User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
- For other things named Minot see Minot (disambiguation).
History
Minot came into existence in 1886, when Jim Hill's Great Northern Railroad ended its push through the state for the winter, after having trouble constructing a trestle across Gassman Coulee. A tent town sprung up over night, as if by "magic", thus the city came to be known as the Magic City, and in the next 5 months, the population increased to over 5,000 residents, further adding to the nickname's validity.The townsite was chosen by the railroad to be
placed on the land of then-homesteader Erik
Ramstad. Mr. Ramstad was convinced to relinquish his claim, and
became one of the city leaders.
The town was named after Henry
Davis Minot, a railroad investor and friend of Jim Hill. The
city was incorporated on 28 June 1887.
Later, the Soo Line was
building a line from
Valley City up to Canada. While initially their plan was to
cross the Souris River
at Burlington,
local interests and arguments convinced them otherwise; landholders
along the new route gladly donated the right-of-way. They reached
Minot in 1893.
During Prohibition the
city was nicknamed "Little Chicago", as it was a central hub of
Al
Capone's liquor smuggling operations. Smugglers used a network
of underground tunnels (some of which were previously built for
heating or deliveries) to transport and conceal the illicit cargo.
Some of the tunnels can still be accessed.
The 1950s saw a great
influx of federal funding into the region, with the construction of
Minot
Air Force Base north of the city, and Garrison Dam
was on the Missouri
River, about fifty miles south of Minot. In 1969, a severe flood
on the Souris River
devastated the city. Afterward, the Army
Corps of Engineers straightened the path of the river through
the city and built several flood control structures.
On January 18,
2002, a
severe
train derailment west of the city sent a gigantic cloud of
anhydrous
ammonia toward Minot, and Burlington.
One man died and many of Minot's citizens were sickened and
severely injured by the noxious gas . In early 2006, court cases
were heard in Minneapolis,
Minnesota
against Canadian
Pacific Railway, the owner of the derailed train. Several cases
have been settled and many others are pending. The anhydrous
ammonia spill was the largest such spill in U.S. history.http://www.unmc.edu/dept/midamerica/index.cfm?L1_ID=17&CONREF=17.
Geography
Region
Minot is located on the Drift Prairie of north central North Dakota. Minot is at (48.233190, -101.292229), about 170 km (100 mi) north of Bismarck. The Souris River, also known as the Mouse River, runs through the city west to east.Important cities in the region for which Minot is
the trading center include Bottineau,
Garrison,
New
Town, Rugby,
Stanley,
and Velva.
City
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 14.6 mi² (37.7 km²). It is almost entirely land; the Souris River, its oxbow lakes, and a few creeks take up just 0.14% of the city's total landmass.The elevation of the river at the city center is
1556 feet (474 m). The valley sits some 160 feet (50 m) below the
surrounding plains; the elevation at the
Minot International Airport on "North Hill" is 1716 feet (523
m).
Grid and address system
The city is laid out on a grid-based street system. Streets run north-south and avenues run east-west. Streets are numbered by their block distance east or west of Main Street. Similarly, Avenues are numbered north and south of Central Avenue. There are four city quadrants (NW, SW, SE, NE) to describe the exact location of any given address. Main Street addresses are simply designated North and South. Central Avenue addresses are simply designated East and West.Major streets
North-South:- 16th Street West
- 6th and 8th Streets West
- Broadway (US 83)
- 3rd Street East
- Valley Street (Bus. US 52)
- Hiawatha Street
East-West:
- 21st Avenue North
- University Avenue
- 4th, 3rd, 5th, Railway Avenue
- The Quentin N. Burdick Expressway (Bus. US 2/52)
- 11th Avenue South
- 20th Avenue South
- 32nd Avenue South
Major divisions
The Souris River divides the city approximately in half, north and south. The valley rises to the plains both north and south of the river. Minot does not have particular names for these general topographic divisions of the city. The Valley is simply the Valley (or not called anything at all). The northern rise and the plateau north of it are referred to as North Hill and the southern rise and plateau south of it are referred to as South Hill.Climate
Minot experiences four distinct seasons, including warm summers and very cold winters. Temperatures below 0°F (-18°C) are common in the winter, while temperatures can reach 105°F (41°C) in the summer.Demographics
As of the census of 2000, there were 36,567 people, 15,520 households, and 9,265 families residing in the city. The population density was 970.4/km² (2,513.1/mi²). There were 16,475 housing units at an average density of 437.2/km² (1,132.3/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 93.18% White, 1.34% African American, 2.76% Native American, 0.62% Asian, 0.07% Pacific Islander, 0.49% from other races, and 1.54% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.47% of the population.The top 6 ancestry groups in the city are
German
(40.8%), Norwegian (32.3%),
Irish
(8.7%), English (5.4%),
Swedish
(4.2%), French (3.2%).
