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Downtown St. Joseph in 2006 Another view of the downtown in 2006. Saint Joseph is located on the Missouri/Kansas border in northwestern Missouri, also close to Nebraska; Iowa is another 70 miles farther north. The nearest major metropolitan area to St. Joseph is the Kansas City Metropolitan Area, which begins approximately 30 miles (48 km) to ...
The St. Joseph Metropolitan Statistical Area, as defined by the United States Census Bureau, is an area consisting of four counties - three in northwest Missouri (Andrew, Buchanan, and DeKalb) and one in northeast Kansas - anchored by the city of St. Joseph, comprising a total area of 1,673.93 square miles (4,335.5 km 2).
Cathedral of St. Joseph (St. Joseph, Missouri) Central High School (St. Joseph, Missouri) Central Police Station (St. Joseph, Missouri) Christian Sachau Saloon; St. Joseph Christian School; St. Joseph City Hall; City Hose Company No. 9; Cloverdale archaeological site; Corby–Forsee Building
Buchanan County government's website; St. Joseph Missouri City Directories; St. Joseph Missouri Yearbook Indexes; Digitized 1930 Plat Book of Buchanan County Archived August 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine from University of Missouri Division of Special Collections, Archives, and Rare Books
Following is a list of mayors of St. Joseph, Missouri. St. Joseph had a president of the council from its incorporation in 1843 until it began electing mayors in 1851. [1] Thomas Mills (1851–1852) Robert Lamden (1852–1853) Joseph A. Anthony (1853–1854) Robey Boyle (1854–1855) Jonathan Bassett (1855–1856) John Corby (1856–1857)
St. Joseph City Hall is a historic city hall located at St. Joseph, Missouri.It was designed by the architectural firm Eckel & Aldrich and built in 1926–1927. It is a three-story, stone and concrete building in the Italian Renaissance Revival style.
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The government of the U.S. state of Missouri is organized into the state government and local government, including county government, and city and municipal government. While the state was originally a part of the Democratic-dominated "Solid South," the state transitioned into a national bellwether at the start of the 20th century.