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stevewiegenstein

~ News, announcements, events, and ruminations about my books, including Slant of Light, This Old World, The Language of Trees, and Scattered Lights, and about creativity, fiction, Missouri, the Ozarks, and anything else that strikes my fancy

stevewiegenstein

Tag Archives: St. Louis

Streetcar City

24 Friday May 2019

Posted by stevewiegenstein in History, Missouri

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Hers and His STL, history, Kansas City, St. Louis, streetcars, World's Fair

During my research into turn-of-the-century St. Louis, I came across this marvelous blog post about the history of streetcars in the city. Ryan Albritton does a detailed analysis of two maps, one from 1903 and the other from 1940, showing the development (and decline) of St. Louis’ streetcar lines and the impact of those lines on the city’s population. It’s a fascinating account, and I recommend reading it. Here’s the 1903 map:

1903 Streetcar Map

Albritton observes how the map resembles an anatomy drawing of the circulatory system, with a the heart (downtown) containing a dense network of lines on nearly every block, and an expanding fan of circulation outward into the residential areas. Lines also facilitated travel to cemeteries, parks, and the soon-to-open World’s Fair grounds. Interestingly enough, there were plenty of north-south lines, too; anybody who’s ever tried to go north-to-south in today’s St. Louis knows how difficult that is. Today’s ease of east-to-west and difficulty of north-to-south only exacerbates the city’s racial divide.

The sad history of the demise of America’s city streetcar lines, helped along by General Motors, Firestone, and Standard Oil as a way of replacing streetcars with buses and thus boosting their profits, is one of the tragedies of the 20th Century. Albritton cites statistics that between 1917 and 1928, streetcars in America carried 12 to 13 billion passengers annually. That’s an amazing number; think of the congestion that would be removed from our cities if such a system were in place today.

And yet this morning, I read an opinion piece in my local paper from a writer out of one of the usual sources (Heritage Foundation), complaining about the inclusion of “wasteful” mass transit funding in the federal highway bill. It’s only wasteful if you think strictly of governmental dollars and cents, not including the private expenditures on cars, gasoline, and related expenses, the growing gridlock and declining livability of our city centers, and the associated social and environmental costs of being locked into a transportation system tilted toward one person in a car, commuting from a distant suburb.

Serendipitously, I also read a fascinating piece in Politico yesterday about the growing success of Seattle’s mass transit system. Let’s hope that Seattle’s experience sparks other cities to re-examine their approaches to mass transit; nobody expects a return to the grid of electric streetcars that dominated transportation in the early 20th Century, of course, but certainly we should be imaginative enough to consider alternatives to the fossil-fuel powered systems that now rule us, and that relegate streetcars to the role of tourist novelties like the Loop Trolley and the KC Streetcar.

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Films!

21 Thursday Jun 2018

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Missouri, Ozarks

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film, National Scenic Riverways, Ozarks, rivers, St. Louis, Tivoli Theatre, travel

The Tivoli Theatre in St. Louis recently hosted an Ozark Streams Film Festival! I was unable to attend, but was impressed by the list of films.

Luckily for us non-attendees, the festival organizers have posted links to all the films on their website. I plan to watch all of them, one by one, whenever I feel the need for some Scenic Rivers relaxation but can’t get away for a float trip.

 

Images of the Past

04 Wednesday Apr 2018

Posted by stevewiegenstein in History, Missouri, Photos

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Tags

detail, history, interpretation, photography, St. Louis

Researching my next book, I came across this trove of photographs in the online magazine Monovisions. 

There’s something about the visual image that arrests in a way that verbal descriptions never do. I lose myself in a narrative or descriptive account, letting my imagination recreate the scene; but with a photograph or map I find myself studying ever more closely, seeking out meaning in the slightest detail.

vintage-st-louis-streets-circa-1900-09

This photograph was identified as “ca. 1900” and located on Market Street. Let’s assume that the street address on the photo – 1310 – follows the same numbering system in use today. Here’s what’s there now:

1310 Market Street Today

A pocket park next to City Hall.

I’m tempted by the story, how the city went from Image A to Image B, but I’m also irresistibly drawn to the image itself. The life in that photograph! The man peering out from the dark interior on the left – is he the proprietor? And what draws his attention? The blurred passerby near him, or the two loafers propped again the liquor window farther down? I can’t make out the posters in that window, but they appear to be promoting a circus that’s coming to town. Below that, California wines are advertised. California wine, in Missouri, at that time? I never imagined.

The enormous billboard on the roof is another infinite attraction. The Forest Park Highlands will be opening for the season soon! There’s a matinee at the Imperial! And who can resist Tomlinson’s Dead Shot and Quick Relief Oil? I’d buy a bottle just for the name.