There were 15,520 households out of which 28.6%
had children under the age of 18 living with them, 46.6% were
married
couples living together, 10.0% had a female householder with no
husband present, and 40.3% were non-families. 32.5% of all
households were made up of individuals and 12.0% had someone living
alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size
was 2.27 and the average family size was 2.90.
In the city the population was spread out with
23.2% under the age of 18, 13.3% from 18 to 24, 27.4% from 25 to
44, 20.7% from 45 to 64, and 15.4% who were 65 years of age or
older. The median age was 35 years. For every 100 females there
were 93.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were
89.0 males.
The median income for a household in the city was
$32,218, and the median income for a family was $42,804. Males had
a median income of $30,283 versus $20,023 for females. The per
capita income for the city was $18,011. About 8.8% of families
and 12.8% of the population were below the poverty
line, including 16.0% of those under age 18 and 8.9% of those
age 65 or over.
A recent study by Coldwell-Banker Real Estate
showed that Minot has the country's lowest median home price of
$132,300, which buys 2200 square feet with 4 bedrooms and 2 1/2
baths. Other cities in the report were from Texas, Ohio, Michigan, Oklahoma, and
Kansas.
Law and government
The mayor of Minot is Curt Zimbelman, a banker. As mayor he chairs the 14-member City Council, but only casts a vote to break a tie. The day-to-day affairs of the city are handled by the City Manager, currently David Waind.Minot uses the Council-manager
system of government. Fourteen councilmen are elected from 7 city
wards to four-year terms. Elections are arranged such that one
councilman from each ward is elected in every even-numbered year.
The mayor of Minot is elected to a four-year term as well; the last
mayoral election was in 2006. All city offices
are nonpartisan.
City elections are held in June in North
Dakota, along with the state primary
election.
While the city's leadership has been trending
towards the conservative, Minot's liberal factions have been active
in recent years and have had somewhat more success than in other
areas of the state.
Policy
Minot's civic realm includes a number of debates over taxes, fiscal management, and economic development policy.Major issues include:
Economic development
In recent years, economic development has become a significant issue in the city of Minot. The city created the publicly-financed MAGIC Fund in 1992 to provide financial incentives for businesses, but a series of debacles made the operations of the fund a significant issue in the 2002 city elections.Northwest Area Water Supply (NAWS)
The Northwest Area Water Supply is slightly less controversial among residents of Minot and area, however, it has attracted the ire of the Canadian government because the plan calls for water to be pumped from Lake Sakakawea, then to Minot for treatment, and then on to large stretches of Northwest North Dakota.Minot voters decided in 1998 to levy a 1%
sales tax to go towards the construction of NAWS; this tax fund was
found in court to have been illegally diverted towards economic
development purposes. A lawsuit was filed against the city and it
was ordered to return the misappropriated funds to the NAWS fund.
By that time, the money had already been spent, and the city
instead voted to issue a special assessment on city water bills to
raise the funds.
NAWS may be a moot point as water levels in Lake
Sakakawea continue to fall; it is possible that not enough water
will be available for use when the project is complete.
