Saint Paul ( , abbreviated
St. Paul) is the capital and
second-most populous city of the U.S.
state of Minnesota
. The city lies mostly on the north bank of the
Mississippi River, downstream of
the river's confluence with the Minnesota River, and adjoins Minneapolis
, the state's largest city.
Known as
the "Twin
Cities
", these two cities form the core of Minneapolis-Saint Paul
, the sixteenth largest metropolitan area in the United States
, with about 3.5 million residents. The
city's population at the
2000
census was 287,151.
Saint Paul serves as the county seat of Ramsey
County
, the smallest and most densely populated county in
Minnesota.
Founded near historic Native American settlements as a trading and
transportation center, the city rose to prominence when it was
named the capital of the
Minnesota
Territory in 1849. Though Minneapolis is more nationally
recognized, Saint Paul contains important institutions and the
state's political activity.
Regionally, the city is popular for the
Xcel Energy
Center
, home of the Minnesota
Wild, and for the Science Museum of Minnesota
. As a business hub of the Upper Midwest, it
is headquarters for companies such as
Ecolab
and
Lawson Software.
St. Paul, along with
its Twin City, Minneapolis
, is known for its high literacy rate. It is
the only city in the US, with a population of 250,000 or more, to
increase the circulation number of Sunday newspapers in 2007.
The settlement originally began at present-day Lambert's Landing
but was referred to as
Pig's Eye, when
Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant established a
popular tavern there. When Fr.
Lucien Galtier, the first Catholic pastor of
the region, established the Log Chapel of St. Paul (shortly
thereafter to become the first location of the Cathedral of
St. Paul
), he made it known that the settlement was now to
be called by that name, as "St. Paul as applied to a town or city
was well appropriated, this monosyllable is short, sounds good, it
is understood by all Christian denominations...".
History
Burial
mounds in present-day Indian Mounds Park
suggest the area was originally inhabited by the
Hopewell Native Americans about
two thousand years ago. From the early 17th century until
1837 the
Mdewakanton Dakota, a tribe of
the
Sioux, lived near the mounds after fleeing
their ancestral home of Mille Lacs Lake from advancing
Ojibwe. They called the area
I-mni-za ska
dan ("little white rock") from the exposed white sandstone
cliffs.

Steamboats docked in 1858, likely at
Lambert's Landing.
Following the
Louisiana Purchase
in 1803, a U.S. Army officer named
Zebulon
Pike negotiated for approximately of land from the local Dakota
tribes in 1805 for the establishment of a fort.
The territory was
located on both banks of the Mississippi River starting from
Saint Anthony
Falls
in present-day Minneapolis to the confluence with
the Saint
Croix River. Fort Snelling
was built on the territory in 1819 at the
confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers, which formed a natural
barrier to both Native American nations. The 1837 Treaty
with the Sioux ceded all local tribal land east of the Mississippi
to the U.S. Government.
Taoyateduta
(Chief Little Crow V) moved his band at
Kaposia across the river to the south. Fur traders,
explorers, and missionaries came to the area for the fort's
protection. Many of the settlers were French Canadians and lived
nearby. However, as a whiskey trade flourished, military officers
banned settlers from the fort-controlled lands.
Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant, a retired fur
trader-turned-
bootlegger who
particularly irritated officials, set up his tavern, the Pig's Eye,
near present-day Lambert's Landing. By the early 1840s, the
community had become important as a trading center and a
destination for settlers heading west. Locals called the area
Pig's Eye (French:
L'Oeil du Cochon) or
Pig's
Eye Landing after Parrant's popular tavern.
In 1841, Father Lucien Galtier was sent to minister to the Catholic
French Canadians and established a chapel on the bluffs above
Lambert's Landing named for his favorite saint,
Paul the Apostle. Galtier intended for the
settlement to adopt the name Saint Paul in honor of the new chapel.
In 1847 a New York educator named Harriet Bishop moved to the area
and opened the city's first school. The
Minnesota Territory was formalized in
1849 and Saint Paul named as capital.
In 1857, the
territorial legislature voted to move the capital to Saint
Peter
. However,
Joe
Rolette, a territorial legislator, stole the physical text of
the approved bill and went into hiding, thus preventing the move.
On May 11, 1858, Minnesota was admitted to the union as the
thirty-second state with Saint Paul as the capital.
