Clinton Peabody, Yesteryears, Part One

Richard Henry Fuhrman, Cracker Castle, Jonathan Pierce Residence, Missouri History Museum, P0764-00532-4a

As I began to research the business community in pre-Civil War St. Louis, the addresses of some of the most important factory owners often seemed to come up in the later footprint of Clinton-Peabody. Certainly the Cracker Castle is a well-known example, but there are many more.

Street view from the row house, owned by Otto Hillman, at 1329 St. Ange. Sievers, Isaac, 1886-1954. March 19, 1937. In Copyright. Rights holder: Schweitzer, Albert L. Missouri History Museum. P0403-07528-03-8n.

It turns out that streets such as St. Ange Avenue were lined with Second Empire masterpieces that looked straight out of Soulard or Lafayette Square.

Thomas B. Teasdale Residence. 1223 St. Ange Street. Photograph by unknown, early 20th century, Missouri History Museum Photograph and Print Collection. Residences n34646
Clinton-Peabody School: School building (old), March 1950, Missouri History Museum, P0900-27378-01-8a

And of course, it’s only logical that the streets would look so; the neighborhood sits right in the middle of those two redeveloped areas. Perhaps lacking in an official identity, the area took the name of its grade school.

William Swekosky, Heitkamp, Maria J. Residence. 1113 Saint Ange, c. 1904, Missouri History Museum, N03268

And of course, just like those other Near South Side neighborhoods, it fell on hard times in the mid Twentieth Century.

William Swekosky, Sarkis, William Residence. Saint Ange, Missouri History Museum, N03686

The same tired arguments for demolition were trotted out: no indoor plumbing, blah, blah, blah.

William Swekosky, Douglass, John T. Residence. 1129-1133 Saint Ange, Missouri History Museum, N03122

Of course, Lafayette Square now has a median home price over a half million dollars and Soulard is around $440,000. So what do you think these houses would be selling for now if they hadn’t been demolished, sitting right in between those two neighborhoods?

William Swekosky, Stevens, Dr. C.W. and Susan Dillon Residence. 1027 Saint Ange, Missouri History Museum, N04151

Maybe we’re starting to get a clearer picture of why St. Louis is struggling to compete nationally.

3 Comments Add yours

  1. Sean B. says:

    “For”..”some”..”19th-of-March”..”1937”..
    “SilverToned..Appropriated”..
    “photograph”..”from-many-decades”..
    “long-ago”…

    “The-Streets”..”look-way-too-eerily”..
    “Empty”..”when-it-came”..”to”..”the-sensibilities”..”of-the”..”LATE”..”Eleanor
    Roosevelt”..”that-wasn’t”..”Harold Lloyd”…

  2. Sean B. says:

    🙁

    1. cnaffziger says:

      My reaction, too.

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