Communities develop a sense of self from those things which people see as defining their city. St. Louisans defined themselves by institutions, and symbols from the Veiled Prophet to baseball. Those cultural symbols are rooted in our collective past as a community, and are those things people speak of when describing St. Louis to others.
Today, the Garden is committed to the global concerns of receding rainforests, increased pollution, and destruction of endangered plant and animal species. At the same time, it contributes to the local community as an attraction while providing educational programs and horticultural information.
To an extent, the St. Louis Zoo is its counterpart in the animal world. The concept dates to 1876, when the city opened a zoological garden at Fairgrounds Park complete with a bear pit (remnants of which are still there) and a monkey house. Interest increased soon after the world's fair in 1904, so that within ten years the city legislature appointed a Zoo board.
The St. Louis Zoo was among the first in the United States to feature animals in more naturalistic settings. Its bear exhibits were built from castings of bluffs on the lower Mississippi River. The philosophy has evolved to include indigenous plant life and natural groupings of animals in exhibits. Arching over much of that period was Marlin Perkins, who started at the Zoo in 1926 and ended up director in 1962. Perkins was responsible for drawing attention to the animal world and its study. His televised "Wild Kingdom," broadcast for 21 seasons starting in 1961, featured weekly journeys to show something of animals in exotic places. While animals in the zoo have a natural appeal for people, it would be a mistake to discount the impact of Perkins and his mix of education and showmanship.
After a $30-plus million effort, an expanded St. Louis Science Center opened its new facility in 1992 adjacent to the McDonnell Planetarium. The Center's roots date to the Academy of Science of St. Louis, founded in 1856. It opened a permanent home at 3817 Olive in 1904, but closed during World War I. It opened a new home in 1944 at 4642 Lindell, then moved to Oak Knoll in 1959. The Academy joined the Planetarium in 1983. Its exhibits, activities, and programs strive to compel people to think in terms of scientific inquiry and relationships while also having fun doing it.
Largest and oldest of the arts organizations is the St. Louis Art Museum. It began at 19th and Locust to nurture both classes and connoisseurship, and outgrew its space by the turn of the century. Plans for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition included a Palace of Art as a permanent structure for the Art Museum. The museum took occupancy in time for the fair, and was administered by Washington University and the Exposition Company for another five years. The museum was turned over to the city in 1909. Its collections remain broad-based in painting, sculpture, and decorative arts from most places and periods, including joint administration with the Nelson Gallery of the George Caleb Bingham sketchbook.
While the St. Louis Art Museum has collected and exhibited with a broad brush, other newer organizations have striven for more focus. The Urban League created the Vaughn Cultural Center in 1977 to preserve, articulate, and interpret both local and national African-American art and culture. The center was funded by Ermalene Lovell Vaughn in memory of her deceased husband Dr. Arthur Vaughn. The First Street Forum began as a place to exhibit contemporary art in changing exhibits. Now, both the Vaughn Center and The Forum are located in Grand Center, a growing arts area centering on Grand Avenue between Delmar and Lindell.
The Missouri Historical Society rounds out the major cultural institutions. The mercantile elite first met in the Old Courthouse in 1866 to create an organization to preserve the artifacts of the oldest St. Louis families and the Louisiana Territory. It purchased an old home at 16th and Locust twenty years later to display its holdings, but outgrew it by the time of the world's fair. It moved in 1913 into its current home, the Jefferson Memorial Building at the site of the entrance to the world's fair in Forest Park. Funds for the memorial came from leftover proceeds of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, and was originally to exhibit artifacts relating to Lewis and Clark. Thus it became the community's memory bank, but retaining only those objects and archival materials deemed significant or interesting by a white elite. Now supported by the Zoo-Museum Tax District, the Missouri Historical Society is far more expansive to document a diverse community.
Other clubs provided similar musical experiences in later decades. The Riviera Club, owned for a while by African-American political boss Jordan Chambers, offered the best local bands an outlet during the 1940s and 1950s. While many white nightclubs and halls were closed to black patrons, African-American musicians were generally welcome. Even in a racist society, black culture seeped into white consciousness. The Mill Creek Valley music district experienced a slight renaissance in the 1960s, when new clubs opened in Gaslight Square.
Such music was juxtaposed against a more formal style, that of classical music. By the turn of the century, the Odeon Theater (on Grand just north of Delmar) housed a new locally based orchestra, the St. Louis Symphony. The Symphony moved to the newly opened Kiel Auditorium in 1934, then to Powell Hall three decades later. Originally, the building opened at Grand and Delmar in 1925 as the St. Louis Theater. After a $2 million renovation in 1966 the Symphony moved to its present home.