That year, more than 1,000 steamboats were in service at Saint
Paul, making the city a gateway for settlers to the Minnesota
frontier or Dakota Territory. Natural geography was a primary
reason the city became a landing. The area was the last accessible
point to unload boats coming upriver due to the Mississippi River
valley's stone bluffs. During this period, Saint Paul was called
"The Last City of the East."
James J.
Hill constructed and expanded his
network of railways into the
Great Northern Railway and
Northern Pacific Railway, which were
headquartered in Saint Paul. Today they are the
Burlington Northern Santa
Fe Railway.
On August
20, 1904, severe thunderstorms and
tornadoes damaged hundreds of downtown
buildings causing USD $1.78 million (1904) in
damages in the city and ripping spans from the High
Bridge
. In the 1960s during
urban renewal, Saint Paul razed western
neighborhoods close to downtown. The city also contended with
creation of the interstate freeway system in a fully built
landscape. From 1959 to 1961, the western Rondo neighborhood was
obliterated by the construction of
Interstate 94 and brought attention to racial
segregation and unequal housing in northern cities. The
Rondo Days celebration annually commemorates the
African American community.
Downtown had short skyscraper booms beginning in the 1970s. The
tallest buildings were constructed in the late 1980s such as
Galtier Plaza (Jackson and Sibley
Towers), The Pointe of Saint Paul condominiums, and the city's
tallest building
Wells Fargo Place
(formerly Minnesota World Trade Center). The 1990s to 2000s
continued the tradition of ushering in new immigrant groups.
As of
2004, nearly 10% of the city's population were recent Hmong immigrants from Vietnam
, Laos
, Cambodia
, Thailand
, and Myanmar
.
Geography
Saint Paul history and the city's growth as a landing port are tied
to water. The city's defining physical characteristic, the
Mississippi and connecting Minnesota Rivers were carved into the
region during the
last ice age.
Fed by
receding glaciers and Lake Agassiz
ten thousand years ago, torrents of water from a
glacial river undercut the
river valleys. The city is situated in east-central
Minnesota.
The Mississippi River forms a municipal boundary on part of the
city's west, southwest and southeast sides.
Minneapolis, the
state's largest city lies to the west; Falcon
Heights
, Lauderdale
, Roseville
, and Maplewood
are north; Maplewood is also to the east; the
cities of West Saint Paul
and South Saint Paul
are to the south; and Lilydale
, Mendota
and Mendota Heights
lie across the river from the city to the
south. The city's largest lakes are Pig's Eye Lake,
in the river, Lake
Phalen
, and Lake Como
. According to the
United States Census Bureau, the
city has a total area of 56.2 square miles (145.5 km²).
52.8 square miles (136.7 km²) of it is land and
3.4 square miles (8.8 km²) of it (6.07%) is water.
Neighborhoods
Saint Paul's Department of Planning and Economic Development
divides Saint Paul into 17 Planning Districts, created in 1979 to
allow neighborhoods to participate in governance and utilize
Community Development
Block Grants. With a funding agreement directly from the city,
the councils share a pool of funds. The councils have significant
land-use control, a voice in guiding development, and they organize
residents. The boundaries are adjusted depending on population
changes, as such, they sometimes overlap established
neighborhoods.
The city's seventeen Planning Districts are:
- 1. Sunray-Battle Creek-Highwood
- 2. Greater East Side
- 3. West Side
- 4. Dayton's Bluff
- 5. Payne-Phalen
- 6. North End
- 7. Thomas Dale (Frogtown)
- 8. Summit-University
- 9. West End
- 10. Como (Como
Park
)
- 11. Hamline-Midway
- 12. Saint Anthony
Park
- 13. Union Park
- 14. Macalester-Groveland
- 15. Highland (Highland
Park)
- 16. Summit Hill
- 17. Downtown
- 18. Hillcrest (White Bear and Iowa)
Climate

The city skyline from the southwest in
the winter.
Saint Paul has a
continental
climate typical of the
Upper
Midwestern United States. Winters are frigid and snowy, while
summer is comfortable and warm. At times however, it can be hot and
humid. As a consequence of St. Paul's continental climate it
experiences one of the greatest ranges of temperatures on earth. On
the
Köppen climate
classification, Saint Paul falls in the warm summer
humid continental climate zone
(
Dfa). The city experiences a full range of precipitation
and related weather events, including
snow,
sleet,
ice,
rain,
thunderstorms,
tornadoes and
fog.
