Fergus Falls, Minnesota, United States

History : 21st century | Ethnicity | Growth | Immigration | Population growth and loss | Geography | Lakes | Major highways | Economy | Largest employers | Education | Arts and culture | Media : Television : Radio : Print | Sport

🇺🇸 Fergus Falls is a city in and the county seat of Otter Tail County, Minnesota, United States.

History The falls from which the city gets part of its name were discovered by Joe Whitford (a Scottish trapper) in 1856 and promptly named in honor of his employer, James Fergus. It is not known whether Fergus ever visited the city, but Whitford did not live to see the city develop, as he was killed during the 1862 Dakota war in western Minnesota. In 1867, George B. Wright was at the land office at St. Cloud and found Whitford's lapsed claim, purchased the land, and built what is now the Central Dam in downtown Fergus Falls around 1871. After Wright died in 1882, his son Vernon moved from Boston to Minnesota and took over his father's interests in the town. Vernon Wright was also one of the two people who established the Otter Tail Power Company in 1907. The city was incorporated in the late 1870s and is situated along the dividing line between the former great deciduous forest of the Northwest Territories to the east and the great plains to the west, in a region of gentle hills, where the recent geological history is dominated by the recession of the glaciers from the last great Ice Age, with numerous lakes and small rivers.

Two major tornadoes hit Fergus Falls during the early 20th century, the second, the 1919 Fergus Falls tornado, being the greater. The only church edifice left standing after the great cyclone was the predominantly black Baptist church.

History: 21st century Fergus Falls features many different parks (tallgrass prairie and eastern woodlands), stores, and other tourist attractions. The Union Avenue Bridge spans the Otter Tail River, and was reconstructed in 2004. Just below the bridge is part of scenic River Walk Park, which spans about a mile of the river. The part nearest the Union Avenue Bridge was redone along with the bridge. The town hall was modeled after Independence Hall in Philadelphia. Its west wing housed the city fire station until the 1970s. Other points of interest include the county museum, Lake Alice, George B. Wright Park, Pebble Lake Golf Course, and Veteran's Memorial Park. Arts in Fergus Falls are booming with a community theater program downtown. Many local and professional artists perform at A Center for the Arts.

The city also lends its name to the song "Fergus Falls" by the band Field Report on its 2012 self-titled album.

Fergus Falls received international coverage in early 2017 and late 2018 after a news article in Der Spiegel falsely claimed there was an anti-Mexican sign at the city's entrance and fabricated other things about the town. The story's author, Claas Relotius, admitted to numerous instances of journalistic fraud. In December 2018 two residents of Fergus Falls, Michele Anderson and Jake Krohn, published a report pointing out the "11 most absurd lies" of the 2017 article. The same month Der Spiegel also sent a reporter to Fergus Falls to investigate and apologize.

Ethnicity A strong economic division between later Scandinavian immigrant farmers and the earlier English and Scottish war veterans who retained control of the principal businesses of the city centre, the banks, and the increasingly important Otter Tail Power Company, persisted for decades until several generations of ethnic intermarriage and continuing inward and outward migration largely erased the divisions along ethnic lines. The small black community, largely Baptist, which clustered in the Southeast section of the city, gradually dwindled as people departed for larger cities.

Growth The dams built on the Otter Tail River beginning in the 1880s were powerful economic forces that shaped the area's development. Returning soldiers from the American Civil War settled in the region, mostly as farmers (wheat and corn in the western plains and dairy and hogs in the eastern hills and forests). The importance of the Civil War experience to these early settlers is highlighted by the town's street names: the intersecting principal thoroughfares are Lincoln Avenue and Union Avenue. The oldest parts of the town have streets with names such as Sherman, Sheridan, and Vernon. The early English wave of settlement claimed control of the falls along the Otter Tail River and established the first Episcopalian and Presbyterian churches.

Immigration Almost as soon as the foundational structure of the town was laid, an influx of Norwegian immigrants arrived, by way of the Scandinavian migration of Chicago and Minneapolis, often on the Great Northern Railway. Primarily dairy farmers, they established numerous Lutheran churches in the area. The Lutheran Brethren (Church of the Lutheran Brethren of America) established an academy in Fergus Falls, which today operates a private high school, theological seminary and mission society, with an office in Fergus Falls. The pietistic, low-church Lutherans constituted one cultural centre of the Norwegian-German community, while the high-church First Lutheran constituted a separate centre, which attracted a more upwardly mobile class of parishioner.

