On State Highway 4 south of 75th Avenue Northeast (County Highway 28), on the left when traveling south.
Joshua H. Gates arrived at Diamond Lake in 1857 where he claimed land in Sections 17 and 20 of Harrison Township. Gates may have been the first farmer in what is now Kandiyohi County. This is the site of the Joshua and Lucinda Gates family . . . — — Map (db m77102) HM
On 138th Avenue Northeast (County Road 98) at County Highway 4, on the right when traveling east on 138th Avenue Northeast.
During the Woodland period, about 1000 B. C. to A. D. 1650, Indian peoples began constructing earthworks or "mounds." Many if not most of these mounds functioned to visibly define and demarcate burial areas, much . . . — — Map (db m78079) HM
On County Highway 4, 0.3 miles south of North Shore Drive (County Highway 30), on the right when traveling south.
The first settlers in Kandiyohi County arrived in 1856 eager to stake a real estate claim on the shores of Green Lake. Early pioneers were hopeful that this place would soon become home to a thriving new city.
Two men from . . . — — Map (db m77865) HM
On 132nd Avenue Northwest, 0.4 miles west of County Highway 5.
On September 28, 1858, Johannes and Carin Iverson and family settled on section 32 of Lake Andrew Township near Crook Lake. Using supplies from the Eagle Lake Sawmill, Johannes Iverson built a log house here.
Almost four years later, on August . . . — — Map (db m79375) HM
On 150th Avenue Northwest (County Road 29) 0.5 miles east of County Highway 5, on the right when traveling west.
First Church in Minnesota Organized by Mission Friend Immigrants from Sweden
1870-Organized on J.A. Skoglund Farm
1873-Built 1910-Enlarged
1870-1955 Served this Rural Parish
1961-Perpetual Care Fund Raised . . . — — Map (db m77844) HM
On 140th Avenue Northeast, 0.5 miles west of State Highway 23, on the right when traveling west.
The Dakota nation established campsites in Kandiyohi County to hunt and fish. Little Crow's campsite located here was used for that purpose. Little Crow was born Taoyateduta about 1810 in the Mdewakanton Dakota village of Kaposia. Little Crow later . . . — — Map (db m78384) HM
On County Highway 9, 0.6 miles south of 113th Avenue Northeast (County Highway 10), on the right when traveling south.
In May 1859, Olof Olson Haugen, his wife Bergeret, and son Frederick homesteaded here in section 32, Dovre Township. Over the next three years, the Haugen family diligently worked to establish their new life; building shelter, raising crops and . . . — — Map (db m77770) HM
On Lake Avenue North (County Highway 30) north of Manitoba Street (County Highway 58), on the right when traveling north.
Green Lake has had three names. The Dakota who spent their summers here for hundreds of years, called it Mdeto.
The first whites called it Carnelian, for its red sandy beaches. Later settlers observed the green color, as the Indians had, and . . . — — Map (db m77792) HM
On Lake Avenue North (County Highway 30) north of Manitoba Street (County Highway 58), on the right when traveling north.
Dedicated to the
Veterans of All
Wars Who Served
Their Country to
Protect the
Freedom
of Humanity
Presented by Spicer
American Legion Post 545 — — Map (db m77050) WM
Near 113th Avenue Northeast (County Highway 10) at County Highway 9, on the left when traveling west.
Ojibwe and Dakota nations had a long history of conflict in what would become Minnesota. Both Dakota and Ojibwe people contended for the control of the abundant natural resources in the future Kandiyohi County area that played an economic role in . . . — — Map (db m78028) HM
Near North Shore Drive (County Highway 30) 0.4 miles west of County Road 4 NE, on the right when traveling east.
Native Americans camped in Kandiyohi County for thousands of years before white settlers arrived in the 1850s. One of the large Indian camp sites was here on the north shore of Green Lake. The Santee, or eastern bands of the Dakota Indians, were the . . . — — Map (db m231748) HM
On North Shore Drive (County Highway 30) 0.4 miles east of Highway 23 Northeast (State Highway 23), on the right when traveling east.
Several families settled near Green Lake's Crow River inlet in 1864. This became a trading center known as Green Lake Village, with a post office established in 1867. That same year the Green Lake lumber and grist mills were built. Lumber milling . . . — — Map (db m231754) HM