Lone Rock
USA /
Minnesota /
Coates /
World
/ USA
/ Minnesota
/ Coates
World / United States / Minnesota
interesting place, stone/rock feature
A large sandstone pillar, that has been used as a marker for traveler, since it can be seen from far away.
Nicollet described the spot in his journal as a "pretty hill of soft and rough-grained and varied colored sandstone. Worked over by the wind and the rain, it has the appearance of an old chateau, or fort in ruins with castellations, window openings, and loopholes."
Looming above the surrounding countryside, the formation was to Nicollet a familiar landmark. On a trip through the area a year earlier he had paused there long enough to carve his name in the soft stone, perhaps feeling a need to leave a sign letting subsequent travelers know that someone had passed this way before.
That carved inscription eroded away long ago, but Sandstone Hill is still there today. Now known as Lone Rock, it remains an important point of interest at the southern edge of UMore Park.
For more than 150 years, Lone Rock has stood largely untouched as the landscape all around it has been in nearly continuous transition--a sort of geological palimpsest upon which history has been written and rewritteby many generations of Minnesotans. Like Joseph Nicollet, each generation has left something behind for those who followed, reminding them that someone has passed this way before.
Nicollet described the spot in his journal as a "pretty hill of soft and rough-grained and varied colored sandstone. Worked over by the wind and the rain, it has the appearance of an old chateau, or fort in ruins with castellations, window openings, and loopholes."
Looming above the surrounding countryside, the formation was to Nicollet a familiar landmark. On a trip through the area a year earlier he had paused there long enough to carve his name in the soft stone, perhaps feeling a need to leave a sign letting subsequent travelers know that someone had passed this way before.
That carved inscription eroded away long ago, but Sandstone Hill is still there today. Now known as Lone Rock, it remains an important point of interest at the southern edge of UMore Park.
For more than 150 years, Lone Rock has stood largely untouched as the landscape all around it has been in nearly continuous transition--a sort of geological palimpsest upon which history has been written and rewritteby many generations of Minnesotans. Like Joseph Nicollet, each generation has left something behind for those who followed, reminding them that someone has passed this way before.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 44°41'3"N 93°3'33"W
- U-Lands 5.1 km
- Clarks Grove, Minnesota 104 km
- State Forest Land 156 km
- Springwater Village 178 km
- Lake Neshonoc 180 km
- Effigy Mounds National Monument 228 km
- White Pine Hollow State Forest 274 km
- Blackhawk Lake State Park 288 km
- St Donatus, Iowa 328 km
- riverside casino and golf resort 375 km
- Dakota Woods Dog Park 2.8 km
- Derner's pond 3 km
- 223-A 3.4 km
- 223-B 3.4 km
- Gopher Ordnance Works (GOW) 3.7 km
- House of Coates 3.8 km
- Turkey Track Airport 3.9 km
- Elk Farm 4.8 km
- Highway 52 bridge 4.8 km
- Empire Township, Minnesota 4.9 km