Listen and subscribe to our podcast: Via Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher
Minnesota's Department of Corrections operates 11 prisons scattered across the state, a system that traces its roots to a frontier facility in Stillwater.
A reader wrote to Curious Minnesota, the Star Tribune's reader-powered reporting project, saying he had learned in grade school that the newly formed territory of Minnesota needed a university, a capital and a prison. He was taught that Stillwater chose the prison first, and he wanted to know if that was true.
It doesn't appear that the prison's location was so neatly decided. Other locations were considered and rejected. And the sense that all three institutions were chosen simultaneously is "a myth," Washington County Historical Society executive director Brent Peterson said.
At the first meeting of the territorial Legislature in 1849, Gov. Alexander Ramsey urged leaders to lobby the federal government for money to build a lockup facility, according to a 1960 history authored by James Taylor Dunn, former chief librarian for the Minnesota Historical Society. At the time, "civilian malefactors" were held at Fort Snelling or Fort Ripley, Dunn wrote.
The settler's voices were heard, and Congress allocated $20,000 to build a prison in June 1850. But it would take several months to determine its location.
Finding a site
An early plan to place the prison in the village of St. Anthony (which later became part of Minneapolis) was roundly rejected by its residents "with the most marked contempt," Dunn quoted from the Jan. 30, 1851, edition of the Minnesota Pioneer of St. Paul.