St. Louis Essays

  • St. Louis Communities

    559 Words  | 2 Pages

    met anyone in St. Louis, this is probably one of the first questions asked. Whether you are from the city, county, north, south, east or west, most people in St. Louis are convinced that they can identify you by what community you come from. The actual city of St. Louis is broken into three main parts; the North Side, South City and the Central West End. The three areas combined have approximately eighty established neighborhoods. If you decide to add the western part of St. Louis County, this number

  • History of st. louis

    1763 Words  | 4 Pages

    city itself. St. Louis falls into this category because cities were once the focal point of the national agenda and presidents sought to increase the importance and services of the city. This was done in St. Louis with programs being created, unions and the attention that the World’s Fair brought to make St. Louis one of the best cities in the early 20th century. However, as suburbanization was happening the focus of the nation was to the growing middle class and suburbs. St. Louis was afurcted by

  • History and Overview of St. Louis

    1134 Words  | 3 Pages

    Would you think that St. Louis would be a magnificent place or a horrible terrifying place to be or go? There are some positive and also some negative reasons why St. Louis is a horrible place or a magnificent place. St. Louis is a violent place sometimes but it can also be a beautiful place. Even though St. Louis has a high crime rating it is still a nice city. St. Louis is a well- liked city because of all its attractions and things to do. It would be a nice place to go if you want to go on a vacation

  • History: The History Of St. Louis

    1116 Words  | 3 Pages

    Every city has a history to it. Some are very old; some are very new. Some are interesting; some are not so interesting. The city of St. Louis has an old and interesting past. Many events were held in St. Louis that many people don’t realize. Two of the biggest events in the world have been held in St. Louis, Missouri. Also, these events were held in the same year. The first event was the 1904 World’s Fair, but that same year, visitors could attend the Summer Olympic Games as well. What is a World’s

  • Meet Me in St. Louis & Raging Bull

    1459 Words  | 3 Pages

    effects of war every day. Whether it be stomaching the violence of war or trying to deal with the absence of male family members in the family unit, everyone was shaken by World War II. Therefore it is easy to see how a movie such as Meet Me in St. Louis was born. It takes us back to a time that is associated with wholesome family values and a world with less major problems before war had directly affected Americans of modern times. A film of a different nature, Raging Bull, takes place in these

  • Meet me in St, Louis and the Aspect of Sound

    1001 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Aspect of Sound in Meet Me In St. Louis In 1904 Eugene Lauste successfully recorded sound onto a piece of photographic film. This invention was known as a “Sound Grate” the results where still far to crude to be used to public display. The cameras used to film “The Talkies” as they where known, had to be kept in enormous soundproof casing. This immediately hindered directors creativity and made movies such as Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) much more rigid. Because of the fascination with the lip-syncing

  • My Trip to the St. Louis Art Museum

    805 Words  | 2 Pages

    The St. Louis Art Museum is one of the United States most renowned art museums that is located in our very own St. Louis. It has over 30,000 pieces of exquisite art that I had the privilege to witness. While there, I mainly examined the art pieces that were modern art, since that is of what I have a good working knowledge. There is a wide range of art that I also got to witness including the sculptures and the museum itself. In the past year, they have recently installed a new sector of their establishment

  • St. Louis Tornado Essay

    1294 Words  | 3 Pages

    The St. Louis Tornado or The Great Cyclone of 1896 took place on Wednesday, May 27, 1896, just after 5:00 pm. This tornado was not only the single worst disaster in St. Louis history but the St. Louis Tornado was one of the most destructive and deadliest tornados in United States history. The storm caused approximately one hundred million dollars in damage to the City of St. Louis and East St. Louis. In today’s dollars this would equal about two point nine billion dollars in damages. It would

  • Adolphus Busch

    1120 Words  | 3 Pages

    its product was so inferior that St. Louis rowdies were known to project mouthfuls of it back over the bar. Adolphus kept on selling it, and it became better, and eventually the best in America. Adolphus Busch was born on July 10, 1839 to Ulrich and Barbara Pfeiffer Busch. Growing up in Kastel, near Mainz, Germany, Adolphus was the twenty-first of twenty-two children. At the age of eighteen, he moved to the United States, to join his three brothers in St. Louis, Missouri. He first started working

  • The Great Depression Of St. Louis

    721 Words  | 2 Pages

    The 1930s plagued St. Louis with unrelenting economic hardships until war based economies began to prepare for the inevitable global conflict of the early 1940s. World War II revitalized the economy of the St. Louis region and relieved the population from the constraints of the Great Depression. The city experienced a 50% decrease in manufacturing, and unemployment levels greater than 30% by the end of 1933. Projects through the Works Progress Administration put people to work, but did little in

