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The site, also known as White Haven, commemorates the life, military career and presidency of Ulysses S. Grant. Five historic structures are preserved at the site, including the childhood home of Ulysses' wife, Julia Dent Grant. White Haven was an 850-acre plantation worked by enslaved people; Grant supervised their forced labor from 1854 to ...
Gaslight Square (also known as Greenwich Corners) [1] was an entertainment district in St. Louis, Missouri active in the 1950s and 60s, covering an area of about three blocks at the intersection of Olive and Boyle, near the eastern part of the current Central West End and close to the current Grand Center Arts District.
It initially opened in the basement of the Hotel Midtown as the Glass Bar and Gold Room on November 3, 1944. [6] [4] In 1956, the Glass Bar was remodeled and renamed the Peacock Alley. [7] Peacock Alley was located inside the new Midland Hotel. [8] It was named after the Peacock Alley cocktail bar inside New York's Waldorf-Astoria. [9]
This is a list of properties and historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places within the city limits of St. Louis, Missouri, north of Interstate 64 and west of Downtown St. Louis. For listings in Downtown St. Louis, see National Register of Historic Places listings in Downtown and Downtown West St. Louis.
In 2020 the south side was 24.0% black, 60.6% white, 0.4% American Indian/Alaska Native, 7.6% Two or More Races, 3.9% Asian, and 3.6% Some Other Race. 7.1% of the population was of Hispanic or Latino origin. Map of the 79 neighborhoods of St. Louis, Missouri
In 1926, Douglass University, a historically black university was founded by B. F. Bowles in St. Louis, and at the time no other college in St. Louis County admitted black students. [36] In the first half of the 20th century, St. Louis was a destination in the Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South seeking better opportunities.
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Lucas Avenue Industrial Historic District is an American historic district bounded by Washington, Delmar, 20th & 21 Streets, St. Louis, Missouri. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. A boundary increase, roughly bounded by Locust St., Delmar, and 19th and 20th Sts. was added in 2007.