Pavers

And these pavers, identified as working on Compton Avenue north of Meramec in 1906, spiffy in their neckties. Why so many paving stones out? I’m guessing it had something to do with getting a good fit of the stones, with pride in one’s craft. Judging by the spires of St. Anthony of Padua in the background, this looks to be the block today:

Compton Ave

Those stone paving blocks are still underneath the asphalt, I’ll bet. That would be Gasconade Street crossing, which puts the location way south in St. Louis, down in Dutchtown. A solid and respectable address even then, with gaslamps, limestone foundations, and a big brick neighborhood church. You can see in the background how the paved street will improve the place, as the rutted dirt track leads up the hill to St. Anthony’s.

Street scene

Finally (for my purposes, anyway: there are more photos in the article), an unidentified street in the early twentieth century. It’s just the beginning of the motorized era; a sleuth more expert in early automobiles could probably identify the year by the look of the light cargo carrier in the right foreground. But carriages still dominate. Ahead of the man in the motorcar is another man in a one-horse gig, following a wagon that appears to be laden with sacks of grain as it labors up the muddy, tracked hill. But most fascinating of all is the heavy wagon coming in from a side street to the left, with an enormous wooden barrel. Delivering? Taking away? Whatever the task, I wouldn’t want to be that horse.

The marvel about old photographs is how the edges, the details, reveal as much or more than the putative subject. The cock of a hat, the item in a window, the passing glance, all speak to us.

Good times at Washington U.

27 Thursday Oct 2016

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Daybreak, Literature, Missouri, Personal, Slant of Light, Writing

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Alpha Delta Phi, books, Eliot, Missouri, St. Louis, Washington University

alpha-delta-phi

Every year, the men of Alpha Delta Phi at Washington University choose a Missouri author to read and discuss. This year I was happy to be selected, and here’s a picture of us after my talk! They are aptly known as the Eliot Chapter of their fraternity. We talked for more than an hour, and they had some great comments and questions. Thanks especially to Tarun Chally (third from left), who was my contact person/organizer for the event. And despite the general glow, we aren’t about to be transported into a spaceship . . . just standing in a brightly lit foyer.

April in Missouri -for the Literary-Minded

26 Saturday Mar 2016

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Literature, Missouri, Writing

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Blank Slate Press, Bonniebrook, Branson, Columbia, creativity, Kansas City, Missouri, Missouri Writers Guild, St. Louis, Unbound Book Festival, writing

There are lots of literary events going on in Missouri next month, some of which I’m involved with, some not. If you enjoy reading or writing, climb in the car and take a spring road trip!

First, there’s the Afternoon of Authors with Blank Slate Press event April 2, from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Central Library in downtown St. Louis. I’ll be joining two other BSP authors to talk about writing and to read from our work. I haven’t decided yet whether I’ll read from my most recently published book, This Old World, or from my work-in-progress, which I’m getting close to completing. I’m also looking forward to sharing some time with Cynthia Graham and John Ryan.

Next up will be the season-opening open house at the Bonniebrook Gallery, Museum, and Homestead near Branson on April 16. I don’t think I’ll be able to make that event as I have work-related travel, but I’m eager to get down there sometime this spring or summer. The open house runs from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will include exhibits, craft demonstrations and vendors, presentations, and musical performances. Here’s a link to an earlier post about that event, including a schedule.

Then the following Saturday is the Unbound Book Festival here in Columbia. This is the initial year for that festival, and it looks very promising.

Finally, at the end of the month, is the annual conference of the Missouri Writers’ Guild. This year’s conference is in Kansas City, and includes workshops, master classes, opportunities to meet with editors and agents, and nonstop networking! I’ve been going to the MWG conference for years and always come away with something valuable, whether it’s an insight on craft, a new thought on marketing, or an important contact. Anybody who wants to take his or her writing to the next level needs to check out this conference.

So change your oil and buckle your seatbelt! It’s time to hit the road for literary adventure.

 

The Persistence of the Utopian Impulse

11 Monday Aug 2014

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Missouri, Utopias

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

history, St. Louis, utopia

The utopian idea continues to fascinate even today. Two interesting items:

Fox Entertainment is starting a new “reality” series, Utopia, this fall, based on a Dutch series that was a big hit in that country. The premise of the show is that fifteen people are placed in a remote location with instructions to remake society. It’s not truly a social experiment, of course, but rather a bit of entertainment along utopian themes. I may watch an episode or two just to see how they present the utopian ideal, but it sounds a lot like Survivor without the intentional privation. I notice that the TV networks no longer even employ the fig leaf of “reality,” but prefer “unscripted” instead. But who knows, maybe the personalities will pull me in and I’ll become a viewer.

