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Popular history is more than who were the mayors
and when the highways were built. To really understand
how people lived in St. Louis Park years ago, we must
sometimes delve into unusual topics. This is one of
them. Your stories are most certainly welcome - please
contact us.
Back in the 1890s, when there was so much building and
activity in the Village, there was no garbage collection:
coffee grounds and eggshells were put into the garden, table
scraps were fed to the chickens, and butcher paper was
burned in the coal-fired furnace or in the kitchen stove.
Each spring the Village would have a "Cleanup Day," when a
team of horses pulling a wagon would go up each alley and
Village employees would scoop up the ashes from the kitchen
stove and the furnace onto the wagon. The Village would
print up “dodgers” to distribute, alerting the residents of
the coming of Cleanup Day. Sometimes it was free, and
sometimes, as in 1914, residents paid 25 cents per load.
Minutes from the April 5, 1907 Village Council meeting refer
to the Bass Lake public dumping ground.
An ad in a 1914 paper for Depew’s Transfer listed locations
in Minneapolis, St. Louis Park, and Hopkins.
In April 1915, the Village Council passed an “ordinance to
regulate the throwing or depositing of garbage, swill, etc.
on streets, alleys or in lakes, streams, etc. in the
Village…” The ordinance ran through a long list of noisome
things one could not throw in the streets, including
butcher’s waste, manure, contents of cess-pools or privy
vaults, “or any other nauseous or unwholesome substance,
fluid, or thing.” The fine ranged from $2 to $100, the jail
sentence up to 30 days or until the fine is paid. That’s no
longer legal, by the way.
Public dumping was a problem. In July 1920, the Village
Council ordained that no dumping would be allowed in the
alley between Goodrich and Summit (now Oxford). Then in
April 1921, the Minnetonka Blvd. Improvement Association
complained about a dump long the Milwaukee, Chicago, and St.
Paul Railroad. This may have been the dump behind the Roller
Garden at Lake and Minnetonka.
In 1929, Village Council Minutes noted that a system of
garbage collection was needed.
In the years 1934-38, the Village still had no municipal
garbage collection, but one could make private arrangements
by calling private haulers, such as Aaron Anderson.
Anderson, located at 2720 Vernon (Between Minnetonka Blvd.
and Reformation Church), advertised as such: "Keep
Your Yard Clean! Let me do it. Special Monthly
Rates. Ashes and rubbish removed. Black Dirt -
Sand - Gravel - General Hauling"
Another private hauler was W.C. Beihoffer. In 1935-37 he was at 3039 Natchez
Ave., and in 1938 he was at 2605 Vernon (about where Benilde
is now). Mr. Beihoffer
charged 50 cents per month for garbage, tin cans, and glass,
75 cents to add rubbish (not to be confused with
garbage...), and $1.00 to add tree trimmings and lawn
cuttings. Clean ashes could be dumped on a site provided by
a private owner at Lake and Minnetonka.
In 1939, a public dump "for ashes and clean rubbish only"
was located at 5600 W. Lake Street behind the Holmberg and
Hermstad Gas Station. Another one was located between 36th
and 37th, Princeton and Ottawa.
In 1941, Francis B. "Fritz" Bradley got the idea to fill the 25 ft. hole
at 36th and Princeton that was left by gravel excavation
with garbage, reclaiming it as “useful tax-producing land.”
Bradley, operating as Suburban Sanitary Drayage Co., was
contracted by the Village to make weekly collections of
garbage. An article in the Dispatch was titled “No Flies, No
Rats, with Unique Garbage System.” In 1943, householders
were required to place their garbage in fly-tight cans. A
1945 ad listed Suburban Sanitary Drayage as a “Licensed
Scavenger,” and offered service for cesspools and septic
tanks pumped “The Sanitary Way.” The company kept the City’s
garbage contract through the 1950s. There is more about the
Bradley family in
Something in the Water.
On February 14, 1947, the Dispatch announced the
creation of the Excelsior Blvd. Dump, located at the site of
Rice Sand and Gravel on Excelsior Blvd. This would later be
known as the Beltline Pay Dump.
In September 1947 and again in 1949, Charles Goldblatt was
cited for a dump between Highway 7 and Lake Street, west of
Hampshire.
The lot that is now 3340 Webster was a dump in 1947,
complete with fires and rats. The lot was built on in 1961.
In June 1948 we read of a “scavenger manhole” at 36th and
Wooddale.
In 1948, Charles Goldblatt was charged with public dumping
on three lots. One was located on either side of Highway 7,
east of Louisiana. Another was in the Highway 7/Oregon/Lake
area.
In 1948, Chester A. Jensen of Edina requested a permit to
operate Sam Elchuck’s dump at the old Rice Sand and Gravel
pit.
