Old St Louis

Public wiki for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition
Revision as of 18:39, 8 November 2022 by WikiSysop (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Old St. Louis}} {{Infobox prepared food | name = Old St. Louis | image = Old St. Louis.jpg | image_size = 300px | caption = Main entrance of Old St. Louis | alternate_name = | country = | creator = | course = | cost = $50,000({{Inflation|US|50,000|1904|fmt=eq}}) | admission = .25 ({{Inflation|US|.25|1904|fmt=eq}}) | profit = $102,873.30 ({{Inflation|US...")
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Old St. Louis
Main entrance of Old St. Louis
Construction Cost$50,000(equivalent to $1,507,963 in 2021)
Admission.25 (equivalent to $8 in 2021)
Profit$102,873.30 (equivalent to $3,102,583 in 2021)

The Old St. Louis exhibit replicated what the host city of the Louisiana Exposition appeared like in the year 1764, when it was founded as a fur trading post.

Etymology

Before the Fair

Description

Encompassing 20 buildings which included: a government house, a schoolhouse, a church and many stores; these buildings were placed very close to where the originals actually stood.

Highlights of the exhibit included: The `King of the Cowboys," Charles H. Thompkins' wild west show, a high wire act by Monsieur Leon. Leon, whose name was W. H. Green, dazzled the 2,000 capacity arena crowd until August 3rd, when he fell and fractured his skull.

Another dare-devil attraction was was presented by James Ballho and his wife. James performed a 122 high bicycle stunt act, while his Alfretta had a trapeze act. They were paid 13 dollars a week for their act.

The Old St. Louis attraction constantly changed as to keep the exhibits and shows fresh. There were impersonators of Napoleon and other such historical figures that were involved in the Louisiana Purchase; on a few occasions, carnivals were brought in to wow and thrill the patrons. Horse shows, including famed trick-rider Mabel Hackney marveled the crowd.

They had a reenactment of the famous Indian attack of St. Louis in 1770.

After the Fair

See also

Notes

References

External links