Alexandria
Minnesota
Alexandria: Viking statue
Alexandria, city, seat of Douglas county, west-central Minnesota, U.S. It is situated about 70 miles (115 km) northwest of St. Cloud in a lake-resort and dairy-farm region. Settled in 1858 on land that was once part of Ojibwa and Sioux camping grounds, Alexandria was organized as a township in 1866 and named for Alexander Kinkead, an early settler. It became a resort spot in the 1870s. The controversial Kensington Stone, with runic inscriptions describing a visit by Norsemen to the area in 1362, was “unearthed” in 1898 and is in the Runestone Museum. A 28-foot (9-metre) statue of a Viking, along with the Kensington Runestone Monument, a large reproduction of the original, promotes the belief in early Norse exploration. Diversified farming (including oats, dairy products, soybeans, corn [maize], and livestock), manufacturing (including packaging machinery, abrasives, metal products, and plastics), and tourism are the city’s economic mainstays. A technical college is located in the city. Lake Carlos State Park is a few miles north. Inc. village, 1877; city, 1908. Pop. (2000) 8,820; (2010) 11,070.
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