unfortunately, the beauty of the cave changed on December 23rd, 1880 when a portion of the cave collapsed, taking some of Main Street with it. Once the area was stabilized and the street was back up and running, the cave was deemed unsafe and the resort was abandoned. Years later in the 1960s, the city pondered the idea of turning the cave into a fallout shelter, but that idea was abandoned.

 

Scan from loan for copy negative on Epson Expression 10000XL.

 

Before Main Street sank into Chute’s Cave, businessmen William Eastman and John Merriam purchased the majority of Nicollet Island with the intent to mill along the island’s shores. The two argued that the St. Anthony Falls Water Power Company controlled all of the water power on the east side of the falls, so they sued the company and won. The two parties agreed that Eastman and Merriam could dig a tunnel underneath the falls from Hennepin Island to Nicollet in order to take advantage of the falls fifty-foot drop to create 200 horsepower to operate their mills.

Digging started in September of 1868 and workers slowly dug their six-by-six-foot tunnel 2,500 feet to Nicollet Island. By early October 1869, the crew made it 2,000 feet in and reached the southern tip of Nicollet Island. They were almost there. Towards the end of the workday on October 4th, some workers noticed a very small leak in the tunnel. The next day when they arrived at the site, they discovered that that the river turned the small leak into a giant hole, and the river quickly carved out a seventeen-foot deep hole ninety feet wide!

Over 100 men from St. Anthony volunteered to help save St. Anthony Falls, and more important to them, the power it was capable of producing. They started throwing rocks and logs into the giant hole, but they were tossed around and swept away like toothpicks. The power of the mighty Mississippi was just too much. Eventually, the Minneapolis Fire Department came to the rescue, and with the help of even more volunteers, they constructed three cofferdams to stabilize the falls. Wood will obviously erode over time, so the dams had to be replaced every four years or so until the 1950s when the Army Corps of Engineers installed the concrete apron that makes up St. Anthony Falls today.

 

1940 photo of the remnants of the Eastman Tunnel

 

Nicollet Island’s Many Secrets

Remnants of tunnels from the Eastman tunnel collapse are still located throughout the southern tip of Nicollet Island. These are known as the Neapolitan Caves because of iron-red swirls mixed into the white and green sandstone walls. Further up the island is a tunnel dubbed the “bloody snake passage” by local explorer, historian, and author of the book Subterranean Twin Cities, Dr. Greg Brick. He gave this tunnel, which dead ends at the foundation of DeLaSalle High School, its name because of scarlet-red flowstones along the walls that resembled dripping blood.

The two most prominent caves can be found around the northern tip of the island. First, accessible from an old utility tunnel that forms a loop around the island, Satan’s Cave is aptly named because of bas-reliefs carved in the sandstone of demonic figures and a small alter with a candelabra on top. The carvings were created in such a way that when lit candles are placed in the mouths of the carvings, light glows out of their flaring nostrils. These carvings and the alter are fairly recent, appearing no earlier than the mid-1970s when a Minneapolis Star reporter explored the caves on the island and did not note anything demonic. Satan’s Cave used to have a more important use, however. When John Orth became the first brewer in Hennepin County in 1850, he would use this cool cave to keep his lager chilled. Eventually, Orth would go on to establish the Minneapolis Brewing Company. Once Orth left the cave, it was used the grow mushrooms through the 1920s.

 

Underground entrance to Satan’s Cave

Carvings and candles inside Satan’s Cave

 

The last notable cave on Nicollet Island is Santa’s Cave, a transposition of Satan’s Cave, done by Dr. Brick. Prior to this name, it was known as Cave X, for its cross-like shape. While more impressive than Satan’s Cave, Santa’s Cave is hard to access, so most urban explorers leave it for the two species of bats that hibernate there in the winter months.

These caves are still around today, but don’t be fooled, they are still dangerous. That early explorer who found a spiral staircase down into Chute’s Cave said the stairs were made out of polished marble with brass bannisters. Earthly gasses, like methane, can get trapped in these caves. Perhaps this explorer’s tall tale was influenced by trapped gasses and a lot of time on their hands? A French explorer claimed to have studied hieroglyphs in a vault on Nicollet Island, and he concluded that beyond the vault was a room full of treasures where an extinct race of very smart, flying humans kept their knowledge. Maybe the gasses got to him and he saw bats flying by his head? More recently, in the late 1900s, a resident of Nicollet Island was exploring one of the many tunnels and passed out from inhaling too much methane. Luckily, he was with a friend who pulled him out and he came to once they were topside. Caves are pretty neat, but they are blocked off for a reason. Hopefully one day we can safely explore Minneapolis’ subterranean world.

 

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MICHAEL RAINVILLE JR

A 6th generation Minneapolitan, Michael Rainville Jr. received his B.A. in History from the University of St. Thomas, and is currently enrolled in their M.A. in Art History and Certificate in Museum Studies programs. Michael is also a historic interpreter and guide at Historic Fort Snelling at Bdote and a lead guide at Mobile Entertainment LLC, giving Segway tours of the Minneapolis riverfront for 7+ years.

North Loop Neighborhood Association: An Outdoor & Social Distanced Presentation of Jurassic Park

North Loop Neighborhood Association: An Outdoor & Social Distanced Presentation of Jurassic Park

Halloween in the North Loop sponsored by the North Loop Neighborhood Association:  With a warmer forecast for Saturday, it’s perfect to join your neighbors for a free outdoor movie & candy too at Target Field Station…bring a chair, blanket and a mask and enjoy!

When: Saturday, October 31 • Showtime is 6pm

Where: Target Field Station • 5th Ave North and 5th Street North, Minneapolis

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