There are a whole bunch of fascinating historical spots, including-but-not-limited-to the old railroad car / blues bar, the city's last strip club (and only strip club located in a strip mall), an ancient family-run pizza parlor, a German-American "klub haus", the batting cages where Steve Winfield coaches, dozens of new immigrant businesses, a historic Hmong bait shop, a willingly-homeless man who has lived literally on the sidewalk for decades, one of the only non-chain 24-hour diners in the Twin Cities, the city's waterworks reservoir, a couple beautiful lakes, the building formerly known as the "hair milk lab", an old Catholic school that is increasingly populated by Southeast Asian immigrants, cemeteries and car part stores and industry, and, of course, a whole bunch of truly gritty dive bars.
[The past comes to life on Rice Street.] |
I’ve written before about what it was like to hang out around Rice Street:
The growing diversity is a good thing for Rice Street, which boasts businesses like Bangkok Thai Deli or Kathy's Live Bait, with more and younger people speaking languages other than English. But in an area that struggles with crime and gang violence, it’s a challenge, especially for the old-timers.
Another story: I felt really weird when I marched in the Rice Street Parade back in 2006, because the parade offered a long string of floats full of white people heading down a street lined with people of color. The parade dynamics really bugged me, especially when I saw the guy running for City Council on a “tough on crime” platform hoisting police logos against a segregated racial background. It was one the things that pissed me off enough to get involved in local politics in the first place.
[The amazing Vadnais Inn sculpture.] |
[Link to map to the Vadnais Inn.] |
Rice Street is named after Henry Rice, one of the key figures behind the founding of Saint Paul, and even then, the street (which followed an old trail leading out of Saint Paul) was a bit marginal. The peerless Donald Empson describes the terrain thus:
The north-south portion of this street, named in Rice and Irvine's Addition in 1831, marks a section line on the land survey. The first surveyor noted the area today along Rice Street between Van Buren Avenue and Wayzata Street was marshland and tamarack swamp. To the north of today's Wayzata Street all the way to Larpenteur Avenue, he area along Rice Street was comprised of oak barrens interspersed with marshes.
[Typical Rice Street sentiments.] |
There's also a heated debate on Rice Street about the connection between street design, safety, and economic development, which will be food for thought as we bike the suburban-to-urban transect and go through
This will be a one-way trip down Rice Street, about 5 miles in length, beginning by Interstate 694 and ending not too far from the Rice Street Green Line station. We will stop at Vadnais Inn, the historical McCarrons' Pub (formerly Dean's) for food, Lonetti's Bar, and wind up at Born's (formerly a 40+ bar).
Please join me on this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity! Rice Street is always changing and will never be the same again.
What: Bike tour of dive bars along Rice Street
When: Sunday 9/10 at 2:30 pm.
Where: Meet at Vadnais Inn, by Rice and 694.
Why: Because it's there.
Who: You. Free of charge, though tips are very much accepted.
[The guard dog at Lonetti's.] |
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