African Americans in Downtown St. Louis
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About this ebook
John A. Wright Sr.
John A. Wright Sr., Fulbright Scholar, educator, and historian, has compiled a visual and narrative record of African Americans in Downtown St. Louis that, for the first time in a single book, documents the pivotal role this area and its residents played in shaping the nation from the time of the Civil War to the era of Civil Rights.
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African Americans in Downtown St. Louis - John A. Wright Sr.
Archives.)
INTRODUCTION
African Americans have played a vital role in the history of downtown St. Louis since its beginning. However, for many years their contributions have been ignored. Textbooks, written history, and popular accounts for the most part have omitted, distorted, or stereotyped African Americans.
It is the hope that this book will help all who read it to regard African Americans as important contributors, who under the most difficult conditions and circumstances, have added greatly to the history and culture of St. Louis and the country. By filling in some of the gaps in St. Louis’ history, this book should help replace omission with knowledge and myth with reality.
African Americans have left an indelible mark in St. Louis and American history, from the days of slavery and Jim Beckworth, one of the founders of Denver, Colorado, and William Wells Brown, America’s first black novelist, to the present day. In addition, monumental court cases such as Dred Scott v. Irene Emerson, Shelly v. Kramer, Lloyd Gaines v. Canada, and Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co. have had a profound impact on the city and country. Downtown St. Louis has also been the home to many unforgettable faces, places, and events that have shaped the St. Louis and American experience for all, such as entertainers Josephine Baker, Scott Joplin, and W.C. Handy and such memorable folk ballads as Frankie and Johnny,
Stackerlee,
and Brady and Duncan.
Today, most traces of early African American presence in downtown St. Louis have disappeared from the city’s landscape, except for a few churches that have remained and a few streets with name changes. However the most important things that will never change are the contributions and impact African Americans have had on the city and nation.
Nun and child patient are pictured at St. Mary’s Infirmary. (Photograph courtesy of the Sister of Franciscan Archives.)
One
THE BEGINNING
African Americans and their ancestors have been a vital part of the history of America and St. Louis since their beginning. No one knows for sure when the first Africans arrived in the Western Hemisphere. Peter Martyr, historian of Balboa’s 1513 expedition where Balbo discovered the Pacific Ocean, writes that Balboa found blacks at war with the Indians and thought they may have come from Ethiopia. Columbus on his third voyage heard stories of Negroes who had come from the south and southeast to Hispaniola. Historians Ivan Van Sertima, a Rutgers University professor, and Leo Weiner, a Harvard University professor, have provided some evidence and theories that the Indian Mounds in the St. Louis area may have been influenced by Africans. They also state similar mounds were used for protection of Mandingo trading posts in West Africa centered in the upper Niger Valley. We may never know for sure when the first Africans arrived in the area. However, we do know that in 1719 blacks entered into what is now known as Missouri, unwilling participants in a new French mining venture. (Photograph of Indian Mound in 1870 courtesy of the Mercantile Library.)
St. Louis was founded in 1764, a product of competition between European nations over control of the Mississippi Valley. From its founding, St. Louis has served as the Gateway to the West
for African Americans. Free blacks and slaves were among the early settlers of the village. According to the 1799 census, the St. Louis population included 56 free blacks, 268 slaves, and 601 whites. (Map courtesy of the Mercantile Library.)
Blacks played a vital role in the development of the early village. On May 25, 1780, Fort San Carlos (located around Broadway and Market and Fourth and Walnut Streets), pictured here, was saved when a slave named Louis alerted the villagers and spoiled a large-scale attack by the British and an estimated 600 Sioux, Sac, Fox Potawatomi, Winnebago, and Chippewa. By repelling the attack the villagers put an end to the British campaign to take over the Mississippi Valley. (Photograph courtesy of the Mercantile Library.)
Clamorgan Alley, originally called Commercial Alley,
marked by this sidewalk engraving, is named for Jacques Clamorgan, a West Indian native who arrived in St. Louis in the 1780s. He was a fur trader, merchant, financier, and land speculator who owned land in what is now Laclede’s Landing. His home was on the site of what is now the Peper Tobacco Company, 701-17 North First Street. In 1804, he was appointed judge of the Court of Common Pleas and Quarter Sessions and rented his house to the government to be used as a jail. (Photograph by John A. Wright.)
In 1796 Jacques Clamorgan was given the title to a considerable amount of land in Missouri and Arkansas and encouraged by Charles Dehault Delassus, Lieutenant Governor of New Madrid and its dependencies, to establish a rope factory for the use of Spain’s navy and Havana. Clamorgan was in every way an enterprising individual. Besides his rope making enterprise, he and Jean Baptiste Point DuSable developed a thriving trading business. (Document courtesy of Mercantile Library.)
A number of blacks owned land and property from the village’s early beginning; the exact number is unknown. Esther, a former of slave of Clamorgan, petitioned Spain in 1793 and received a land grant at 723 North Second Street. Another black woman, Jeanette Forchet, owned property on Church Street. She and her husband received one of the original St. Louis town lots and a farm lot in the common fields in downtown St. Louis. Over the years her descendants subdivided the town lots among themselves and eventually sold it to developers. (Photograph by John A. Wright.)
In 1804, President Thomas Jefferson commissioned the Meriwether Lewis and William Clark expedition to explore the land we now know as the Louisiana Purchase. The lone black man and one of the most valuable men on the expedition was York, William Clark’s slave. He played a major role in winning the friendship of the Indians. This event was made possible by Pierre Dominique Toussaint L’Ouverture, a Haitian patriot who in 1791 led a revolt against the French and