The three bluffs were named by
steamboat captains, who used them as landmarks. A logging town with its own steamboat landing was active here in the 1850s, supplying
lumber to
sawmills in newly founded Winona. The townsite has since been submerged by water backed up by the
lock and dam. John A. Latsch was a Winona businessman who loved fishing beneath these three bluffs. He purchased some of the property and, along with an adjacent landowner, donated for a state park in 1925. Latsch was a lifelong patron of conservation;
Whitewater State Park and
Wisconsin's
Perrot State Park both grew out of other parcels he donated. He was also a founder of the
Izaak Walton League, an early environmental
non-profit organization. Development at this park stagnated, largely because the only level land was at the mouths of the small ravines that separated the three bluffs. The
Civilian Conservation Corps blazed a trail to the top of Mount Charity, the highest of the trio, in 1933. Latsch, who died the following year, recorded his regret that he hadn't acquired more property in the beginning. In 1963 the
Minnesota Legislature authorized an extension of the park's boundaries, to include a sizeable area behind the bluffs. However this property is yet to be acquired from its private owners, and the publicly held land in the park amounts to only . A 1971 analysis recommended that John A. Latsch State Park be reclassified as a Scientific and Natural Area, though this has not been acted upon either. ==Recreation==