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Source: Upham, Warren, Minnesota Geographic Names. St. Paul, Minnesota Histroical Society, 1969. |
Aitkin |
Scottish-born fur trader William Alexander Aitkin |
Anoka |
Sioux or Dakota word meaning “on both sides” |
Becker |
George Loomis Becker, former St. Paul mayor, state senator, brigadier general and St. Paul and Pacific Railroad land commissioner |
Beltrami |
Giamcomo Beltrami; discoverer of the Bloody (Red Lake) River and the Mississippi River |
Benton |
Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton; enactor of homestead land laws |
Big Stone |
Big Stone Lake |
Blue Earth |
Named for the bluish-green earth in the region |
Brown |
Joseph Renshaw Brown; drummer boy, soldier, Indian trader, lumberman, pioneer, speculator, sounder, legislator, politician, editor and inventor |
Carlton |
Rueben B. Carlton; early settler and member of the first senate (1858) |
Carver |
Jonathan Carver; explorer and writer of the northland, traveled with the Sioux on the Minnesota River |
Cass |
Statesman Lewis Cass |
Chippewa |
Chippewa River |
Chisago |
Named after the largest lake in the county |
Clay |
Statesman Henry Clay |
Clearwater |
Clearwater River and Lake |
Cook |
Major Michael Cook; brave Civil War soldier |
Cottonwood |
Cottonwood River |
Crow Wing |
Named for an island shaped like a raven’s wing at the junction of the Crow Wing and Mississippi Rivers |
Dakota |
Named after the Dakota Tribe of Indians |
Dodge |
Henry and August Caesar Dodge; father and son politicians of the time |
Douglas |
Stephen Arnold Douglas; know as “little giant,” adversary of Abe Lincoln |
Faribault |
Jean Baptiste Faribault; trader among the Sioux |
Fillmore |
Millard Fillmore; US President (1850-1853) |
Freeborn |
William Freeborn; second mayor of Red Wing |
Goodhue |
James Madison Goodhue; Minnesota’s first printer and editor |
Grant |
Ulysses Simpson Grant; Civil War general and US President (1869-1877) |
Hennepin |
Father Louis Hennepin; missionary, explorer and author |
Houston |
Sam Houston; general and political leader |
Hubbard |
Lucius Frederick Hubbard; editor, soldier, businessman, and first governor 1882-1887 |
Isanti |
Tribal name of the area |
Itasca |
Lake Itasca |
Jackson |
Henry Jackson; first merchant, postmaster, and justice-of-the-peace in St. Paul |
Kanabec |
Named after the Snake River, Kanabec is Ojibway for “snake” |
Kandiyohi |
Dakota Indian name meaning “where the buffalo fish come” |
Kittson |
Norman Wolfred Kittson; leading pioneer, fur trader, and mayor of St. Paul |
Koochiching |
Cree Indian name of uncertain meaning given by Ojibways to Rainy River and the falls and rapids |
Lac Qui Parle |
French, meaning “lake which talks” |
Lake |
Named after Lake Superior |
Lake of the Woods |
Named after the lake that forms the county’s northern border |
Le Sueur |
French-Canadian Pierre Charles Le Sueur; trader and explorer |
Lincoln |
Abraham Lincoln |
Lyon |
General Nathaniel Lyon; killed in the Battle of Wilson’s Creek, Missouri |
Mahnomen |
Ojibway word for wild rice |
Marshall |
William Rainey Marshall; pioneer merchant, banker, soldier, and governor (1866-1870) |
Martin |
Henry Martin, who came from Connecticut in 1856 and purchased thousands of acres in this and other counties |
McLeod |
Martin McLeod; a pioneer fur trader who became president of the Territorial Legislature Council in 1853 |
Meeker |
Bradley B. Meeker; territorial legislator, Minnesota Supreme Court Justice and charter member of the Minnesota Historical Society |
Mille Lacs |
Named after the lake the French called “Thousand Lakes” |
Morrison |
William and Allen Morrison; pioneer fur traders who explored the Mississippi headwaters |
Mower |
