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Minnetonka High School

1952 establishments in MinnesotaAll pages needing cleanupChanhassen, MinnesotaEducational institutions established in 1952International Baccalaureate schools in Minnesota
Minnetonka, MinnesotaPublic high schools in MinnesotaSchools in Hennepin County, Minnesota

Minnetonka High School, or MHS (locally referred to as Tonka), is a four-year public high school located in Minnetonka, Minnesota, United States, a western suburb of Minneapolis-St. Paul. The school enrolls about 3,540 students, and offers four interchangeable academic curricula: International Baccalaureate, Advanced Placement, Honors, and G (general). Newsweek ranked the school at #123 in their list of America's Top High Schools. Minnetonka High School is currently rated #4 in public high schools in Minnesota by Niche.Minnetonka High School is the only high school within Minnetonka School District, whose enrollment area comprises western Minnetonka, northern Chanhassen, Deephaven, Excelsior, Greenwood, Shorewood, Tonka Bay, Woodland, northern Victoria, and northern Eden Prairie; an area known as "South Lake Minnetonka," or simply "Minnetonka." Additionally, students come from all over the western suburbs due to open enrollment.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Minnetonka High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Minnetonka High School
Sparrow Road,

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N 44.9090907 ° E -93.511296 °
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Sparrow Road
55345
Minnesota, United States
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Christmas Lake

Christmas Lake is a spring-fed lake covering approximately 265 acres (1.1 km2) in the western Minneapolis suburbs of Shorewood and Chanhassen. The lake is crossed by the border of Hennepin and Carver counties, with most of the area lying within the jurisdiction of the former. Christmas Lake is known for its exceptional water clarity, the best in the Minneapolis metropolitan area, with a DNR-reported clarity level of 20 feet (6.10 m). This clarity can be attributed to the fact that Christmas Lake is a spring fed lake with a sandy bottom. Although relatively small in area, Christmas Lake becomes deep (its maximum depth is 87 ft (27 m)) very quickly, forming the basin of a depression that extends all along "the Ridge" (the rim of the lake's basin). The steep nature of the shoreline means that many houses are built far above the lake with railed motorized carts to provide access to the docks at the water level. Although Christmas Lake is located very near to the much larger and more populated Lake Minnetonka, the lake culture is much different, with fewer powerboats and jetskis, although this is slowly changing. Christmas Lake is connected to Lake Minnetonka by an underground canal which can be used to raise the water level of Lake Minnetonka during droughts.Christmas Lake falls under the jurisdiction of the city of Shorewood, Minnesota, although much informal control is maintained by the close-knit community of homeowners, under the aegis of the Christmas Lake Homeowners Association. Neighbors organize an annual Fourth of July boat parade, where boat owners turn their boats into water-borne floats, and parade from dock to dock along the shoreline.

Francis W. Little House II
Francis W. Little House II

The Francis W. Little House II was a Prairie School house in Deephaven, Minnesota, which was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for Francis W. and Mary Little. Built in 1912, it was the second house Wright designed for the Littles; the first was built in Peoria, Illinois in 1902. The Littles contacted Wright about the house in 1908, shortly after purchasing a vacation plot overlooking Lake Minnetonka; as Wright was occupied with a European tour and work on his own home, Taliesin, he did not design the Little House until four years later. The two-story house's design was typical of Wright's Prairie School works, featuring a low profile with multiple connected pavilions meant to blend in with the surrounding landscape. Along with Taliesin, it was one of Wright's last Prairie School designs before he began to explore other styles. The house faced demolition after being put up for sale in 1972. Morrison Heckscher of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City intervened to preserve the house, and the Met purchased and dismantled the building; while much of the house is still in the museum's possession, parts have been sold to other museums. The house's living room is on display in the Met's American Wing. The house's library is exhibited in the Allentown Art Museum, while one of its bedroom hallways is part of an exhibit at the Minneapolis Institute of Art; other elements of the house, such as windows, have been sold to additional museums.