- Sugar Loaf (Winona, Minnesota)
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name =Sugar Loaf
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caption = Sugar Loaf in 1898
location = SW of jct. of US 61 and MN 43
nearest_city =Winona, Minnesota
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added =August 3 ,1990
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refnum = 90001164
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governing_body =Sugar Loaf is a rocky
pinnacle overlooking eastern Winona above the junction of Highways 61 and 43. It towers 500 feet over Lake Winona (former part of theMississippi River main channel) and more than 85 feet above the remainder of the bluff. It resulted from thequarrying through most of the1880 s of the limestone which was then used for Winona’ssidewalk s and brick buildings. Themining was done by two brothers, John and Stephen O'Dea. The use oflimestone (Oneotadolomite - asedimentary limestone composed mainly ofcalcium carbonate andmagnesium ) began with the need to improve city sidewalks, most of which were made of wood and burned in the 1862 fire that destroyed 90 percent of the downtown district. Many miles of this limestone were installed before the turn of the 20th Century and met with such success that a city ordinance was passed in late 1890 specifying stone only for sidewalks. Buildings in the area also began to utilize the stone because of its texture.Quarry operations were shut down in 1887.In March, 2004 a rare event occurred. Tons of limestone sheared off the northwest face of the landmark, leaving a dark trail of rock rubble in the snow, down a lower cliff face and onto the tree-covered slope below. The cascade stopped about 100 yards short of the nearest house. The layers of stone came loose and fell because of the freezing and thawing action of water over time, especially from the unusually wet winter.
In its original configuration of the bluff was as a rounded dome with a fringe of evergreen on the crown was well known to early explorers, traders, tourists, and river boat pilots. Indian legend has it that the mountain represented the cap of Chief Wa-pah-sha (Wabasha) transformed into stone. Another legend refers to a dispute at the site of
Red Wing, Minnesota upriver from Winona in which a single bluff splits into Barn Bluff (which remained at Red Wing), and Sugar Loaf, which was moved downriver to its present site. The name "Sugar Loaf" refers to the former formation's resemblance to the conical loaves that sugar used to be packaged and sold in. There are many hills and mountains named "Sugar Loaf" in the United States. At least three other hills or bluffs bearing the name "Sugar Loaf" are located in or near the Mississippi River Valley in proximity to Winona.More than a few local businesses that incorporate Sugar Loaf into their names have been built at the base of the bluff. The Sugar Loaf name is also given to a very small community located south and east of the hill.
The former Sugar Loaf Brewery (Peter Bub's Brewery) building is nestled into the northeastern slope. It is in the
National Register of Historic Places , as is the hill itself in a separate entry. The brewery operation extended caves into Sugar Loaf. While currently the location of anantique shop , there are plans to convert it into a modernbrewery . [ [http://www.winonadailynews.com/articles/2007/10/23/news/00lead.txt Beer plans brewing at former Bub’s site : Winona Daily News ] ]External links
* [http://img430.imageshack.us/img430/550/sugar26ah.jpg1800s photo of west side of Sugar Loaf]
* [http://gallery.lazylightning.org/gc-20050312?page=2 Sugar Loaf today]References
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