Members: 113,050 - 1,665 Online Now
 

photo of a green frogSt. Paul like every other city has neighborhoods.  Being a St. Paul resident in my very core, albeit a new physical resident, I’m learning about the city like any other new resident.  I’ve always known about the houses, but not always about the city itself!

Thomas-Dale is the official name for the St. Paul neighborhood most often dubbed as Frogtown.  Bounded by 35E on the east, University Avenue on the south, Lexington on the west, and the Burlington Northern railroad tracks on the north, the area contains the four “mini-‘hoods” of East Midway (Lexington to Dale), Frogtown (Dale to Rice), Capitol Heights (Rice to Jackson) and Mt. Airy (Jackson to 35E). 

My suburban friends frown at the name Frogtown so I checked out the name’s origin.  There are 3 theories

  • The area was a marsh and Archbishop John Ireland (he has a road named after him) remarked the place was like a “frogtown” when he heard all the frogs croaking.
  • The term frog is a derogatory name used by Germans to describe the French who settled the area.  The Germans called the area Froschburg or “Frog City”.
  • A frog is slang for the device used to help switch the train tracks.  Since Frogtown first housed the railroad workers who used the “frogs” that may have spawned the name.

The neighborhood started as St. Paul expanded from river transportation to include the newly built railroad in the mid to late 1800's.  Today the location remains a working class area where houses can be purchased at a working class price.  Interestingly, the neighborhood has a variety of architectural styles which include many of historical significance.  Victorian touches are seen combined with utilitarian size.  Lots tend to be small and some even have 2 houses on them.  The community has combined efforts to reverse an increase in neighborhood crime which has demonstrated some results.  As it was from the beginning, Frogtown is an eclectic mix of nationalities many of which are immigrants looking for the American dream like those who first settled here in the 1800's.

 

4 Comments on St. Paul's Frogtown

Neighborhood nicknames always fascinate me. I don't usually see three explanations, how interesting! And isn't it usually a working class neighborhood that gets the unique nickname. We have an area in Lakewood Ohio called 'Birdtown,' originally settled by factory workers from other countries. Of course the streets are names like Quail and Robin.

At least your streets fit with the name of the neighborhood, Carole.  You know that Jesse Ventura made the faux pas of saying St. Paul’s streets were named by drunken Irish men because they make no sense.  Our suburb of Coon Rapids has a lot of bird streets including Egret and some other less common bird names.

01/21/2007 08:10 PM by Bonnie Erickson (The Realty Matrix)


love the name... our (now gone) area where the immigrants settled was called Flytown. A highway went through where it was.

We have Italian Village and German Village... I had some interaction with German Bloggers who thought German Village was such a funny name.

Maureen, do you know what the origin of "Flytown" was?  It would be interesting to find out.

 

01/22/2007 03:29 AM by Bonnie Erickson (The Realty Matrix)


Hey. What happened here.  Was there a celebration? A Fan Fare? A passing of the tiara?

No, Lisa, no one noticed the change in lead at all.  No one even noticed I changed my picture.  Her Majesty has not officially left AR, but is focusing her energies elsewhere if you’ll check out her last two entries on AR.  She got lots of national acclaim for her St. Paul Real Estate Blog, though, so she’s still the queen!

01/22/2007 09:28 PM by Bonnie Erickson (The Realty Matrix)


 

 I live very close to frogtown and have been interested in finding out the history of the name. My younger cousin moved there a few years ago and then I HAD to know the history behind the town.

 Thank you!

08/30/2007 11:09 AM by Jonathan L


Leave a response…

Name:
Notify me of new comments:
Comment:
What does the graphic say?
 
Real Estate Agent: Bonnie Erickson (The Realty Matrix)
Bonnie Erickson
Saint Paul, MN
More about me…
The Realty Matrix

Office Phone: (651) 649-1153
Cell Phone: (612) 419-1829
Email Me
Thoughts about St. Paul houses, rentals, remodeling, staging, market trends, life, and more.


Links

Archives

RSS 2.0 Feed for this blog
ATOM 1.0 Feed for this blog

Find MN real estate agents and Saint Paul real estate here on ActiveRain.
Disclaimer: ActiveRain Corp. does not necessarily endorse the real estate agents, loan officers and brokers listed on this site. These real estate profiles, blogs and blog entries are provided here as a courtesy to our visitors to help them make an informed decision when buying or selling a house. ActiveRain Corp. takes no responsibility for the content in these profiles, that are written by the members of this community.
© 2007 ActiveRain Corp. All Rights Reserved