John El. Mower; pioneer lumberman who served both the Territorial (1854-55) and State Legislatures (1874-75) |
Murray |
William Pitt Murray; Territorial Legislator and president of its council, also a state representative and senator |
Nicollet |
Joseph Nicolas Nicollet; a French-born geographer and explorer who mapped the Itasca Lake basin in 1836 |
Nobles |
William H. Nobles; a wagon maker and road builder who served in the Minnesota Territorial Legislature in 1854 and 1856 |
Norman |
Named after the early Norwegian (Norsemen or Norman) settlers |
Olmsted |
David Olmsted; first mayor of St. Paul who was also an editor and a publisher |
Otter Tail |
Ottertail Lake and River, named by the Ojibway for its long, ancient sandbar shaped like an otter’s tail |
Pennington |
Edmund Pennington; a railroad man who become president of the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railway |
Pine |
Named for the great forests of white and Norway pine which once flourished in the county |
Pipestone |
Named for the red pipestone, or catlinite, which was venerated and quarried by Indians |
Polk |
James Knox Polk; US President (1845-1849) |
Pope |
General John Pope; explorer and soldier who assisted Generals Sibley and Sully in the 1863-64 campaign against the Sioux Indians |
Ramsey |
Alexander Ramsey; Minnesota’s first Territorial Governor (1849-1853) and the second mayor of St. Paul (1855) |
Red Lake |
Red Lake River, named by the Ojibway for the river’s red sand and reddish water |
Redwood |
Named after a river believed to be named for a slender bush whose red bark the Dakota mixed with tobacco for smoking |
Renville |
Joseph Renville who led the Sioux warriors for the British against the US in the War of 1812 |
Rice |
Henry Mower Rice who aided in negotiating Indian treaties and became one of the first two Minnesota Senators |
Rock |
Named for a large rocky outcrop or plateau, know as “The Mound” |
Roseau |
Roseau Lake and Roseau River |
St. Louis |
St. Louis River which was given its name by French explorer Verendrye |
Scott |
General Winfield Scott who served in the War of 1812 and was American troop commander in the Mexican War (1846-1848) |
Sherburne |
Moses Sherburne; a Territorial Supreme Court Justice from 1853-1857, he helped to compile Minnesota’s statutes |
Sibley |
Henry Hastings Sibley; fur trader, pioneer, and first governor of Minnesota (1858-1860) |
Stearns |
Charles Thomas Stearns; distinguished pioneer resident of St. Cloud |
Steele |
Franklin Steele; a prominent Minneapolis pioneer and charter member of the Minnesota Historical Society and member of the University of Minnesota Board of Regents |
Stevens |
Isaac Ingalls Stevens; a statesman who requested this county be named for him seven years after a clerical error denied him that honor in 1855 for Stearns County |
Swift |
Henry Adoniram Swift, Minnesota’s governor in 1863Todd CountyJohn Blair Smith Todd; commander of Fort Ripley from 1849-1856 |
Traverse |
Lake Traverse |
Wabasha |
Named for a three-generation line of great Sioux chiefs named Wabasha |
Wadena |
Wadena Trading Post, built on the old Crow Wing-to-Pembina Trail |
Waseca |
Dakota or Sioux word translated as “rich,” “fertile” and “plentiful” |
Washington |
George Washington |
Watonwan |
Watonwan River, a Dakota name believed to signify “where fish-bait abounds” |
Wilkin |
Colonel Alexander Wilkin, an attorney, state marshall and soldier who was killed in 1864 during the Battle of Tupelo, Mississippi |
Winona |
Named after a Dakota woman of distinction, Winona, who was a cousin of the last of the three chiefs named Wabasha |
Wright |
Silas Wright, New York lawyer and politician |
Yellow Medicine |
Yellow Medicine River, the Dakota or Sioux Pajutzaee (“yellow-plant root diggings”) |