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St. Cloud or Saint Cloud (/ ˈ s eɪ n t k l aʊ d /; French: [sɛ̃ klu]) is a city in the U.S. state of Minnesota and the largest population center in the state's central region.
The St. Cloud Commercial Historic District is a designation applied to the historic downtown of St. Cloud, Minnesota, United States.It comprises 41 contributing properties built between 1870 and 1947. [2]
In 1857, some of these sisters arrived in St. Cloud, Minnesota, and in 1863, they moved to St. Joseph and established St. Benedict's Monastery. Being educators, the sisters had no experience in health care. However, Dr. A.C. Lamothe Ramsay persuaded the sisters that the growing St. Cloud community needed a hospital.
Located within St. Mary's is a shrine to Saint Cloud including a number of relics: a piece of St. Cloud's clothing, a bone fragment from Saint Cloud himself and fragments from five other saints. The statue of St. Cloud in the shrine is a replica of a seventeenth-century statue, the oldest known statue of St. Cloud to exist. [6]
St. Cloud Hospital's main site is located north of downtown St. Cloud on the west bank of the Mississippi River. [7] The hospital building has 11 floors (seven above ground), 1,496,000 sq ft (139,000 m 2) of floor space (not including the attached CentraCare Clinic), and sits on a 30.4 acres (0.123 km 2) plot of land.
The Chancery House in St. Cloud, Minnesota, United States, is the current chancery for the Roman Catholic Diocese of St. Cloud and the former residence for the Bishop of St. Cloud. It was built in 1916 for Bishop Joseph Francis Busch. The Chancery House was an early work of Louis Pinault, St. Cloud's most prominent early-20th-century architect.
Minnesota Victorian treasure: Historic Foley Mansion in St. Cloud open for events, tours Whether you’re sipping tea during a holiday tour or hosting a festive gathering, the Foley Mansion offers ...
There were 9,000 stockholders by 1917. In March 1917, St. Cloud became the official site for the new Pan Motor Company. The site was chosen because of its proximity to the harbors and iron ore mines of Duluth, Minnesota. St. Cloud had two major rail lines and two power dams on its eastern border, the Mississippi River. [4]