  • School Segregation, The Continuing Tragedy Of Ferguson By Richard Ferguson

    1252 Words  | 3 Pages

    school district is “among the poorest and most segregated in Missouri” (p. 2). The August 2014 shooting death of a young African-American, Michael Brown, by a white police officer, spurred riots not only in St. Louis, but also in other cities nationwide. Black and white children in the St. Louis region remain educationally divided, and the state Board of Education knows what needs to change in order for black children to gain a better

  • The Life and Literary Work of Kate Chopin

    739 Words  | 2 Pages

    American short story writer, novelist, poet, and essayist. Timeless classics, Kate Chopin’s works of the late nineteenth century remain rare jewels and priceless gifts to the literary world today. Born Katherine O’Flaherty on February 8, 1851, in St. Louis, Chopin was the daughter of a prominent Irish merchant and an aristocratic French-Creole mother. Chopin’s roots in, and familiarity with, two distinctly different cultures were important on both a personal and creative level throughout her life.

  • Meet Me In St. Louis

    1414 Words  | 3 Pages

    paper, a utopia is defined as a community or society that possesses highly desirable or near perfect qualities. In Meet Me in St. Louis by Vincent Minnelli, it is evident that different styles, structures, and aspects are used in order to construct the idea of a utopic society and help develop the film’s As it can be seen in the short clip, Vincent Minnelli’s Meet Me in St. Louis is a musical. Since the scene mostly consists of singing, there is a lot of nonsynchronous sound. This results in the background

  • Dred Scott

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    of free and slave states, the problem was that Missouri was located right in the middle of what was the freedom and slavery. In 1830, the Blow family moved to St. Louis and then ran into some financial problems, which made them sell Dred Scott to Dr. John Emerson. Emerson was a military surgeon stationed just south of St. Louis in Jefferson Barracks. For twelve years Dred Scott had to go with Emerson to different posts in Illinois and the Wisconsin territory where slavery was prohibited

  • The Holocaust: The Voyage Of The St. Louis

    518 Words  | 2 Pages

    of the St. Louis survived, and under half died during this tragic event. Before the St. Louis, when St. Louis sailed to Cuba, and escaping the St. Louis are all important events at the time of the Holocaust. Killing hundreds of people, the Voyage of the St. Louis was a terrible catastrophe during the Holocaust. The Kristallnacht was said to be the beginning of the Holocaust and what started the Voyage of the St. Louis. It was a bad way to start off the boarding and sailing of the St. Louis. The Kristallnacht

  • Laura Searing

    601 Words  | 2 Pages

    during her lifetime to have a town named after her. All of this is great but it becomes amazing when you consider that from the age of 11 Laura Searing was deaf. She was born on February 9, 1840 in Somerset County, Maryland. Her family moved to St. Louis, Missouri in 1851 and that is when she contracted cerebrospinal meningitis. This left Laura deaf and with a speech impediment that left her only able to speak in sepulchral tones. Throughout her life, Laura depended on written communication until

  • Descriptive Essay On St. Louis

    639 Words  | 2 Pages

    It’s game day in St. Louis, Missouri. The streets are filled with Cardinal fans covered in bright red and navy blue, and here and there are a few of the Pirate fans brave enough to show off their Pittsburgh pride. As my family and I walk down Eighth Street amongst a sea of baseball enthusiasts, tourists, and vendors, I can see the stadium get closer and closer. The burnt reddish brown bricks come into sight, as well as the worn down statues of former St. Louis players. Behind the stadium I can see

  • Fur Trade

    1419 Words  | 3 Pages

    two parties, representing Astor's Pacific Fur Company, set out to establish the first trading post on the Columbia River. One party sailed from New York aboard the Tonquin, under the command of Captain Jonathan Thorn. The other party set out from St. Louis on an overland expedition to the mouth of the Columbia. That party was under the leadership of Wilson Price Hunt, one of the partners of the Pacific Fur Company. Both the overland and the overseas parties expected to arrive at the Pacific Coast about

  • Maya Angelou

    1203 Words  | 3 Pages

    Maya Angelou "I had decided that St. Louis was a foreign country. In my mind I had only stayed there for a few weeks. As quickly as I understood that I had not reached my home, I sneaked away to Robin's Hood's Forest and the caves of Alley Oop where all reality was unreal and even that changed my day. I carried the same shield that I had used in Stamps: 'I didn't come to stay.'" In Maya Angelou's autobiographical novel, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings", tender-hearted Marguerite Johnson, renamed

  • Biography of Kate Chopin

    633 Words  | 2 Pages

    Biography Kate Chopin was one of the most influential nineteenth century American fiction writers. She was born in St. Louis, Missouri on either one of three dates: February 8, 1851, February 8, 1850, or July 12, 1850, depending on the source. She once said that she was born in 1851, but her baptismal certificate states February 8, 1850 as her birthday (Inge, 2). There is also an indiscretion regarding the spelling of her name. Her full name is Katherine O’Flaherty Chopin, but one source spells her