Pillsbury Flour Mill, Minneapolis, MN
February 2009 — Pillsbury A Mill in Minneapolis. At one time, the worlds largest flour mill.
Explore photos tagged Northeast Minneapolis.
February 2009 — Pillsbury A Mill in Minneapolis. At one time, the worlds largest flour mill.
September 2017 — General Mills elevator in Minneapolis.
November 2018 — Northeast Minneapolis with US Bank Stadium across the Mississippi River.
March 2019 — Snow surrounding a bench in Father Hennepin Bluff Park in Northeast Minneapolis.
April 2019 — BNSF train goes through intersection at Harrison Sreet in Northeast Minneapolis during sunset.
June 2019 — The Pillsbury A-Mill is a former flour mill located on the east bank of the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It held the distinction of being the world's largest flour mill for 40 years. Completed in 1881, it was owned by the Pillsbury Company and operated two of the most powerful direct-drive waterwheels ever built, each capable of generating 1,200 horsepower (895 kW). The mill was named a National Historic Landmark in 1966 and has since been converted into resident artist lofts.
November 2019 — Once part of the vast milling network that shaped Minneapolis’s industrial identity, this now-closed General Mills Purity Oats plant at 1201 Jackson Street NE reflects the city’s transition from global grain hub to post-industrial reuse. The modest brick complex, still bearing its original signage, served as a specialized processing site within the company’s broader cereal operations before its eventual closure. Its preservation offers a glimpse into the city’s enduring ties to the flour and oat industries that once defined the Mississippi River corridor.
November 2019 — This view shows the rear loading and office entrance of the former General Mills Purity Oats facility in Northeast Minneapolis. Built during the city’s industrial boom, the complex once handled oat processing and packaging for one of the nation’s largest cereal producers. The structure’s painted brick walls, grain silos, and utilitarian layout are characteristic of mid-20th-century food-processing plants that supported the city’s reputation as the “Flour Milling Capital of the World.”
June 2020 — Minneapolis Police Department Second Precinct in Northeast Minneapolis behind razor wire and concrete barricades.
July 2020 — An Oromo protest in Northeast Minneapolis over the unrest in Ethiopia.
July 2020 — Woman with an Oromo flag during a march through Northeast Minneapolis.
July 2020 — Oromo protesters march over the Mississippi River protesting the unrest in Ethiopia.
November 2020 — Protesters march from Holmes Park to Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey’s home to demand he do something to address the city's all time high homelessness.
November 2020 — Two men wearing "Make America Great Again" hats disrupt a housing protest outside Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey’s home.