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St. Bonifacius Library Bridge over Minnesota State Highway 7 in St. Bonifacius, Minnesota, part of the Dakota Rail Regional Trail, a biking and hiking trail. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has an area of 1.07 square miles (2.77 km 2), of which 1.06 square miles (2.75 km 2) is land and 0.01 square miles (0.03 km 2) is water. [4]
County Road 110 begins at the intersection of County 6 and County 83 in Independence and passes through Minnetrista to Mound, where it shifts from a north–south route to an east–west route back into Minnetrista, ending at County 92 north of St. Bonifacius. Prior to the mid-1950s, this route and County Road 83 were originally State Highway 110.
Modern bridge over Minnesota State Highway 7 in St. Bonifacius, Minnesota. Two major railroad bridges in Lake Minnetonka were preserved for the trail. The largest one is the Arcola Trestle, built in 1881. It is 550 feet (170 m) long. [6] It consists of several spans of trestles with two through plate girder sections.
Get the St. Bonifacius, MN local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
Minnesota State Highway 7, or Trunk Highway 7, (MN 7, TH 7) is a state highway in Minnesota, which runs from its intersection with MN 28 near Beardsley and continues east to its terminus with MN 100 and County Road 25 (CR 25) in St. Louis Park. The highway runs east–west for approximately 194.2 miles (312.5 km) through mostly rural farmland ...
Crown College is situated on a 215-acre (87 ha) campus near the communities of Waconia, Minnetrista and St. Bonifacius. Prior to occupying its current campus in June 1970, the college had been located within the city of St. Paul and occupied several buildings in the block northeast of the intersection of Englewood Avenue and Albert Street.
MN 110 — — MN 7 in St. Bonifacius: US 12 in Maple Plain: 1934: 1955 MN 111: 9.789: 15.754 US 14 in Nicollet: MN 22 northwest of St. Peter: 1934: current MN 112: 15.012: 24.159 US 169 in Le Sueur: MN 99 west of Le Center: 1934: 2019 Became Le Sueur CSAH 22 MN 113: 54.592: 87.857 MN 32 at Syre: US 71 north of Park Rapids
The primary Native languages in Minnesota are Dakota and Ojibwe.Some Dakota and Ojibwe placenames are based on Iowa language, a people that had significant presence in the Southern portion of the state until the 16th century.