Economy
Minot's economy thrives on the Air Force Base located 13 miles north of town making the city's economy more robust than other cities of its size due to its large service area; however, it is beset by significant problems with enterprise capital and wage standards. About 30% of Minot residents work two or more jobs, and two-thirds of households earn less than the national median household income.A Coldwell Banker Home Price Comparison Index
listed Minot as the most affordable area of 348 markets in the US,
Canada, and Puerto Rico for homebuyers.http://hpci.coldwellbanker.com/hpci_press.aspx
Education
The Minot Public Schools system operates ten elementary schools within the city: Bel Air, Edison, Lewis and Clark, Lincoln, Longfellow, McKinley, Roosevelt, Perkett, Sunnyside, and Washington. Jefferson Elementary was closed in 2003. The old Washington Elementary building was closed at the end of 2007 and the students moved to a new building which was renovated from an old health care center. There are also two elementary schools on the Minot Air Force Base: Dakota and North Plains.There are three middle schools, two in Minot:
Jim Hill,
Erik Ramstad.
Memorial Middle School is located on the Minot Air Force
Base.
Minot has one public high school, Minot
High School, that is divided into two campuses. Downtown is
Central Campus,
which is for grades 9-10, and on the southwest side of town is the
newer
Magic City Campus (grades 11-12), which was constructed in the
mid 1970s.
Minot Public Schools also operates an adult learning center and
Souris River Campus, an alternative
high school.
Private schools in Minot include the Minot Catholic
Schools system which operates two elementary schools, St. Leo's and
Little Flower, and a combined middle and high school, Bishop
Ryan High School. There is also a Protestant K-12 school,
Our Redeemer's Christian School http://www.orcsknights.org/.
Minot is also home to Minot
State University.
Preschool and Daycare
Most of the larger Daycare Centers and Preschools
in the Minot area work in collaboration with local church groups.
There are also programs such as
Head Start and preschool programs through Minot Public Schools.
The In-home daycare providers are state registered/licensed.
Culture
Minot's midwestern setting and attitudes sometimes hides its sizable and sometimes flamboyant arts community. Minot has an art museum, a symphony orchestra, an opera company, a city band, several dance and theatre troupes, a youth/punk concert organization, the AMP, and much more; over 40 organizations claim membership in the Minot Area Council on the Arts, and even more exist.Nearly 40% of the residents of Minot are of
Scandinavian ancestry, and every October since 1977, Minot has been
the host to the Norsk
Høstfest, North America's largest Scandinavian-American
festival.
Recreation
The Minot Park District operates 17 parks with various facilities; Corbett Field, home to American Legion, high school and college baseball; Optimist soccer complex; MAYSA ice arena; the Sertoma Complex which has 8 softball fields; Souris Valley Golf Course, and an indoor tennis complex.The city's largest parks are Roosevelt
Park and Oak Park. Roosevelt
Park Zoo is one of the top zoos in the region. Dogs are not
allowed in any of the city parks. A "bark park"
for dogs opened in the summer of 2005.
The North
Dakota State Fair is held annually in Minot.
Apple Grove Grove Golf Course, and
Souris Valley Golf Course are located in Minot. The Minot
Country Club is located west of Minot, towards Burlington.
Nearly all recreation areas however are closed
during the long winter.
Sports
- Minot SkyRockets of the Continental Basketball Association
- Minot Vistas of the North Dakota American Legion Baseball League
Minot is also a sister city of Moose
Jaw, Saskatchewan. The cities share many qualities, including
their size, mutual location on river valleys, historical origins,
and air force bases.
Media
Minot has several media outlets. Only two television stations regularly broadcast local news reports. The stations republish network and wire reports as well as maintain a strong local focus.Television
Minot has six television stations, most of which have ATSC (digital) transmitters:Radio
Minot has fifteen radio stations (12 FM, 3 AM). Bottineau-based Programmers Broadcasting owns KTZU and KWGO, along with KBTO of Bottineau. North Dakota Public Radio operates a full power FM station, a community broadcaster based in nearby Burlington, ND operates a low-power FM station, and the remainder are nonprofit Christian stations, of which only KHRT is based locally.
