St. Louis (city) - geography. I INTRODUCTION St. Louis (city) or Saint Louis,
Publié le 04/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
Between 1940 and 1990 the black population in metropolitan St.
Louis nearly tripled.
Blacks are most heavily concentrated in three areas in the St.
Louis metropolitanregion: East Saint Louis, the North Side close to downtown, and an east-west belt extending from the waterfront to beyond Forest Park.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, areas to the north and south of the central business district were settled by immigrant working families from Germany, Ireland,and many Eastern European countries, and by blacks from the American South.
The German element was especially strong on the south side.
Adjoining the Germancommunity were Czech neighborhoods.
A large Italian neighborhood developed between Kings Highway and Sulphur Avenue, and between Manchester Road andArsenal Street, in the old fire-clay mining area known as “the Hill.” The Dogtown area in southwest St.
Louis has been the home to a large Irish population.
TheEuropean character of most of these neighborhoods has long since disappeared as succeeding generations have moved to the suburbs.
The water- and coal-rich industrial cities that grew up on the east side of the Mississippi River in Illinois also attracted immigrant groups as industries grew and the needfor unskilled labor expanded.
East Saint Louis, Madison, Granite City, National City, and Cahokia all attracted unskilled immigrant workers.
Granite City and Madisoncame to comprise one of the largest settlements of Bulgarians and Macedonians in the United States.
The growth of metropolitan St.
Louis correspondingly drew down the rural population of the state.
Nearly two-thirds of Missouri’s 114 counties experienced a net loss ofpopulation between 1940 and 1990, with many of those leaving settling around St.
Louis.
IV EDUCATION AND CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS
Major educational institutions in the St.
Louis region include Saint Louis University (1818), Washington University in St.
Louis (1853), Webster University (1915),Maryville University of St.
Louis (1872), and a branch campus (established in 1963) of the University Of Missouri.
Smaller institutions include Fontebonne College (1917),Harris-Stowe State College (1857), Lindenwood College (1827), and Missouri Baptist College (1957).
The metropolitan area includes numerous specialized colleges,seminaries, and extensive community college systems.
There are excellent museums in St.
Louis.
The renowned Saint Louis Art Museum has a major collection representing many of the world’s cultures.
The museum hostsnumerous traveling exhibits and supports an active art education program.
The Contemporary Art Museum exhibits visual arts of the recent past and the present.
ThePulitzer Foundation for the Arts, which opened in 2001, displays art from the collection of newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer and his wife, Emily, in a building designedby Japanese architect Tadao Ando.
Exhibits housed in the museum of the Missouri Historical Society include a collection of mementos associated with Charles A.Lindbergh, who in 1927 became the first person to complete a solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean.
The citizens of St.
Louis contributed funds for the construction ofLindbergh’s airplane, the Spirit of St.
Louis.
The St.
Louis Science Center explores ecology, the natural environment, technology, humanity, and space sciences.
Magic House is a children’s museum with hands-onteaching exhibits.
Laumeier Sculpture Park is home to a wide collection of contemporary sculpture situated amid well-tended lawns and woodlands.
Other museums inthe city include the Museum of Transportation and the Museum of Westward Expansion, which is part of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial Historic Site.
Amongthe unique attractions are the National Video Game and Coin-op Museum and the National Bowling Hall of Fame.
The St.
Louis Symphony Orchestra, founded in 1880, is among the oldest symphony orchestras in the United States.
The city also has an opera company, the St.
LouisMunicipal Opera, which presents operettas and musical comedies during the summer months in a very large open-air theater in Forest Park.
On the campus of WebsterCollege is the Loretto-Hilton Center for the Performing Arts, the home of a professional theater company, exhibition hall, and classroom for drama students.
A popularperformance location is the Fox Theater, a beautifully preserved former movie house.
V RECREATION
St.
Louis maintains an extensive system of municipal parks.
Among the chief units are O’Fallon, Chain of Rocks, Tower Grove, Creve Coeur, Carondelet, and Fairgroundparks.
