- Dinkytown
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Dinkytown
Dinkytown, USA, Grodnik— District — The Varsity Theater on 4th Street Dinkytown is within the Marcy-Holmes neighborhood of the U.S. city of Minneapolis Coordinates: 44°58′51″N 93°14′10″W / 44.98083°N 93.23611°WCoordinates: 44°58′51″N 93°14′10″W / 44.98083°N 93.23611°W Country United States State Minnesota County Hennepin City Minneapolis Neighborhood University Branded 1940s Founder Unknown Named for Grodnik or Dinkys City Council Ward 3 Government - Councilmember Diane Hofstede Elevation 830 ft (253 m) Population (2007)[1] [2] - Urban 387,970 - Metro 2,367,204 Time zone CST (UTC-6) - Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5) Postal code Area code(s) 612 Dinkytown, USA (commonly Dinkytown) is an area within the Marcy Holmes neighborhood in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Centered at 14th Avenue Southeast and 4th Street Southeast, the district contains several city blocks occupied by various small businesses, restaurants, food courts, bars, and the like, and apartment buildings mostly housing university students. Dinkytown is along the north side of the University of Minnesota Twin Cities East Bank campus.
Notable landmarks include the Dinky Dome (a former theological seminary converted to a food court), the Loring Pasta Bar (formerly Gray's Drug and also the building where Bob Dylan lived in Minneapolis), and Al's Breakfast (arguably the city's smallest restaurant).
Several landmarks are considered historic including Vescio's Italian restaurant, which opened in the 1950s, and the House of Hanson grocery store. The former Marshall-University High School on the corner of 14th Avenue and 5th street was closed in 1982 due to low enrollment and was purchased and converted into the University Technology Enterprise Center (UTEC) for startups.[3] The Chateau co-op built their brutalist-style 22-story apartment co-op in 1973 at 13th Avenue Southeast and 5th Street Southeast.[4]
Contents
History
The name Dinkytown is of uncertain origin, although it was in definite use by 1948, when the Dinkytown Business Association formed.
Stories regarding the origin of the name include
- The streetcars, called Dinkys, that used to provide transit throughout the area.
- Similarly, the tenders at the nearby railyard were called Dinkys
- The theatre in Dinkytown had only four rows of seats, and for years was known as "The Dinky"
- It's a small town-like area, with everything within walking distance.
- The Loring Pasta Bar, previously Gray's Drug on 14th Ave. SE and 4th St. SE has the name of an early owner carved in cement over the doorway: "Grodnik," meaning a small (or dinky) town. The name of the early owner was Louis Grodnik. He owned a habidashery at that location and built the building. His brother, Hela Grodnik, always claimed that he was the one who named the area when he said that "This is getting to be a real 'Dinky Town'". Nobody in the family believed that though. Louis had other brothers, Jacob, who owned a jewelry store for many years at 7th and Hennepin. Other siblings were George, Fanny Levitan and Lena Bank.
- Then-Gopher football player Frank "Dinky" Rog, whose large group of friends spent much time down here in the late 1940's and early 1950's.
References
- ^ "Twin Cities Region Population and Household Estimates, 2006" (PDF). Metropolitan Council. 2006-04-01. http://www.metrocouncil.org/metroarea/2006PopulationEstimates.pdf. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
- ^ "Table 2: Population Estimates for the 100 Most Populous Metropolitan Statistical Areas Based on July 1, 2006 Population Estimates: April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2006" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. 2007-04-05. http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/cb07-51tbl2.pdf. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
- ^ http://utec-center.com/news.html
- ^ http://www.riverton.org/about.php
External links
- Official Dinkytown Website Your guide and resource to the Dinkytown community.
- Lileks.com -- University of Minnesota pages -- contains information and reminiscence about Dinkytown, by Star Tribune columnist James Lileks
- Former Marshall High School
- The Dinkytown Project
Further reading
Minneapolis neighborhoods Calhoun-Isles Camden Cleveland · Folwell · Lind-Bohanon · McKinley · Shingle Creek · Victory · Webber-Camden
Central Longfellow Cooper · Hiawatha · Howe · Longfellow · Seward
Near North Harrison · Hawthorne · Jordan · Near North · Sumner-Glenwood · Willard-Hay
Nokomis Diamond Lake · Ericsson · Field · Hale · Keewaydin · Minnehaha · Morris Park · (Nokomis East) · Northrop · Page · Regina · Wenonah
Northeast Phillips Powderhorn Southwest Armatage · East Harriet · Fulton · Kenny · King Field · Linden Hills · Lynnhurst · Tangletown · Windom
University Cedar-Riverside · Como · Marcy-Holmes · Nicollet Island/East Bank · Prospect Park · University
Commercial areas Dinkytown · Downtown · Eat Street · 50th & France · Lyn-Lake · Midtown · Mills District · Stadium Village · Uptown
Categories:- Neighborhoods in Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Student quarters
- University of Minnesota
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