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Platteville Limestone

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Color image of a Platteville limestone seam in Fort Snelling State Park, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.

Platteville limestone seam in Fort Snelling State Park, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.

Platteville limestone is a distinctive building stone of southeastern Minnesota and southwestern Wisconsin characterized by its gray color, rough texture, and many fossils. It was heavily used in the early decades of the building of the Twin Cities and Faribault.

In Minnesota, Platteville limestone is found only in eleven southeastern counties: Ramsey, Hennepin, Washington, Dakota, Rice, Goodhue, Wabasha, Dodge, Olmsted, Winona, Fillmore, and Houston. Like almost all limestones, the Platteville variety (named for a town in southwestern Wisconsin) is a marine creation. Platteville limestone formed between 488 and 436 million years ago, when what became southeastern Minnesota and southwestern Wisconsin lay beneath an ancient sea. This sea was heavily populated by shellfish and other invertebrates. As they died, their shells and other hard parts, made of calcium carbonate, fell to the ocean floor. Over the centuries, the weight of these deposits crushed the shell fragments and compressed them into stone.

About 100 million years later, geologic forces raised southeastern Minnesota above the ocean surface. In the region that became the Twin Cities, the limestone was covered by thin deposits of shale and soil. Glaciers covered this region from 75,000 to about 12,000 years ago. When they finally melted, between 14,000 and 12,000 years ago, the released water carved the channels of the Mississippi, Minnesota, and smaller rivers through the layers of limestone, exposing some of it.

When the United States Army began work on Fort Snelling in 1820, Platteville limestone was abundant and nearby. The fort site lay atop a great deposit of the stuff. It is an easy stone to quarry, as it breaks readily. Soldiers built almost the entire original fort, from foundations to the round tower, out of Platteville stone. It remains the largest complex of Platteville structures ever made.

Like Fort Snelling, downtown St. Paul was built atop a Platteville shelf. Once the city moved beyond its early stage of flimsy and flammable wooden buildings, the local limestone came into heavy use. The first quarry went into operation in 1856. The Original Coney Island (1858), the Alexander Ramsey House (1868), and Assumption Church (1874) were all built in part or entirely from the local stone. Several fine examples of Platteville limestone’s use in private houses can be found in St. Paul’s Summit Hill district, including the Burbank-Livingston-Griggs House (1862), at 432 Summit Avenue; the Ambrose Tighe House, 314 Dayton Avenue (1888); and the Stanford Newell House, at 251 Dayton (built in 1864 with additions completed in 1886).

The Platteville stone was quarried and used also in Minneapolis, though less of it survived there into the twenty-first century. Quarrying began in 1864 and builders used it for the original Customs House and City Hall (both 1873) and the original Central High School (1878). The most conspicuous survivor is the ruin of the Pillsbury “A” Mill, built in 1881, its walls all Platteville stone quarried on site.

Outside of the Twin Cities, Willis Hall (1872), the first permanent building of Carleton College, Northfield, was built of Platteville stone quarried at Dundas, Minnesota. In Faribault, the Episcopal Cathedral of Our Merciful Savior and Bethlehem Academy, downtown, and the Chapel of the Good Shepherd and most main buildings of Shattuck School were also made of Platteville. (The Rice County stone tends to be a paler gray, often stained with light brown patches.)

As a building stone, Platteville’s chief attraction was its availability; in St. Paul and Minneapolis it was often simply quarried on site. But it had limits. Coarse and crumbly, it could not be carved or polished to a smooth finish, and its gray color had limited appeal. With the spread of railroads in the 1870s, other, finer materials became available and affordable, including the red Lake Superior sandstone and the buff-colored Kasota stone (another variety of limestone) that were more attractive and easier to work with. Builders rarely used Platteville for major projects after the 1880s.

Seams of Platteville limestone may be seen in many places in the Twin Cities area, most easily along the Mississippi River, in Fort Snelling State Park, in the Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary in St. Paul, and at Mill Ruins Park in Minneapolis.

