The Encyclopædia Britannica - 13th Edition (1926)

General Details

Title: The Encylopædia Britannica Thirteenth Edition
Volumes: 3 (Added on to the 11th edition)
Language: English
Publisher: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company
Year: 1926
Pages:3491


The Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature & General Information: The Three New Supplementary Volumes constituting with the Volumes of the Latest Standard Edition The Thirteenth Edition is a set of three supplementary volumes is essentially a redo of the 12th edition supplementary volumes under a new editor, James Lewis Garvin. The volumes (numbered 1, 2, 3) are meant to follow after volume 29 of the 11th edition set (completely replacing the 12th edition supplement) and they contain information for the years between 1910 and 1926. The 12th edition was very focused on the 1st World War; the 13th is an attempt to better process those events in a more succinct fashion, as well as to give more space to advancements in other realms of human activity. As the preface states, "in one way the supplementary three volumes issued after the World War will always keep irreplaceable value as an aid to the future historian and social investigator. They are exhaustive as a record in minute detail of the War itself and every subject connected with it. They reflect the overpowering extent to which people's minds were still possessed and absorbed by the recent convulsion and its more immediate consequences. We may say that, while the tempest was past, the ocean still heaved and surged on all sides and the air was still obscure. [...] And, above all, the proportion of matter occupied by the War and related references bulked so mightily as to allow no adequate space for very many other subjects essential to a general survey of recent information" (vii-viii).

My copy of the 13th edition supplementary volumes is not the same "handy volume issue" size as my copies of the 11th and 12th, but instead is the standard encyclopedia volume size. Each volume contains a list of contributors at the beginning, and the last volume contains an index and a "classification of articles" section like the 11th edition. There is also, on page 1236, a list of the illustration plates (some in color!) and where they can be found among the three volumes. That said, the 13th edition is, like the 12th edition, not nearly as profusely illustrated as the 11th edition was.

The 13th edition does add a new feature to the encyclopedia - before the index in the 3rd volume is a "Chronological Table of Events" listing by day important events from January 1, 1911 to July 31, 1926. Similar to the 12th edition supplements, the entries in the 13th edition hyperlink to the articles in the 11th edition via a parenthetical note.

Sample Entries

For ease of comparison, I attempt to look up the same two entries in each reference work featured in my guide: "umbrella" and "Saint Louis." Similar to the 12th edition, there are no "umbrella" updates. There is an update for the "Saint Louis" entry on page 448 of the 3rd supplementary volume.

ST. LOUIS (see 24.24). — The population of St. Louis July 1 1925 was 821,543 (census bureau estimate), an increase of 48,545 since 1920. The increase from 1910 to 1920 was 85,868, or 12%. The population figures are for limits fixed in 1876, when St. Louis city and St. Louis county were separated. An amendment (adopted in 1924) to the constitution of Missouri authorises the extension of the city limits into the county if the plan is approved by the voters of both city and county. The city, the counties of St. Louis and St. Charles in Missouri and the counties of St. Clair and Madison in Illinois form the St. Louis industrial district of the U.S. census.

The city charter of 1914 reduced elective officers to mayor, comptroller, president and board of aldermen, collector, treasurer, recorder of deeds, sheriff and coroner with four-year terms. Each of 28 wards has a resident alderman elected by citywide vote. The mayor, the comptroller and the president of the board of aldermen form a board of estimate and apportionment with control of appropriations. The board of public service (appointive) consists of a president and four directors of divisions — public welfare, public safety, public utilities, and streets and sewers, with departments and bureaus under them. The tax rate of 1925 was $2.57 per $100 assessment. Assessed valuation of realty, personalty and utilities increased from $775,500,000 in 1921 to $1,075,099,930 for the taxes of 1925.

