Project Location

801 22nd Ave S
Minneapolis, MN 55454

Location Map

Project Manager

Daniel Elias
Phone: (612) 230-6435
Email: delias@minneapolisparks.org

Subscribe to Email Updates

Language Resources

Key Documents

Status

Current Phase: Bidding and Construction Contract Award

Subscribe to Email Updates

Enter your email to receive updates about meetings, events and more.

Upcoming Meetings

Funding

2022 CIP – NPP20 – $214,000

Park History

Murphy Square is Minneapolis’s first park. It’s was named for Edward Murphy, who donated the land for a park when he platted Murphy’s Addition in 1857.
(The name was offcially changed from Murphy Park to Murphy Square in 1890.)

Parks were in the news in 1857: New York City conducted a competition to design its vast Central Park, one of the most important developments in the creation of urban parks in the country’s history. That event may have infuenced Murphy’s establishment of a park on land he was developing. Murphy Park was a long way
from the center of the small towns of Minneapolis and St. Anthony at the time and the land served as little more than a cow pasture for twenty years.

In 1873 Murphy attempted to get the city council to pay to improve the land. Trees were planted in the park, perhaps under the direction of Charles Loring, who is said to have planted the first trees in Minneapolis and was a city council member at the time.

The park was transferred from the city council to the new park board shortly after the park board was created in April 1883. The park board hired Landscape architect Horace Cleveland to create a plan for the park in late 1884. Murphy Square was one of several parks immediately improved by Theodore Wirth when he was hired in 1906. He implemented additional plantings and changed some of the paths in the park. An artesian well was also dug at Murphy Park that year, but the city condemned as unfit the water produced by the well.

Murphy Square was one of the parks recommended as a playground in 1906, when the park board installed its first playground equipment, and a merry-go-round was installed in 1907. A tennis court was built at Murphy Square in 1917, but it was removed in 1919 with the explanation that there wasn’t sufficient space for it.

Some residents of the neighborhood petitioned the park board to install a kittenball (softball) field in the park in 1922, but opposition from other property owners led the park board to reject the idea.

With the growth of Augsburg College, Murphy Square became, in essence, a central square for the college. The park board entered into serious negotiations with the school to sell the square to the college in 1957.

When those negotiations were unsuccessful, the park board included Murphy Square on a list of properties it could part with, for housing purposes, in 1960. In 1975, the park board considered a land swap with Augsburg College that would have transferred the park to the college, but once again the city’s oldest park remained a park.

Ultimately, only a small piece of Murphy Square was lost, and that was due to the construction of the I-94 freeway, which nipped off a bit of the park in the 1960s.