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© Minnesota Historical Society
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Jacobsen, Christina H. “The Burbank-Livingston-Griggs House: Historic Treasure on Summit Avenue.” Minnesota History 42, no. 1 (Spring 1970): 23–34.
http://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagazine/articles/42/v42i01p023-034.pdf

Millett, Larry. Lost Twin Cities. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 1992.

Ojakangas, Richard W., and Charles L. Matson. Minnesota’s Geology. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1982.

Stauffer, Clinton R., and George A. Thiel. The Limestones and Marls of Minnesota. University of Minnesota, Minnesota Geological Survey, Bulletin 23. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 1933.

Related Images

Color image of a Platteville limestone seam in Fort Snelling State Park, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of a Platteville limestone seam in Fort Snelling State Park, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Sketch of Old Customs House, Minneapolis, 1876.
Sketch of Old Customs House, Minneapolis, 1876.
Black and white photograph of Willis Hall, Carleton College, ca. 1890s.
Black and white photograph of Willis Hall, Carleton College, ca. 1890s.
Color image of the Alexander Ramsey House, 2012. Photograph by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever.
Color image of the Alexander Ramsey House, 2012. Photograph by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever.
Color image of the Burbank-Livingston-Griggs House, St Paul, 2013. Photograph by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever.
Color image of the Burbank-Livingston-Griggs House, St Paul, 2013. Photograph by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever.
Color image of the Washburn A Mill ruins, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Washburn A Mill ruins, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Fort Snelling Round Tower, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Fort Snelling Round Tower, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Fort Snelling Hexagonal Tower, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Fort Snelling Hexagonal Tower, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Fort Snelling Chapel, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Fort Snelling Chapel, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Commercial building, Central Avenue, Minneapolis, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Commercial building, Central Avenue, Minneapolis, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of a limestone seam under Stone Arch Bridge, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of a limestone seam under Stone Arch Bridge, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of a Platteville limestone arch, Mill Ruins Park, Minneapolis, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of a Platteville limestone arch, Mill Ruins Park, Minneapolis, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Cathedral of Our Merciful Savior, Faribault, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of the Cathedral of Our Merciful Savior, Faribault, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of an abandoned bridge pier in the Mississippi River, downtown Minneapolis, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of an abandoned bridge pier in the Mississippi River, downtown Minneapolis, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of a Platteville Limestone curve of the Church of the Assumption, St. Paul, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of a Platteville Limestone curve of the Church of the Assumption, St. Paul, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Platteville Limestone, Church of the Assumption, St. Paul, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Platteville Limestone, Church of the Assumption, St. Paul, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Bethlehem Academy, Faribualt, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Bethlehem Academy, Faribualt, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Dilley Hall, Shattuck-St. Mary's, Faribault, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.
Color image of Dilley Hall, Shattuck-St. Mary's, Faribault, 2016. Photograph by Paul Nelson.

Turning Point

In 1820, soldiers begin work on the first and biggest Platteville limestone structure, Fort Snelling.

Chronology

488 –433 million years ago

An ocean covers most of what will become southern Minnesota and southwestern Wisconsin. It fosters many invertebrate animals, including shellfish. As they die, these creatures deposit their hard parts, made mostly of calcium carbonate, on the sea bottom.

443 million–220 million years ago

The shellfish remains are compressed by weight to form limestone. The sea slowly recedes, leaving the formerly submerged rock exposed to erosion by wind and water, and to overlay by soil.

14,000– 12,000 years ago

The last glaciers covering Minnesota melt, creating rivers which, in turn, cut openings in the earth, exposing seams of Platteville limestone.

1820

Work begins on the first Platteville limestone construction in Minnesota, Fort Snelling.

1856

The first Platteville limestone quarry begins operations in St. Paul.

1863

The completion of the Burbank-Livingston Griggs House in St. Paul marks the beginning of the peak era of Platteville limestone.

1864

The first Platteville limestone quarry in Minneapolis begins operations.

1868

Construction of the Alexander Ramsey house begins.

1874

St. Paul’s Church of the Assumption is built.

1880

Construction of the Pillsbury A Mill begins in Minneapolis.

1880s

More attractive building materials, such as Lake Superior sandstone and Kasota stone, began to supplant Platteville limestone.