Closer to home, the Missouri Germans Consortium is scheduling activities in connection with an exhibit at the Missouri History Museum that will commemorate the activities of the German emigration societies in the U.S., and more specifically the Giessen Emigration Society that led a group of around 500 colonists to the Missouri River valley in Missouri in the 1830s. The exhibition will open at the History Museum in late November, and I’m definitely putting it on my calendar!

Favorite Ozarks Books – 3

05 Saturday Oct 2013

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Missouri, Ozarks, Rural, Writing

≈ 5 Comments

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books, Leonard Hall, Missouri, Ozarks, parks, Seneca Mo, St. Louis, writing

Stars Upstream

Stars Upstream

I picked up a copy of Stars Upstream, Leonard Hall’s 1958 book about the Current and Jacks Fork rivers, at a used book store a year or so ago. It was the original 1958 version (cover above) published by the University of Chicago Press. (The book has since been republished by the University of Missouri Press and is still available.)

Leonard Hall and his wife, Ginnie, were makers of nature films, and Leonard was a columnist for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Stars Upstream is widely credited with kicking off the movement to have the two rivers protected by the government, a movement that eventually led to the creation of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways.

It’s enjoyable to read Hall’s account of their float trips on the rivers, which were much more arduous in his day than in ours–advance arrangements to be made, supplies to be gathered beforehand, pickup and dropoffs negotiated. Today if I want to float a river, I don’t even need to call ahead unless it’s a summer weekend (when only a fool would want to float a river anyway)–I drive down, and within half an hour I can be afloat.

The prose of Stars Upstream is dated, and Hall’s attitude toward the “mountain people,” as he calls us, walks the line of condescension and occasionally steps over it, as when he ascribes traditional farming practices to backward thinking. But as a historical account of the floating life of that era, it is well worth the read.

The Halls moved from St. Louis to a farm just outside Caledonia, a little town about 30 miles north of where I grew up, in 1945. He was a native Ozarker, born in Seneca, Missouri, over by the Oklahoma border. His efforts on behalf of preservation of the Ozark landscape cannot be overstated.

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Poetry, memory, mystery

25 Thursday Jul 2013

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Missouri, Ozarks, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Current River, favorite_places, Missouri, nature, Ozarks, poetry, St. Louis, writing

photo by Kbh3rd, uploaded from Wikimedia Commons

photo by Kbh3rd, uploaded from Wikimedia Commons

I had the great pleasure of spending Tuesday on the Current River, and while drifting along, I remembered a poem I had published in Ozark Review many years ago. Poetry has an amazing capacity to stick in the mind; I hadn’t read this poem in years, maybe decades, but I could still remember its last few lines.

But I couldn’t remember who wrote it! Looked it up this morning and remembered that it was James S. Harris, who was from Kirkwood. Then I remembered further that he and I had enjoyed a long lunch one afternoon in the late ’70s, talking about the Ozarks, publishing, and poetry.

Oddly enough, I can’t find any information about what became of him. His poem was a lovely, finely structured piece that used a float trip on the Current River as a metaphor for the fragility of life, so I can’t imagine that it was the last thing he wrote. At the time of publication (1978), he was 32, so that would make him around 67 by now. But I can’t find any listings of books. If anybody has information about the creator of this lovely poem, please let me know! Here’s the poem, which was entitled “The Tree Will Fall”:

It always seemed to me —

the clear green pool, the leaning tree —

as changeless as an illustration in

my copy of Huckleberry Finn,

as the crack in the churchyard wall.

And the stream itself, more

each time like the perfect time before,

till at last the landmarks of a float trip seemed

the features of a faithful dream,

endless, vivid, still.

And yet I have wakened to find

the president’s men have all resigned;

arteries a pinpoint more congealed

and a mind, therefore, finally sealed

that once outshone them all.

There is oil, I hear, beneath —

Canoers, hang another wreath —

and I see the gap the fissure will become,

for as surely as the Current runs,

the sycamore will fall.

 

Writers’ Workshops

31 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Missouri, Writing

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creativity, fiction, Missouri, St. Louis, St. Peters, writing

I had the privilege last weekend of speaking to the annual workshop for Saturday Writers, a group based in St. Peters, Mo. Writers’ conferences are a little weird — after all, writing is such a solitary act. But it does us good as writers to emerge from our dens and desks occasionally to talk with other writers!

I tried to make my presentation as practical and hands-on as I could — since I’m a longtime teacher, I think I know how to make good use of time in a structured group presentation.

Talking to Saturday Writers. Thanks to Jennifer Hashieder, Karen Guccione, and Becky Povich for helping me find a photo!

Just a word…..

09 Saturday Jun 2012

Posted by stevewiegenstein in Missouri

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Civil War, history, Missouri, St. Louis

If you’ve never visited the Missouri History Museum, I highly recommend it! Some great exhibits and a beautiful setting.

http://www.mohistory.org/

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