106.9 KROC-FM logo
Get our free mobile app

While we haven't had a typical winter this year in Minnesota, exporting 'winter'-- or a part of it, anyway-- used to be a big business in the North Star State.

Seeing as we've really only had a few days with our typical cold and snowy weather this year, it's a little tough to wrap your head around how Mother Nature usually treats us during the cold weather months. But did you know that the winter once was big business in the Land of 10,000 Lakes?

Sure, many resorts, cabins, ski and ice fishing areas up north still use Minnesota's winter as their 'business.' But exporting winter-- specifically ice from the Gopher State's 10,000 frozen lakes and rivers-- used to be a major industry.

According to this History Lesson column from the Sun-Sailor (a weekly site serving the western Twin Cities suburbs), ice from frozen Minnesota rivers and lakes was used before our modern-day refrigerators and freezers were invented to help keep food cold.

READ MORE: 10 Unique Things You Only Say If You're in Minnesota

And, the story says the ice harvest industry was big in Minnesota from the early 1800s to as recently as the 1950s. Crews would spend several weeks in January, working nearly 24 hours a day, cutting massive blocks of ice that would then be stored in massive, insulated warehouses before being delivered to homes and businesses.

Individual homes and businesses would then put that ice in their icebox-- an insulated cabinet that was the precursor to our refrigerators and freezers-- to help keep food cold. and also used on trucks and trains delivering food across America. The ice harvest was so great that the supply of ice blocks would last throughout the entire year-- even during our hot summer months and was once the second-largest export in the U.S.

However, after electricity made it to even the most rural parts of the country in the early 1950s, Minnesota's ice harvesting business pretty much went away after modern refrigerators and freezers became much more common.

It's not totally gone, however. An ice harvest is still done each year (okay, maybe not THIS year, but most years) by the Three Rivers Park District in Plymouth, as well as in other parts of the state as well. Check it out below!

Listen to Curt St. John weekday mornings
 from 6 to 10 a.m. on Quick Country 96.5

Check Out Former Minnesota Vikings GM Rick Spielman's Home

The Eden Prairie home where former Minnesota Vikings GM Rick Spielman lived is now for sale.

Gallery Credit: Curt St. John

More From 106.9 KROC-FM