In April 1949, citizens protested the condition of the dump
located in “lowlands” west of the Belt Line, south of the
Great Northern railroad. The land was owned by Arthur J.
Eaton (of the Pastime Riding Arena) and the operating permit
was held by Morton Leder of Minneapolis. The permit was
pulled the next week, at least temporarily.
In June 1949, contractor Sam Holt was cited for piling up
rubbish, kindling, and logs on land that would become the
Park Trails Apartments on 36-1/2 Street. Curiously, the
complaint was made by another builder,
Robert Johnson, who
lived at 3811 Princeton.
In August 1950, Dr. Darby ordered the Bowman Dump on W. 35th
Street to be covered and filled. Harold Olson was contracted
to carry it out.
In the fall of 1951, Zephyr Oil, which operated a gas
station at 5050 Excelsior (later the site of Citizens Bank)
applied for a public dump permit north of the station, fee
$100. In 1954, the gas station requested permission to build
a fence to screen the view of the dump.
A July 1951 headline screamed “Garbage Dump Must Go Say
Aroused Aquila Ave. Folk.” They were complaining about the
Village Garbage Dump, which had been a gravel pit between
Aquila and Boone, south of Minnetonka Blvd. This is where
Suburban Sanitary Drayage dumped household refuse.
In a December 1951, G.M. Orr Engineering recommended that
the Village not purchase an incinerator, but instead open
another dump. They pointed to 75 acres bounded by St. Louis
Ave., Princeton, and 26th Street. Nevertheless, the
incinerator prevailed.
The contract for Suburban Sanitary Drayage was renewed for
1952 and ’53, but at first only until the new incinerator
was completed. Services were rendered for 93 cents per
resident per month. The Minneapolis suburbs generally
shipped their garbage to neighboring hog farms.
In October 1952, citizens were asked not to burn their trash
(including leaves) in the streets.
Dumps everywhere in 1952-55:
· The Veterans Tree Service, Washington Ave, was cited for
dumping rubbish at 28th and Hannah Lake.
· Elliot Anderson had a dump north of 16th Street, west
of Colorado, and was cited for having an open cesspool
behind his house that was leaching into the water. He and
his wife owned the 30 acre Elliot-Erskine Sand and Gravel
Co. Also cited was property at Hampshire and Wayzata Blvd.
· Dr. Darby (the public health officer) approved a dump at
Minnetonka Blvd. and Virginia.
· The area that is now the Belt Line Industrial Park
(south of the tracks, east of Highway 100, north of 36th
Street) was designated as a dump site in 1952.
· David A. Klatke, Sig Johnson owned a dump north of Cedar
Lake Road at the Great Northern bridge. It contained refuse,
tin cans, plaster, and industrial waste, and was covered
with sand.
· There was another dump at 31st and Utah (Virginia Ave.
between 31st and 32nd), leased from LNC Sand and Gravel.
· Walter Pavey of 36th Street complained about the
Minnesota
Tree Service, which dumped old roots and trees in the area
behind his house.
· A 250-signature petition requested that the Village put
up 250 signs behind Minikahda Court saying “No Dumping” in
the Bass Lake area. There were also 750 signatures urging
the Village to build an incinerator.
· Activity in 1955 included a dump operated by
Adolph
Fine, north of the Great Northern tracks, west of Virginia
Ave.
In 1953, specification for the new incinerator were spelled
out: two furnaces at 75 tons each, both to have an initial
firing chamber, a secondary combustion chamber and an
expansion chamber. The furnaces were to have forced draft
capable of firing heavy loads. The ash pits had to be
arranged so that ashes may be removed without shutting the
furnaces down. An accompanying building had to be large
enough to allow a dump truck inside with the doors closed.
In 1953, Health official Dr. Darby testified to the Village
Council that he commended the use of DDT and liberal ground
covering to keep animals at bay until the incinerator was
finished. Citizens were back the next meeting, though,
complaining about the odor and the mess.
In June 1953, we read of a sewer manhole at Edgewood and
39th, east of the tracks, where Roto Rooter dumped cesspool
sewage.
The Annual Christmas Tree Burning was held and Minikahda
Vista Park on January 5, 1954. After burning the Village’s
trees, members from the Figure Skating Club and other Park
skaters put on a show and competition.
In June 1954 the city began to operate an incinerator,
located west of Highway 100 and south of the Milwaukee Road
tracks. Designed by architect Loren B. Abbett and built for
$238,000 by G.M. Orr Engineering, its two burners could
dispose of 75 tons/day. It was paid for with a $200,000 bond
issue and a $5.80 yearly assessment per household. Suburban
Sanitary Drayage hired the men to run it. The ashes were
sent to Ernie Jacobson’s dump for top fill, but Jacobson
complained that they smelled bad, so the Village had to pay
him $75/month to bury them at his dump. Another problem was
that soon after the commencement of operations there was a
problem of sparks coming from it. Throughout its operation,
it emanated a white ash.