City Improvement Plan. — In 1923 St. Louis voted $87,000,000 in bonds for a great scheme of city improvement. The bonds provided $8,500,000 for widening and $5,800,000 for improving 69 m. of streets; $12,000,000 for waterworks on the Missouri river, doubling the present supply of water taken from the Mississippi; $11,000,000 to put underground the River des Pères in the western suburbs; $2,600,000 for a plaza and park fronting Union station; $2,500,000 for new parks and playgrounds, with $1,300,000 for improving the old ones; $8,000,000 for city-wide electric lighting; $8,000,000 for reconstruction of sewers; $400,000 for an aquarium; $4,000,000 for eleemosynary institutions; and $1,250,000 for city markets. The bonds voted provide also $5,000,000 for a memorial plaza occupying 9 city blocks (27 ac.) between Market and Olive streets, west of Twelfth street boulevard. The new buildings on the plaza will be a courthouse, $4,000,000; and auditorium and convention hall, $5,000,000; and a World War memorial, $1,000,000. Existing public buildings in the plaza group include the municipal courts, the city hall and the public library.

Municipal improvements accomplished since 1910 include a permanent open-air theatre in Forest Park with seats for 9,275; a free steel bridge costing $7,500,000; viaducts over railways, $700,000; and new school buildings, $5,000,000. Additions to Washington University were endowment gifts ($1,500,000) and new buildings for the medical, art, biological and other departments, costing $3,000,000. To St. Louis University James Campbell left an estate of $10,000,000 for a hospital and the advancement of medicine and surgery. Three new hospitals — Barnes, the Jewish and the Children's — represent, with endowments, $5,000,000. From the surplus of the Louisiana purchase exposition the Jefferson memorial was built, costing $500,000, for the Missouri Historical Society.

Trade and Industry. — The total resources of banks and trust companies in 1925 were $523,114,561; deposits, $536,701,672; capital stock $42,950,000. Clearings for 1924 were $7,174,034,000. In 1925 St. Louis industries included the largest plants in the United States for the manufacture of shoes, street cars, stamped ware, stoves and ranges, drugs, tobacco, lead and brick. Operating 11 tanneries and 40 factories, the leading shoe company reached a production of 150,000 pairs daily in 1925. Recent development in metals has been marked, giving St. Louis the largest steel-casting plant in the world. An industrial district employing 55,000 has developed in northwest St. Louis since 1915. Rail freight tonnage received increased from 43,000,000 in 1920 to 52,000,000 in 1923; shipments out increased from 29,000,000 to 35,000,000 in the same years. Receipts of grain in 1924 were 113,974,000 bushels. Receipts of hogs in 1923 were 4,800,000.

(W. B. St.)

The Encyclopædia Britannica - 12th Edition (1922)

General Details

Title: The Encylopædia Britannica Twelfth Edition (Handy Volume Issue)
Volumes: 3 (Added on to the 11th edition)
Language: English
Publisher: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company
Year: 1922
Pages:3477


The full title of this three-volume set is The Encyclopædia Britannica: the New Volumes Constituting, in Combination with the Existing Volumes of the Eleventh Edition, the Twelfth Edition of That Work, and Also Supplying a New, Distinctive, and Independent Library of Reference Dealing with Events and Developments of the Period 1910 to 1921 Inclusive. As the title suggests, these three volumes append on to the full 11th-edition set to constitute the 12th-edition of the encyclopedia. They are numbered 30, 31, and 32 so as to fit at the end of the standard 11th edition set. This supplement was necessitated, according to the editorial preface, by the war and its developments (vii). Both the 11th and the 12th featured Hugh Chisholm as chief editor. The preface spends a lot of time explaining why the editor felt it important to release a supplement just a decade after the last edition, but it also features some beautiful language warning the reader not to elevate the information in the new volumes - concerned as they are with essentially a single tumultuous decade - above the information found in the old volumes: "It remains as true as ever that contemporary human life and interests are organically related not only to the immediate developments of one preceding decade but to those of a succession of earlier decades and epochs, back to the abysses of time. The great Drama is of the Ages, and can only be appreciated with all its Acts on record. The eye which looks only at the passing scene is too often colour-blind" (ix).

