Hennepin History Museum

Hennepin History Museum We preserve and explore history, creating spaces where our communities' stories can be told. Masks are required when visiting the museum. Thank you.

We fulfill our mission to preserve and share the diverse history of Hennepin County through our vast collections, exhibitions, an archives/library, public programs, and publications. Please see our website for more information on current shows or for information on upcoming events. Given current Covid conditions, we appreciate your compliance for the health and safety of our visitors, volunteers,

and employees. Fully experiencing the museum at the present time requires climbing stairs between floors in our historic building. We are working hard to provide an elevator in the future to make your museum fully accessible to everyone. Please contact us if you have questions about accessing the museum and exhibits.

History is in bloom here at Hennepin History Museum! We’d like to offer a special thanks to our team of volunteer garden...
05/30/2026

History is in bloom here at Hennepin History Museum!

We’d like to offer a special thanks to our team of volunteer gardeners, Karen Cooper, and Bluebird Gardening for keeping our outside grounds full of vibrant floral arrangements.

Hennepin History Museum is open every Thursday and Friday 10-3, and Saturdays 10-5. Admission is always pay-as-you-can.

Come on by to explore local history in a former mansion in the Washburn-Fair Oaks Historic District. Learn about the rich history of Hennepin County; examine the case of Eliza Winston, an enslaved woman who sought freedom in Minnesota in 1860; immerse yourself in puppetry as activism with In The Heart of The Beast Puppet Theatre's 1983 Circle of Water Circus; view stunning images from North Minneapolis photographer Philip Murphy, and more!

Learn more at: hennepinhistory.org

Did you know that there used to be a zoo near Minnehaha Falls?The Longfellow Zoological Gardens was the brainchild of ec...
05/26/2026

Did you know that there used to be a zoo near Minnehaha Falls?

The Longfellow Zoological Gardens was the brainchild of eccentric entrepreneur Robert “Fish” Jones (pictured below in the top hat). He first came to Minneapolis from New York City in 1876 and soon established the fish and oyster market at Third St. and Hennepin that gave him his nickname. A natural showman, Jones eventually purchased a bear that he chained up near his market to amuse (and sometimes frighten) customers. To this he added a camel and a pair of tigers, which he kept as an attraction on the third floor of his market.

When city authorities shut down this indoor menagerie, Jones purchased three acres on what was then the outskirts of downtown (on the site where the Basilica of St. Mary now sits) for an open-air zoo. By 1903, his attraction featured a family of six South African lions, jaguars, leopards, cougars, a camel, cattle “from the Holy Land,” giant tortoises, exotic birds, and a pair of pure white Russian wolves whom he would walk through downtown on a leash to drum up business.

However, noise complaints led Jones to eventually abandon this spot as well. In 1907, he opened the Longfellow Zoological Gardens near Minnehaha Falls, named for the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (whose poem ‘The Song of Hiawatha’ had made the Minnehaha Falls an internationally famous tourist draw). Nearby, Jones built a residence for himself that was a 2/3 scale replica of the famous poet’s Boston home. Jones lived here until he died in 1930. His relatives were unable to continue operating the zoo as a profitable business, and it closed in 1936. Most of the animals were sold to the Como Zoo in St. Paul (although, according to local legend, a pair of seals escaped and were never seen again.)

The story of Longfellow Zoo is just one colorful episode in the wild and surprising history of the Minnehaha Falls area, alongside dance halls, secret saloons, wild behavior, lawsuits, crooks, and copious whiskey. We invite you to join us this Saturday, May 30th, at 1 pm for a 'A Raucous Ramble Around Minnehaha Falls,' a one-mile walk where the mayhem occurred. Tours depart from “Fish” Jones’ miniaturized replica of the Longfellow House (today owned by Minneapolis Parks & Recreation Board).

Karen Cooper, whose work ‘When Minnehaha Flowed with Whiskey: A Spirited History of the Falls’ won the 2023 Minnesota Book Award for Nonfiction, gives participants further background on the people and places that shape this remarkable story. Through colorful anecdotes and thorough documentation, she helps us picture the Minnehaha Falls area in a new light, and helps us understand how this history formed the park we know and love today.

You can buy tickets for this tour as well as our other upcoming summer walking tours here: https://hennepinhistory.org/events/

This era of rising authoritarianism is a good time to recall Minnesota’s detour into dictatorial rule during World War I...
05/14/2026

This era of rising authoritarianism is a good time to recall Minnesota’s detour into dictatorial rule during World War I, an episode which helps us understand how democracy can be eroded and how Minnesotans can fight back.

Join us this Saturday, May 16th, at 2pm as we welcome author Greg Gaut to talk about his book, 'The War at Home,' which tells the dramatic and sometimes violent story of the Minnesota Commission of Public Safety, an unelected body which ruled the state with an iron hand during the war.

Led by John F. McGee, a reactionary Minneapolis attorney, the commission pursued a “loyalty” campaign against trade unions, socialists, the Industrial Workers of the World, and the Nonpartisan League. Although Minnesota’s home front experience resulted from a particular confluence of events and personalities, it’s a case study of how authoritarianism can swamp democracy when economic inequality, anti-immigrant nationalism, white supremacy, and militarism rule the day.

