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MoHistory

11 Inspiring Accessories from Our Textile Collections

3 years ago
We’re hosting our signature fundraiser, Threads, on April 9, 2022, and this year it’s all about the accessories! Several of St. Louis’s professional and student designers have been tasked with creating a 21st-century design inspired by accessories from the Missouri Historical Society’s textile collections. From hats and shoes to other outfit add-ons like parasols and jewelry, check …
Brittany Krewson

The Namesake of O’Fallon, Missouri

3 years ago
John O’Fallon barely knew his father James, but the lingering tales of his father as a “reckless, debt-ridden adventurer” certainly contributed to John’s lifelong obsession with business success. While in his early 20s, John heard from his famous uncle William Clark about the incredible amount of goods moving through St. Louis, and headed there in …
Brittany Krewson

Carrie Nation’s Hatchetations

3 years 1 month ago
In the early 1900s, a staggering number of men spent their days gathered in saloons, escaping their responsibilities on an ocean of booze. Some lost their family’s income one beer at a time, while others rendered themselves so stammering drunk they couldn’t make it to work. Beer buckets even let them take “one for the …
Brittany Krewson

Gerty Cori’s Nobel First

3 years 1 month ago
Dr. Gerty Cori, a Washington University in St. Louis professor and the recipient of the 1947 Nobel Prize for medicine, was asked to sum up her beliefs on a radio program in 1951. She said, “I believe that cynicism and despair are inimical to first rate achievements in art and science. . . . Honesty …
Brittany Krewson

70 Years at the St. Louis Arena

3 years 1 month ago
“The Barn,” the loving nickname given to the Arena by St. Louisans, is actually quite appropriate. It opened in 1929 as a proud new home for the National Dairy Show, an annual livestock prize contest. Although it featured the show just once, the name stuck on St. Louis’s huge new entertainment space. For 70 years …
Brittany Krewson

St. Louis’s Forgotten 19th-Century Black Composer

3 years 1 month ago
The life and career of Joseph William “J. W.” Postlewaite is elusive and fascinating. For years he and his various bands and orchestras entertained audiences across the St. Louis area. He composed and published works that proved popular in the Midwest. However, his identity as a Black man was either accepted or hidden, depending on …
Brittany Krewson

Roscoe Robinson Jr.: A Journey of Excellence

3 years 2 months ago
St. Louisan Roscoe Robinson Jr. became the first African American four-star general in the US Army. In retirement he also served on the Board of Directors for Northwest Airlines, McDonnell Douglas, Metropolitan Life Insurance, and Giant Foods. Robinson’s leadership philosophy was “take responsibility for those under you, set goals, be willing to listen, be decisive …
Brittany Krewson

Black History Month in St. Louis: A Timeline

3 years 2 months ago
Historian Carter G. Woodson organized the first national Black History Week (then called Negro History Week) in February 1926. The celebration’s purpose was to recognize the central role Black people played in the development of the US. Woodson chose the second week of February to coincide with the birthdays of abolitionist Frederick Douglass and President …
Brittany Krewson

Charles and Anne Lindbergh’s Greenland Inuit Kayak

3 years 2 months ago
The Lindbergh 100 Project is made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services MA-30-19-0454-19. Charles and Anne Lindbergh spent three weeks visiting Greenland during a survey flight expedition in the summer of 1933. They were investigating a potential northern route to Europe for commercial airlines. The Lindberghs took the trip in …
Brittany Krewson

Fontella Bass: Can’t You See That I’m Lonely?

3 years 2 months ago
The following is excerpted from David Ramsey’s piece on Fontella Bass in the Oxford American’s Up South issue. As a teenager, Fontella Bass played piano or organ at various churches around the St. Louis area, including Morning Star Missionary Baptist Church, which bought its first organ for Fontella to play (at this time, despite eventually …
Brittany Krewson

The 1969 St. Louis Rent Strike

3 years 3 months ago
Public housing challenges affected low-income communities across the nation, but it was St. Louis’s 1969 rent strike that brought these problems into focus as residents in Pruitt-Igoe and other public housing facilities grappled with the system’s shortcomings. Though rent strikes were becoming a common form of protest in the 1960s and 1970s, St. Louis had …
Brittany Krewson

Segregated St. Louis Dance Halls

3 years 3 months ago
Written by TMH Apprentice Gabby Johnson Artists like Ella Fitzgerald, Nat King Cole, and Billie Holiday are widely known for the well-loved music they produced. Less familiar to the public is the history behind the often segregated venues in which they performed, many of them in St. Louis. Castle Ballroom and Cave Hall There were …
Brittany Krewson

Grandma Bugg’s Rocker Loom

3 years 3 months ago
Woven clothes have been around for thousands of years, but hardly anyone makes their own today. Since agriculture enhanced society some 1,500 years ago, animals and plants have been readily available to harvest hair or natural fiber. Cleaning and smoothing the fiber, spinning it into thread, then weaving it into cloth that can be cut …
Brittany Krewson

Holiday Menus from the Collections: New Year’s Eve

3 years 3 months ago
This post is part of a series exploring menus with holiday connections. Barnum’s Hotel Theron Barnum opened his first major hotel in Philadelphia before moving to St. Louis in 1840 with his wife Mary Lay Chadwick. He took over the City Hotel on Third and Vine in the Spring of 1848. Less than five years later Barnum retire …
Brittany Krewson