A common theme running throughout the preface is that things have changed drastically for the world at large: The "war of 1914-9 cut a Grand Canyon gash in the whole intellectual structure of the world" (x). The breakneck pace of change and development being experienced complicates the job of an encyclopedia editor; how can one record for a general readership the latest advances in science and technology when there is no period of rest or pause? As Chisholm writes, "it required the experience obtained during the gestation of these New Volumes to teach the Editor how much simpler a matter it is to create such a "Library of Education" when the world is at peace and is progressing normally, as it was in the years preceding 1911, than when, as recently, it is everywhere in convulsion, nobody being able to tell from week to week what he would be doing next, or where some new complication or even revolution, political, economic, industrial or scientific, might break out, to the upsetting of any attempt at orderly statement of the progress of events and the crystallization of opinion" (x). One positive development from the past decade was a newfound awareness of the world outside of one's own country; the Encyclopædia Britannica embraces this expanded horizon with the 12th edition, as the editor made a concerted effort to gather material from contributors around the world, from the countries that had just been fighting and beyond. This brings new perspectives; for example, "it will be noted that, for the first time in the history of the Britannica, the article on Japan is contributed by a Japanese" (xii).

The three volumes are a mix of new entries (e.g. "Abbe, Cleveland") and amendments/additions to existing entries. The latter are hyperlinked to the 11th-edition with notes (e.g. the entry on "Abbey, Edwin Austin" instructs you to "see 1.11", or visit page 11 in volume 1, to see the events of Mr. Abbey's life before 1910; only the last two years of his life are covered in the 12th edition entry). A very large portion of this edition is devoted to the World War and to the scientific/military developments that arose because of it. An index for the three supplement volumes is found at the end of volume 32 (beginning at page 1145). That is followed by a list of contributors. These three volumes are not quite as illustrated as the 11th edition, but they still feature a number of technical drawings, photographs, and especially maps - there are large fold-out maps for every major battle of the World War.

Sample Entries

For ease of comparison, I attempt to look up the same two entries in each reference work featured in my guide: "umbrella" and "Saint Louis." There were no new developments in umbrella technology in the decade following the 11th edition, so these three volumes lack an entry for "umbrella." There is an update for the "Saint Louis" entry, however, on page 344 of volume 32:

ST. LOUIS (see 24.24). — The pop. of St. Louis in 1920 was 772,897, an increase of 85,868 since 1910, or 12.5%. In the preceding decade the increase was 111,791 or 19.4%. The area remained as fixed in 1876, but the increasing pop. and industries have spread beyond these limits. The city, the counties of St. Louis and St. Charles in Missouri and the counties of St. Clair and Madison in Illinois are grouped as the St. Louis district and treated as a whole in the U.S. industrial census. In 1920 the district contained 1,145,443 inhabitants.

Municipal Government and Activities. — A new charter adopted in 1914 reduced the elective officers to mayor, comptroller, president and board of aldermen, collector, treasurer, recorder of deeds, sheriff and coroner, with terms of four years. The legislative branch is unicameral. Each of the 28 wards has a resident alderman elected by the entire city vote, one-half of the board retiring biennially. Mayor, comptroller and president of the board of aldermen form a board of estimate and apportionment. An appointive board of public service consists of a president and four directors of divisions, public welfare, public safety, public utilities, and streets and sewers. Municipal departments and bureaus are grouped in the four divisions. The president of the board has charge of public work and improvements. In 1919 the city's outstanding bonds amounted to $19,884,000, to which in 1920 were added $5,500,000 for removal of railway grade crossings, for a municipal farm to afford better treatment of the tubercular and insane, for new engine houses and reconstruction of streets and for municipal lighting equipment. The tax rate for 1920-1 was $2.55 per $100 assessed valuation, divided as follows: state purposes, $0.18; public schools $0.78; municipal government, $1.51; public library, $0.04; art museum, $0.02; zoological park, $0.02. The assessed valuation of realty and personalty for 1920-1 was $777,500,000. City planning was undertaken in 1912 with a commission of nine citizens and five ex-officio members. The work done includes a concrete dock, mechanically equipped to convey freight between river and railways. A zoning law determines definitely the residential, industrial, and commercial districts; 29 street widenings, openings and cut-offs were under construction in 1921. Neighbourhood parks, playgrounds and squares were increased to 80, embracing 2,908 acres. A pageant and masque given by 2,000 participants before audiences of 100,000 led to the construction in 1917 of a municipal theatre in Forest Park, with accommodation for 9,270. At a cost of $7,200,000, the city completed in 11917 a municipal bridge of massive steel construction, double track and double deck, across the Mississippi. About five years earlier the McKinley bridge was erected by the Illinois Traction Co., primarily to admit interurban electric trains. Kingshighway viaduct, 855 ft. long, completed in 1912 at a cost of $500,000, crosses the railway tracks and unites western sections of the city. A municipal court building, a city jail and a children's detention house, all of stone, were erected, the first in 1912, the others in succeeding years, at a cost of $1,855,000.

