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MoHistory

St. Louis Screams for Ice Cream (Sundaes)

3 years ago
In 1979, Laclede’s Landing was turned into an ice cream lover’s paradise, when everything within a nine-block radius was dedicated entirely to ice cream! You name it, they had it at the festival—ice cream building, root beer floats, fried ice cream, astronaut ice cream, watermelon sherbet, ice cream “trees,” ice cream omelets, spumoni, and turtle …
Brittany Krewson

Making Missouri: More than 200

3 years 1 month ago
The story of how Missouri became a state takes us back to the early 1800s. However, the history of the people who lived in this area stretches back much, much further. In order to tell a complete and honest story about Missouri’s beginnings, we need to acknowledge and commemorate the histories of Missouri’s first inhabitants, as well as the people living today whose ancestral lands became part of our state. …
Brittany Krewson

Miles’ Styles

3 years 1 month ago
When young Miles Dewey Davis III was just one year old in 1927, a devastating tornado descended on St. Louis and his hometown of East St. Louis. “I seem to remember . . .” he wrote in his autobiography, “something in the bottom of my memory. Maybe that’s why I have such a bad temper …
Brittany Krewson

The Mystery of the Traveling Coffin Handle

3 years 1 month ago
Unusual objects are lurking in the Missouri Historical Society Collections! Some seem spooky to modern viewers, like death masks. Others sound gross, like art and jewelry made of human hair. And some present us with mysteries, like this coffin handle that spent more than half a century buried underground in Virginia before somehow making its …
Brittany Krewson

A Riot at the Pickwick Theatre

3 years 1 month ago
Written by TMH Apprentices Max Blatter, Marley Gardner, and Gavin O’Neal A few nights before Halloween in 1890, a crowd primed for a display of the supernatural in the lavish Pickwick Theatre instead erupted in a riot. A seance had gone horribly wrong, two mediums were on the run, and a rope was around the …
Brittany Krewson

The Truth behind the Murder Ballad: Duncan and Brady

3 years 1 month ago
Murder ballads are an integral part of American folklore and music history. For years, songs inspired by true crime have captivated the public. Some have been inspired by crimes that were mere footnotes at the time they were perpetrated, while others loomed large in the public eye. However, the truth rarely gets in the way …
Brittany Krewson

MHS Press Marks 30th Anniversary

3 years 1 month ago
This year marks the 30th anniversary of MHS Press. The year 1991 was a big one for the Missouri Historical Society: We opened the Library & Research Center in the former United Hebrew Temple on Skinker Boulevard, and the Press was officially born with the publication of Charles van Ravenswaay’s Saint Louis: An Informal History …
Brittany Krewson

Making Missouri: Compromising Missouri

3 years 1 month ago
“It is the failure to apprehend this great truth that induces so many unsuccessful attempts at final compromise between the slave and free States, and it is the existence of this great fact that renders all such pretended compromises, when made, vain and ephemeral.” —William Seward, 1858 The existence of the “peculiar institution” in Missouri shaped the discussion about slavery’s expansion in 19th century America. As slave-produced …
Brittany Krewson

Who Was Alonzo J. Tullock?

3 years 1 month ago
The Missouri Historical Society recently received a donation of letters written to Charles DeHault Delassus that date from the 1790s and early 1800s. These letters pertain to the tumultuous time when Spain governed the Louisiana Territory, and the eventual Louisiana Purchase. The letters are now part of the Alonzo J. Tullock Louisiana History Collection in …
Brittany Krewson

Gargoyles in the Gateway City

3 years 1 month ago
When we think of gargoyles, our minds often go to places like the iconic Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris. But if you look closely, these stone statues are lurking all over St. Louis. Everywhere from cathedrals to colleges to cemeteries, our city is full of gargoyles. The term gargoyle comes from an old French word, gargouille, which means throat or pipe. …
Brittany Krewson

The Battle Over Beer Gardens

3 years 2 months ago
If you’ve been to a beer garden around St. Louis today, it’s hard to imagine the scene of shady tables and chatting friends provoking a violent outburst. While they aren’t so hotly debated today, a battle over beer gardens was raging in the mid-1800s. As thousands of German immigrants came to St. Louis, they brought their old world cultures …
Brittany Krewson

Making Missouri: Examining Missouri’s First Statesmen

3 years 2 months ago
People have always been people—that’s one of my favorite facts about history. It’s also a very easy fact to forget. We talk about “great men” of history and the things they did and the decisions they made that still impact us today. We often don’t think about the rest of their lives—their families, their friends, or the smaller decisions they made. …
Brittany Krewson