The $34.5 million revitalization of Historic Fort Snelling opens to the public on Saturday, offering visitors stunning new views of the Mississippi River as well as a more expansive telling of the site's 10,000-year-old history that evokes both "pride and tragedy."
The state, which owns the site, provided $19.5 million for the revitalization of the National Historic Landmark. The nonprofit Minnesota Historical Society, which operates the site, raised $15 million in private funding.
What visitors are likely to notice first is the sweeping new views of the Mississippi River, which drew people to this site for centuries including Dakota and Ojibwe people and later the U.S. military.
The 1980s-era visitor center that obscured the river has been torn down and replaced with new walking paths and scenic overlooks surrounded by native plantings and interpretative signage.
"As soon as you drive up, it's such a dramatic difference. It is just so inviting in a way that it hasn't been before." said Amber Annis, the Historical Society's director of Native American Initiatives.
The visitor center has been relocated to a restored 1904 cavalry barracks, which had previously been closed to the public. The public can tour the exhibits and gathering spaces in the 19,000-square-foot building. The new visitor center will now be open year-round.
Just as the physical site is at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers, Fort Snelling is also a convergence of people and cultures, said Ben Leonard, the Historical Society's senior site director.
The revitalization more fully acknowledges that complex and long history. The sign at the entry tells visitors this is a place of "diplomacy and conflict; pride and tragedy; service and sacrifice."