winnewassa falls pipestone minnesota
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Winnewissa Falls, Pipestone National Monument, Minnesota, April 2009
panoramic view of the waterfall and surrounding area
Historic Calumet Inn - Pipestone (Minnesota) - United States
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Historic Calumet Inn hotel city: Pipestone (Minnesota) - Country: United States
Address: 104 West Main Street; zip code: MN 56164
Just 2 minutes’ drive from Fort Pipestone, the Historic Calumet Inn is located in Pipestone, MN. The accommodation features a restaurant, bar and shared lounge. Free WiFi access is available.
-- Situé à seulement 2 minutes de route de Fort Pipestone, l'Historic Calumet Inn vous accueille à Pipestone, au Minesota. L’établissement dispose d'un restaurant, d'un bar et d'un salon commun. Une connexion Wi-Fi est accessible gratuitement.
-- El Historic Calumet Inn, situado en Pipestone, MN, a solo 2 minutos en coche de Fort Pipestone, es un alojamiento con restaurante, bar, salón compartido y conexión WiFi gratuita.
-- Das Historic Calumet Inn in Pipestone, Minnesota, liegt nur 2 Autominuten von Fort Pipestone entfernt und verfügt über ein Restaurant, eine Bar sowie eine Gemeinschaftslounge. WLAN nutzen Sie kostenlos.
-- Historic Calumet Inn ligt in Pipestone, MN, op slechts 2 minuten rijden van Fort Pipestone. De accommodatie beschikt over een restaurant, een bar en een gedeelde woonkamer. Er is gratis WiFi beschikbaar.
-- A soli 2 minuti in auto da Fort Pipestone, l'Historic Calumet Inn si trova a Pipestone, MN, e offre un ristorante, bar e salone comune, e il WiFi gratuito.
-- O Historic Calumet Inn está localizado apenas a 2 minutos de carro de Fort Pipestone, em Pipestone, Minesota. Dispõe de um restaurante, de um bar e de um salão partilhado. O acesso Wi-Fi é gratuito.
-- Historic Calumet Inn酒店位于明尼苏达州的派普斯通(Pipestone),距离派普斯通堡垒(Fort Pipestone)仅有2分钟车程,设有餐厅、酒吧、共用休息室以及免费WiFi。 酒店的每间客房均提供有线电视、书桌、空调、床单和熨烫设施以及带浴缸或淋浴、吹风机和免费洗浴用品的私人浴室。 Historic Calumet Inn酒店设有24小时前台、热水浴池、健身中心、会议设施、台球设施、骑马设施、高尔夫设施以及免费停车场。 酒店距离苏福尔斯国际机场(Sioux...
-- Мини-гостиница при ресторане Historic Calumet Inn с рестораном, баром и общим лаунджем разместилась в 2 минутах езды от Форт-Пайпстон, в Пайпстоне, в Миннесоте. Гостям предоставляется бесплатный Wi-Fi.
-- Historic Calumet Inn ligger bara 2 minuters bilresa från Fort Pipestone i Pipestone i Minnesota. Här erbjuds en restaurang, en bar och en gemensam lounge. WiFi är gratis. Varje rum på hotellet har kabel-TV och skrivbord.
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Pipestone National Monument - Minnesota
This National Monument is truly a sacred place and has been for close to 2000 years. The Sioux account as to the origin of the pipestone, as recorded by George Catlin in 1836 states that .... At an ancient time the Great Spirit, in the form of a large bird, stood upon the wall of rock and called all the tribes around him, and breaking out a piece of the red stone formed it into a pipe and smoked it, the smoke rolling over the whole multitude. He then told his red children that this red stone was their flesh, that they were made from it, that they must all smoke to him through it, that they must use it for nothing but pipes; and as it belonged alike to all tribes, the ground was sacred, and no weapons must be used or brought upon it.