Due to its northerly location in the United States and lack of
large bodies of water to moderate the air, Saint Paul is sometimes
subjected to cold Arctic
air masses,
especially during late December, January and February. The average
annual temperature of 45.4 °F (7 °C) gives the
Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area the coldest annual mean
temperature of any major metropolitan area in the
continental U.S.
Demographics

Cinco De Mayo festival in 2007.
The Latin and Hispanic communities (though primarily Mexican)
have focused on Saint Paul's West Side
The
earliest known inhabitants from about 400 A.D. were members of the
Hopewell tradition who buried
their dead in mounds (now Indian Mounds Park
) on the bluffs above the river. The next known
inhabitants were the Mdewakanton
Dakota in the 17th century who fled their
ancestral home of Mille
Lacs Lake
in central
Minnesota in response to westward expansion of the Ojibwe nation. The Ojibwe would later occupy
the north (east) bank of the Mississippi River.
By 1800,
French Canadian explorers
came through the region and attracted fur traders to the area.
Fort Snelling
and nearby Pig's Eye Tavern also brought the first
Yankees from New
England
and English, Irish, and Scottish immigrants
who had enlisted in the army and settled nearby after
discharge. These early settlers and entrepreneurs built
houses on the heights north of the river. The first wave of
immigration came with the Irish who settled at
Connemara Patch along the Mississippi, named
for their home in
Connemara Ireland. The
Irish would
become
prolific in politics, city governance, and public safety much
to the chagrin of the Germans and French who had grown into the
majority. In 1850, the first of many waves of
Swedish immigrants passed through Saint Paul
on their way to farming communities in northern and western regions
of the
territory. A large group
settled in
Swede Hollow which would
later become home to Poles, Italians and Mexicans.
The last Swedish
presence had moved up Saint Paul's East Side along Payne
Avenue
in the 1950s.
In terms of people who specified
European ancestry in the 2005-2007
American Community Survey,
the city was 26.4%
German, 13.8%
Irish, 8.4%
Norwegian, 7.0%
Swedish, and 6.2%
English. There is also a visible community
of people of
Sub-Saharan African
ancestry, representing 4.2% of St. Paul's population. By the 1980s,
the Thomas Dale area, once a Austro-Hungarian enclave known as
Frogtown (German:
Froschburg),
became home to Vietnamese people who left their war-torn country.
Soon after a settlement program for the Hmong diaspora came and by
2000, the Saint Paul Hmong were the largest urban contingent in the
United States. Mexican immigrants have settled in Saint Paul's West
Side since the 1930s, and have grown enough that Mexico opened a
foreign consulate in the 2005.
The majority of residents claiming religious affiliation are
Christian, split between the
Roman Catholic Church and various
Protestant denominations. The Roman
Catholic presence comes from Irish, German, Scottish, and French
Canadian settlers who in time would be bolstered by Hispanic
immigrants. There are
Jewish synagogues such as
Mount Zion Temple and relatively small
populations of
Hindus,
Muslims,
Buddhists, and
Pagans.
As of the 2005-2007
American
Community Survey conducted by the
U.S. Census
Bureau,
White Americans made up
66.5% of Saint Paul's population; of which 62.1% were non-Hispanic
whites.
Blacks or
African
Americans made up 13.9% of Saint Paul's population; of which
13.5% were non-Hispanic blacks.
American Indians made up
0.8% of Saint Paul's population; of which 0.6% were non-Hispanic.
Asian Americans made up 12.3% of
Saint Paul's population; of which 12.2% were non-Hispanic.
Pacific Islander Americans made up
less than 0.1% of Saint Paul's population. Individuals from some
other race made up 3.4% of Saint Paul's population; of which 0.2%
were non-Hispanic. Individuals from
two or more races made up 3.1% of Saint
Paul's population; of which 2.6% were non-Hispanic. In addition,
Hispanics and Latinos
made up 8.7% of Saint Paul's population.
As of the
2000 U.S.
Census, there were 287,151
people, 112,109 households, and 60,999 families residing in the
city. The racial makeup of the city was 67.0%
White, 11.7%
African American, 1.1%
Native American, 12.4%
Asian (mostly
Hmong and
Vietnamese), 0.07%
Pacific Islander, 3.8% from
other races, and 3.9%
from two or more races.
