Grant's Cabin: Difference between revisions

Public wiki for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition
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{{short description|Grant's Log Cabin}}
{{short description|Grant's Log Cabin}}
{{Infobox prepared food
{{Infobox FairBuilding
| name            = Grant's Log Cabin
| name            = Grant's Log Cabin
| image            = Grant's Log Cabin.jpg
| image            = Grant's Log Cabin.jpg
| image_size      = 300px
| image_alt        =
| image_size      = 400px
| caption          = Grant's Log Cabin
| caption          = Grant's Log Cabin
| alternate_name  =  
| alternate_name  =  
| country          =
| location        = [[The Trail]]
| creator          =  
| no_buildings    = 3
| course          =  
| construction_cost=  
| cost            = ({{Inflation|US|800000|1904|fmt=eq}})
| furnishing_cost  =  
| admission        =  
| profit          =  
| profit          =  
| owner            =  
| owner            =  
| main_ingredient  =  
| architect        = Ulysses S. Grant
| variations       =  
| dimensions       =  
| calories        =  
| adult_entry      =
| child_entry      =
| opening_day      =
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| floorplan_image  = 
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}}
}}
Located east of the [[Palace of Fine Arts]], on [[The Trail]], Grant's Cabin exhibition was the real `Hardscrabble,' log cabin home that Grant live in from St. Louis.
Located east of the [[Palace of Fine Arts]], on [[The Trail]], Grant's Cabin exhibition was the real `Hardscrabble,' log cabin home that Grant live in from St. Louis.
==Etymology==


==Before the Fair==
==Before the Fair==
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[[Category:The Trail]]
[[Category:Art Hill]]

Latest revision as of 02:20, 4 March 2024

Grant's Log Cabin
LocationThe Trail
No. of Buildings3
Architecture
ArchitectUlysses S. Grant

Located east of the Palace of Fine Arts, on The Trail, Grant's Cabin exhibition was the real `Hardscrabble,' log cabin home that Grant live in from St. Louis.

Before the Fair[edit | edit source]

Assigned to Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis in 1853 (ten years after graduating West Point), Ulysses Simpson Grant, returned to civilian life in St. Louis and built a log cabin on a few acres, naming it `Hardscrabble.’ The name meant yielding a bare or meager living with great labor or difficulty. Grant only lived in the cabin for three months.

After gaining victory over the South in the Civil War, he served two terms as President of the United States ((1869-1877). His biggest accomplishment was signing the bill creating Yellowstone National Park. Failing for a third term, he retired in New York. Due to poor investments, Grant was broke when he left the White House. Inking a deal to publish his memoirs, and five days after finishing his manuscript he died (it earned the family $450,000 (equivalent to $13,571,667 in 2021)). In his final months, Grant was on cocaine during the days and morphine at nights. He and his wife is buried in Central Park, New York City, his tomb, at 150 feet tall, is the largest mausoleum in North America.

Description[edit | edit source]

The structure was dismantled log by log and relocated at the 1904 Fair. Inside, visitors could see original furniture, and attend lectures on the life of the man (on occasion spoken by Grant's son, who was also a General). The attraction was sponsored by Blanke Coffee Company, which sold coffee inside the cabin.

After the Fair[edit | edit source]

Adolphus Busch (of Budweiser fame), purchased the cabin after the Fair’s closing and moved it to St. Louis county where it can be viewed today.

See also[edit | edit source]

Notes[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]