'The War at Home: Minnesota During the Great War, 1914-1920' (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2025) was a finalist in the Minnesota Nonfiction category of the 2026 Minnesota Book Awards.

Event is pay-as-you-can. To learn more or register, head to:

https://hennepinhistory.org/event/when-minnesota-veered-into-authoritarianism/

Our doors are open! Stop on by today, May 10th, for a rare chance to visit to the Hennepin History Museum on a Sunday (o...
05/10/2026

Our doors are open! Stop on by today, May 10th, for a rare chance to visit to the Hennepin History Museum on a Sunday (our typical hours are Thursday and Friday 10-3, and Saturday 10-5). We'll be open until 5:00pm today as part of Doors Open Minneapolis.

Doors Open Minneapolis, produced by Rethos, is your chance to explore the buildings that tell our city’s story. From theaters to business hubs, sacred spaces to private clubs, sports complexes to engineering wonders, historical gems to not-even-open-yet buildings, Doors Open Minneapolis will give you a FREE behind-the-scenes look at dozens of exciting venues. Building owners and caretakers will provide unique perspectives that illustrate why these venues, people and businesses, are central to Minneapolis’s identity.

To learn more, head to: https://www.doorsopenminneapolis.org/

The history of the Twin Cities is deeply rooted in its lands and waters. Join on us on Thursday, May 14th at 5pm in Cros...
05/09/2026

The history of the Twin Cities is deeply rooted in its lands and waters. Join on us on Thursday, May 14th at 5pm in Crosby Farm Regional Park in St. Paul for a walk with Tanaǧidaŋ To Wiŋ (Blue Hummingbird Woman or Tara Perron) to learn about her family's relationship with Dakota plant medicines.

Tanaǧidaŋ To Wiŋ is a Dakota and Ojibwe mother, author, and plant medicine enthusiast. During the walk, Tanaǧidaŋ To Wiŋ will share about her family's history and her connections with native plants and local waterways. She will demonstrate how to identify and care for native plants, including those that improve water quality. Together we will share and honor the sacred plant nation.

Cost: $35, Hennepin History Members save $10.

To learn more and purchase tickets, follow this link:

https://hennepinhistory.org/event/dakota-plant-walk-with-tana%c7%a7idan-to-win-7/

We have a new, free digital guide to our museum!We love our museum, but like a lot of the things we love, we know it’s g...
05/06/2026

We have a new, free digital guide to our museum!

We love our museum, but like a lot of the things we love, we know it’s got some issues. When you walk through the doors of Hennepin History Museum, you’re confronted with a staircase, which are an obstacle for many people. We’re working on making our building more accessible, but in the mean time, we have partnered with Bloomberg Connects to bring museum content to you wherever you are.

We’ve added a digital guide to our offerings. Bloomberg Connects is a platform that facilitates free digital guides for museums and cultural institutions. Through a mobile device or computer, you can see our current exhibits, listen to oral history excerpts, and get a glimpse of our most historically valuable artifacts and archival items.

You can find our guide here: https://guides.bloombergconnects.org/en-US/guide/hennepinHistoryMuseum

And check out this blog post from our Archivist, Michelle Pollard, talking more about this project, the process of making it, why we chose to work with Bloomberg Connects, and more:

https://hennepinhistory.org/free-digital-museum-guide/

History happening on our doorstep. Right now in Washburn Fair Oaks, the lovely park directly across the street from Henn...
01/31/2026

History happening on our doorstep. Right now in Washburn Fair Oaks, the lovely park directly across the street from Hennepin History Museum, several hundred cyclists are gathering for a January bike ride as memorial to Alex Pretti, who was both a member of this community and an avid cyclist.

Our doors are open until 5pm today for anyone needing a place to warm up or use a restroom.

Today Hennepin History Museum staff took these photos while visiting the site where Alex Pretti was killed, just six blo...
01/29/2026

Today Hennepin History Museum staff took these photos while visiting the site where Alex Pretti was killed, just six blocks away from our museum. As part of this community, we continue to grieve and stand in solidarity with our neighbors.

For those visiting the memorial site at 26th and Nicollet, we encourage you to also patronize the nearby restaurants and businesses, many of which are immigrant-owned and have been struggling financially due to their customers and staff not feeling safe during the ICE surge. Our staff dined at a restaurant today that is usually bustling during normal times, but was nearly vacant. We encourage everyone to join us in supporting local businesses. There has never been a better time to sample the many amazing and diverse cuisines to be found on Eat Street.

As an act of solidarity with our neighbors, and to allow our staff to participate in community activities, Hennepin History Museum will be closed tomorrow, Friday, January 30th. We will resume our regular hours on Saturday.

In a time when Minneapolis is once again in the global spotlight, we continue to find our greatest strength and hope in our own local community.

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT: In support of our neighbors and our communities, Hennepin History Museum will again be closed to...
01/29/2026

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT: In support of our neighbors and our communities, Hennepin History Museum will again be closed tomorrow, Friday, January 30th, 2026.

We will be open our regular hours (10-5) on Saturday.

Address

2303 Third Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN
55404

Opening Hours

Thursday 10am - 3pm
Friday 10am - 3pm
Saturday 10am - 5pm

Telephone

(612) 870-1329

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