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Lake
Hanska County Park Information:
Historic
Lake Hanska County Park offers a quiet rural park close to a wide
variety of activities. Shaded, level campsites with electric hookups
are part of this Brown County Park located 17 miles southwest
of New Ulm. The campground also includes a large tent camping
area, clean restrooms with showers, sanitary dump and firewood
for sale.
Lake Hanska County Park has a variety of historic highlights
including a log cabin built in the 1850s, an old fort site,
and interpretive signage. There is also a DNR public lake access
and fishing pier, playground, hiking and cross country skiing
trails, sand swimming beach and a variety of picnic areas. Three
picnic shelters can be reserved, at a nominal fee, for family
or large group gatherings. The park is located a short driving
distance from a variety of regional celebrations.
Archaeologists
have determined from their excavations that pre-historic hunting
people occupied this place from about 500 B.C. to 1000 A.D.. Agricultural
tribes occupied the area from this time until the first contact
with Europeans.
In
the late 1850s, after the Dakota (or Sioux) Indians had
been moved to reservations, Norwegian immigrants moved to the
area. After the Sioux Uprising in 1862, the highest hill in the
park proved to be an ideal place for a fort to help protect settlers.
Soldiers of the Ninth Minnesota Regiment were stationed here for
many months.
Ole
Synsteby purchased land here in 1879. He planted many of the unusual
tree which still grow in the park. The land stayed in the Synsteby
family until it formed the nucleus of the park. In 1900, Synsteby
opened the Fort Hanska Amusement Park., which was a popular recreational
park for 25 years. The present park was dedicated on June 25,
1978.
Ole Synsteby opened the Fort Hanska Amusement Park below the fort site,
near the shore of the lake, in about 1900. It was a popular recreational place
for over 25 years.
A great many people combined their efforts to create this park, which was
dedicated on Sunday, June 25, 1978.
A lake restoration project was completed in 2000 to improve fish and wildlife
habitat, and recreational use of Lake Hanska. The lake dredging project removed
4,816,375 cubic yards of lake sediment from the lake area southwest and immediately
northwest of the park, deepening most of this area to an average 12' water depth.
A channel constructed in 1988 connecting Lake Hanska and the basin adjacent to
the campground allows boat access to the camping area. A variable crest dam was
installed at the Lake Hanska outlet to allow controlled partial drawdowns of the
lake level to promote emergent vegetation along the shoreline in the upper 1500 acres
of the lake, which improves waterfowl habitat and water clarity.
The Omsrud-Torgrimson log cabin was the first log cabin built in this area. The
cabin was built around 1857 by the Omsrud/Thordson and Torgrimson families, immigrants
from Valdres, Norway. The Thordson's occupied it until 1953. In 1986, Omsrud (Thordson)
-Torgrimson descendants moved the cabin to this site. The cabin stands as a memorial
to all Norwegian pioneers who were the first Euopeans to permanently settle this part
of Brown County.
Several kiosks throughout the park provide additional historic and present day
information for park visitors.
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