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In the 1930’s, St. Louis Park was still a Village
with only a part-time Village council, and it found itself
ill-equipped to address the issues of zoning, planning,
infrastructure, and public facilities necessary for a
booming residential community. Home rule would allow Park to
become a full-fledged city and hire a city manager to handle
administrative affairs.
The St. Louis Park Better Government League (BGL) was
organized in 1935, with Morton Arneson serving as Chairman.
Arneson was particularly incensed about the Village’s poor
law enforcement, particularly when it came to the bars on
Excelsior Blvd., where he lived. The BGL met monthly at the
home of local attorney Milo Clark. The group set about
promoting a reform candidate for Mayor, and succeeded in
getting Roy O. Sewell elected, despite harassment and
threats. Although the BGL was unable to find a candidate for
Mayor in the next election, they did succeed in helping to
elect Torval Jorvig and Joe Justad to the Council, two men
who tried to keep the liquor licenses at bay.
The Civic and Commerce Association of St. Louis Park was also formed in
1935, perhaps as another response to a corrupt local
government. Edwin H. Renner was President of the
newly-formed group, and the other officers were H.J.
Bolmgren, E.H. Shursen, and J.E. Pockrandt. In a letter
dated October 16, 1935, Renner indicated that the group
strove to be:
a medium through which meritorious civic projects
may be initiated and constructive ideas be given the
benefit of a public hearing and discussion. Our citizens
need us as a vehicle through which they may move to
accomplish the things to be done in providing the best
in planning, transportation, utilities, schools, form of
government and opportunities for livelihood.
FIRST ELECTION
In June 1938, a group led by Morton Arneson petitioned
the Hennepin County District court to appoint a Charter
Commission. The Commission drafted the first version of the
City Charter, which called for a council-manager type
government. The city of Albert Lea had a model
council-manager structure, and Arneson brought a busload of
Park officials to that city to see how efficiently it was
run. Arneson was convinced that it was the way to go and
that he would be treated more fairly under a similar system.
An election was held on September 10, 1940, but the charter
was rejected by the electorate.
SECOND ELECTION
A second Charter Committee was appointed by the Hennepin
County District Court in 1947, with Morton Arneson and
Leland F. Leland the only holdovers from the first
commission. A second Home Rule Charter was rejected in an
election held in March 1949, in which only 39 percent of the
electorate voted. A group called the Charter Fact Finding
Committee, led by C.L. Hurd, published its opposition in a
full page ad in the Dispatch on March 25, 1949, citing the
fact that the charter had no tax limit, would give the city
manager too much power, and that a new Village code
authorized by the State was adequate. Hurd and the business
community also opposed it because businessmen were not given
“their rightful spot in the formation of a charter.” It was
also thought that some Village employees opposed it because
it would cost them their jobs.
In addition, the night before the election, an anonymous
pamphlet was distributed to every home in the Park, personally
attacking Arneson as "Little Joe Stalin - Wants Complete
Control." The charge was that Arneson would appoint the City
Manager and thus control the City, since he was already the
Chairman of the Better Government League, Charter
Commission, and the Planning Commission. Arneson suspected
that it was C.L. Hurd who put out this pamphlet. After this
charter was rejected, the Better Government League
immediately worked to get a third Charter Commission
appointed by the court.
THIRD ELECTION
A new Charter Commission was proposed by Hurd on January 21,
1952. Morton Arneson moved to Edina in 1953, and Attorney
Everett Drake became Chairman of the 14-member Charter Commission.
Drake drafted a strong document, and it was endorsed and
advocated by the newly-formed League of Women Voters,
a "powerful and respected organization in the community"
according to the Dispatch. The charter was
also endorsed by Caroll Hurd, who, with Kenneth W. Wolfe,
placed an endorsement in the Dispatch as co-chairmen
of the Charter Adoption Committee. Members of the
Charter Commission were:
Maurice Adelsheim, Jr.
William R. Chapman
James S. Cullen
Everett Drake
Tres F. Goetting
Mrs. Gertrude Hognander,
Fred W. Kaeppel
J.E. Adolph Karlsson
Lelan F. Leland
Lydia Rogers,
Edmund T. Montgomery
Catherine Westerdahl
Edward Rouse
Walter Wheeler
On December 7, 1954, St. Louis Park’s Home Rule Charter was
approved by the electorate by a vote of 2,822 to 734. 23
percent of the electorate voted. Herb
Davis (Trustee), Joe Justad (City Clerk), Russell Connery
(Assessor), and Anton Yngve (Justice of the Peace) were
elected at this time. Russell Fernstrom had been elected
Mayor on December 9, 1953, and remained in office during the
transition. On December 10, the Council canvassed the votes
and declared the charter adopted and new members elected.
The newly-elected Council members took office on January 3,
1955.
The new charter took effect on January 7, 1955 – 30 days
after the election per state law - and St. Louis Park was
officially designated a City. On January 10, Phil Smith,
City Engineer, was appointed (interim) City Manager. At the
January 17 City Council meeting, C.L. Hurd and Howard
Perkins were appointed to fill the two additional council
seats created by the Charter. The first City Manager was Tom
Chenoweth. See Mayors and
City Managers.
A City election was held on December 6, 1955, and the
following people were elected:
Russell C. Fernstrom - Mayor
Herb Davis and Torval Jorvig – Councilmen at Large
Bob Ehrenberg - Councilman, Ward I
H.J. Bolmgren – Councilman, Ward II
Gene Schadow – Councilman, Ward III
Ken Wolfe – Councilman, Ward IV
E.B. Linnee – Justice of the Peace
The newly-elected officers took office on January 9, 1956.
Fernstrom would remain Mayor until 1959.

With the adoption of the Charter (and the move of Arneson),
the Better Government League, which had started in 1935 to
quiet down the beer joints on Excelsior Blvd., disbanded.
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