Edmund Boulevard in south Minneapolis is a stretch of just 14 blocks, its gentle curves lined with picturesque houses with views of the parkland along the Mississippi River. But for all of Edmund Boulevard’s attractiveness, the story of its namesake reveals an ugly chapter in Minneapolis history: racial covenants.
The street is named after Edmund Walton, a real estate developer in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who introduced and popularized racial covenants in Minnesota. That language written into deeds banned anyone but white people from owning or living at the properties.
Upon learning about the boulevard’s history, Mark Brandt and his friend Joe Larsen decided its name needed to go.
“When people are driving along the parkway and they turn into the neighborhood, one of the first things they’re going to see is the word Edmund,” Brandt said. “If people find out he’s this racist guy, we knew about him, but we decided not to change the signs anyway, that says something horrible about us.”
Walton’s racially discriminatory housing practices would become the blueprint for similar covenants across Minnesota, which ended only after the Legislature banned them in 1953, according to the University of Minnesota’s Mapping Prejudice project.
The effort to rename Edmund Boulevard comes after several successful campaigns to change the names of other local landmarks, including lakes, schools and streets, with controversial pasts. Lake Calhoun was renamed Bde Maka Ska because its namesake was a strong supporter of slavery. Ramsey Middle School changed to Justice Page Middle School in 2017 over its namesake’s call for the extermination of the Dakota people.
Brandt and Larsen don’t live on Edmund itself, but live nearby and pass it often. They held two informational meetings with residents in October and December so that people who live on the street could ask questions or voice their opinions. The pair also created an informational website about the name change effort.
At the neighborhood meetings, residents discussed renaming the street, rededicating it to someone else named Edmund, or doing nothing. At the December meeting, four residents voted to do nothing, 10 voted for a name change and 20 voted to rededicate the street to a different Edmund.