WELCOME! Located in the beautiful Minnesota River valley in the southwestern
Twin Cities metro area, the city of Chaska is strong in tradition and building
for the future.
General Info
Chaska is a "Quality Small Town" located on the outskirts
of Minneapolis in the Minnesota River Valley. The city is strong in tradition
but is also looking ahead to the future as urban sprawl brings more residents
to its growing neighborhoods.
Population
Chaska has approximately 17,449 residents.
Chaska: 1769 - 2004
Chaska's
history reflects the influence of the Native American culture. The first
inhabitants are believed to be the Mound Builders, whose ancient communities
are marked by mounds in City Square. Later, the Dakota (commonly known
as the Sioux) were the primary nation in this region known as the Big
Woods. Although the Indian mounds located in Chaska City Square indicate
the immediate area was inhabited years before 1769, that's the year Chaska's
recorded history began.
In 1776, Jonathan Carver explored the lands along the Minnesota River
and chronicled his journeys. French Canadian fur traders traveled the
waterways, trading with the Dakota in the early 1800s. During this time,
Jean Baptiste Fairbault established a trading post in Chaska.
In 1851, the Treaty of Traverse des Sioux officially opened Little Rapids,
as Chaska was then known, to settlement. Soon after, speculators moved
into the new territory. Among the earliest was Thomas Andrew Holmes who,
in August of 1851, claimed a 20 acre clearing as the Chaska townsite.
The name "Chaska" is derived from a Dakota word often given
as a name to the first born male child. Records show that David L. Fuller
purchased the "Shaska" townsite from Holmes in 1852. In 1857,
the townsite was platted by the Shaska Company. In the same year, construction
began on the original Carver County Courthouse located where the post
office and First National Bank now stand. Chaska was incorporated as a
village in 1871 and, by special legislative charter, as a city in 1891.
An abundance of high quality clay led to the start of brick making in
1857. By the 1880s, as a result of the clay resources, Chaska was a thriving
brick manufacturing center. Bricks were shipped by boat to Saint Paul
and, although the City grew as a result of steamboat trade, it was not
until the Minneapolis and St. Louis Railroad was built through town in
1873 that rapid expansion began.
With the advent of the twentieth century came other industries, including
the processing of beet sugar and other agricultural products; flour making,
butter making, the canning of peas, corn, and tomatoes, and the curing
of sauerkraut and pickles.
Throughout
the first half of the century, Chaska's population averaged about 2,000
and the nature of the City remained unchanged. The City retained its small
town image until the 1950's when the transition to a metropolitan community
began. The expansion of the seven county metropolitan area reached Chaska
in the 1960s. With that expansion came the introduction of the Jonathan
New Town design concept in 1966. The Jonathan "new town" development
within Chaska brought new land, new jobs and new people to the community.
This period of transition and expansion continues today. Dozens of modern
industries have located here and continue to do so; residential construction
adds 100 to 300 new homes per year; commercial business continues to expand
offering a variety of retail and service opportunities to its residents;
redevelopment of commercial areas in the downtown began in the 1980s and
continued in the 1990s. Although the community has seen much growth, development
regulations and sound planning have ensured Chaska's small sense of community
and the preservation of its rich heritage.
Today, Chaska combines the best of both worlds -- friendly small town
and modern city.
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