Hispanic or
Latino of any race were 7.9% of the
population.
There were 112,109 households, out of which 29.1% had children
under the age of 18 living with them, 36.1% were married couples
living together, 13.9% had a female householder with no husband
present, and 45.6% were non-families. 35.9% of all households were
made up of individuals and 9,4% had someone living alone who was 65
years of age or older. The average household size was 2.46 and the
average family size was 3.32.
In the city the population was spread out with 27.1% under the age
of 18, 12.5% from 18 to 24, 32.0% from 25 to 44, 18.0% from 45 to
64, and 10.3% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was
31 years. For every 100 females there were 93.6 males. For every
100 females age 18 and over, there were 89.5 males.
The median income for a household in the city was $38,774, and the
median income for a family was $48,925. Males had a median income
of $35,111 versus $29,432 for females. The per capita income for
the city was $20,216. About 11.7% of families and 15.6% of the
population were living below the poverty line, including 23.2% of
those under age 18 and 9.7% of those age 65 or over.
Economy
The Minneapolis-Saint Paul-Bloomington area employs 1,570,700
people in the private sector as of July 2008, 82.43 percent of
which work in private service providing-related jobs.
Major
corporations headquartered in
Saint Paul include
Ecolab, a chemical and
cleaning product company which was named in 2008 by the
Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal as the eighth best
place to work in the Twin Cites for companies with 1,000 full-time
Minnesota employees,
Securian Financial Group Inc.,
Lawson Software, a business
software and support company, and
Gander Mountain, a retailer of sporting
goods which operates 115 stores in 23 states.
The
3M Company is often cited as one of Saint
Paul's companies though it is located in adjacent Maplewood,
Minnesota
. 3M employs 16,000 people throughout
Minnesota.
St. Jude
Medical, a manufacturer of medical devices, is directly across
the municipal border of Saint Paul in Little
Canada
though the companies address is listed in Saint
Paul.
The city
is home to the Ford Motor
Company's Twin Cities Assembly Plant
, which it opened in 1924. Recently slated
for closing, Ford now expects the plant to remain open through at
least 2011 despite massive corporate losses.
The site is located
in Highland Park on the
Mississippi River adjacent to a
company-owned dam
, which generates hydroelectric power.
Culture
In winter
months, Saint Paul is active with the Saint Paul Winter Carnival, a
tradition originating from 1886 when a New York reporter called
Saint Paul "another Siberia
." Attended by 350,000 visitors annually, the
event showcases
ice sculpting, winter
food, activities, and an ice palace.
Year round the
Como Zoo and
Conservatory
and adjoining zoo and Japanese Garden are
popular. The historic Landmark
Center
located in downtown Saint Paul hosts cultural and
arts organizations. The city's notable recreation locations
include Indian Mounds Park
, Battle Creek Regional Park, Harriet Island
Regional Park, Highland
Park, the Wabasha Street Caves
, Lake Como
, Lake
Phalen
, and Rice Park, as well as several areas abutting
the Mississippi
River.
The city
is associated with the Minnesota State Fair
located in nearby Falcon
Heights
as the fair grounds are just north of the Midway
neighborhood and southeast of the University of Minnesota Saint
Paul Campus. Though Fort Snelling
is on the Minneapolis side of the Mississippi River
bluff, the area including Fort Snelling State Park
and Pike
Island
is managed by the Minnesota Department
of Natural Resources headquartered in the city.
Saint Paul is the birthplace of
cartoonist Charles
M. Schulz (
Peanuts) who lived in Merriam Park from infancy
until early 1960. Schulz'
Snoopy cartoon
inspired decorated giant
Peanuts sculptures around the
city, a chamber of commerce promotion in the late 1990s. Other
notables include playwright
August
Wilson who lived in the city from 1978 until 1990. He wrote
much of his decalogue of plays about the African-American
experience in the 20th century during this time, premiering at the
Penumbra Theatre. Other 20th
century notables include renowned painter
LeRoy Neiman and photographer
John Vachon.
The
Ordway Center for the Performing
Arts
hosts theater productions and the Minnesota Opera is a founding tenant.
RiverCentre
, attached to Xcel Energy Center
, serves as the city's convention center. The
city has contributed to the
music of
Minnesota and the Twin Cities music scene through various
venues.
