River Roads, Then and Now

River Roads Mall, corner of Halls Ferry Road and Jennings Station Road, Jennings, Missouri. Negative. Mizuki, Henry T. October 1962. In Copyright, Rights holder: River Roads Corporation, Missouri History Museum, P0374-02592-01-4a.

It had been awhile since I’d checked in at the site of the former River Roads Mall, and the contrast between 1962 and 2025 cannot be greater.

But perhaps it also reflects the changing pattern of suburban shopping; large, anchor-based shopping centers are being demolished and replaced with single parcel stores, each with their own parking lots.

Exterior of Stix, Baer, and Fuller at the River Roads Mall, corner of Halls Ferry Road and Jennings Station Road, Jennings, Missouri. Negative. Mizuki, Henry T. July 1961. In Copyright. Rights holder: Stix, Baer and FullerP0374-02300-05-4a

Much of the old mall property is being replaced with apartments, as well, and I think that some of it is for senior housing.

Big Modernist department stores are really going the way of the dodo, and I can’t think of the last time one was built outside of the Galleria, and that one just went out of business!

Stix, Baer, and Fuller at the River Roads Mall, Halls Ferry Road and Jennings Station Road. Negative. Mizuki, Henry T. August 2, 1961, In Copyright. Rights holder: United Foods Management, Inc. Missouri History Museum, P0374-02319-17-4a.

It’s interesting to think how dramatic the setting has changed for these houses directly across from the mall’s ring road over the last eighty years.

3 Comments Add yours

  1. ME says:

    Once upon a time one would get dressed up to go buy quality clothing at a classy department store. Where as now one rolls out of a weed smoke-filled sedan in pajama pants to purchase Takis from the Dollar Tree. Changing pattern of suburban shopping indeed!

    1. Everett says:

      It’s called ‘late stage Capitalism’.

  2. Debra Lueckerath says:

    In the late 1960’s Riverroads was to place to hang on Saturdays for young teens. Levi’s with frayed hems, white buttoned down Oxford shirt, yellow London Fog jacket or a wool navy CPO, cordovan Bass Weejuns or Baker’s fakers and a monogrammed Villager or a Baker’s faker was di rigueur dress.
    Pizza by the slice from Woolworth’s, Spencer’s Gifts, Foxmoor, sewing lessons at Singer, Hopper Furs, beautiful clothes at Stix, Baer & Fuller. . .

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