Sunday, December 11, 2016

Old Courthouse (and temporary Visitor's Center for the Gateway Arch)

11 North 4th Street 
St. LouisMO 63102

Admission: free   parking: not free



Ground breaking for the Old Courthouse began in 1839 with the last major change completed in 1864. It was Missouri's largest habitable building from 1864-1894. 

The last addition to the courthouse was the dome, begun in 1861 and completed in 1864. Just like the United States Capitol Dome (built also during the Civil War), the dome is modeled after St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City. 

Needless to say under the dome, the interior of the courthouse rotunda is quite impressive and beautiful. 

Each of the four lunettes contains a painted mural depicting an event in St. Louis history. The murals were painted right after the 1864 completion of the dome. 


The night we toured the Old Courthouse as part of a Christmas tour of historic houses in St. Louis city, there were dancers and musicians performing in the rotunda as seen from the second floor. 


The courthouse is particularly known for its most famous case - the 1846 Dred Scott case when the slave sued for his and his wife's freedom. One of the four history galleries at the courthouse is dedicated to slavery and to Dred Scott as shown below in two of the displays. This gallery is a long-time permanent display.



Some of the displays focus specifically on the Scotts and their case. 



This display represents life in St. Louis during the year of the trial. 


There are a few artifacts. The laundry supplies from the 1800's represent the laundry business that Harriett Scott presumably ran while waiting for the trial to be completed.  It was very hard work. 

Dred worked at Barnum's hotel where patrons would pay him to carry bags similar to this one on display. 

At the end of the exhibit hall, a courtroom is set-up to represent the mid-1800's courtroom. 

 In the exhibit there is an informative video for viewing

This wall display represents the struggle for civil rights. 

Another somewhat permanent exhibit found in a second gallery is Early St. Louis - the French and the Osage. This life-size house sits in the middle of the gallery.  When the St. Louis Arch museum recently closed temporarily, items from that collection were added to this gallery. 

This is a model of a typical French house built in St. Louis, noticeably different from a log cabin. Specialized skills needed to build this style house required hiring a carpenter or mason to build it. 

Before Europeans came, St. Louis had been the land of the Osage Indians.  It was with the Osage tribes that Laclede and other early St. Louis residents traded goods. These artifacts of items traded as well as other artifacts, are on display. 


One of the two newer and temporary exhibits in a third gallery centers on Lewis and Clark and Mountain Men. Many of these artifacts and displays came from the Arch museum and will be returned there when it re-opens. 

That display shows more artifacts from the days of trading with the Osage Indians. 

These are the trappers' tools of the trade. 

Trapping beaver was generally done in the fall or spring. 


Beaver felt hats, like these on display, were very popular in Europe, and relied on beaver from the American west.  

This large map showing the route of Lewis and Clark covers a wall of the gallery. 

The fourth and final gallery is about Plains Indians and Pioneers.


Like the previous gallery, this one is temporary and was set up when the Arch museum closed for remodeling. Artifacts here are generally on loan from that collection. 


This is a life-size covered wagon representing the pioneers. 


These are two of the murals representing the pioneers. 

In December there is also a temporary display in the rotunda. A group of women from Nebraska quilted 13 quilts representing national parks in honor of the National Park Service Centennial.  They are beautiful works of art. I took pictures of three of them. Below is the quilt representing the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial. 

This is the Homestead National Monument of America in Beatrice, Nebraska. 

This quilt represents Joshua Tree National Park in California. 

And of course, no museum is complete without a gift shop.  Typical of the national park gift shops, it is quite large. 
Comments:  Until we visited the courthouse as part of a Christmas tour of three historical city houses, I had no idea that this building held so many displays and exhibits.  It is full of the history of the area. 

When the Arch museum closed in February 2015, items from the Museum of Westward Expansion were brought to the courthouse which was designated as the Arch administration home until the museum under the Arch reopens.  A number of these items were added to three of the galleries. When the new Arch museum reopens, hopefully in 2017, many of these items will return to the Arch museum.  As funding becomes available the national parks hope to replace those exhibits with ones that focus on building/architecture/art and the court and different cases.


What this means is that the current displays will not all remain as they are now, but hopefully will be replaced with some just as great and more centered on the courthouse and less on the area of St. Louis.   