Great jazz musicians have passed through the
influential Artists' Quarter, first
established in the 1970s in Whittier, Minneapolis
until it moved to downtown Saint Paul in
1994. The
Turf Club in
Midway has been a music scene landmark since the 1940s. St. Paul is
also the home base for the internationally acclaimed
Rose Ensemble. As an Irish stronghold, the
city boasts popular Irish pubs with live music such as Shamrocks,
The Dubliner and O'Gara's. The internationally acclaimed
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra is
the nation's only full-time professional chamber orchestra. The
Minnesota Centennial
Showboat on the Mississippi River began in 1958 with
Minnesota's first centennial celebration.
Saint
Paul hosts a number of museums including the University of
Minnesota's Goldstein Museum of Design; The Minnesota Children's Museum; The
Schubert Club Museum of Musical Instruments; The Minnesota Museum
of American Art; The Traces Center for History and Culture; The
Minnesota
History Center
; The Alexander
Ramsey House; The James J.
Hill House
; The Minnesota Transportation
Museum; The Science Museum of Minnesota
; and The Twin City Model Railroad
Museum.
Media

Minnesota Public Radio headquarters in
downtown Saint Paul
Residents of Saint Paul can receive 10 broadcast television
stations, five of which broadcast from within Saint Paul. One daily
newspaper, the
St. Paul
Pioneer Press, two weekly neighborhood newspapers, the
East Side Review and
City Pages (Village Voice Media), and
several monthly or bi-monthly neighborhood papers serve the city.
Several media outlets based in neighboring Minneapolis also serve
the Saint Paul community, including the
Star Tribune.
And the magazine,
Saint Paul Illustrated is published in Bloomington
.
Saint Paul is home to
Minnesota
Public Radio, a three-format system that broadcasts on nearly
40 stations around the Midwest. MPR locally delivers news and
information, classical, and The Current (which plays a wide variety
of music). The station regionally has 94,000 members and more than
800,000 listeners each week throughout the Upper Midwest, the
largest audience of any regional public radio network. Also
operating as part of
American
Public Media, MPR's programming reaches 5 million listeners,
most notably through
A Prairie
Home Companion hosted by
Garrison
Keillor, who also lives in the city.
The Fitzgerald
Theater
, renamed in 1994 for Irish native and novelist
F. Scott Fitzgerald is home to the
show.
Sports

The Xcel Energy Center, configured for
professional hockey.
The arena also supports other professional sports, concerts
and other events.
The Center hosted the 2008 Republican National Convention in
September 2008.
The Saint Paul division of Parks and Recreation runs over 1,500
organized sports teams. In addition the Parks and Recreation
department is responsible for 160 parks and 41 recreation
centers.
Saint Paul hosts a number of professional, semi-professional and
amateur sports teams.
The Minnesota
Wild and the Minnesota Swarm
both play their home game in downtown Saint Paul's Xcel Energy
Center
, which was built for the Wild in 2000.
The Wild
brought the NHL back to Minnesota for the first time since 1993,
when the Minnesota North Stars
left the city for Dallas
, Texas
.
Citing the history of hockey in the Twin Cities and teams at all
levels, Sports Illustrated affectionately called Saint Paul the new
Hockeytown U.S.A. in 2007.
The
Xcel Energy
Center
, a multi-purpose entertainment and sports venue,
can be converted to host concerts and accommodate nearly all
sporting events. The Xcel Energy Center is located on the
site of the demolished Saint Paul Civic Center
. The Xcel Energy Center hosts the
Minnesota high school
boys hockey Tournament, Minnesota High School Girl's Volleyball
Tournament and concerts though out the year. In 2004, it was named
the best overall sports venue in the U.S. by ESPN. Previously, the
Minnesota Fighting Saints
had played in Saint Paul from 1972 to 1977.
The
St. Paul Saints is the city's
semi-professional baseball team. Originally founded in 1884, they
were shut down in 1961 after the Minnesota Twins moved to
Minneapolis. The St. Paul Saints were brought back in 1993 as an
independent baseball team in the
Northern League of the
American
Association.
Their home games are played at open-air
Midway
Stadium
in Energy Park in the northwest section of the
city. Four noted Major League All Star baseball players are
natives of Saint Paul: Hall of Fame outfielder
Dave Winfield, Hall of Fame infielder
Paul Molitor, pitcher
Jack Morris and catcher
Joe
Mauer. The all black
St.
Paul Colored Gophers played four seasons in Saint Paul from
1907 to 1911.
