FOOTNOTES (1) For a more complete discussion, see "Transportation" below. (2) For more on the goods shipped through St. Louis, see the "Business, Commerce, and Industry" context. (3) For more on suburbanization, see the "Community Planning" context. (4) For more on urban renewal, see the "Community Planning" context. (5) For a more detailed discussion of the 1876 home rule charter, see the "The Relationship Between People and Government" context. (6) For more on streetcars, see the "Transportation" context. (7) For more on the city improvements in the early twentieth century, see the "The Relationship Between People and Government" context. (8) A more detailed discussion of segregation in education is in the "African-American Experience" context. (9) For more information on the jazz legacy in St. Louis, see the "African-American Experience" context. (10) Carnegie required that communities tax themselves for books and administration before he would construct a library in a town. Since St. Louis already funded its public library from tax roles, the 1901 grant was processed more quickly. (11) For more on the construction of the Arch, see the "Community Planning" context. (12) McIntosh was a half-black freeman from Pittsburgh, in the city as a cook aboard a steamboat. Interfering with the arrest of two fighting men, McIntosh stabbed a policeman to death. An enraged crowd dragged him from the jail, drug him to the outskirts of town, and burned him alive. (13) For more on the St. Louis home front during World War II, see the "The Relationship Between People and Government" context. (14) A more detailed discussion of African-American churches is in the "Religion" context. (15) A more detailed discussion of public housing is in "The Relationship Between People and Government' context. (16) Bell told of an incident when he noticed a faulty light switch in a California hotel room where he and Paige were staying as roommates. As Bell recounted the story, he turned down his bed that evening, then asked Paige if the, Bell, was the fastest. Satchel agreed. Bell asked him if it were true that he was so fast, he could turn out the light and be in bed before the room got dark. Paige nodded. Bell walked to the switch, turned off the light, ran to the bed and pulled up the covers to await the darkness. Bell noted that Satch had been telling truth all those years. (17) For more on the role of the business elite in community development leadership, see the "Business, Commerce, and Industry" context. (18) Suburbanization is discussed more fully in "Transportation." (19) For more on Hargadine & McKittrick, see the "Business, Commerce, and Industry" context. (20) For more on Missouri Law 353 and its impact on downtown, see the "People's Relationship with Government" con text. (21) For more on the impact of railroads on stl, see the "Transportation" context. (22) The role of religious institutions in the city's development is described in "Religion" below.