In 1937 Congress established Pipestone National Monument to provide traditional quarrying for Indians. Today pipe carvings are appreciated as art-works as well as for ceremonial use. Once again, as commanded by the spirit bird in the Sioux story of it's creation, the pipestone here is quarried by an American Indian enrolled in a tribe recognized by the US Government. An age old tradition continues in the modern world, ever changing yet rooted in the past.
The unique and special stone is also referred to as Catlinite, named after George Catlin.
Be sure to enjoy the Circle Trail and take in beautiful Winnewissa falls and then explore the ancient quarries. The Native Americans who are tasked with quarrying the stone treat it with reverence and respect. Please do the same and not remove any pieces of the stone, nor intrude in the space assigned to each workman. The pipestone is still quarried by hand just as it has been for centuries.
Pipestone, Minnesota Tourism Video
Hau Koda (Welcome Friend) to Pipestone, Minnesota - Home of the Red Stone Pipe! Visit us on facebook at Pipestone Area Chamber of Commerce or at PipestoneMinnesota.com.
Winnewissa Falls-The Jewel of Pipestone National Monument
Please watch: WIN an iPod Nano! See video for details!
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A visit to Winnewissa Falls in Southwest Minnesota's Pipestone National Monument.
Culture + Spirituality | Pipestone National Monument in Minnesota
For countless generations, Native American Indians have quarried the red pipestone found at this site. These grounds are sacred to many indigenous people because the pipestone quarried here is carved into pipes used for prayer. Many believe that the pipe's smoke carries one's prayer to the Great Spirit. The traditions of quarrying and pipe making continue here today.
When you pray with this pipe, you pray for and with everything.
-Black Elk
Music provided via Jamendo
Artist: SaReGaMa
Album: The Red Road
Title: Dance of Kokopeli Native A
Pipestone National Monument Minnesota
Pipestone National Monument is located in southwestern Minnesota, just north of the city of Pipestone, Minnesota. It is located along the highways of U.S. Route 75, Minnesota State Highway 23 and Minnesota State Highway 30.
The catlinite, or pipestone, has been traditionally used to make ceremonial pipes, vitally important to traditional Plains Indian religious practices. The quarries are sacred to most of the tribe of North America, Dakota, Lakota, and other tribes of Native Americans, and were neutral territory where all Nations could quarry stone for ceremonial pipes.[2] The Sioux tribes may have taken control of the quarries around 1700, but the Minnesota pipestone has been found inside North American burial mounds dating from long before that, and ancient Indian trails leading to the area suggest pipestone may have been quarried there for many centuries.[3]
As the United States grew westward in the 19th century, pipes found their way into white society through trade. To protect their source, the Yankton Sioux secured free and unrestricted access via The Treaty With The Yankton Sioux, which was signed on April 19, 1858.
The land was acquired by the federal government in 1893. In 1928, the Yankton Sioux, then resettled on a reservation 150 miles (240 km) away, sold their claim to the federal government. The National Monument was established by an act of Congress on August 25, 1937, and the establishing legislation restored quarrying rights to the Indians.[2] Today only people of Native American ancestry are allowed to quarry the pipestone. A boundary change occurred on June 18, 1956.[4] As an historic area under the National Park Service it was administratively listed on the National Register of Historic Places under the heading Cannomok'e—Pipestone National Monument. The Red Pipestone Quarries within the monument comprise a Minnesota State Historic Site.[5]
During the summer months, there are cultural demonstrations at the monument. The Upper Midwest Indian Cultural Center, located inside the visitor center, sponsors demonstrations of pipemaking by native craftworkers using the stone from the quarries. Local Native Americans carve the stones using techniques passed down from their ancestors. Many of the demonstrators are third or fourth generation pipe makers.
Visitors can also walk along a three-quarter mile (1.2 km) self-guided trail to view the pipestone quarries and a waterfall. A trail guide is available at the visitor center. About 260 acres (1.1 km2) of the national monument has been restored to native tallgrass prairie. Monument staff burn prairie parcels on a rotating basis to control weeds and stimulate growth of native grasses. A larger area of restored tallgrass prairie and a small Bison herd are maintained by the Minnesota DNR at Blue Mounds State Park, 20 miles (32 km) to the south.
