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MoHistory

Lucas and Garrison: Wayman Crow

1 year 5 months ago
EDITOR’S NOTE: In order to bring a plurality of voices to our storytelling, the Missouri Historical Society frequently asks guest writers to contribute to History Happens Here. The views and opinions expressed by guest contributors are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Missouri Historical Society, its affiliates, or …
Brittany Krewson

Union Station’s Restoration

1 year 5 months ago
EDITOR’S NOTE: In order to bring a plurality of voices to our storytelling, the Missouri Historical Society frequently asks guest writers to contribute to History Happens Here. The views and opinions expressed by guest contributors are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Missouri Historical Society, its affiliates, or …
Brittany Krewson

Meet Me at 5135 Kensington

1 year 5 months ago
The places we love grow large in our imaginations. That was the case for Sally Benson’s beloved childhood home in St. Louis at 5135 Kensington Avenue. In the movie Meet Me in St. Louis, based on Benson’s 1942 autobiographical novel of the same name, the house was a grand Victorian mansion; in reality, it was …
Brittany Krewson

Cheater Fever: Bob Kuban and the In-Men

1 year 5 months ago
Listen to an episode about “The Cheater” on our Here’s History podcast with KDHX. St. Louis record label Musicland USA only released one major song, but it was a big one. In St. Louis, no other one-hit wonder approaches Bob Kuban and the In-Men’s “The Cheater.” An eight-piece band formed in 1964 by local drummer Bob Kuban, …
Brittany Krewson

Lucas and Garrison: An Intersection of St. Louis Lives, Times, and Places

1 year 5 months ago
EDITOR’S NOTE: In order to bring a plurality of voices to our storytelling, the Missouri Historical Society frequently asks guest writers to contribute to History Happens Here. The views and opinions expressed by guest contributors are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Missouri Historical Society, its affiliates, or …
Brittany Krewson

The St. Louis Junta and the Mexican Revolution

1 year 5 months ago
In the early 1900s the St. Louis press became obsessed with a group of local revolutionaries dubbed the “St. Louis Junta,” led by the anarchist writer and journalist Ricardo Flores MagĂłn. Nicknamed “The Scorpion” because of the venomous sting of his pen, Flores MagĂłn was one of the most outspoken critics of Mexican president Porfirio …
Brittany Krewson

Lighting Up Gaslight Square

1 year 6 months ago
When a tornado tore through the bohemian neighborhood of Greenwich Corners in St. Louis in February 1959, it spelled the end for this up-and-coming St. Louis hotspot near Olive Street and Boyle Avenue in the Central West End. Over the previous six years, a few clubs and restaurants had moved in and turned this strip …
Brittany Krewson

Why Does St. Louis Have So Many Stained-Glass Windows?

1 year 6 months ago
Listen to an episode about stained-glass windows on our Here’s History podcast with KDHX. From towering mansions down to the smallest shotgun houses, stained-glass windows are everywhere in St. Louis. They’re points of pride for homeowners and selling points for realtors, but the larger story behind these colorful windows isn’t so obvious today. It’s a story that …
Brittany Krewson

The Man at the Edge of St. Louis History

1 year 6 months ago
Listen to an episode about William Taussig on our Here’s History podcast with KDHX. Some of the biggest stories in St. Louis history—the 1849 cholera epidemic, the Eads Bridge and tunnel, the Civil War, the building of Union Station, and more—involve a man named Dr. William Taussig. Though his name may be unfamiliar to most, Taussig is …
Brittany Krewson

Harry Houdini in St. Louis

1 year 6 months ago
Mention “Erich Weiss,” to a random St. Louisan, and you’re likely to get a shrug. But use Erich Weiss’s more famous adopted name—Harry Houdini—and you’ll get a different reaction. The most famous magician in history, Harry Houdini’s image remains instantly recognizable today. His name is used to describe any object that has disappeared (“My car …
Brittany Krewson

5 Chilling Songs to Get You Ready for Halloween

1 year 6 months ago
This Halloween season is the perfect time to look at some of the lesser-known creepy tunes and spine-tingling ballads recorded by St. Louisans during the early 20th century. Each of the songs on this list were recorded for Okeh Records as part of their race records series—a collection of 78rpm records featuring, promoting, and marketed …
Brittany Krewson

Behind the Veil: The Secret Society of St. Louis Elites

1 year 6 months ago
Written by TMH Apprentices Gavin O’Neal, Ne’Vaeh Dudley, and Danielle Haynes If you live in St. Louis, you’ve probably heard of the city’s Fourth of July celebration, Fair St. Louis. Some of you may have attended it to see the parade or catch the fireworks display. But did you know that Fair St. Louis once went …
Brittany Krewson

Winning Baseball’s Suds Series

1 year 6 months ago
EDITOR’S NOTE: In order to bring a plurality of voices to our storytelling, the Missouri Historical Society frequently asks guest writers to contribute to History Happens Here. The views and opinions expressed by guest contributors are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Missouri Historical Society, its affiliates, or …
Brittany Krewson

The Time the Blues Almost Moved to Saskatoon

1 year 7 months ago
EDITOR’S NOTE: In order to bring a plurality of voices to our storytelling, the Missouri Historical Society frequently asks guest writers to contribute to History Happens Here. The views and opinions expressed by guest contributors are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Missouri Historical Society, its affiliates, or …
Brittany Krewson

Saving Lafayette Square

1 year 7 months ago
Listen to an episode about Ruth Kamphoefner on our Here’s History podcast with KDHX. It’s hard to imagine it now, but there was a time in St. Louis when the idea of saving old buildings was a foreign concept. Progress usually meant tearing down anything old or in need of repair. Old homes and businesses were generally …
Brittany Krewson

Benjamin Oglesby and the 56th Infantry

1 year 7 months ago
EDITOR’S NOTE: In order to bring a plurality of voices to our storytelling, the Missouri Historical Society frequently asks guest writers to contribute to History Happens Here. The views and opinions expressed by guest contributors are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Missouri Historical Society, its affiliates, or …
Brittany Krewson

The Birth of Granite City

1 year 7 months ago
Listen to an episode about the Niedringhaus brothers on our Here’s History podcast with KDHX. Today’s nonstick frying pans and heatproof plastic utensils make cooking drastically easier than it was for St. Louisans of the past. The 19th century’s tin and iron kitchenware was notoriously difficult to keep clean and rust free, but in the 1870s, two …
Brittany Krewson