The
St. Paul Twin Stars of the
National Premier Soccer
League play their home games at James
Griffin Stadium
. The first
curling
club in Saint Paul was founded in 1888.
The current club, the
St. Paul
Curling Club
, was founded in 1912 and is the largest curling
club in the United States. The
Minnesota RollerGirls are a flat-track
roller derby league that is based in
the
Roy Wilkins Auditorium.
Minnesota's oldest athletic organization,
the Minnesota Boat Club resides in the Mississippi River on
Raspberry Island
. The club has produced world-class rowers
for over a century.
The
Minnesota Timberwolves,
Twins, and Vikings all play in Minneapolis
.
Government and politics

Minnesota State Capitol
Saint Paul is governed via a variation of the
strong
mayor-council form of government. The mayor is the
chief executive and
chief administrative officer
for the city and the seven member city council is the legislative
body. The mayor is elected by the entire city, while members of the
city council are elected from seven different geographic wards,
which have approximately equal populations. Both the mayor and
council members serve four-year terms. The current mayor is
Chris Coleman (
DFL), who is
unrelated to former mayor Norm Coleman. Coleman follows a long line
of Irish mayors and he is the ninth since 1900. Aside from
Norm Coleman (1994-2002) who became a
Republican during his second term, Saint Paul has not elected a
Republican mayor since 1952.
The city
is also the county seat for Ramsey County
, named for Alexander
Ramsey the first state governor. The county once spanned
much of the present-day metropolitan area and was originally to be
named Saint Paul County after the city. Today it is geographically
the smallest county and is the most densely populated. As the only
home rule county in Minnesota, the seven-member Board of
Commissioners appoints a county manager whose office is in the
combination city hall/county courthouse along with the Minnesota
Second Judicial Courts. The nearby Law Enforcement Center houses
the Ramsey County Sheriff's office.
State and federal
Saint Paul is the capital of the state of Minnesota. The city hosts
the capitol building, designed by Saint Paul resident
Cass Gilbert, and the
House and
Senate office buildings.
The Minnesota
Governor's Residence
, which is used for some state functions, is on
Summit Avenue. Minnesota's two
major political parties are headquartered in Saint Paul. The
Minnesota
Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, affiliated with the
Democratic Party and the
Republican Party of
Minnesota. Many state departments and services are
headquartered throughout Saint Paul such as the
Minnesota Department
of Natural Resources.
The city is represented by 12 people in the
Minnesota Legislature. The latest
biannual election was in 2008. At the Federal level, the city is in
Minnesota's 4th
congressional district, represented by
Betty McCollum, a
Democrat. In the
Senate, Minnesota is represented by
Amy Klobuchar, a former
Hennepin County Attorney, a
Democrat, and
Al Franken, a former comedian and satirist, a
Democrat.
| Minnesota House and Senate districts |
Senate
|
House |
|
Name |
Took office |
Party |
|
Name |
Took office |
Party |
| 64 |
Dick Cohen |
1986 |
DFL |
64A |
Erin Murphy |
2006 |
DFL |
| 64B |
Michael Paymar |
1996 |
DFL |
| 65 |
Sandy Pappas |
1990 |
DFL |
65A |
Cy Thao |
2002 |
DFL |
| 65B |
Carlos Mariani |
1990 |
DFL |
| 66 |
Ellen Anderson |
1992 |
DFL |
66A |
John Lesch |
2002 |
DFL |
| 66B |
Alice Hausman |
1989 |
DFL |
| 67 |
Mee Moua |
2002 |
DFL |
67A |
Tim
Mahoney |
1998 |
DFL |
| 67B |
Sheldon Johnson |
2000 |
DFL |
Note: Ellen Anderson and Alice
Hausman also represent Falcon Heights
.
Education
Saint Paul is second in the United States in the number of higher
education institutions per capita. Higher education institutions
that call Saint Paul home include three public and eight private
colleges and universities, and five post-secondary institutions.
Well-known colleges and universities
include: the College of Saint
Catherine, Concordia University
, Hamline University
, Macalester College
, and the University
of St. Thomas
. Metropolitan State University
and Saint Paul
College, which focus on non-traditional students, are based in
Saint Paul, as well as two law schools, William Mitchell College of
Law and Hamline
University School of Law.
