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City Tour of New Hope
New Hope was once a farming rich community in the early 1900s. The area
was settled as part of the Crystal Lake Township and became the home for
many family farms. As housing developments spread west from Minneapolis
in the 1930s, the new residents of Crystal Lake Township began the movement
to incorporate the township.
In 1936, the City of Crystal was incorporated. Forming a city, though,
was not supported by all residents in the township. The rural residents
in the western half of the township broke away from the City of Crystal
and formed their own township. The resistant residents, mostly farmers,
were unhappy about paying taxes for projects such as street lighting and
sanitary sewer. The name the farmers selected for their new township was
a reflection of the time: New Hope.
The township of New Hope had three distinct boundaries to the north,
south and west where what is now 62nd Avenue North, Medicine Lake Road,
and Highway 169 are located respectively. The eastern boundary shared
with the new City of Crystal, however, was less distinct. Many residents
along the border formed groups and requested to be annexed by Crystal
in order to receive what were the most modern city services at the time.
Others, however, were happy to be part of the New Hope township and remained
separate from Crystal. Therefore, sections, or pockets, of New Hope residents
were created along the eastern boundary.
By the early 1950s, the rapidly developing township of New Hope chose
the fate it had eluded just over 15 years earlier. In 1953, New Hope incorporated
as a city to prevent losing more of its land and residents to Crystal
via annexation. This move was again opposed by the farming community of
New Hope, but housing developments between 1936 and 1953 had made farmers
a minority in New Hope.
When the township was incorporated, it had 600 residents. The City grew
rapidly and was the home to over 2,500 people by 1958. This rapid population
growth continued through the 1960s, and by 1971, there were 24,000 residents
in New Hope. The population of the community has declined slightly since
1971, for a population of 21,658 by 1998.
New Hope is located in Hennepin County, ten miles northwest of downtown
Minneapolis. The city is a second ring suburb providing over 200 acres
of park land plus a nine-hole golf course, swimming pool and ice arena.
New Hope is known for its well-kept, diverse residential neighborhoods.
The city supports a strong industrial base with three prominent industrial
parks. Highway 169 establishes the western boundary of the city, providing
access to four major interstate highways and the Minneapolis-St. Paul
International Airport in minutes.
New Hope Links
City of New Hope
Robbinsdale Area Schools
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