Imagine, if you will, a canopy of
White Pine trees so thick that the blue sky and sunshine
were hard to see. This is what the first White settlers
saw as they moved into the area around Hinckley.
Of course, they were not the first
to know the area. The Native Americans had been here for
a long time and knew the wealth of the area. They had been
living near the St. Croix since around 1854, when the Ojibwe,
who had been living in the northeastern part of the state
agreed to give up a vast tract of land bordering Lake Superior.
Reservations were created in both Minnesota and Wisconsin
to accommodate those displaced Indians but the earlier Natives
who had been living along the St. Croix since the early
1800's did not want to desert their ancestral homes for
the confinements of reservation life at Lac Court Oreilles
near Hayward, Wisconsin. By their refusal, they forfeited
any chance of receiving land allotments and became the "Lost
Tribe" of the St. Croix. Today, descendants of those early
people still live in the Lake Lena Indian Reservation, and
are part of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe.
Because
of the large stand of white pine trees in the Hinckley area,
loggers began their migration into the area and the first
sawmill was built in 1869. The railroads were also invading
the area and in the same year, 1869, the Lake Superior and
Mississippi Railroad pushed its railroad building operation
into Hinckley, and two miles north, and finally, into Duluth
in 1870.
With the coming of the railroad,
the lumbering industry boomed and for twenty years, Hinckley
was a growing, prosperous town with a population of 1,500.
On September 1, 1894, all of that
changed.
Even today, that year still stands
as one of the driest on record. With blowing winds, low
humidities and less than two inches of rain from May until
September, the area was a prime target for a fire.
Because
of the dryness of the summer, fires were common in the woods,
along railroad tracks and in logging camps where loggers
would set fire to their slash to clean up the area before
moving on. Some loggers, of course left their debris behind
giving any fire more fuel on which to grow. Saturday, September
1st, 1894 began as another oppressively hot day with fires
surrounding the towns and two major fires that were burning
about five miles to the south. To add to the problem, the
temperature inversion that day added to the heat, smoke
and gases being held down by the huge layer of cool air
above. The two fires managed to join together to make one
large fire with flames that licked through the inversion
finding the cool air above. That air came rushing down into
the fires to create a vortex or tornado of flames which
then began to move quickly and grew larger and larger turning
into a fierce firestorm. The fire first destroyed the towns
of Mission Creek and Brook Park before coming into the town
of Hinckley. When it was over the Firestorm had completely
destroyed six towns, and over 400 square miles lay black
and smoldering. The firestorm was so devastating that it
lasted only four hours but destroyed everything in its path.
Today,
the Hinckley Fire Museum interprets the story of the Great
Fire and also of the rebuilding of the town and the area's
natural progression into agricultural lands. The museum
is open from May 1st through mid-October, Tuesday-Saturday
from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Sunday noon-5:00. Closed
Mondays.
Hinckley has lost much of its farming
community but has become a tourist destination famous for
its history, caramel rolls, good food, bike trails and the
St. Croix State Park, and fun at the popular Grand Casino
Hinckley.
The population is just over 1,000
and growing to meet the demands of job opportunities and
people who just want to live in a small town with large
town opportunities. Come for a visit and stay for the night.
Hinckley welcomes you to experience all it has to offer.