Near Eveleth in Saint Louis County, Minnesota — The American Midwest (Upper Plains)
Paul Wellstone Memorial and Historic Site
Near this site on October 25, 2002—twelve days before Election Day—a plane carrying United States Senator Paul Wellstone crashed en route to the Eveleth airport. In addition to Wellstone, the crash took the lives of his wife Sheila Wellstone, their daughter Marcia Wellstone Markuson, and three campaign staff members, Tom Lapic, Mary McEvoy, and Will McLaughlin. The plane's pilots, Michael Guess and Richard Conry, were also killed.
Paul Wellstone served Minnesota in the U.S. Senate for twelve years, and was a teacher and activist for more than thirty. Wellstone was a populist Democrat who balanced his forceful advocacy for social and economic justice with a sense of humor and joy for politics. A fiery orator, he enlivened crowds with his passionate speeches. As an accomplished legislator, he formed alliances across the political spectrum.
Paul Wellstone loved Minnesota, and especially the Iron Range, where he began his first Senate campaign in 1989. The Range’s history of progressive politics and its working-class character fit Wellstone perfectly. He often referred to the Range as “my second home.”
This six-acre site is a tribute to Senator Wellstone’s life and career, and to the lives of his family and staff who died in the crash. It is divided into three parts: the Legacy Trail, the Commemorative Circle, and the Crash Site Narrative Space.
This site was kept largely undisturbed. All rock used on site is more than two billion years old, and was originally mined by steelworkers at the old Erie Taconite mine near here. St. Louis County donated the land. Minnesota sculptor Phil Rickey teamed with St. Paul Landscape Architects, Sanders Wacker Bergly, Inc. to design the site, and with Terra Ferma Development in Iron, Minnesota for the construction. LeAnn Littlewolf from Duluth wrote the poem in the entry plaza. Hundreds of generous donors to the Wellstone Action Fund made it all possible.
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Air & Space • Disasters. A significant historical month for this entry is October 1603.
Location. 47° 24.2′ N, 92° 27.513′ W. Marker is near Eveleth, Minnesota, in Saint Louis County. Marker is on Bodas Road (County Road 95) 0.2 miles east of Scout Camp Road (County Road 536), on the left when traveling east. Marker is 3 miles east of U.S. Highway 53. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 7365 Bodas Road, Eveleth MN 55734, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 12 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies. John Mariucci (approx. 5.7 miles away); A Three-Way Continental Divide (approx. 5.8 miles away); Oscar Hokka Log House (approx. 9.6 miles away); Gunnar Peterson (approx. 9.7 miles away); This is Magnetic Taconite (approx. 11.8 miles away); Leonidas Merritt (approx. 11.8 miles away); Mountain Iron (approx. 11.8 miles away); 1910 Baldwin Locomotive (approx. 11.8 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Eveleth.

Photographed By Keith L, September 27, 2007
4. Entry Plaza Poem
As the rescue crews //
were approaching the //
crash site, eagles were //
sighted soaring above...
•
The eagles circle //
In a ceremony //
To guide their kind friends home. //
Though our time here is brief, //
An ancient truth circles with the eagles: //
That spirits never die.
•
They stay alive //
In love, in hope, //
In eagles' wings touching the sky, //
In people extending hands to one another //
To circle like an eagle //
And bring everyone home.
•
—LeAnn Littlewolf
Credits. This page was last revised on September 27, 2022. It was originally submitted on October 10, 2007, by Keith L of Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin. This page has been viewed 6,954 times since then and 99 times this year. Photos: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. submitted on October 10, 2007, by Keith L of Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin. • J. J. Prats was the editor who published this page.