Population growth and loss After the Interstate Defense Highway System built Interstate 94 along the western edge of Fergus Falls in the late 1950s, population mobility increased dramatically, and high school graduates increasingly left the town to attend colleges in Morris, Fargo-Moorhead, or the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul. As farming declined as an occupation and lifestyle, with large-scale commercial farming gradually replacing the family farm system during the second half of the 20th century, the city appeared increasingly destined to become a retirement and nursing community until a new migration of younger remote workers moved to the city. The bucolic environment, with abundant sporting opportunities that had long attracted summer vacationers, combined with the relatively low cost of real estate and cost of living have brought people wishing to raise their children away from the comparatively commercialized and higher crime environments of larger cities.

Geography According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 15.37 square miles (39.81 km²), of which 14.11 square miles (36.54 km²) is land and 1.26 square miles (3.26 km²) is water.

Interstate 94 / U.S. Highway 59/U.S. Highway 52 and Minnesota State Highway 210 (co-signed); and County Highways 1, 82 and 88 are the main routes in Fergus Falls.

Lakes Lake Name Size

Alice 31 Acres; Chautauqua 229 Acres; Devils 348 Acres; Hoot 161 Acres; Iverson 54 Acres; Jewett 737 Acres; Larson 45 Acres; Opperman 84 Acres; Orwell 782 Acres; Pebble 169 Acres; Spring 47 Acres; Swan 689 Acres; Wright 66 Acres.

Major highways The following routes are located within the city of Fergus Falls. • Interstate 94 • U.S. Highway 59 • Minnesota State Highway 210 • Otter Tail County Highway 1 • Otter Tail County Highway 82 • Otter Tail County Highway 88.

Economy Fergus Falls is a micropolitan with a diversified economy that includes healthcare, manufacturing, commercial, agricultural, information technology, and utilities. The largest employer is Lake Region Healthcare, an integrated health system with a 108-bed hospital, cancer research centre, assisted living community, and multiple clinics.

Largest employers According to the Fergus Falls Economic Improvement Commission's 2015 Community Profile the largest employers in the city are: 1 Lake Region Healthcare; 2 Otter Tail Power Company; 3 Otter Tail County; 4 Fergus Falls Public Schools; 5 PioneerCare; 6 LB Homes; 7 Northern Contours; 8 Minnesota Department of Veterans Affairs; 9 City of Fergus Falls 186

10 Productive Alternatives; 11 Minnesota State Community and Technical College.

Education Fergus Falls Public Schools (Independent School District #544) operates public schools. • Elementary schools ◦ Adams Elementary (1-2) ◦ Cleveland Elementary (3-4) ◦ McKinley Elementary (K-1) ◦ Prairie Science Class (4-5) ◦ School of Choice, Homeschool Co-op (K-8) • Kennedy Secondary School (5-12), with separate middle and high school divisions, is the sole public secondary school

Private schools: • Claire Ann Shover Nursery School (Pre K) • Trinity Lutheran Elementary (Pre K) • Morning Son Christian School (Pre K-6) • Our Lady of Victory School (K-6) • Hillcrest Lutheran Academy (9-12)

Higher education • Minnesota State Community and Technical College • Lutheran Brethren Seminary • Park Region Luther College (no longer exists)

Arts and culture Fergus Falls is home to several arts and culture organizations and has a reputation of being a cultural hub in West Central Minnesota.

A Center for the Arts building was originally built in 1921 and was home to The Orpheum Theater, producing live theater and vaudeville performances and movies. In the early 1990s, after several decades of change and transition, over $1 million was raised to renovate the theater and A Center for the Arts was founded. The Theater is also home to one of the largest pipe organs in the midwest, the Mighty Wurlitzer Theater Pipe Organ.

The Kaddatz Galleries is a nonprofit art gallery located in historic downtown Fergus Falls, whose mission is to foster visual arts education and appreciation, and to maintain a gallery where the works of Charles Beck and other recognised local artists are accessible to the public. The Kaddatz Galleries were founded in 2001 when Artspace bought The Kaddatz Hotel building in partnership with the Hotel Kaddatz Preservation Association. The upstairs of the Kaddatz Hotel Building is home to artist live/work spaces.

The Lake Region Arts Council serves 9 counties (Becker, Clay, Otter Tail, Wilkin, Traverse, Stevens, Grant, and Pope) and has its main office in the River Inn Building in Fergus Falls. The Lake Region Arts Council's mission is to encourage and support the arts in West Central Minnesota. Their programs and services are made possible through an appropriation from the Minnesota State Legislature, Legacy Arts & Cultural Heritage Fund and the McKnight Foundation.

