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Missouri FlagMISSOURI LEGENDS

St. Louis - Gateway to the West

 

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Greetings From St Louis, Missouri

St. Louis vintage postcard.

 

St Louis, Missouri, 1900

St. Louis Missouri in 1900, courtesy Library of Congress

 

This settlement will become one of the finest cities in America.

 

-- Pierre Laclede Liguest, founder

of St. Louis, in 1764

 

St. Louis, one of the oldest cities in Missouri, began when a man named Pierre Laclede Liguest discovered the perfect place for a trading post on a high bluff of the Mississippi River in 1763. Early the next year, Leclede sent his stepson, along with thirty men, to begin clearing the heavily forested land for a new town, of which Laclede declared, "This settlement will become one of the finest cities in America.”

The first structures included a large house for the fur company’s headquarters, along with cabins and storage sheds. A post house was completed in September, 1764, becoming the focal point of the new village. From here, streets and buildings soon expanded, as trappers and traders populated the settlement.

Referred to as Laclede’s Village by its new residents, Laclede himself pronounced the settlement  "St. Louis” in honor of King Louis IX of France.

By 1766, the burgeoning village had about 75 buildings built of stone, quarried along the river bluff, or timber posts, and was called home to about 300 residents. Maintaining a steady growth through the end of the century, St. Louis boasted almost 1000 citizens by 1800, mostly French, Spanish, Indians, and both black slaves and free men.

In 1804, when the Louisiana Purchase was officially transferred to the United States, the settlement included a bakery, two taverns, three blacksmiths, two mills, and a doctor. Several grocers also operated from their homes, selling merchandise at outrageous prices due to high transportation costs. From St. Louis, Thomas Jefferson sent Lewis & Clark to explore the new Louisiana Territory in May, 1804. Two years later, when the explorers returned in September, 1806, city became the "Gateway to the West” for the many mountain men, adventurers, and setters that followed the path of Lewis and Clark into the new frontier.

 

The first steamboat arrived in St. Louis on July 27, 1817, beginning the boom town days of St. Louis as an important river city. Before long, it was common to see more than 100 steamboats lining the cobblestone levee during any given day.

 

 

 

The 1830s were a decade of growth and prosperity along the burgeoning river city. Many new churches were built at this time, a public school system was started, and the city implemented a new water system. By the 1840, St. Louis was called home to almost 17,000 residents.

The next decade saw a large number of immigrants populating the city, especially those from Germany and Ireland, driven by the Old World potato famine.

 

In 1849, St. Louis suffered two major set backs. The first was a raging fire that destroyed 15 city blocks and 23 steamboats along the riverfront. Later in the same year, St. Louis was to suffer from a serious epidemic of cholera, which took thousands of lives.

 

St Louis Levee, late 1800s

St. LouisLevee, late 1800s, courtesy Library of Congress.

 

By 1850, river traffic had increased to such an extent that St. Louis had become the second largest port in the country, with commercial tonnage exceeded only by New York. It had also grown to be the largest city west of Pittsburgh. On some days, as many as 170 steamboats could be counted on the levee, some of which were literally "floating palaces,” complete with chandeliers, lush carpets, and fine furnishings. It was also during this time that travel to the vast west began in earnest after gold had been discovered in California the prior year.  St. Louis saw additional prosperity as the gateway to the west, outfitting many a wagon train, trapper, miner, and trader.

 

By the time the construction of the railroads began in the early 1850s, St. Louis had a population of almost 80,000 people. The first westbound train left St. Louis in 1855, which eventually lead to the death of the river boat traffic.

 

 

Continued Next Page

Eads Bridge, 1905

Eads Bridge, 1905, courtesy Library of Congress

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