St. Paul's historic Landmark Center, completed in 1902, originally served as the United States Post Office, Courthouse, and Custom House for the state of Minnesota. It was designed by Willoughby J. Edbrooke, who served as Supervising Architect of the U.S. Treasury Department in 1891–92. Edbrooke designed a body of public architecture, much of which, like this structure, was completed after his 1896 death. Landmark Center stands at 75 West Fifth Street in Rice Park and is now an arts and culture center.For Landmark Center and beyond, use our Saint Paul sightseeing planner to get the most from your Saint Paul vacation.
The exterior is pink granite ashlar with a hipped red tile roof, steeply pitched to shed snow and adorned by numerous turrets, gables and dormers with steeply peaked roofs; cylindrical corner towers with conical turrets occupy almost every change of projection. There are two massive towers, one of which houses a clock. The exterior is almost devoid of carved detail. The interior features a five-story courtyard with skylight and rooms with 20-foot ceilings, appointed with marble and carved mahogany and oak finishes. Its Romanesque Revival architecture is similar to Edbrooke's Old Post Office Building in Washington D.C.
John Dillinger's girlfriend Evelyn Frechette, Alvin "Creepy" Karpis, "Doc" Barker and other members of the Barker-Karpis gang were tried in the building when it served as a federal courthouse.
Judges Walter Henry Sanborn and John B. Sanborn, Jr. kept their chambers here while serving on the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun worked in the building as a law clerk to the younger Sanborn in 1932–33.
In the 1970s, a citizens' group saved the building from demolition and restored it to its previous grandeur. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places and reopened to the public as Landmark Center in 1978.
After its comprehensive 1972–78 renovation, the center became home to many prominent Twin Cities arts organizations, now including:
American Association of Woodturners and the AAW Gallery of Wood Art
Ramsey County Historical Society Gallery and Research Center – changing exhibits and research area for local history topics
The Schubert Club Museum of musical instruments
Landmark Gallery – permanent and temporary exhibits from its local history collection
"Uncle Sam Worked Here" – a permanent interactive exhibit opened in 2007 about activities in Landmark Center over its history [1]
Exhibition space for music, dance, theater, and public forums.For a time the high school St. Paul Conservatory for Performing Artists also held classes on the fifth floor. It has since moved to 16 West 5th Street. The fifth floor now houses the offices of the American Composers Forum.
Owned by Ramsey County, Landmark Center is managed by Minnesota Landmarks, a not-for-profit organization. Landmark Center also houses Anita's Cafe, Landmarket Gift Shop, and five galleries.
Source
Create an itinerary including Landmark Center
© OpenMapTiles © OpenStreetMap contributors
Landmark Center reviews
-
We made a reservation and toured the Landmark Center on our own. We had the entire place to ourselves. The woodworking rooms were very interesting. There is a lathe on display that fell off a ship in.... more »
-
Walked around the outside, not open to visitors during our time due to COVID restrictions. Still beautiful to see. more »
-
Wandered inside and found a free narrated tour that had just started. Fascinating history, never knew anything about this building before. Never knew about all of the famous gangster trials held there. Architecture is stunning. The marble and woodwork that has been unearthed and restored is amazing.
-
There is a lot of history to immerse yourself in at this free "living museum"! The restoration of this beautiful building is chronicled very well as are notable and notorious stories of personalities and events that have taken place in and around this landmark in the city of St Paul. There are four retired courtrooms that must be seen. You can catch views of the city from windows in a number of little alcoves. It is a functioning landmark with private offices throughout. There's a little cafe on the first floor that faces Rice Park offering an average menu. There is a 6 story central grand space with impressive columns under a huge central skylight. Depending on how much history you want to absorb (read about John Dillenger and other notables on both sides of the law, etc.) you could spend a few hours here.
-
Build a trip
Tell us where and when you
want to go, we will build
the best sightseeing itinerary -
Refine it
You have complete flexibility on your destinations and itinerary -
Book as a package
Use our travel agents to get
package savings and hassle free booking -
Enjoy your trip!
Enjoy our 24x7
on-trip assistance
Popular things to do in Saint Paul
Side trips from Saint Paul
Museums in Saint Paul
Hidden gems in Saint Paul
Breweries & Distilleries in Saint Paul
Trips to Landmark Center by other users
9 days in Minneapolis & Yellowstone National Park
BY A USER FROM UNITED STATES
Minneapolis
Yellowstone National Park
17 days in United States
BY A USER FROM UNITED STATES
Cincinnati
Chicago
Minneapolis
60 days in Minnesota
BY A USER FROM UNITED STATES
Rochester
Duluth
Grand Marais
14 days in Midwest
BY A USER FROM UNITED STATES
Indianapolis
Chicago
Wisconsin Dells
11 days in Boston & Minneapolis
BY A USER FROM UNITED STATES
Boston
Minneapolis
60 days in Minneapolis
BY A USER FROM UNITED STATES
Rybicki Cheese
Nickelodeon Universe
Lego Imagination Center