Charities and Education. — At a cost of $5,000,000 a new medical school, hospital and children's hospital, occupying several city blocks fronting on Forest Park, have been completed since 1911. The hospital, opened in 1914, represents an investment of $2,000,000, the sum left 50 years ago by Robert A. Barnes, a banker whose name the institution bears. The medical school, a department of Washington University, includes laboratory, anatomical, clinical and other buildings. In 1914 James Campbell left an estate, values at $10,000,000, in trust to St. Louis University (subject to the life income of certain surviving relatives) for the erection and support of a hospital and for the advancement of medicine and surgery. From the surplus of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition was constructed in 1914 the Jefferson Memorial costing $485,000 and devoted to the collections of the Missouri Historical Society. On new public school buildings and expansions of old, St. Louis expended during 1910-20, $3,177,000.

Finance. — In 1920 the assets of the banks and trust companies of St. Louis were $637,615,811.45, and bank clearings were $8,294,027,135; in 1910 the latter were $3,727,949,379. The First National Bank, with total resources of $155,953,137, was formed in 1919 by a consolidation of three existing banks.

Commerce and Industry. — According to the records of the Merchants' Exchange and the Chamber of Commerce, 35 lines of industry in the St. Louis district did a business in 1920 of $1,582,957,145. Some of the largest items of wholesale trade in 1920 were dry goods, $240,000,000; carpets, rugs and linoleums, also $240,000,000; boots and shoes, $175,000,000; groceries, $175,000,000; railway supplies, $210,000,000; hardware, $115,000,000; foundry products, $125,000,000. St. Louis receives 70,000 H.P. by a 110,000-volt transmission line from the Keokuk dam in the Mississippi at Keokuk, Ia. Motor licenses issued in 1914-5 numbered 9,867, and 45,949 in 1919-20. The position of St. Louis as the largest horse and mule market in the world was maintained, the volume of business in 1919 being $50,000,000. The city continued to be the largest primary fur market of the world, with sales of $27,200,000 in 1920. Sales of meat products in 1919 were $128,000,000; hog receipts, 3,650,534; head cattle receipts, 1,500,000. The foreign trade of St. Louis was $100,000,000 in 1920, an increase of $25,000,000 over 1919. The total tonnage shipped out of St. Louis in 1920, domestic and export, was 29,036,405 (by rail~ and 166,140 (by water); tonnage received in the same year was 43,104,519 (by rail) and 177,925 (by water).

The more important new buildings of the period 1910-20 with the amounts they cost were: the Statler hotel, $3,000,000; the Warwick hotel, $400,000; the cathedral of St. Louis, $2,000,000; the Missouri athletic club, $500,000; the Railway Exchange, $3,000,000, 18 storeys, covering an entire city block; the University club, $600,000; the Young Women's Christian Association, $500,000; the Boatmen's bank, $750,000; the Arcade, $1,250,000; the Post-Dispatch building, $500,000; the Bevo Manufacturing Company, $1,000,000. The cost of new buildings in 1919 was $20,538,450.

The St. Louis Republic, a morning newspaper founded in 1808, was purchased in 1919 by the St. Louis Globe-Democrat (a Republican paper) and discontinued. This left two morning newspapers, the Globe-Democrat, and the Westliche Post (German). There was a marked increase in the circulation of the evening papers.

When the Armistice was signed Nov. 11 1918 one in 13 of the city's pop. — 56,944 — was in the army, navy or marine corps. The total casualties were 2,511, of which 1,384 were killed in battle. Of the three Liberty Loans, St. Louis took the equivalent of 25% of the assessed value of the city's realty and personalty. On the third, fourth and fifth calls for loans the St. Louis Federal Reserve district was the first to subscribe its quota. On the third loan the city subscribed $65 for every man, woman and child, nearly three times the quota.

(W. B. St.)

