Motels and downtowns don't seem to go together. Downtowns are dense and motels need space for cars and the obligatory pool.
But there was a time when downtown Minneapolis had a motel boom. If you weren't around to see it, the only evidence you'll find today are old postcards and an ashtray someone's uncle swiped.
The history of Minneapolis' motels begins, perhaps, with a moral panic.
In the early days of the car culture, motels grew on the edge of town, like mushrooms in a shady forest. The earliest motor courts, back in the 1920s and '30s, were often little more than a collection of under-lit cottages shrouded by trees, places for all sorts of shady behavior.
Tawdry novels and pulp magazines set their lurid tales in motel courts. In fact, J. Edgar Hoover, director of the FBI, wrote a report in 1940 called "Camps of Crime," accusing the motor courts of encouraging "an implicit immorality and tendency to criminality."
The burgeoning motel industry fought back against the "no-tell motel" image by forming associations designed to assure travelers of decency and cleanliness. Signs for the United Motor Courts, the American Motor Hotel Association and Quality Motor Courts were intended to prove that these motels were clean and safe and that their owners were upstanding citizens who cared about their properties — and their reputations.
As historian Lori Henderson explained in "America's Roadside Lodging: The Rise and Fall of the Motel," everyday Americans embraced the convenience and, often, the lower cost of the motel. Hotels, Henderson explained, were regarded as a European idea. Motels, on the other hand, arose from a country that embraced the open road, and the freedom the automobile promised.
Here in the Gopher State, the motel industry boomed as roads improved, cars became more affordable and more of us wanted to hit the highway in the summer with the kids, and stay someplace secure and wholesome.