Clear Channel Communications was blamed for placing its
stations on 'autopilot' and resulting failure to warn area
residents not to go outside when an ammonia tanker derailed on
18
January 2002. Clear Channel
owned all of the commercial radio stations in Minot at the time.
One man died and dozens were injured attempting to flee the area
while Clear Channel continued to play their satellite feeds.
In May 2007 it was announced that Clear Channel
sold the Minot group to Dean Goodman's GoodRadio, LLC. It was
confirmed on May 16 2007 by filings made
public with the FCC. Then in the next couple of months, GoodRadio's
plans fell through when it's financing group, American Securities
Capital Partners, objected to the deal's $452 million costs. The
radio station group is again up for sale, and interested buyers are
actively being sought.
AM band
- 910 KCJB - "91 Country" Classic country/Talk
- 1320 KHRT - "K-Heart" Gospel Music
- 1390 KRRZ - "Cars" Oldies
FM band
- 88.9 KMPR - Prairie Public
- 91.1 K220GC - HBN Radio Christian
- 91.9 K216EE - K-Love Christian
- 93.7 KIZZ - "Z94" Top 40/CHR
- 94.9 KTZU - "The Zoo" Classic Rock
- 97.1 KYYX - "97 Kicks" Country
- 98.1 KOWW-LP - "The Cowlip" eclectic community broadcaster
- 99.9 KMXA-FM - "Mix 99.9" Hot AC
- 102.9 KWGO - "W-G-O" Adult Contemporary (Burlington, North Dakota)
- 104.1 KSAF-LP - Radio 74 Christian
- 105.3 KZPR - "The Fox" Rock
- 106.9 KHRT - "K-Heart" Christian
Other stations
Additionally, the following stations are not based in Minot but generally have a clear signal into town:Cable television
Midcontinent Communications provides cable service to the city of Minot and Minot Air Force Base. Souris River Telecommunications provides cable service to other nearby communities.Midcontinent offers a Bismarck-originating
The CW
cable station, KWMK, on channel 14,
as well as KMSU (a
cable station operated by the Minot
State University broadcasting department) on channel 19.
Local news
KXMC-TV, KMOT-TV, and the Minot Daily News report on local news daily. KCJB-AM, KHRT-AM, and Prairie Public have some local news content, but no active journalists.Transportation
Railroads
The railroads that built Minot remain there today, though Great Northern is now part of the BNSF Railway and the Soo Line is run by the Canadian Pacific Railway.Passenger rail transportation is provided daily
on Amtrak's
Empire
Builder line which stops at the Minot
Amtrak station. Trains make a 20-minute refueling stop in
Minot; Westbound trains arrive about 9:00 am
local time. Eastbound trains arrive about 9:00pm.
US 2 runs East-West. It is a four-lane highway
from Minot east to
Grand Forks and largely two lanes from Minot west to Williston.
In February 2004 it was announced
that Highway 2 would be expanded to four lanes between Minot and
Williston by 2008.
US 83 runs North-South. It is a four-lane highway
from Minot south to Bismarck
and north to Minot
Air Force Base. Past the Air Force Base the road reduces to two
lanes. US 83 crosses the Canadian border at Westhope,
ND, where it becomes Manitoba
Highway 83.
US 52 runs Southeast-Northwest. Southeast from
Minot, US 52 follows a slightly circuitous route to Jamestown,
where it meets up with Interstate 94. Highway 52 merges with
Interstate 94 after Jamestown going east to Fargo.
Northwest from Minot, US 52 crosses the Canadian border at Portal,
ND/North Portal, SK, where it becomes Saskatchewan
Highway 39.
Minot has a bypass for these routes around the
south and west sides of the city.