The World Book (1919)

Details

Title: The World Book: Organized Knowledge in Story and Picture
Volumes: 10
Language: English
Publisher: Hanson-Roach-Fowler Company
Year: 1919
Pages: 6528


This set isn't quite the first-edition of the World Book encyclopedia - that appeared two years earlier in 1917 in eight volumes. My set is the 1919 edition in ten volumes - World Book has revised itself, with a few exceptions, annually. That continues today: World Book is one of the last encyclopedias in the world that is still producing a print edition. According to the preface, World Book's scope includes "all that is most interesting, illuminating and useful,"including recent innovations in science, "every subject of instruction in the elementary and high schools,"as well as articles on education aimed at teachers and parents (iii). It was very important to the editors that a wide-range of readers, from small children to educated adults, could use the encyclopedia: "As a rule encyclopedias are apt to be quite formal and technical. A faithful effort has been made in The World Book to avoid this common defect. Every-day, simple language is used, and technical terms are employed very sparingly" (iii). One of the main features of the World Book compared to other concurrent encyclopedias is the amount of pictures; this set includes over 5000 specially commissioned illustrations, diagrams, photographs, and maps.

My copy of this encyclopedia has seen better days - mouse-chewed corners, stains on the covers - but it is beautiful. Each volume has decorated endpapers and marbled page edges. The black-and-white illustrations are detailed and very clear. There are a limited number of color plates scattered throughout. The spine of each volume gives both the range of letters covered as well as the page numbers (the entire set uses sequential page numbering, so volume 8, for instance, contains pages 4609 to 5248). The last hundred pages of the final volume contain an alphabetical index, for assistance in finding information on topics that do not get their own entry or which may be listed under a different name.

Sample Entries

For ease of comparison, I look up the same two topics in each reference work I list: "umbrella" and "Saint Louis." The rather short entry on "umbrella" can be found in volume 10, on page 5937:

UMBRELLA. Though to-day this term is used almost exclusively to mean a protector against the rain, while a sunshade is called a parasol, the umbrella was originally a sunshade, and the name is from a Latin word meaning little shadow. These protectors had their origin in Oriental countries, where the sun was hot and bright; the sculptures of ancient Egypt and Assyria show slaves bearing umbrellas over the heads of their kings. Even to-day in those same countries the umbrella is to some extent regarded as a symbol of rank.

At the time of this encyclopedia's publication, Saint Louis was a very important city, so it receives a lot more text than it would today. The entry on Saint Louis ranges from page 5158 to 5162 in volume 8 of the encyclopedia, and is followed by a set of review questions intended to aid students in report writing and information retention.

SAINT LOUIS, Mo., the largest city in the vast territory included in the Louisiana Purchase (which see), and the fourth city in the United States in population and in manufacturing. In 1910 it had a population of 687,029; according to a Federal estimate this had increased to 757,309 in 1916. Germans are most numerous in the foreign element.

General Description. Saint Louis is situated on the west bank of the Mississippi River, about twenty miles below the point where it receives the waters of the Missouri. Chicago is about 280 miles northeast, and Kansas City is about the same distance northwest. New Orleans is 709 miles south, and Saint Paul is 599 miles north. Originally the city was built on the high slope rising from the river, but this congested section is now almost wholly commercial, being occupied by wholesale, jobbing and manufacturing houses; the dwellings still remaining have been converted into tenements. An old brick house in this locality of narrow streets and time-worn buildings bears a bronze tablet which tells the passer-by that Eugene Field, the children's poet, was born there in 1850, and near by is the house in which Ulysses S. Grant, eighteenth President of the United States, was married to Julia Dent in 1848.

On Walnut Street, near the river, stands the oldest church in the city, familiarly called the Old Cathedral; it is the most notable relic of the French period of the history of Saint Louis. On the crest of this slope stands one of the city's most interesting landmarks, the old courthouse, built in 1839, which was a slave market before the War of Secession. It is built in the form of a Greek cross and contains four large paintings by Wimar and figures representing Law, Commerce, Justice and Liberty.

The newer and greater business district adjoins this old one on the west, and farther on lie fine residential districts, which extend into suburbs of rare beauty. The tendency of the city is to grow westward, and the greater number of the fine residential sections are on the farther West Side; there are, however, some magnificent homes on the North and South sides. More than sixty-one square miles are included in the city's area.

