Cherokee Park, located in the West Side neighborhood of St. Paul, is a regional park comprising 100 acres of forested bluff and blufftop parklands along the Mississippi River. The St. Paul Park Board first established a ten-acre section of the park in 1905 near the High Bridge, with subsequent expansions in 1906, the 1910s, and the 1970s. The park is well known for its spectacular view of the Mississippi River Valley, and of both downtown St. Paul and Minneapolis.
Situated on a high bluff along the western bank of the Mississippi River, Cherokee Park sits amid a landscape of Dakota sacred sites, including Bdote (the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers) and Wakan Tipi (Carver’s Cave). For thousands of years, the area’s proximity to the river, floodplains, Pickerel Lake, and upland bluffs offered a variety of resources for Indigenous inhabitants of the area. In 1851, the Treaty of Mendota resulted in the Dakota transferring a vast swath of land to the United States government, including the area that is now Cherokee Park. The United States government has yet to deliver much of the promised payment under the treaty. By the mid-1850s, the area that is now Cherokee Park was owned by various private citizens.
By the 1890s, the land that is currently Cherokee Park was platted, with streets and homes planned for the area. Some homes and other structures had already been built on the current parkland. Nevertheless, the St. Paul Park Board was eager to use this land for a public boulevard, which was proposed to begin around the intersection of Cesar Chavez Street and Isabel Street West, head along the bluff toward the High Bridge, and then stretch another four miles to the town of Mendota. The Park Board had difficulty in securing this land, as it was all already privately owned.
In 1905, however, donations of land and money from West Side residents resulted in a ten-acre section of land east of the High Bridge being designated as a park, which was called the West Side Boulevard. In 1906, a subsequent monetary donation made by James J. Hill enabled another nine-acre expansion of the park to the west of the High Bridge. The Park Board acquired the southern portion of the park in 1915, and around this time the park was renamed Cherokee Heights Park. Beyond grading a dirt road, few park “improvements” were made during these years.
The 1920s marked the beginning of more extensive development in the park, including a widened and paved road, and construction of recreational facilities such as horseshoe, tennis, and kitten-ball courts. In 1920, a municipal tourist campground was established that hosted approximately 10,000 travelers each summer. Facilities at the campground included tables, permanent stoves, water, lights, a pavilion, and a bathhouse with hot showers. The campground was initially located along Chippewa Avenue. After a few years, the campground was moved to the western boundary of the park, away from the residential area and neighbors who considered it an eyesore.
The campground was shuttered in the early 1930s, and the park became a popular destination for picnics. In the following decades, the park hosted band concerts, an ice-skating rink, a toboggan slide, community sings, horseshoe and tennis leagues, annual West Side Fourth of July celebrations, and countless community and family gatherings.
In the late 1960s, several development projects were proposed in the vicinity of the park. The St. Paul Port Authority attempted to purchase fifty acres of land adjacent to the park owned by the Twin Cities Brick Company with the goal of establishing an industrial zone and scrapyard. This plan was ultimately rejected, and twenty-five acres of the Twin Cities Brick Company land along the bluff were eventually incorporated into Cherokee Park. Around this time, a private company presented an offer to lease a portion of the bluff within the park for a ski-racing run. This plan was dismissed due to overwhelming community opposition.
In the early twenty-first century, park managers made efforts to restore native vegetation and increase accessibility to picnic facilities. In 2024, the spectacular views that first inspired the St. Paul Park Board to establish this area as public land continue to be enjoyed by park visitors.