Main Street
Sauk Center, MN
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We never quite know where our travels will take us. We needed a place to stay for the night, so we did what we usually do and scanned our big book of campground/RV park listings for a place that was close to the bike trail we wanted to ride on the next day. We selected one that turned out to be a winner. The campground was on the shore of a beautiful lake and the town was the birthplace of a famous author, Sinclair Lewis.

We enjoyed the morning, watching the Canadian geese, seagulls and ducks on Sauk Lake, then our 35-mile bike ride began with a stop at Lewis' childhood home. We then made a more informative visit to the Sinclair Lewis Interpretive Center and had a picnic lunch in the shade of the trees surrounding the nearby "Little Red Schoolhouse."

Thirty years before Sinclair Lewis was born, Chippewa and Sioux lived in the area of Sauk Centre. In 1862, Chief Little Crow and the Sioux warred with the whites in the bloodiest conflict in history between the two races.

The Lake Wobegon Trail turned out to be a wonderful bike path and we enjoyed the day's journey. It was built on the route of the old railroad and makes for very smooth, level, easy riding.

We took the recommendation of an impressive cyclist we met on the trail, and had a snack at a cafe in Freeport before heading back to the campground. We pulled in just before dark, tired, but content with having spent an enjoyable day exploring a beautiful part of Minnesota.

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Next to the Interpretive Center is this "Little Red Schoolhouse" that served as the town's multi-grade education center for many years.

Main Street
by Sinclair Lewis, Thomas Mallon (Introduction)

A woman from the Interpretive Center was kind enough to unlock the schoolhouse and let us walk inside. Harrison and Amanda sat at the little desks, complete with ink wells and imagined what it would have been like to go to school here. The pull-down maps were impressive, but not as amazing as the teachers must have been who taught children of many ages at the same time within these walls.
During our bike ride on the Lake Wobegon Trail, we passed a turkey farm. While Rob got a close-up view of the white feathered fowls, they checked him out as well. They seemed to flock toward him at the fence, as if trying to hear an interesting orator, though it would have been impossible to hear anything over gobbling.

Lake Wobegon Days
by Garrison Keillor

Susan and Amanda on the Lake Wobegon Trail. The scenery was beautiful, varying from small lakes to well-kept farms to charming small towns.
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Sinclair Lewis, Author

Born February 7, 1885 to the town doctor and his wife in Sauke Centre, Minnesota. His father was very stern and his mother died when he was only six, but Lewis' stepmother encouraged the redheaded boy, who was ridiculed by his peers, to read and she supported his writing endeavors. He was not a great student in high school, but began submitting poetry for publication at the age of 16. Lewis went on to attend Oberlin Academy and Yale University.

He was divorced twice and his only son was killed in World War II, so he related well with middle-class Americans. His 23 novels helped this section of society discover themselves, and his high ideals, courage and originality propelled him to the high point of his career in the 1920's. His unique style of satire and detailed reality made his books popular. "Elmer Gantry" is a novel about religious hypocrisy and"Main Street" is a liberating story detailing the frustrations of middle class America in small towns, such as the one he grew up in and eventually left.

He died January 10, 1951 alone in Italy, but requested that his ashes be brought back to his home town. He felt stifled by the limitations of Sauk Centre, but felt a desire to remain attached to it.

Elmer Gantry
by Sinclair Lewis

Mervin Seacourt, 72 Year-old Biker

We met Mervin on the Lake Wobegon Trail and had a friendly 20-minute chat with this interesting man. His T-shirt said, "3rd Annual Power Lifting Championship". This energetic senior rides everyday on the trail and has logged nearly 3,000 miles so far this year (9/15/99). He has lived his whole life in Minnesota, leaving the state for the first time on a troop train during World War II.

Mr. Seacourt says, "We have everything in Minnesota: seaport, mountains, desert." He told us the state has the oldest mountain range in the country and the desert is so flat the curvature of the earth can be seen on the horizon. He also expounded the merits of a small restaurant in the town we were heading to, and we stopped in at Charlie's Cafe to try the caramel rolls. They were huge, and delicious.

Trip Tips

The Sinclair Lewis Campground is a grassy, shady spot along Sauk Lake. It's the perfect place for launching onto the Lake Wobegon Trail or the Sinclair Lewis sites in town.
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Amazon.com Find more books about Sinclair Lewis
Main Street
by Sinclair Lewis, Thomas Mallon (Introduction)
Babbitt
by Sinclair Lewis, James M. Hutchisson (Introduction)
Arrowsmith
by Sinclair Lewis, E. L. Doctorow (Introduction)
Elmer Gantry
by Sinclair Lewis



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