The
Saint Paul Public
Schools district is the state's second largest school district
and serves approximately 42,000 students. The district is extremely
diverse with students from families speaking 70 different
languages, although only four languages are used for most school
communication. Those languages are
English,
Spanish,
Hmong and
Somali. The district runs 82 different
schools including 52
elementary
schools, twelve
middle schools,
seven
high schools, ten
alternative schools and one
special education school, employing over
6,500 teachers and staff. The school district also oversees
community education programs for pre-K and adult learners,
including Early Childhood Family Education,
GED
Diploma, language programs and various learning opportunities for
community members of all ages. In 2006, Saint Paul Public Schools
celebrated its 150th anniversary.
A variety of
K-12 private,
parochial and public
charter schools are also represented in the
city. In 1992, Saint Paul became the first city in the U.S. to
sponsor and open a
charter school,
now found in most states across the nation. Saint Paul is currently
home to 21 charter schools as well as 38 private schools.
Cretin-Derham Hall High
School
in the Highland Park neighborhood. Both are
members of the Catholic Church.
Transportation

I-94 as it enters downtown Saint Paul
from the west.
Residents utilize
Interstate
35E running north-south, and
Interstate 94 running east-west. Trunk
highways include
U.S.
Highway 52,
Minnesota State Highway 280, and
Minnesota State Highway 5.
Saint Paul has several unique roads such as
Ayd Mill Road and
Shepard Road/Warner Road, which
diagonally follow particular geographic features in the city.
Metro Transit provides bus
service and connects the city to the existing
Hiawatha Line light rail via dedicated bus
routes but will not have its own line, the
Central Line along
University Avenue
until 2014. Downtown Saint Paul has a five mile (8 km)
enclosed
skyway system over twenty-five city
blocks. Biking is also gaining popularity due to paved
bike lanes which connect to
other bike routes throughout the
metropolitan area.
The layout of city streets and roads has often drawn complaints.
Jesse Ventura brought up the city's
roadways during an appearance on the
Late Show with David
Letterman while
Governor
of Minnesota. Ventura later apologized for his remark that the
streets had been designed by "drunken Irishmen," although people
had already been complaining about the fractured grid system for
more than a century by that point. Some of the city road design is
the result of the curve of the Mississippi River, hilly topography,
conflicts between developers of different neighborhoods in the
early city, and grand plans only half-realized. Outside of
downtown, the roads are less confusing, but most roads are named,
rather than numbered, increasing the difficulty for non-natives to
navigate. Due to neighborhood autonomy, some roads suddenly change
names without warning.
Amtrak's Empire Builder
between Chicago and Seattle stops once daily in each direction at
nearby Midway
Station
. Ridership on the train is increasing,
about 6% from 2005 to over 505,000 in fiscal year 2007.
Increased
ridership has prompted southern Minnesota leaders to plan for an
expansion of Amtrak's service in the area, including an overhaul of
Saint Paul's
Union Depot
. Saint Paul is the site of the Pig's Eye
Yard, a major freight
Classification
yard for
Canadian Pacific
Railway. As of 2003, the yard handled over 1,000 freight cars
per day. Both
Union Pacific
and
Burlington Northern Santa Fe run
trains through yard, though they are not classified at Pig's Eye.
Burlington Northern Santa Fe operates the large Northtown Yard in
Minneapolis, which handles about 600 cars per day. There are
several other small yards located around the city.

Saint Paul Downtown Airport (Holman
Field)
Saint
Paul is served by the Minneapolis-Saint Paul International
Airport
(MSP), which sits on 3,400 acres (14 km²)
southwest of the city on the west side of the Mississippi River
between Minnesota State
Highway 5, Interstate
494
, Minnesota
State Highway 77, and Minnesota State Highway
62. The airport serves three international, twelve
domestic, seven charter and four regional carriers and is a hub and
home base for
Northwest Airlines,
Mesaba Airlines and
Sun Country Airlines.
Saint Paul is also
served by the St. Paul Downtown Airport
located just south of downtown, across the
Mississippi River. The airport, also known as Holman Field,
is a
reliever airport, run by
the
Metropolitan
Airports Commission. The airport houses Minnesota's Air
National Guard and is tailored to
local corporate
aviation. There are three runways that serve about 100 resident
aircraft and a flight training school.
The Holman Field
Administration Building
and Riverside Hangar
are on the National Register of Historic
Places.
Sister cities
See also
Footnotes
External links