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A great deal of this section was
taken from “Out of My Mind,” a memoir by Ella Grimes Eustis.
Another source is The Grimes Family, published in 1946 by
Mary A. Grimes and Ella A. Eustis (Lund Press, Mpls.). Many
thanks to the Edina Historical Society for their generous
assistance.
Although the Grimes family was primarily important to
Edina’s history, their children did go to the
Pratt School in St. Louis
Park, and 40 acres of their farm was located in the
southeast section of St. Louis Park.
Jonathan Taylor Grimes, eldest child of George and Elizabeth
Donahoe Grimes, was born May 10, 1818 at Leesburg, Virginia.
He left Virginia in 1839 because it was a slave state, and
moved to Terre Haute, Indiana, where he married Eliza
Angeline “Angie” Gordon on September 20, 1843. After 14
years of farming in Clay County, Indiana, the director of
the Wabash and Erie Canal erected a reservoir on their land.
The stagnant water poisoned their cattle, gave Jonathan
malaria, and forced the couple to move away. In 1855 they
decided to come to Minneapolis, at that time a village of
about 300 people.
From Jonathan Grimes’ memoir:
During this time [1859] I became interested in a flour
mill located on Minnehaha Creek (in what is now known as
the Country Club). This mill was then called the
Waterville Mill, but was later known as Edina Mill.”
Grimes and William Rheen bought the mill and a 160-acre
farm belonging to Richard Strout. The farmland became
the present-day Morningside neighborhood of Edina. Rheen
soon departed back to Pennsylvania and Grimes ran both
the mill and the farm.
In those days, it was no unusual thing to see Indians
around, but they were mostly friendly. The Sioux Indians
were engaged in a deadly feud with the Chippewa, whom
they thought were encroaching upon their hunting
grounds. One day Mrs. Grimes looked out of the window
and saw some Sioux warriors dancing around a pole from
which was suspended some tassel-like objects. She said
to me, ‘What have those Indians on that pole – some
turkeys?’ ‘Turkeys indeed!’ said I, ‘Those are scalps!’
Mrs. Grimes was so shocked and frightened she had to lie
down for several hours. [This happened when they were
still in Minneapolis.]
During the Civil War the Government made requisitions
for the mill to furnish flour to Fort Snelling. As I was
not a practical miller, I hired Mr. Allen Baird to take
charge of operating the mill while I kept the accounts
and hauled the flour to the Fort with my team of horses,
one of the few left in the country. When I left the Fort
with my empty wagon I would let the horses find their
way home while I seized this opportunity for a
much-needed rest in the bottom of the wagon. All during
the Civil War the mill ran night and day making flour
for the Union Army. It was not uncommon to see 25 yoke
of oxen at the mill at one time.
After the War, in 1866, Grimes sold the mill to James
Baird and purchased an adjoining 160-acre parcel of land on
the Minneapolis side of France Avenue. There he started the
Lake Calhoun Nursery and planted a 1,000-tree orchard. He
also planted pine trees on 44th Street, some of which remain
today. (Although it is sometimes said that Grimes developed
the Jonathan apple, this is not the case.) Grimes was the first president of the Minnesota
Horticulture Society.
Grimes had built his first house at 4200 West 44th Street.
In 1869 he built a larger house on the same property, and
then moved the first house. The second house still stands
and is one of the oldest surviving structures in Edina.
In the early 1870’s, Grimes bought another adjoining parcel,
this time 40 acres in St. Louis Park. Another 6 ½ acres were
subsequently purchased, bringing his total acreage to 366.
Grimes built the diagonal Schoolhouse Road through the woods
so that his children could attend Pratt School in St. Louis
Park (1859-1890). That road became known as Pleasant Avenue,
and in 1933 was renamed Wooddale Avenue.
Grimes retired to Minneapolis in 1883. (Edina became a
village in 1888.) Eliza died on November 15, 1902, and
Jonathan died on February 10, 1903.
Soon the family began to sell the farm for the development
of homes. The area was ripe for development thanks to the
advent of the Como-Harriet Streetcar line that ran down 44th
Street. This provided easy access to downtown and allowed
people to settle in the suburbs. It is no surprise that the
Morningside Subdivision, with 322 lots, all in Edina, was
platted in 1905. The subdivision was developed by Mr. C. I.
Fuller.
The Grimes Homestead Subdivision was platted on May 18,
1906. The 55 lots were partly in St. Louis Park and partly
in Edina.
Wooddale Park was platted on April 1, 1910, and on August
28, 1913, the family sold it to Intercity Investment Company
(Incorporated February 11, 1910). This is the section of the
farm that was in St. Louis Park.
The Melvin Grimes Subdivision Lots/Grimes Homes subdivision
consists of 23 homes, including the Grimes home at 4300 W.
44th St. Other than the Grimes house, most of the houses
were built in the 1920’s and 1930’s, although there are two
that date to 1917. All homes are in Edina. Melvin died in
August 1930.
Other subdivisions that were carved out of the Grimes farm
include (all in Edina unless otherwise noted): Morningside
Manor (4 homes and 2 Outlots owned by the city), Morningside
Oaks (25 homes mostly on Grimes), William Scott’s Addition
(28 lots), Crocker and Crowell’s First Addition (99 lots),
Wooddale Heights (28 lots, some in Edina, some in St. Louis
Park), Mickelsen’s Rearrangement of Morningside (20 lots),
Riley’s Subdivision of Lots in Grimes Homestead (20 lots),
Berkeley Heights (20 lots), Fairbairn’s Rearrangement (17
lots), and Auditor’s Subdivision No. 161 (56 lots).
Jonathan T. and Eliza G. Grimes’ children:
William Henry Grimes, born September 21, 1846, died
(drowned) June 15, 1855
John Gordon Grimes, born November 14, 1848, died May 4,
1912, unmarried
Edward Everett Grimes, born March 1, 1853, wife
Elizabeth, October 29, 1919, 9 children
Anna Elmina Grimes, born December 15, 1854; husbands
Frank Edwin Edgerly, John Creary; died May 3, 1908, no
children
Charles Melvin Grimes, born June 10, 1857, wife Minetta,
died August 8, 1930, 7 children
George Sutherland Grimes, born April 4, 1859, wife
Jennie, died January 20, 1942, 7 children
Emma Elizabeth Grimes, born August 17, 1861, died August
6, 1942, unmarried
Mary Agatha Grimes, born December 31, 1863
Ella Alma Grimes, born April 3, 1867, husbands George
Henry Boyd, Dr. Samuel Phelps (2 children), Fred Eustis (2
children)
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