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Mid 1850s
Settlement Boom


The number of non-Indian people in Minnesota jumps from 3,814 in 1849 to 172,072 in 1860, a 4,500 percent increase! The newcomers break sod, start businesses, plot towns, look for jobs, and dream of getting rich.

No other territory or state in American history has ever grown so rapidly over a ten year period. What explains this boom?

Pent-up demand for good agricultural land is the primary reason. Iowa and Wisconsin had been heavily settled and had both passed from territorial to statehood status by 1848. It had been dangerous and illegal to settle on land in most of Minnesota before treaties with the Dakota and the Ojibwe were signed. But after several treaties were ratified in the 1850s, the floodgates of migration burst open.

Photo of building for a real estate company
Minnesota map.
Beginning of want more section. related links start below
Adventure Online
  • What can the census tell you about people in 1850? A lot more than just numbers. Play "Getting Counted," a portion of the Minnesota Territory online exhibit.
  • Be a speculator! Seek your fortune by selling land in a new town in "Land For Sale", a portion of the Minnesota Territory online exhibit.

    Investigate Further
  • Page through William Watts Folwell's A History of Minnesota (4 Volumes). (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1956)
  • Read June Drenning Holmquist (editor), They Chose Minnesota: A Survey of the State's Ethnic Groups. (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1981.)
  • Read Anne R. Kaplan and Marilyn Ziebarth (editors), Making Minnesota Territory, 1849-1858.
  • Read Jocelyn Wills', Boosters, Hustlers, and Speculators: Entrepreneurial Culture and the Rise of Minneapolis and St. Paul, 1849-1883
  • Read William E. Lass', The Eden of the West
  • Read Land Settlement and Colonization in the Great Lakes States by John D. Black and L.C. Gray.
  • See Northern Lights: The Stories of Minnesota's Past, the new curriculum published by the Minnesota Historical Society. Minnesota History written for Grades 5 Through 8
  • Use the Visual Resource Database to search and view some of the Society's 250,000 images.
  • Search PALS, the MHS online card catalog, to find books, archives, manuscripts, maps, and some of the Society's vast object collections.

    1950s

    Suburban Boom

    1862

    Homestead Act

    1856

    Boom Town

    1849

    Minnesota Territory

    1805

    U.S. Buys Land


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