Airport
Minot International Airport is served by Northwest Airlines three times daily, four times daily in peak periods. Until the early 1990s, it was also served by Denver-based Frontier Airlines and Frontier's successor, Continental Airlines, then, briefly, by the new iteration of Frontier. Airport officials are constantly looking for additional service, both from Northwest and other airlines, but such efforts have proved fruitless so far.Within the city
Automobiles dominate intracity and local area transport. There is limited fixed-route city transit service (Minot City Transit) on weekdays, and flexible-route rural transit service (Souris Basin Transportation) on an occasional basis. Local transit services for the elderly and disabled (Minot Commission on Aging Transit) meet federal guidelines but have 24-hour advance notice requirements.Pedestrianism in the city is inhibited by several
factors; the sidewalk network is poor in many areas of the city,
though improving. Automobile drivers take the right of way at all
but the best-marked crosswalks, and major points are often
separated by relatively large distances and hill slopes. Skateboarding
is illegal in streets and on sidewalks (though there is a skating
area in Roosevelt Park), and rollerblading is generally
disallowed by downtown landowners.
Sites of interest
- Dakota Territory Air Museum is an aircraft museum near the airport. It contains many war and civilian aircraft.
- The Scandinavian Heritage Park is home to the Minot Visitor's Center, as well as buildings based on the Scandinavian style of architecture.
- Pioneer Village, on the state fairgrounds, is a collection of various buildings from the pioneer era.
- The North Dakota State Fair Center, located on the state fairgrounds, is home to many of the city's largest events, including: The North Dakota State Fair, the Norsk Høstfest, the Big One craft show, the KMOT Ag Expo, and the Great Tomato Festival. It also hosts rodeos, and college hockey games.
- Roosevelt Park and Zoo
Notable residents
- Ronnie Bradford - former NFL player
- Dale Brown - former Louisiana State University basketball coach
- Boris Karloff - star of 1931's Frankenstein and other films, lived in Minot for a year
- Gary Cederstrom - Major League Baseball Umpire
- Thor Nelson - National Hockey League Referee
- Josh Duhamel - Emmy Award-winning actor and former male model
- John Hoeven - current Governor of North Dakota
- General David Charles Jones - former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Rear Admiral Michael H. Miller - flag officer of the U.S. Navy and former commander of Carrier Strike Group Seven
- Ragnvald A. Nestos - former governor of North Dakota
- Neal Peterson - musician
- Greg "Fossilman" Raymer - winner of 2004 World Series of Poker
- Chester Reitan - former mayor and creator of Norsk Hostfest
- Daniel V. Roggenbuck - Diplomat (Legal Attache) /Federal Bureau of Investigation representative to United Arab Emirates, Oman and Qatar
- Donny Schatz - World of Outlaws Champion - sprint car driver
- Nicole Borud - Contestant on America's Next Top Model, Cycle 3
- Maynard Feist, AIA - Renowned Architect
Notes
External links
- City of Minot official website
- Minot Convention and Visitors Bureau website
- Minot Community website
- Minot Chamber of Commerce website
- Minot Public Schools website
- Current area weather - from Ramstad Middle School weather station
- History of Minot from 1920-1940
- History of Minot from 1920-1940 through slides
- Minot history - Minot State University
- Fargo Band Family Tree: Minot
- Collected stories of January 18, 2002 CP Rail derailment and anhydrous ammonia spill
- Story of lawsuits against CP Rail after derailment - CBC.ca
minot in Arabic: مينوت، داكوتا الشمالية
minot in Bulgarian: Майнът
minot in Danish: Minot (North Dakota)
minot in German: Minot (North Dakota)
minot in French: Minot (Dakota du Nord)
minot in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Minot, North Dakota
minot in Haitian: Minot
minot in Dutch: Minot (North Dakota)
minot in Piemontese: Minot, Dakota dël
Nòrd
minot in Polish: Minot
minot in Portuguese: Minot (Dakota do
Norte)
minot in Slovak: Minot (Severná Dakota)
minot in Swedish: Minot
minot in Volapük: Minot (North Dakota)
minot in Chinese: 邁諾特 (北達科他州)