The city’s showcase is Forest Park, on the western edge of the city, one of the largest municipal parks in the United States.
The site of the Louisiana PurchaseCentennial Exposition in 1904, Forest Park is home to the city’s science center, art museum, and history museum.
The St.
Louis Zoo, noted for its primate rain foresthabitat, is located in Forest Park, along with the Jewel Box, a picturesque area of the park where flower exhibits are held.
Also in the park, in front of the art museum, isan equestrian statue of Louis IX of France, also known as Saint Louis.
The statue is regarded by St.
Louis citizens as a symbol of their city.
The Missouri BotanicalGarden, one of the largest botanical gardens in the world, is in the southwestern part of St.
Louis.
Along with outdoor gardens, it features the domed Climatron thathouses a collection of tropical plants and simulates a tropical rain forest.
St.
Louis is the home of three major-league sports teams: the St.
Louis Cardinals (baseball), the St.
Louis Rams (football), and the St.
Louis Blues (ice hockey).
TheCardinals play in Busch Stadium, and the Blues play in the Savvis Center.
The St.
Louis Rams play in the Edward Jones Dome.
St.
Louis has no professional basketballteam, but St.
Louis University’s varsity team, the Billikens, draws large crowds.
Among the annual events in St.
Louis is Fair St.
Louis, formerly the Veiled Prophet Fair, said to be one of the nation’s largest Fourth of July celebrations.
VI ECONOMY
The economy of St.
Louis is diversified in comparison to most large American cities.
While employment in manufacturing, long the dominant economic sector, hasdeclined steadily in recent years, it remains a major economic force, and St.
Louis is known for its aircraft manufacturing, automobile assembly, breweries, and chemicalplants.
Although employment in manufacturing has declined, the service sector has expanded enormously.
In the early 2000s services provided employment for nearlytwo-thirds of the labor force, up from 20 percent in 1978.
Leaders in the sector include educational, health, government, and business services.
Service-industryworkers were also employed by the leisure and hospitality industry, including hotels, restaurants, and bars.
Other leading employment sectors include wholesale trade,construction, transportation services, general retailing, information technology, banking and finance, and communications and public utilities.
The retooling of auto assembly plants in the metropolitan area in the early 1990s helped Missouri maintain its position as a leader in automobile assembly.
The GeneralMotors Corporation and DaimlerChrysler AG both have assembly plants in the area.
The McDonnell Douglas Corporation, a major aerospace company, had itsheadquarters in St.
Louis until its merger with The Boeing Corporation in 1997.
Boeing plants in the area produce combat aircraft and missiles for the armed forces andaerospace components for the federal government’s space program.
Monsanto was once one of the nation’s largest chemical firms, with headquarters, researchlaboratories, and plants in the St.
Louis area.
Today, only the agricultural products division of the company remains.
Both Emerson (electrical and electronic equipmentmanufacturing) and Graybar Electric (electrical and telecommunications equipment distribution) are headquartered in St.
Louis.
The Ralston Purina Company has millingand food processing plants in the area as well as its international headquarters.
Anheuser Busch, often referred to simply as “The Brewery,” is a major employer on theSouth Side.
Printing and publishing are also important manufacturing activities.
St.
Louis no longer produces many shoes, but it remains the headquarters of the BrownShoe Company and several other footwear companies.
The city is also the site of a Federal Reserve Bank.
St.
Louis is one of the nation’s most important rail centers and inland ports.
Freight railroads from across the country converge in the city.
Amtrak passenger service.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- St. Louis (city) - geography. I INTRODUCTION Skyline of St. Louis, Missouri St. Louis,
- St. Lawrence (river) - Geography. I INTRODUCTION St. Lawrence (river) (French Saint-Laurent), river
- Saint John (city, New Brunswick) - Geography.
- St. John's (city, Newfoundland and Labrador) - Geography. I INTRODUCTION St. John's (city,
- St. John's (city, Newfoundland and Labrador) - geography. I INTRODUCTION Harbor of St.