I am not sure if there are guided tours, but there is a ranger station in the rotunda where one can stop and ask for information.  


There is a parking garage nearby. 


The National Park Service owns and manages the Old Courthouse. 

Friday, December 9, 2016

The Eugene Field House & St. Louis Toy Museum

634 South Broadway, 
St. Louis, Missouri 63102
Admission: $10.00; children 7-16 $5.00; parking is free

 http://fieldhousemuseum.org/



The Eugene Field House was built in 1845 as one of twelve row houses. In 1850, attorney Roswell Field and his wife Frances bought the house and there in September their son Eugene was born. In 1853 Roswell served as the attorney for Dred Scott and family when the Scotts brought action in federal court for their freedom.  In 1856 Eugene's mother died, and the following year Eugene left this home to live with an aunt in Massachusetts.   

In 1936 the house opened as the first historic house museum in St. Louis.  Among the many period furniture pieces in the house is this 1876 Steinway piano in one of two parlors on the first floor.

This beautiful ornate bed is in the second floor bedroom.  

Although on display in the second floor library, this piece of furniture actually belongs in a dining room. The tiny drawers on the right bottom are designed to hold silverware and a decorative door can hide the drawers. 

There are a number of antique toys interspersed upstairs including this horse on wheels. 

There are also several doll houses on the second floor.  This replica of a lake house however is not a child's toy. 

We toured this house as part of a Christmas tour of three historic homes and thus were able to enjoy the period holiday decorations.  This second floor tree is made of turkey feathers. 

On the first floor was a decorated tree made of goose feathers. 


The entrance hall floor cloth is hand-painted vinyl that was designed and hand painted for this space as part of the restoration.   

In April 2015, ground was broken for the new 4000 square foot Field House Museum.  We were able to tour as part of a Christmas historical house tour just days before it opened to the public. 


There are currently two exhibits in the museum as well as the toy collection. The walls are covered with informative displays for the exhibit titled What's Past is Prologue: A House Brimming with Stories. 

Stories include that of attorney Roswell Field and his legal work for Dred Scott and family...


stories of Eugene Field and his verses...


and of school children whose pennies helped save the house from the wrecking ball. 

There are also artifacts on display such as this beautiful Italian Monteith Bowl, ca. 1762-1781.  It was used to chill wine bottles and glasses. 

The majority of the artifacts in the new museum are part of the collection of the St. Louis Toy Museum that is a part of the Field House Museum.  These Buckskin Indian Dolls, from the 1800's came from Colorado and belonged to Eugene Field. 

This is a Wind-Up Black Doll, from 1881. 

These three toys are: Boy on Tricycle, 1870, USA; Wind-Up Carousel, 1875, France; and Wind-Up Bird on Wheels, 1870's. 

These German toys displayed together are Pool Shooter, late 1800's and Tut-Tut Man, circa 1903. 

This Baby Carriage from mid-1800's is probably American made. 

The second exhibit is titled Field of Play:  The Joyful Collections of Don and Shirley Zork. The Mickey Mouse Memorabilia comes from The Zork Family Mickey Mouse Collection.  On display is this small portion of the 450 items in the collection dating back to 1928. 

There is also a Zork Bear Collection with 200+ items.  Those on display include Steiff bears dressed in authentic Ralph Lauren Designs and the Muffy Vanderbear Collection dressed in winter finery. 

A variety of teddy bears from the Zork Collection will be on display this spring as part of the upcoming Teddy Bear Picnic Exhibit. 

Another room in the new expansion is the new Eugene Field Library. 

Among other things the library houses the largest Eugene Field collection in private hands. 


The Field House Museum Gift Shop sells books, toys, and other items. 

Comments:  We visited the Eugene Field House as part of a Christmas Tour that included three historic houses and 450 participants.  It would be nice to visit it when it is not so crowded.  They offer docent-led tours during normal visiting hours. 

The house is well preserved. The new museum is visually attractive and interesting. There is no special area for the toys as some are placed by wall displays covering other topics. This was a little confusing to me at first until I realized that these artifacts were part of the toy museum. 


There is a free parking lot behind the house plus there is street parking.  


The website has additional information.