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・ Whittier Mill Village
・ Whittier Narrows
・ Whittier Narrows Dam
・ Whittier Oaks, New Jersey
・ Whittier Police Department (Alaska)
・ Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School
・ Whittier School
・ Whittier School (Mitchell, South Dakota)
・ Whittier Street Health Center
・ Whittier Transit
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・ Whittier, Alaska
・ Whittier, California
・ Whittier, Denver
・ Whittier, Iowa
Whittier, Minneapolis
・ Whittier, North Carolina
・ Whitting
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・ Whittingehame Farm School
・ Whittingehame Tower
・ Whittingham
・ Whittingham (surname)
・ Whittingham Hospital
・ Whittingham Hospital Railway
・ Whittingham railway station
・ Whittingham, Lancashire
・ Whittingham, New Jersey
・ Whittingham, Northumberland
・ Whittingslow


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Whittier, Minneapolis : ウィキペディア英語版
Whittier, Minneapolis

Whittier is a neighborhood in the U.S. city of Minneapolis, Minnesota, bounded by Franklin Avenue on the north, Interstate 35W on the east, Lake Street on the south, and Lyndale Avenue on the west. It is known for its many diverse restaurants, coffee shops and Asian markets, especially along Nicollet Avenue (also known as "Eat Street"). The neighborhood is home to the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, and the Children's Theatre Company.
While the neighborhood is officially part of the greater Powderhorn community, it is separated from those areas by Interstate 35W, and also lies further north than the rest of the community area. Most of Powderhorn is east of Interstate 35W and south of Lake Street; the Whittier neighborhood is west of I-35W and north of Lake Street. Whittier is often associated with adjacent neighborhoods, such as Lowry Hill East in the Calhoun-Isles community to the west and Stevens Square neighborhood in the Central community to the north.
==History==
In the 1800s, Mdewakanton Dakota occupied the area from Saint Anthony Falls toward the Minnesota River following their migration from Mille Lacs Lake and the onward expansion of the quarreling Ojibwa. Temporary Dakota camps were photographed in Whittier which are in the MNHS catalog.
In 1849 at the age of 21, John T. Blaisdell moved from Maine and squatted on land just south of downtown Minneapolis. His brothers eventually came and together they lived in a log house which became Blaisdell School.
Following the 1851 Treaty of Traverse des Sioux which opened lands to the United States, Blaisdell developed the area south of Downtown Minneapolis into Blaisdell's Addition. For capital, he sold timber to the booming lumber industry and leased land for the Morrison Farm in the east, which the Morrisons eventually purchased.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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