Afton State Park

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LocationWashington, Minnesota, United States
Coordinates44°51′45″N 92°47′1″W / 44.86250°N 92.78361°W / 44.86250; -92.78361
Area1,600 acres (6.5 km2)
Elevation938 ft (286 m)[1]
Afton State Park
Afton State Park's swimming area on the St. Croix River
Map showing the location of Afton State Park
Map showing the location of Afton State Park
Location of Afton State Park in Minnesota
Map showing the location of Afton State Park
Map showing the location of Afton State Park
Afton State Park (the United States)
LocationWashington, Minnesota, United States
Coordinates44°51′45″N 92°47′1″W / 44.86250°N 92.78361°W / 44.86250; -92.78361
Area1,600 acres (6.5 km2)
Elevation938 ft (286 m)[1]
Established1969
Governing bodyMinnesota Department of Natural Resources
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
800m
872yds
Trout Brook mouth
Trout Brook
Afton Alps
Ski Area
Visitor
Center
St. Croix River
A F T O N S T A T E
P A R K
Afton State Park

Afton State Park is a state park of Minnesota, USA, on the St. Croix River in Washington County. Its hiking trails offer views of the river, rolling glacial moraine, and bluffland it preserves. It is a popular place for birdwatching, picnics, camping, and other typical outdoor recreational activities. To deter overuse of a state park only 20 miles (32 km) from downtown St. Paul, there is no vehicle access to the camping area or swimming beach.

The park is located approximately five miles (8 km) south of the town of Afton, Minnesota. The park surrounds the unaffiliated Afton Alps ski area on three sides. The name "Afton" was given to this area by its settlers as a reference to the Robert Burns poem "Afton Water", which is about the River Afton in Scotland.

The park lies on a glacial moraine, scribed with deep ravines running down to the St. Croix River. Sandstone outcrops have been exposed in some of the ravines. The vertical drop from the blufftop to the water is 300 feet (91 m).

A few patches of remnant prairie survived the decades of farming that took place on the blufftop. Today the former fields are being restored to prairie and oak savanna. The ravines leading down to the riverbank are thickly wooded with oak, aspen, birch, and cherry.

Cultural history

With William O'Brien State Park growing increasingly crowded in the 1960s, Minnesota was on the lookout for more recreational land near Minneapolis–Saint Paul. Very little state park–caliber land remained, especially along the scenic and well-settled St. Croix River. Therefore, it was a surprise when an undeveloped property directly on the river, containing the last beach on the Minnesota side, went on the market in 1967. Although some of the blufftop had been farmed, the steep ravines had deterred most other development. State park officials and advocacy groups acted quickly and purchased the property the next summer. Many local residents opposed the new state park, fearing the onslaught of visitors it would attract. Resistance continued after the park was authorized by legislation in 1969, and acquisition of property to fill out the park dragged on for thirteen years. Residents did achieve a few key compromises. The park entrance was moved from the north to the west side, snowmobiles were banned, and the road was shortened from its original plan. Thus the camping area and beach are only accessible by hiking. Afton State Park finally opened to the public in 1982, with the visitor center only being completed the following year.[2]

During the 2011 Minnesota state government shutdown, all state parks were closed, leaving Afton open to a serious vandalism and burglary of three park buildings. A group of a dozen young men drove around the gate into the park, where they ransacked an administrative building and vandalized two camper cabins. The shingles of one of the latter were pried off and burned in a campfire. State parks were open to people entering on foot, and an early-morning hiker alerted authorities to the suspicious presence of vehicles. Some of the group scattered and hid, but the Washington County Sheriff's department conducted a manhunt through the park and arrested all but one of the suspects.[3]

Recreation

References

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