The thousands of people settling in downtown Minneapolis these days may feel like pioneers, as they move into converted warehouses and industrial-chic apartment buildings rising from former parking lots. They're welcomed with coffee shops and taprooms and gourmet grocery stores and boutiques selling $200 jeans.
But there was a time, not long ago, when the city had plenty of people living downtown, and it couldn't wait to get rid of them.
Through the early 1960s, the heart of Minneapolis was home to nearly 2,500 men who lived in some of the city's oldest and most decrepit buildings. They were the last generation of the seasonal laborers who had lived there since the mid-19th century. They were railroad workers, farmhands and lumberjacks who would spend winters in Minneapolis and work all over the Upper Midwest in the warm months.
By the end of World War II, those jobs had dwindled, and the aging laborers mostly survived on pension checks and Social Security. They lived permanently in the cheapest of cheap accommodations: faded hotels, 50-cent-a-night flophouses and rescue missions. And they drank heavily from the wide array of bars, beer parlors and the kinds of liquor stores that asked you, when you bought a bottle of wine, if you wanted it opened.
This was Minneapolis' Skid Row, also known as the Gateway District and the Lower Loop. It occupied all or part of 20 blocks downtown, centered on the intersections of Hennepin, Nicollet and Washington avenues.
The buildings lining those streets were mostly two- and three-story commercial structures that housed retail businesses on the first floor. The upstairs lofts were converted into cubicles of tin and plywood topped with chicken wire, which provided ventilation for men in close quarters, but also some protection from thieves climbing into the rooms.
Construction of new "cage hotels" was outlawed in 1918. Yet those already in existence persisted for another 40 years, a sign that they provided much-needed affordable housing for downtown's most notorious residents.
These men were alternately described by outsiders as vagrants, hoboes, winos, transients, deviants. They were overwhelmingly white, single and old. They congregated in alleys to pass around bottles. They scuffled on the sidewalks. They fell asleep in doorways.