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Minnesota is the 32nd state of the United States, having
joined the Union on May 11, 1858. Its name is from the
Dakota people's name for the Minnesota River, mini sota, variously
translated "smoky-white water" or "sky-tinted water."
Minnesota is the largest state by land area in the Midwestern
United States and is in the sub-region known as the Upper
Midwest.
The most significant metropolitan area is known as
the Twin Cities, which contains more than half the state's
population. The Twin Cities refer to the state's most populous
cities- Minneapolis and Saint Paul, along with multiple
"rings" of suburbs.
Before European colonization, the area now known as Minnesota
was inhabited by Native Americans, in particular the Ojibwe
(Chippewa, Anishinaabe) and Dakota, although the Winnebago
also had a presence in the southeastern part of the state. In
this time, the economy originally consisted of hunter-gatherer
activities, which changed over time as Europeans settled in
the area and further exploited the state's natural resources.
Before the arrival of Dakota and Ojibwe, Cheyenne and Gros
Ventre also made their home in Minnesota.
According to local tradition, the first European visitors were
Swedish and Norwegian Vikings in the 14th century. The
evidence for this is largely based on the controversial
Kensington Runestone, which many historians consider to be an
elaborate hoax. Some say that the earliest European settlement
was in the area of the current city of Stillwater, on the St.
Croix River, though many histories focus on the military
settlement that took place farther west. Fort Snelling,
located at the confluence of the Minnesota River and the
Mississippi River, was one of the earliest U.S. military
presences in the state. It is now a historic site.
Part of what would become Minnesota was granted to the United
States by the Second Treaty of Paris at the end of the
American Revolution in 1783, the fledgling states having been
granted all of the land east of the Mississippi River. This
included what would become modern-day Saint Paul (but only
part of Minneapolis), including the northeast, north-central
and east-central portions of the state. Most of the state,
however, was purchased from France as part of the Louisiana
Purchase. The northern border between Minnesota and British
North America was for a long time disputed. At the time it was
erroneously believed that the Mississippi River ran well into
modern Canada, making some earlier agreements flawed. Parts of
northern Minnesota were considered to be in Ruperts Land. The
exact definition of the boundary was not addressed until the
Anglo-American Convention of 1818 which set the border at the
49th parallel west of the Lake of the Woods (except for a
small chunk of land now dubbed the northwest angle). Border
disputes east of the Lake of the Woods continued until the
Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842.
Throughout the first half of the 19th century, the north
eastern portion of the state was a part of the Northwest
Territory, then the Illinois Territory, then the Michigan
Territory, and finaly the Wisconsin Territory. The west and
south areas of the state were not formally organized until
1838 when they became part of the Iowa Territory.
Upon statehood of Iowa and Wisconsin the Minnesota Territory
was carved out of the remaining land and established on March
3, 1849, but unlike the boundaries of modern day Minnesota,
the areas western border extended far into present day North
Dakota and South Dakota; all the way to the Missouri River.
The eastern half of the Minnesota Territory became the
country's 32nd state—after California—on May 11, 1858. The
remaining western part fell unorganized until its
incorporation into the Dakota Territory on March 2, 1861.
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