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Look Back: Great Cyclone of 1896

  • 21 photos
  • by Tim O'Neil --- On May 27, 1896, a super tornado called the Great Cyclone killed 255 people as it churned like a turbine through St. Louis and East St. Louis. Its wide path, running roughly along today’s Interstate 44 and across the Mississippi River at the Arch, was a ruin of 7,500 buildings destroyed or damaged, sheared trees and trains tossed from tracks.
  • 5/27/2011
  • Album ID: 1255833

Look Back: Civil War Fundraiser

  • 8 photos
  • by Tim O'Neil --- The Grand Mississippi Valley Sanitary Fair, a fund-raiser for Union troops in the Civil War, opened on May 17, 1864. The Ladies’ Union Aid Society was the driving force of the Western Sanitary Commission, which sought to fill yawning gaps in Army medical care. Through its closing June 18, the fair raised $550,000 to give Union soldiers hospital care, clean garments and warm meals.
  • 5/20/2011
  • Album ID: 1250311
  • Photos by Missouri History Museu,Mercantile Library and Washington University

Look Back: Great Fire of 1849

  • 8 photos
  • By Tim O'Neil --- On the night of May 17-18, 1849, a hard wind blew from the northeast across the Mississippi River. It would serve as a bellows for a long, destructive night. St. Louis’ Great Fire destroyed 418 buildings on 15 blocks. Three people were confirmed dead, but more probably perished on the steamboats. At least one burning boat blew up.
  • 5/13/2011
  • Album ID: 1246589
  • Photos by Missouri History Museum, Jefferson National Expansion Memorial and History of St. Louis

Look Back: P-D reporter Virginia Irwin, 1945

  • 10 photos for sale Buy a Photo
  • The first of Post-Dispatch reporter Virginia Irwin's stories on the fall of Berlin splashed the front page on May 8, 1945, the day after Germany’s surrender to the allies in World War II. One of the few women reporters overseas, Irwin and Boston newspaperman Andrew Tully were the first American reporters in the German capital.
  • 5/6/2011
  • Album ID: 1242219
  • Photos by Post-Dispatch staff photographers

Look Back: Southwest Bank Robbery, 1953

  • 24 photos for sale Buy a Photo
  • By Tim O'Neil --- On April 24, 1953, three masked men rushed into the lobby of Southwest Bank, Kingshighway and Southwest Avenue. Swinging a sawed-off shotgun, ringleader Fred Bowerman jumped onto a counter and shouted, "This is a holdup! Everybody stand still!" Police quickly rushed to the scene, and despite 40 gunshots and tear-gas shells, no one other than the robbers was hurt. In 1959, a movie called "the Great St. Louis Bank Robbery" hit the theaters. In the cast was young Steve McQueen.
  • 4/22/2011
  • Album ID: 1231661
  • Photos by Post-Dispatch photographers

Look Back: Old County Courthouse, 1878

  • 19 photos
  • On April 19, 1878, farmer Ralph Clayton shoved a spade into the earth in unincorporated St. Louis County, and the construction of the St. Louis County Courthouse began. Clayton, a 90-year-old farmer, had donated 100 acres for the $38,000 facility.
  • 4/15/2011
  • Album ID: 1226632
  • Photos by St.Louis Post-Dispatch photographers and the Missouri History Museum

Look Back: Municipal Auditorium, 1934

  • 28 photos
  • By Tim O'Neil --- Thousands jammed downtown St. Louis on April 14, 1934, for the dedication of the city's new Municipal Auditorium and Community Center. Eleven years before, voters had adopted an $87 million bond issue for an ambitious list of projects, and $5 million was allocated towards an auditorium. In 1942 the massive limestone building would be renamed in honor of Mayor Henry W. Kiel.
  • 4/8/2011
  • Album ID: 1209732
  • Photos by Post-Dispatch staff photographers

Look Back: Martin Luther King assassination

  • 11 photos for sale Buy a Photo
  • By Tim O'Neil --- The day after the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was shot by a sniper on April 4, 1968, 75 St. Louis civil-rights leaders met at the Mid-City Community Congress on Delmar to plan a memorial march for Palm Sunday, two days hence. With everyone on edge, militants and moderates shouted at each other. Morris Hatchett, a World War II pilot and head of the local NAACP, stood firm against violence: "We’re all black... This battle of name-calling has got to go." They announced the march together. Although riots erupted across the nation, St. Louis didn’t burn.
  • 4/1/2011
  • Album ID: 1200097
  • Photos by St. Louis Post-Dispatch staff photographers

Look Back: St. Louis’ Water Supply

  • 19 photos
  • By Tim O’Neil --- As the World’s Fair was about to open in 1904, chemists at the St. Louis Water Works tried to fix the decades-old problem of the brown hue of the city’s water supply. Mayor Rolla Wells had promised clear water for the fair, but time was running out.
  • 3/25/2011
  • Album ID: 1199804
  • Photos by St.Louis Post-Dispatch photographers and the Missouri History Museum

Look Back: St. Patrick's Day

  • 21 photos for sale Buy a Photo
  • By Tim O'Neil --- On March 17, 1820, a small band of Irish settlers gathered to praise St. Patrick. It was the first recorded observance of St. Patrick’s Day here, although the sparse accounts disagree whether a parade was included. The Irish then were a small part of the city’s 4,400 souls. Marching came later.
  • 3/13/2011
  • Album ID: 1189524
  • Photos by St. Louis Post-Dispatch staff photographers
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