by Tim O'Neil --- The final game of the 1944 World Series was played on a chilly Oct. 9 between the National League's St. Louis Cardinals and the American League's St. Louis Browns at Sportsman's Park. Only 31,630 fans -- almost 3,000 fewer than a full house -- saw the game. The Cardinals won that final game, 3-1, and the series, 4-2.
10/7/2011
Album ID: 1337719
Photos by Post-Dispatch staff photographers
Look Back: Climatron
14 photos
for sale
It rose like a honeycomb of aluminum tubes, slowly curling into a dome high above the flowers. It could save the palm trees and, perhaps, revive the garden. The odd structure was the Climatron, the world’s first geodesic greenhouse and new home for the Missouri Botanical Garden’s orchids, coffee trees and hibuscus. The local architects who designed it were inspired by R. Buckminster Fuller, a Harvard dropout and prolific spinner of big ideas. The unusual shape drew visitors during the year of construction. Shortly before the dedication on Oct. 1, 1960, all 112 interior floodlights were illuminated. Outside, the Climatron glowed like a magic mushroom in a fantasy movie.
10/1/2011
Album ID: 1331573
Photos by Post-Dispatch file photos
Look Back: St. Louis Merchants Exchange
23 photos
for sale
by Tim O'Neil --- When the St. the Louis Merchants Exchange building opened in 1875 it was a bustling affair, fitting for the importance of the new building to commerce and society. Grain traders used its vast hall to buy and sell the harvests that poured into St. Louis by steamboat, railroad and horse cart. The following year, the Democratic Party held its national convention there, choosing Samuel J. Tilden as their candidate. Last call was on Sept. 13, 1957, when business moved to a new, forgettably modern brick building at 5100 Oakland Avenue, leaving the old haunt to grain-nibbling pigeons and mice.
9/9/2011
Album ID: 1318466
Photos by Post-Dispatch staff photographers
Look Back: Eads' Civil War gunboats
12 photos
by Tim O'Neil --- James B. Eads, salvage king of the Mississippi River, promised President Abraham Lincoln he could build iron-armored gunboats in 65 days. On Aug. 7, 1861, Eads won a contract to build seven burly gunboats from a novel design. At $89,000 apiece, each was to carry 13 heavy cannon, have 2.5 inches of armor and be delivered to Cairo, Ill., in sixty days.
9/2/2011
Album ID: 1314568
Photos by Larry Coyne
Look Back: St. Louis mob wars, 1980
13 photos
for sale
Shortly after the death of boss Anthony "Tony G" Giordano on August 29, 1980, mob leaders recruited John J. Vitale, the old consiglieri to come out of retirement and smooth the transition. The quiet following Giordano’s death lasted 19 days, and the subsequent murder of James A. "Horseshoe Jimmy" Michaels set off St. Louis’ last big-time gang war.
8/27/2011
Album ID: 1301671
Photos by Post-Dispatch staff photographers
Look Back: River Des Peres, 1915
18 photos
The urban growth of St. Louis made the previously pleasant and meandering River Des Peres become a flood-prone sewer. Its path through Forest Park was encased temporarily in a wooden culvert for the 1904 World�s Fair. On Aug. 19, 1915, remnants of a hurricane reached St. Louis from Texas, and heavy rain dumped 7.4 inches across the area. In 1923, city voters adopted an $87 million bond issue that included $11 million to tame the River Des Peres. Steady work with steam shovels, horse teams and men swinging picks continued for more than a decade. They ran the river underground through the park and into a nine-mile-long open channel to the Mississippi.
8/19/2011
Album ID: 1302908
Photos by St. Louis Post-Dispatch and Missouri History Museum
Look Back: V-J Day, 1945
16 photos
for sale
By Tim O''Neil --- The first unofficial news bulletin of Japan''s surrender in World War II came by radio at 2:30 a.m. local time on Aug. 14., 1945. Henry Ruggeri rushed to reopen his tavern at Edwards Street and Elizabeth Avenue. "I must celebrate," Ruggeri said. Downtown that morning, office workers filled the air and streets with paperwork from their desks. Teenagers snake-danced down Olive Street. Adults banged washboards and dragged strings of clanging cans across pavement. At 5 p.m., when President Harry Truman confirmed the surrender, the party leaped into overdrive.
8/13/2011
Album ID: 1301309
Photos by Post-Dispatch staff photographers
Look Back: Heat wave of 1936
10 photos
for sale
by Tim O'Neil --- The heat of July 1936 had been withering and deadly, reaching at least 100 degrees on 18 days. It had killed 332 people by July 30, when cooling breezes soothed raw, sweating faces. The relief didn’t last. A drought that burned the Plains and Midwest restoked itself, pushing the temperature here back to 100 on Aug. 9. On 15 of the next 18 shimmering days, the high would be at least 100. It was 103 or hotter 11 times. On Aug. 18, the high was 106. The summer’s toll was 479 dead of heat, including 29 children.
8/5/2011
Album ID: 1298131
Photos by Post-Dispatch staff photographers
Look Back: St. Louis glider disaster
11 photos
for sale
St. Louis Mayor William Becker and nine others were killed on Aug. 1, 1943, when a World War II glider they were riding in plunged and slammed nose first into the ground near the Lambert Airport runway.
8/1/2011
Album ID: 807474
Photos by Post-Dispatch files
Look Back: In-air flight record, 1929
18 photos
for sale
Dale Jackson and Forrest O'Brine zoomed onto the front pages in their overloaded aircraft and stayed there for two breathless weeks. After 420 hours and 21 minutes in the air -- 17 1/2 days -- they were cheered as heroes on Aug. 1, 1929 with a ticker-tape parade downtown.