Meantime, smaller independent musical and lecture performances were held at the Sheldon Concert Hall. Completed in 1912, it was a memorial to St. Louis Ethical Society founder Walter Sheldon. The Society left in 1966, but the Sheldon survived as a site for concerts, lectures, theatrical performances, and dances.
The Municipal Theater Association formed in 1919 to sponsor outdoor plays and musicals during the summers in the amphitheater in Forest Park. More than five decades later, in 1976, Ronald Himes founded the Black Repertory Theater to produce theatrical works by black playwrights. Today, the Black Rep is part of the Grandel Center arts renaissance. Today, the city boasts more than fourteen performing arts organizations.
Free
public libraries replaced such institutions by the end of the century.
The rise of free public libraries with tax support grew in the Gilded Age,
parallel to the rise of public education. Many saw libraries as encouraging
democracy because they gave access to learning. Some even started as part
of public school systems. Steel magnate and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie
funded construction of more than 1,600 public libraries in the United States
because, he said, they were the one institution that only helped those
who helped themselves.10 The St. Louis Public Library system started in
1893, and quickly became a prominent institution. Its chief librarian,
Frederick Crunden, was a leader in the national library movement and the
American Library Association. Carnegie gave $1 million to the Public Library
in 1901 to build its central library and five branches. Its Main Library,
designed by Cass Gilbert of New York, opened in 1912. The other half of
the gift went to branches at Carnegie's encouragement, since they help
make learning more accessible to people. His dollars built the Barr Branch
in 1906, the Cabanne Branch in 1907, Carondelet in 1908, and Soulard and
Divol in 1910. Carnegie dollars later funded the Carpenter Branch on South
Grand as well.
The system continued to grow and expand in public support. The St. Louis Public Library system already received tax dollars at the turn of the century, so meeting Carnegie's requirement that the city impose a tax to fund ongoing administration and book purchases was not problematic. The system continued in this vein in the 1980s, establishing electronic card catalogues in sites outside its own buildings. It received a substantial increase in support from voters in 1994.
Pulitzer came from a tradition of German language newspapers to serve the large immigrant population. Christian Bimpage founded the Anzeiger des Westens in 1835. After a difference of opinion with editor Henry Boerstein, Carl Daenzer started the Westliche Post in 1857; Emil Preetorius became editor in 1864, and Carl Schurz joined them three years later. The Post and Anzeiger merged in 1898 as the leading German paper in the region. Most of the other publications from St. Louis were special-interest ones. The Age of Steel became a leading journal for the iron and steel industry, for example. Originally a German weekly, it changed its name and language in 1861 to Journal of Commerce. New owners reissued it in 1880 as The Age of Steel. St. Louis publishers issued The Lumberman, the Western Trade Journal, and the St. Louis Dry Goods and Grocery Reporter during the Gilded Age. The Sporting News, the leading weekly about sports founded in 1886, is published in St. Louis. The Spinks had transformed it into the leading baseball journal by the turn of the century. Today, it covers a wide range of sporting activities and remains the paper of record for sport.
Plans lay idle for almost twenty years. But on October 28, 1965, the last center unit of the Arch was put in place after seven years of construction. Two years later, the National Park Service opened trains to carry visitors to the top of the 632-foot high Arch.
Branch Rickey and, starting in 1920, auto dealer Sam Breadon built the Cardinals into a regular contender after almost three decades of less-than-stellar records. Rickey transformed the game during his tenure at St. Louis by pioneering the "farm system" in the early 1920s. In it, a major league team had control over the players on a series of minor league teams at different levels. It can promote players to or demote them from its major league roster, and hold their contract.
Rickey's
system paid off. Once a perennial loser, the Cardinals won the National
League pennant in 1926, and beat the powerhouse New York Yankees featuring
sluggers Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in the World Series. The Cardinals started
playing at National League Park at Vandeventer and Natural Bridge in 1899,
but leased the more spacious Sportsman's Park in 1920. Sportsman's Park
started showing its age in the late 1950s, especially compared to new National
League stadia in Los Angeles and San Francisco. Now owned by Anheuser-Busch,
the Cardinals moved to the new Busch Stadium downtown in May, 1965.
When asked about most important events in the history of St. Louis, many locals cite the World Series they remember most. For some, it is 1926, when the Cards won the game throwing out Babe Ruth stealing second base for the last out. Others remember the Gashouse Gang, led by Dizzy Dean, beating Detroit in 1934. Some talk of the World Series in which all the games were played in the same stadium in 1944, with the Browns and Cardinals. Many remember Stan "The Man" Musial at the plate in the 1950s. Another generation recalls Bob Gibson pitching the Cards to a world crown in 1967.