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BENTON
PARK
This neighborhood gets its name from the park that sits at the
southeast corner of South Jefferson Avenue and Arsenal Street.
Benton Park, named
for Senator Thomas Hart Benton,
became a city park in 1866 after having served as a cemetery from
1840 to 1865. This area was originally
part of the Cherokee-Lemp neighborhood and contains a large number
of historic structures and storefronts.
Early postcard of Benton Park
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The best-known of these
are the Lemp Brewery and the Lemp and Chatillon-De Menil Mansions
clustered in the far southeast corner of the neighborhood. The housing
stock is iwidely varied with properties ranging from large,
stately homes to the more efficiently-sized abodes where famlies
of the working class brewery, brick and construction tradesmen once
lived. With all this going for
it, the
neighborhood was officially declared a Federal Historic District
in 1985.
Today the neighborhood is humming with activity. Revitalization
here is attracting people who want to buy homes and live in the city.
Most of the homes that surround the park or in close proximity have
already been rehabbed or are well into the process. Millennium has
plans to build The Fleurs-de-Lis a
new development that will include condominiums and commercial retail
space.
Thomas Hart Benton
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For recreation, this neighborhood has three parks: Benton,
Cherokee and Fremont. There are also several cultural and
arts events during the year – Art in the Park is a notable
mention. Benton Park has wonderful diversity in its many excellent
places to wine and dine, shops full of antiques and collectibles
and it has become a very dog- and walking-friendly community.
Benton
Park Neighborhood site
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BENTON PARK WEST
By the 1860s this neighborhood was already a well-established community
with several dairies, grocers, carpenters, a blacksmith, a
midwife and at least two taverns. It was predominatly a working-class
community, but many area businessmen
built beautiful
homes that are still standing today. And a few of those businesses
are still
around too, among them: Gravois Planing Mill, Jefferson
Tent & Awning Company and the Hat Mart.
The area has a
large stock of historic homes, most were built between the
1880s
to just past the turn of the century. There are also several
storefronts scattered throughout the area and they can be found
along Jefferson Avenue,
Gravois Avenue and
Cherokee
Street as well. This neighborhood is also alive with redevelopment
activity and has developed a very diverse group of committed residents.
In 2005 Benton Park
West was added to the National
Register of
Historic Places as part of the Gravois-Jefferson Streetcar
Suburb National Historic District.
Benton Park West Neighborhood site
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FOX PARK
Early French settlers originally called this area, "La Petite Prairie."
In the 1870s a major brickyard was established on Shenandoah,
which
lead to the establishment of five other brickyards in the area. Within
ten years
the lumberyards were established. Building
materials were now close at hand and that sparked the development
of this area and the influx of immigrants who settled
here came because work was plentiful.
Most of the homes in Fox Park were built from the 1880s to
the 1930s and most of the residents were working class families that
were first and second-generation German-Americans. The neighborhood
reflects this in its abundance of single family, two- and
four-family units. There are also many iron storefronts manufactured
at the
turn
of
the twentieth
century by St. Louis foundries. These storefronts are being
redeveloped today for both residential and commercial use.
Built in 1907 and an obvious flagship of the neighborhood, St. Francis
DeSales Catholic Church was placed on the National
Historic Register of Historic Places in 1978. The church's 300-foot
steeple soars above the skyline and is known as, "the Cathedral
of South St. Louis."
Fox
Park was officially designated an Historic District in 1985.
Its location in the city's landscape is ideal for any city dweller
with downtown, Tower Grove Park, the Missouri Botanical
Garden,
South
Grand shops and restaurants, schools and churches barely minutes
away. History, affordability and convenience make Fox Park a great
place to call
home.
Fox Park Neighborhood site
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SOULARD
Antoine Soulard
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In the 1790s, the Spanish governor deeded Antoine
Soulard some land from the city's common fields. This land was in
payment for
Soulard's services rendered as surveyor general of Upper Louisiana,
and it is how the area got its name. Immigrants came to
Soulard beginning with Germans in the
mid-1800s. Later they were
joined by Czechs, Slovaks, Croatians and Lebanese. The neighborhood's
buildings were a mixture of public structures, shops, businesses,
churches and residences,
despite the passage of time, it retains this diversity
of buildings into the present day. Best seen on foot, you can walk
the brick-paved alleys as they lead to carriage houses reinvented
as a residental home. You will see a
large number of historic homes that run the gamut from
brewer's
mansions
to working
class
row houses. And the decorative
friezes, iron storefronts and wrought iron fenced yards sprinkled
throughout the area distinguish this very charming neighborhood.
Though there are still many old properties today,
it is unfortunate that historic buildings were destroyed
to make
way for new highways in the 1950s, 60s and 70s. In 1969, a now
defunct organization called The Soulard Neighborhood Improvement
Association was founded
to keep
the
area from being destroyed any further and in 1972 their dedication
resulted in successfully having this historic area bounded by Gravois
Avenue, I-55, and Broadway, placed on the National Register of Historic
Places.
The current neighborhood organization, the Soulard Restoration
Group, came into existence in 1974.
Soulard Neighborhood site
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TOWER GROVE EAST
This area was settled by the French in the early 1700s when it
was part of what they referred to as "La Petite Prairie." Around
1800 the common grazing and farm
land around St. Louis began to be sold off to private owners.
By the middle of that century, German Catholics owned most of
the land and they used
it for
their pasture lands and dairy farms. Eventually blocks were developed
and near the end of the century, homes began to appear.
Vintage postcard showing the
east entrance
to Tower Grove Park
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This neighborhood
has a great
selection
of historic
homes that range from small one-story bungalows to grand three-story
homes. There are apartment buildings as well and a large inventory
of storefronts featuring iron
works by most of the early local foundries. The area was primarily
a working class neighborhood but it also included a few shopowners
that had established their
businesses
downtown.
These entrepreneurs could afford to hire well-known architects to
design their homes and they brought in the skilled German craftsmen,
so plentiful at that time, to create
the
accents that decorate the interiors.
Today the neighborhood has evolved into a disparate mix of homeowners,
renters and business owners. Any day spent in historic Tower Grove
Park will
demonstrate that. There are schools, churches, retail stores, restaurants
and bars, coffee
houses
and
art galleries and the vibrant and eclectic Grand South
Grand shopping area lies just to the south.
Tower Grove East Neighborhood site
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