Parks, Homes and Boulevards. Forest Park, the largest of the city's recreation grounds, is an immense tract (1,400 acres) of great natural beauty on which about $3,000,000 has been expended in drives, lakes and landscape gardening. Here in 1904 the Louisiana Purchase Exposition was held. The park contains the Art Museum, the Jefferson Memorial Building, and a "zoo;" its golf links are second to non in the United States. Tower Grove Park, on the South Side, has beautiful drives, and statues of Columbus, Humboldt and Shakespeare. Near the statue of Shakespeare are two trees which were planted by the English actresses, Adelaide Neilson and Olga Nethersole, as tributes to their illustrious countryman. O'Fallon Park, on the North Side, has one of the largest artificial swimming pools in the United States. These three parks, with Carondelet Park, on the extreme South Side, are on a chain of fine boulevards.

The Missouri Botanical Garden, better known as Shaw's Garden, ranks first in the United States and next to the Kew Gardens, in London, as an educational botanical garden. Its library contains more than 18,500 books, 22,000 pamphlets and a considerable number of manuscript volumes. The Arboretum contains specimens of trees from various parts of the world, and an extensive collection of fruit trees and plants is housed in the Fruiticetum. This garden and Tower Grove Park were the gifts of Henry Shaw, a Saint Louis citizen, who was deeply interested in plants; his burial place in the garden is marked by an imposing sarcophagus. Lafayette, Lyon and Compton Hill Reservoir parks are among the smaller recreation spots and playgrounds. In some one of the parks a concert may be heard any night during the warm season, as Saint Louis is a music-loving community. Bellefontaine and Calvary are the largest and most beautiful of the city's cemeteries; the latter is the burial place of General William Tecumseh Sherman.

No city in the entire Union surpasses Saint Louis in the beauty of its exclusive residential districts, called "places;" the magnificent homes and spacious grounds of these sections are a tribute to the finest skill of the architect and the landscape gardener. Westmoreland, Portland, Kingsbury and Vandeventer are among the most noted of the "places," but Lindell Terrace and Longfellow, Hawthorne, Lindell and Forsyth boulevards rival them in beauty. The huge apartment buildings common to most large cities are notably scarce in Saint Louis, detached houses and duplex buildings being the rule.

Reference to the residential parts of Saint Louis can scarcely be made without including the handsome estates and beautiful suburbs adjoining the city on the west, which contain the homes of some of the financiers of the city; besides these, there are attractive suburbs northwest and southwest where large numbers of city workers live. East Saint Louis (Ill.), the "little sister" city, is on the opposite bank of the river. Twelve miles south of Saint Louis is Jefferson Barracks, a United States military post. At the Chain of Rocks, north of the city and on the river, the largest sand filtration plant in the United States was opened in 1915.

Buildings. Among prominent public buildings are the city hall, an imposing $2,000,000 structure in the center of Washington Park; the new municipal building, the Federal building, the main post office, opposite Union Station (the downtown branch being in the Federal building), and the Coliseum, with a seating capacity of 15,000. The new Saint Louis Cathedral, on Lindell Boulevard, is by far the most imposing religious structure; several years will be required to finish the interior marbles and mosaics, and when completed the building will have cost $3,000,000. Saint John's Methodist Episcopal, Pilgrim Congregational, First Christian Science, Second Baptist and Second Presbyterian churches and the Jewish Temple are among the modern handsome churches of the city. Christ Church (Episcopal Cathedral) is an artistic old structure containing some of the finest stone carvings in the United States. Saints Peter and Paul Church is the oldest German Roman Catholic church in the city; it was built in 1848.

The Railway Exchange Building, which covers an entire square, is one of the largest office buildings in the world. Union Trust, Frisco, Century, Missouri-Lincoln Trust, Wright and Fullerton buildings, and those of the Bank of Commerce, Third National and Boatmen's banks are among the conspicuous business structures. The hotels of Saint Louis are sufficient in number and equipment to permit the city to act as host to the largest conventions; the best known are the Stadtler, Jefferson, Planters, Warwick, Maryland, Marquette, Terminal, American and Washington. Saint Louis, University, Racquet, Liederkranz, Columbian, Mercantile and Missouri Athletic are the principal clubs of the city, the last two being in the downtown section. The Women's Club and the Wednesday Club (women's) own their respective handsome quarters. Log Cabin, Saint Louis, Glen Echo, Florissant, Belle Rive and Sunset Inn are the prominent country clubs.