The visitor center features exhibits about the natural and cultural history of the site, including a petroglyph display. There is also an orientation video about the history of the pipestone quarries.
I created this video with the YouTube Slideshow Creator (
Photos from Fall 2015
Greetings from Pipestone, MN!
Hello! I'm Nisa Semesta, an Indonesian 2012/2013 YES exchange student hosted in Pipestone, MN! I love my exchange year in the United States and I decided that other people should have the equal experience to live such dream. This video was made for Padmanaba 70 and AFS Chapter Yogyakarta :) I would like to thank everyone who made this video possible, especially my host family and friends in Pipestone Area Schools!
Pipestone National Monument (Minnesota) - March 7, 2009
Slide show of a visit to Pipestone National Monument (near Pipestone, Minnesota) on a gray, cold day (about 24 deg F). Photos include a look at the quarries (worked by native Americans), a walk on the Circle Trail, a view of the Oracle (at 3:28), a crossing of Pipestone Creek (near Winnewissa Falls), and a few other points of interest along the way. One deer was watching from the ridge above the prairie; I was too slow on the draw to get a photo of the red-headed woodpecker that saw me before I saw it; and I heard a pheasant (but did not see it). Not another person was on the trail (however, the visitor center was open). The site is probably a bit more hospitable in warmer weather.
Pipestone, MN's Mick Myers joins Jeff in the Drivers Seat #1
Mick Myers, Executive Director of the Chamber of Commerce & Visitors Bureau in Pipestone joins Jeff for a tour around Pipestone, MN.
Beautiful Minnesota Waterfall
Looped iPhone 7 Plus video for your relaxation.
At the Pipestone Sacred Quarry
My first visit to the sacred quarry at Pipestone, MN., May 31st, 2012. Heavy rains flooded the quarry pits, as is common in the spring. Quarrying begins later in the year when the pits dry out. Only hand tools are used to get at the soft red stone layer, sandwiched between harder than steel layers of Sioux quartzite. $3 gets you in to see a natural wonder!
Pipestone national monument fail
So my phone was almost full of data and I got it on tape.
Pipestone National Monument
Pipestone National Monument is located in southwestern Minnesota, just north of the city of Pipestone, Minnesota. It is located along the highways of U.S. Route 75, Minnesota State Highway 23 and Minnesota State Highway 30. The catlinite, or pipestone, has been traditionally used to make ceremonial pipes, vitally important to traditional Plains Indian religious practices. The quarries are sacred to most of the tribe of North America, Dakota, Lakota, and other tribes of Native Americans, and were neutral territory where all Nations could quarry stone for ceremonial pipes. The Sioux tribes may have taken control of the quarries around 1700, but the Minnesota pipestone has been found inside North American burial mounds dating from long before that, and ancient Indian trails leading to the area suggest pipestone may have been quarried there for many centuries.
Vermillion Falls Hastings MN
This video was uploaded from an Android phone.
Pipestone National Monument #1: Intro - May 14, 2017 - Travels With Phil Unedited
Subscribe to my YouTube Channel ----- - - - - - Pipestone National Monument #1: For countless generations, American Indians have quarried the red pipestone found at this site. These grounds are sacred to many people because the pipestone quarried here is carved into pipes used for prayer. Many believe that the pipe's smoke carries one's prayer to the Great Spirit. The traditions of quarrying and pipemaking continue here today.. This video is an introduction to the Monument. May 14, 2017 - Travels with Phil by Phil Konstantin -
pipstone mn 2
We took Lucy for a walk out at the Pipestone National Monument. It is located in southwestern Minnesota, just north of the city of Pipestone, and yes Lucy got a hair cut. Her first for the summer.
Minneopa Falls
Short video of the upper part of Minneopa Falls at Minneopa State park in Mankato Minnesota.
Pipestone National Monument May 2013
Here are a few views of my visit to Pipestone National Monument. Most of this is the cliffs not the pipestone quarry areas. What a wonderful, sacred area.