- Robert "Fish" Jones
Robert Fremont "Fish" Jones (?–1930) was a
Minneapolis ,Minnesota businessman and showman.cite web|title=Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board - Park Detail|url=http://www.minneapolisparks.org/default.asp?PageID=4&parkid=436|publisher=Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board|accessdate=2008-04-25] His prominence led to him drivingUlysses S. Grant andWilliam T. Sherman downNicollet Avenue (later Nicollet Mall) in downtown Minneapolis for their post-war tours.Early days
Jones came to Minneapolis from upstate
New York in 1876. He got a job as a meat deliverer, but was unimpressed with the profession, so he quit it and invested $500 in a fish market onHennepin Avenue .cite web|title=Lions, Oysters, and Bears: A Fishmonger's Tale - City Pages (Minneapolis/St. Paul)|publisher=City Pages|date=1999-05-12|last=Ritter|first=Peter|url=http://articles.citypages.com/1999-05-12/news/lions-oysters-and-bears-a-fishmonger-s-tale/|accessdate=2008-04-25] The fish market prospered so much that Jones was able to buy a front-page advertisement in theSt. Paul Pioneer Press . It displayed him as a bird with oysters for wings. The advertisement earned him the nickname "The Oyster King" which stuck for the rest of his life. Owning the fish market also earned him the nickname "Fish".cite book|last=Benidt|first=Bruce Weir|title=The Library Book|publisher=Minneapolis Public Library and Information Center|location=Minneapolis|date=1984|isbn=0-9613716-0-9]Animals and the Zoological Gardens
Jones had a
bear imported and tethered in front of his market to both amuse and scare customers. He also owned acamel andtigers which he kept on the third floor of his building in downtown Minneapolis. His fondness for animals was such that in 1886 he sold his fish market and moved west down Hennepin Avenue. On a three-acre farm, he built azoo in which he put six lions fromSouth Africa ,cougars and other animals.In 1906, Jones sold his zoo to the
Roman Catholic Church who built theBasilica of St. Mary on its site after receiving complaints about noise from neighbors. He moved his zoo a quieter portion of town, the area aroundMinnehaha Falls . He rebuilt his zoo as theLongfellow Zoological Gardens , and a 2/3 scale replica ofHenry Wadsworth Longfellow 's house where he lived.cite book|title=Longfellow Gardens Guide|last=Jones|first=Robert|date=1927|location=Minneapolis|edition=17th] He built his zoo up and by the late 1920s, it included apolar bear ,seals andelephants .Death and legacy
In 1930, Jones died. His relatives tried to keep the zoo open, but failed and closed it and sold most of the animals to the
Como Zoo by 1936. His son, Roy Jones, built a barge and gathered the remaining animals to create a floating zoo on theMississippi River . He was not heard from again after he left Minnesota. Jones's house still stands as an interpretive center run by theMinneapolis Park & Recreation Board .References
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