Springboard for the Arts, a nonprofit artist service organization based in St. Paul, has its only satellite office in the River Inn Building, which serves as an artist resource center.

The band Field Report has a song named after Fergus Falls on their eponymous debut album. Lead singer and songwriter, Chris Porterfield, once dated a woman from the town, but the song is actually about a woman he spotted at a downtown Milwaukee music festival. "I saw a girl who was pregnant, and she was with a guy who looked like an asshole", he said. "She looked like she wanted to get out of there. The song was written from her perspective". The song has received critical acclaim.

Media: Television ◦ Public, educational, and government access.

Media: Radio ◦ 1020 AM KJJK (AM) (Sports), Leighton Broadcasting; ◦ 1250 AM KBRF (Talk), Leighton Broadcasting; ◦ 88.7 FM K204FS (Christian), CSN International; ◦ 89.7 FM KCMF (Classical), Minnesota Public Radio; ◦ 91.5 FM KNWF (News), Minnesota Public Radio; ◦ 96.5 FM KJJK-FM (Country), Leighton Broadcasting; ◦ 99.5 FM KPRW (Adult Contemporary), Result Radio, Inc.; ◦ 103.3 FM KZCR (Adult Album Alternative), Leighton Broadcasting.

Media: Print ◦ The Daily Journal; ◦ The Midweek Inc.

Sport Fergus Falls is the proud home of the Fergus Falls Otters as well as home to M State - Fergus Falls sports and many other local teams and organizations for children, teens, adults and seniors.

Saint Paul, Minnesota 
Saint Paul, Minnesota
Image: Adobe Stock andreykr #175831251

Fergus Falls has a population of over 14,119 people. Fergus Falls also forms the centre of the wider Otter Tail County which has a population of over 60,519 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Fergus Falls see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Twin Towns, Sister Cities Fergus Falls has links with:

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Dunfermline, Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Glenrothes, Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Kirkcaldy, Scotland
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

South of: 46.283

🇺🇸 Richland 46.281

🇨🇭 Monthey 46.256

🇭🇺 Szeged 46.253

🇲🇳 Arvaikheer 46.25

🇸🇮 Kranj 46.233

🇺🇸 Pasco 46.233

🇨🇦 Charlottetown 46.233

🇨🇭 Sion 46.233

🇷🇴 Bârlad 46.229

🇸🇮 Celje 46.229

East of: -96.067

🇺🇸 Papillion -96.067

🇺🇸 Tulsa -95.99

🇺🇸 Omaha -95.94

🇺🇸 Council Bluffs -95.862

🇺🇸 Athens -95.833

🇺🇸 Broken Arrow -95.802

🇺🇸 Richmond -95.75

🇺🇸 Cypress -95.694

🇺🇸 Topeka -95.671

🇺🇸 Sugar Land -95.615

Antipodal to Fergus Falls is: 83.933,-46.283

Locations Near: Fergus Falls -96.0667,46.2833

🇺🇸 Moorhead -96.755,46.872 d: 83.9  

🇺🇸 Fargo -96.782,46.876 d: 85.6  

🇺🇸 Brainerd -94.202,46.355 d: 143.4  

🇺🇸 Grand Forks -97.032,47.924 d: 196.5  

🇺🇸 Saint Cloud -94.167,45.55 d: 168.1  

🇺🇸 St. Cloud -94.167,45.55 d: 168.1  

🇺🇸 Elk River -93.567,45.317 d: 221.6  

🇺🇸 Sioux Falls -96.717,43.533 d: 310  

🇺🇸 Chaska -93.617,44.817 d: 251  

🇺🇸 Anoka -93.383,45.183 d: 241.5  

Antipodal to: Fergus Falls 83.933,-46.283

🇦🇺 Bunbury 115.637,-33.327 d: 16976.1  

🇦🇺 Mandurah 115.721,-32.529 d: 16914.9  

🇦🇺 Rockingham 115.717,-32.267 d: 16896.8  

🇦🇺 City of Cockburn 115.833,-32.167 d: 16881.4  

🇦🇺 Vincent 115.834,-31.936 d: 16865  

🇦🇺 Perth 115.857,-31.953 d: 16864.5  

🇦🇺 Wanneroo 115.803,-31.747 d: 16853.8  

🇦🇺 Guildford 115.973,-31.9 d: 16852.3  

🇦🇺 Midland 116.01,-31.888 d: 16848.8  

🇦🇺 Albany 117.867,-35.017 d: 16920.5  

Bing Map

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