Almost immediately, other jurisdictions requested permission
to burn their garbage in the Park’s incinerator. The Village
took a wait and see attitude with requests from Bloomington,
Edina, Robbinsdale, and Crystal.
In 1954, Suburban Sanitary Drayage (3612 Alabama) was owned
by Roy E. Phillips and Helen L. Bradley. The company
continued to have the city’s garbage contract through 1958.
In 1955, there were complaints of “promiscuous placing of
garbage cans and burning of rubbish on City boulevards.” 50
years later such behavior was strictly regulated.
The 700 some businesses generally still handled their own
garbage, and about a third of them had their own
incinerators. In 1956 there was a dustup when the City
started to restrict private incinerators. Mr. Riley of Red
Owl requested a permit to install a “new type of
incinerator.” It was approved on July 2.
In 1956, Mrs. Louise M. Kelly asked permission to use her
property at 22nd and Nevada as a public dump. Permission
denied.
In 1956, Mrs. C.M. Pratt, President of the Brookside Garden
Club, complained of “promiscuous dumping at Minnehaha Creek
at the foot of Colorado Ave.”
In 1957 the incinerator could process 50 tons in 8 hours and
Park needed only 40, so the City Council approved the City
of Crystal’s request to burn its 7-8 tons in Park’s
incinerator.
In April 1957, complaints were made that newsboys were
leaving wires and wrappings in the street.
The Northside trunk and lateral sanitary sewers were
completed in 1958, with the construction of sanitary sewers
to serve the Southwest part of the City scheduled for next
year.
Come the 1960’s, the Park was the first city in the State to
establish total residential trash pickup (rubbish and
garbage) on a weekly basis. The contractor in 1960 was Roy
Phillips and Helen Bradley dba Suburban Drayage.
Here is a picture of the
incinerator in 1960.
In 1960, Charles. M. Friedheim ran a landfill between
Zarthan and Vernon, Cedar Lake Road and the Great Northern
tracks. This land undoubtedly had been excavated, and
the solution to both the garbage problem and that of a huge
hole in the ground was a landfill.
In 1961, councilman C.L. Hurd registered a complaint that
newsboys were leaving trash at their pickup point at 5000
Minnetonka Blvd. (across from City Hall).
In 1962, the Minnegasco Appliance Stores were advertising
the new Calcinator gas garbage disposer. "Make this
the year to get rid of that eyesore in your back yard - the
messy garbage can." The completely automatic machine
was said to be smokeless and odorless, and consumed all
burnable trash and garbage. The gas garbage disposer
didn't really catch on, one supposes.
In 1962, Section 4:220 of the city code was amended to
address smoke nuisance and burning of rubbish and waste
materials.
On August 20, 1962, Councilman Howard asked for an ordinance
to eliminate dumps, junk cars, etc.
Public dumping continued: In 1963, citizens were advised
that Park Police will strictly enforce the dumping ordinance
passed on April 18, including levying a $100 fine.
Also in 1963, a study was called for regarding the need of a
refuse disposal dump.
In 1965 the City Council approved a refractory lining
construction at the municipal incinerator, to cost $30,795,
by the Hilton Fire-Brick Service.
In June 1965, William Terry (owner Daniel Otten) got
approval from the City Council to haave a continuous burning
at the property in the southwest sector of the intersection
of Wayzata Blvd. and Hampshire. He could burn for 72
hours, supervised by the fire department, and could not
bring anything else on the property to burn.
In 1965, Carl Bolander and Sonns got permission for
contractor storage and fill (dump) east of Highway 100 and
north of 34th Street.
“Hard ash” from the incinerator (mostly ashes with bottles
and cans melted to hard blobs) was being dumped in the Bass
Lake area as of 1966.
In 1968, Woodlake Sanitation Service was the designated
hauler.
In 1969, a new pollution ordinance was enacted by the City.
Garbage haulers needed licenses, and people could no longer
burn garbage and leaves. See
Environmental Activities.
Wood Lake Sanitary Service was the residential hauler.
Willie Gall's Rubbish Removal was a private hauler.
In 1989 the city incinerator was demolished, ending the
shower of white ash over the area. Hoigaard's expanded onto
the land, keeping the chimney as an advertising landmark.
Here are pictures of the
incinerator in April 2006.
The incinerator tower was
removed on or about February 14, 2007 to make way for Hoigaard Village.
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