Education. The public school system of Saint Louis is not excelled by any in the Union, and it is noted for its modern, artistic buildings. There are five high schools for white children and a high school and a normal school for colored pupils. The first permanent kindergarten in connection with the public schools, and the first public kindergarten training school for teachers, were established here in 1873 by W. T. Harris, superintendent of public schools, who later became United States Commissioner of Education. Foremost among the institutions for advanced education is Washington University (founded in 1853 as Eliot Seminary), which includes Smith's Academy and Mary Institute (for girls), and has schools of fine arts, law, social economy and manual training. Saint Louis University was founded in 1829 by the Jesuits, and is the foremost school of this Order in the United States; the Christian Brothers' College, David Ranken School of Mechanic Trades, Kenrick Seminary (Roman Catholic~ and Concordia Theological Seminary (Lutheran) are all schools for the higher education of men. Forest Park University, Visitation Academy, Sacred Heart Convent, Loretto Academy and Ursuline Convent are devoted to the education of young women exclusively. The city also has the Missouri School for the Blind, the Saint Louis College of Physicians and Surgeons and a number of law and medical schools. Besides the handsome new public library, which contains more than 415,000 volumes and toward which Andrew Carnegie contributed $1,000,000, there are the Mercantile Library and the libraries of the Missouri Historical Society (housed in the Jefferson Memorial Building), of the Academy of Science and the Medical Society.

Benevolent Institutions. Public charity is provided by the city dispensary, an insane asylum, a poorhouse and a municipal lodging house, and by the industrial school, a reform school for boys and girls. A juvenile court was established in 1903. Barnes Hospital, opened in 1915, is one of the largest and best-equipped institutions of its kind in the United States; it is modeled after the noted Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. Saint John's, Saint Luke's, Saint Anthony's, Jewish and Saint Ann's Maternity hospitals are the best known of a number of modern, excellently-equipped institutions. Saint Vincent's Asylum, in the vicinity, has a wide reputation for the skilled treatment of the insane.

Commerce. Through its central location and exceptional shipping facilities, Saint Louis has become a foremost commercial center in the greatest agricultural valley in the world. Before the Eads Bridge was built in 1869-1874 (see subhead under Eads, James Buchanan), the Mississippi River was the most important factor in the commercial life of the city, and though the growth of railroad construction has caused a decline in water commerce, there is still a considerable trade with cities on the Mississippi River and its tributaries.

Communication with all parts of the country and with Canada and Mexico is afforded by the following railway lines with their connections: the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern; Chicago, Burlington & Quincy; Chicago & Alton; Chicago & Eastern Illinois; Chicago, Peoria & Saint Louis; Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific; Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & Saint Louis; Columbia & Waterloo; Frisco Lines; Illinois Central; Louisville & Nashville; Louisville, Henderson & Saint Louis; Missouri, Kansas & Texas; Missouri Pacific; Mobile & Ohio; Pennsylvania Lines; Saint Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern; Toledo, Saint Louis & Western; and Wabash. All railroad trains "back in" to the colossal Union Station, one of the largest unified passenger and freight terminals in the world, which, with its thirty-two tracks, covers eleven acres; trains from the East enter the city over the Eads' and Merchants' bridges. Electric lines communicate with adjacent cities and towns, and the McKinley interurban electric railway, which operates between cities and towns in Illinois, enters Saint Louis over the McKinley Bridge. The Municipal Bridge is in course of erection.

Industry and Manufacture. Saint Louis began its existence as a fur-trading post, and though it has attained a foremost rank in other branches of industry, it has always nurtured the first shoot of its commercial tree, and now is one of the greatest primary fur markets in the world and one of the largest fur-sale markets in the Union. The fur sale held here in January, 1917, was the largest in the history of the United States. The city has one of the greatest horse and mule markets in the world, and an equally important tobacco market. West of New York there is no greater distributing point for dry goods and shoes, and the city holds high rank as a wool and interior cotton market.

