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==History== [[File:Charles Noyes Cottage 3.JPG|right|thumb|The [[Charles P. Noyes Cottage]] dates back to the days when White Bear Lake was a resort town.]] The railroad was the largest man-made happening in White Bear Lake. On September 10, 1868, the [[Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad]] officially opened the extension to White Bear Lake. This was a gala occasion. Ten platform cars of 300 men and four passenger cars for 200 ladies made the trip from St. Paul. By 1874, Mark Twain had included White Bear Lake as the resort in his "Life on the Mississippi." The "American Travelers Journal" 1881 proclaimed, "One of the most popular resorts in the magic northlands is White Bear Lake." Barnum's hotel became the Leip House, featuring a ballroom, billiard room, dancing pavilion, bowling alley, and boats. F.C. Williams opened the Williams House on the Murray property on Lake Avenue. James Waters opened the White Bear House at the depot. In 1879, the Ramaley Pavilion was opened and described as "perhaps the finest structure around the lake" (Breeze 1890). There was Lake Side Cottage on Lake north of 6th and "Château gay." Shady Side, Bachelor's Rest and Hotel Benson were three of the resorts at Bald Eagle Lake. The Cottage Park summer residents built a club house in 1881 where they had their meals, entertainment and social life. In 1881, the Manitou Implement Co. developed the Island for cottages with the added important feature of water works. The [[Charles P. Noyes Cottage|"Fillebrown" house]] on Lake Avenue was built in 1879 by C.P. Noyes. It was purchased in 1881 by Judge George Young and in 1905 purchased by the J. Walter Fillebrown family who donated the house to the White Bear Lake Area Historical Society in the 1970s. The City of White Bear Lake was incorporated on October 11, 1921. In 1940, [[Nellie Geraldine Best]] painted a tempera mural, ''Early Voyageurs at Portage'', as part of the [[Works Progress Administration|WPA's]] nationwide mural project for the post office in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. The location of this mural is unknown. It may have been removed during a post office remodeling.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Kallermeyn|first1=Pat|title=The Canoe: A Vehicle for the Spirit|url=http://www.canoeing.com/canoes/feature/canoespirit.htm|website=Canoeing.com|access-date=May 12, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160604103044/http://www.canoeing.com/canoes/feature/canoespirit.htm|archive-date=June 4, 2016|url-status=live}}</ref> White Bear Lake High School and Mariner High School merged in 1983 to form [[White Bear Lake Area High School]]. There are still two buildings, the North Campus and South Campus, which are now White Bear Lake High School (North Campus building) and Mariner Middle School (South Campus building). North Campus (White Bear Lake High School) held classes for freshman and sophomores while South Campus (the former Mariner High School) held classes for juniors and seniors. The two buildings had a combined total of about 3,000 students. The murder of three-year-old [[Dennis Jurgens]] in 1965 at the hands of his adoptive mother, [[Lois Jurgens]], was arguably the biggest scandal to hit the town with her [[conviction]] in 1987. The story was recounted in [[Barry Siegel]]'s [[true crime]] novel ''[[A Death in White Bear Lake]].'' In 1953, the [[Lakeshore Players Community Theater]] was organized.<ref>{{cite web|title=Lakeshore Players Timeline|url=http://lakeshoreplayers.org/about/history/timeline/|website=lakeshoreplayers.org|access-date=June 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180620074131/http://lakeshoreplayers.org/about/history/timeline/|archive-date=June 20, 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> Lakeshore Players formerly operated out of a former church building constructed in 1889, at 4820 Stewart Avenue. In 2018 they moved to a new building in 2018 next to the White Bear Center for the Arts. The ''White Bear Center for the Arts'' was officially organized on May 16, 1968 and moved to their new location at 4971 Long Avenue in the fall of 2013. The White Bear Lake Area Historical Society was incorporated on September 25, 1970 and gathers, preserves and shares the stories of the five communities that touch the shore of White Bear Lake – Birchwood, Dellwood, Mahtomedi, White Bear Lake, and White Bear Township.[http://www.whitebearhistory.org]
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