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INTRODI�CTION <br /> INTENT <br /> This plan is an update to the 2004 and 2009 Comprehensive Plans. This plan,like its prei�ecessors,creates <br /> a unified vision for the City as well as a framework for achieving that vision over the next decade. <br /> The City of Pequot Lakes is committed to planning for the future. Participants in the planning process <br /> seek to build on past successes,learn from prior difficulties,and use their collective knc�wledge to ensure <br /> that the people, businesses and organizations of Pequot Lakes are well-positioned for continued <br /> prosperity long into the future. <br /> Brief History <br /> 1 i'1L ti.E`!Y(rci� 1i3��'��5���iti iS t1Cl's I II�_ti:;�� hd4�ln� �_F`.7i lil�l��Tlkf'(1�y'i1;�lI:E'/�.tfi7�I1G�Yi5 f�.)t tP1�1!itl�< t;�tftlt�E' �t�Etiti} <br /> explorers settled in the area. Thirteen recorded prehistoric sites have been identified near the Paul Bunyan Trail <br /> alone. The Ojibwa and Dakota were present in the area until explorers entered the regic�n and logging and railroad <br /> industries took over, The original Leech Lake Trail provided basic access to the outside vdorld that helped establish <br /> the early City of Pequot, after being used by Native Americans to travel from the southern part of the state <br /> through the area. The Leech Lake Trail was simply widened and became the original Highway 371, <br /> Pequot first formed as a trading town along the Leech Lake Trail, formerly a Native American and fur-traders <br /> travel route. It grew as a logging town with the construction of the Northern Pacific Railroad, much like many <br /> other small towns in central Minnesota, In 1892,Crow Wing County bonded itself For�i railroad from Brainerd to <br /> the northern boundary of the state,and the railroad was constructed northwest from(�ull Lake into Cass County. <br /> The panic of 1893 halted any changes, but by the latter part of 1894 efforts were macle to re-route this railroad <br /> and carry the line almost directly north from Brainerd. <br /> The railroad opened Pequot and Sibley Township to logging, both of which experien��ed large-scale clearing of <br /> their vast pine stands from the 1890s to the 1920s. The establishment of a large sawmill near the Pequot train <br /> station brought more settlers to the area, Lake development near most train stations occurred during this time, <br /> which marked the beginning of residential growth and tourist in Pequot, A passenger stage line ran three times <br /> a week between Brainerd and Leech Lake;settlers and tourist most likely came in withi this line. In 1896, School <br /> District 41 formed and the Pequot Post Office was established with F, M Lawhead as pc�st master: The post office <br /> had ariginally been a Northern Pacific Railroad station. <br /> On December 4, 1990, the Crow Wing County commissioners accepted a petition For organization as Sibley <br /> Township. Sibley was named from Lake Sibley, a name given by Nicollet on his map, published in 1843, in honor <br /> of Henry Hastings Sibley, for whom Sibley County was also named the town of Pequot, located within Sibley <br /> Township, had been platted nine months prior. Pequot had first been named for an early logger, but it was <br /> renamed by a postal official for a tribe of Algonquian Indians in eastern Connecticut. <br /> The historic parts of Pequot Lakes were developed in the railroad era. The original town planners of Pequot Lakes <br /> designed the city on a traditional grid pattern centered on the railroad stop, This w�is in deference to the two <br /> major modes of transportation at the time: the railroad between towns and simply walking within. <br /> The original housing was located between the railroad stop and Sibley Lake, The ori€;inal development pattern <br /> was mixed use, so residential and commercial ventures were interspersed throughout the grid The typical <br /> buildings of this era were erected at the edge of the property line This provided for a pleasant public space in <br /> front of the building with room for things like outhouses and garbage bins to the rear, <br />