Although it is preëminently a distributing and commercial point, it ranks fourth in the United States as a manufacturing center. Boots and shoes are now the leading manufactured products, having displaced tobacco products, which ranks second. One of the largest breweries in the world is located here; its storage capacity is enormous, and its liquors are known in every country. So immense is the business of the great woodenware and hardware houses that private railway tracks are necessary for the handling of their shipments. Saint Louis is noted for its extensive manufacture of railway and street cars, clothing, furniture, baking powder, soap and candles, and the output of its flour mills and gristmills, packing houses, foundries and machine shops is also important.

History. The Saint Louis of to-day is the outgrowth of the fur-trading post established on this site by Auguste Chouteau in 1764. In the same year Pierre Laclede Ligueste, his stepfather, formed a settlement here which was first called Laclede's Village, but which soon after was renamed in honor of Louis IX of France. In 1770 France ceded all of its territory west of the Mississippi River to Spain, and Saint Louis became the capital of Upper Louisiana. One memorable day in April, 1803, the village floated three flags, when Louisiana Territory, which had been transferred by Spain to France, was transferred by France to the United States. The place grew steadily in population and importance, and in 1809 the town was incorporated. The first steamboat to visit the city was the Pike, in 1815. In 1819 the western branch of the American Fur Company was established here by John Jacob Astor. About this time large numbers of settlers were coming from Virginia, Tennessee and the Carolinas, and in 1822 a city charter was granted. The year 1849 is memorable for an epidemic of cholera which caused the death of 4,000 people and for a fire which destroyed property valued at several million dollars. During the following ten years the growth of the city was marvelous.

The first railroad (the Missouri Pacific) was constructed from Saint Louis in 1854. The first ironclad gunboats of the United States were built here by Captain James B. Eads in 1861. Under the Scheme and Charter, adopted in 1876, the city became independent of county government and taxation. Saint Louis has been repeatedly visited by fire, flood and epidemic, but the greatest calamity in its later history was a tornado, in 1896; it lasted less than twenty minutes, but in that brief time destroyed several hundred lives and swept away $10,000,000 worth of property. The great fair held in 1904 commemorated the acquisition of Louisiana Territory by the United States. In 1914 a great historical pageant was given in Forest Park, and was attended by more than 100,000 people. The spectacular parade and ball of the Veiled Prophet, which have been held annually in October since 1878, attract large numbers of visitors to the city.

J.D.L.

Consult Spencer's Story of Old Saint Louis; Stephens' Saint Louis, the Fourth City.

Research Questions on Saint Louis
(An Outline suitable for Saint Louis will be found with the article "City.")
When did the city float three flags in one day, and why?
How many cities in the United States are larger than Saint Louis?
How does it compare in size with the one that ranks next above it? With the one that ranks next below it? See list in article City.
What great exposition was held in Saint Louis? Why was there a special fitness in having it in this city?
What well-known poet was born in this city? How is his birthplace marked?
What double disaster did the city endure in 1849?
What might you have seen in the old courthouse at Saint Louis sixty years ago that you would not see to-day?
What was the first settlement on this site named? In whose honor was the city given its present name?
What special advantage would a student of botany have in Saint Louis that he would not find in any other city in the United States?
How does the Union Station in this city rank with the railway stations of the country as to size?
What is Saint Louis's "little sister" city? How is it connected with Saint Louis?
Where may you see two trees planted by English actresses, and in whose honor were they planted?
On what part of the city site was the first settlement made? To what is that region given over to-day?
What President of the United States was married in Saint Louis?
What was his occupation later when he lived in that city?
What is the largest of the recreation grounds of Saint Louis? How does it compare in area with the largest park in Chicago?
What are the exclusive residential districts called?
Why would this city have almost as good a right as has Philadelphia to be called a "city of homes?"
What is the most imposing religious structure in the city?
Where are some of the finest stone carvings in the United States to be seen?
What very important innovations in education were introduced in connection with the Saint Louis schools?
By whom were they introduced? What position did he afterward hold?
What accounted for the early commercial prosperity of the city? Why is this factor no longer of as great importance as it was formerly?
What was the first great industry of Saint Louis?
How does the city rank to-day in this same industry?
What is the popular name for the city, and why was it given?
To how many nations has this region belonged?
When was the first railroad from Saint Louis built? What was it?
What disaster visited the city in 1896? How much damage did it do?