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Owatonna, MN

Owatonna, Minnesota
City
Downtown Owatonna
Downtown Owatonna
Nickname(s): O-Town
Location of Owatonnawithin Steele County and state of Minnesota
Location of Owatonna
within Steele County and state of Minnesota
Coordinates: 44°5′14″N 93°13′28″W / 44.08722°N 93.22444°W / 44.08722; -93.22444
Country United States
State Minnesota
County Steele
Incorporated as town August 9, 1858
Named for Straight River
Government
 • Type Representative council
 • Mayor Tom Kuntz
Area
 • Total 14.62 sq mi (37.87 km2)
 • Land 14.53 sq mi (37.63 km2)
 • Water 0.09 sq mi (0.23 km2)
Elevation 1,152 ft (351 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 25,599
 • Estimate (2015) 25,725
 • Density 1,761.8/sq mi (680.2/km2)
Time zone Central (CST) (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
ZIP code 55060
Area code(s) 507
FIPS code 27-49300
GNIS feature ID 0649095
Website City of Owatonna

Owatonna (/ˌwəˈtɒnə/) is a city in Steele County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 25,599 at the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Steele County. Owatonna is home to the Steele County Fairgrounds, which hosts the Steele County Free Fair in August.

Interstate 35 and U.S. Highways 14, and 218 are three of the main routes in the city.

Owatonna was first settled in 1853 around the Straight River. The community was named after the Straight River, which in the Dakota language is Wakpá Owóthaŋna. The earliest the Owatonna area was settled was in 1854 and platted in September 1855, but it was incorporated as a town August 9, 1858, then as a city on February 23, 1865.

In 1856, Josef Karel Kaplan emigrated from a village southwest of Prague Bohemia (now the Czech Republic) and selected a quarter section (160 acres (65 ha)) of land near the town of Owatonna. Kaplan described Owatonna as having just 50 small homes, but predicted 100 within a year, along with a railroad. With just four stores and a pharmacy, Owatonna quickly prospered and grew to 1500 inhabitants in just 5 years. Kaplan wrote about the Owatonna area in letters donated to the Minnesota Historical Society. In them he described often seeing Indians – people with "tough constitutions...brown skin and good dispositions", explaining: "When you read about battles between whites and Indians, it is the whites who are to blame." In 1866, Kaplan helped organize the Catholic Cemetery, and a year later, the National Bohemian Cemetery of Owatonna


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