Historian Patricia Cleary Digs Into The Long-Lost Mounds Of St. Louis
A multitude of truncated earthworks more commonly known as mounds once dotted the St. Louis landscape. For the ancient Mississippian people who constructed them many centuries ago, these structures were full of meaning and purpose.
The mounds also drew the interest of European newcomers to the region long after the mounds were built. But by the late 19th century, most of these sacred Native American places had been destroyed the Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site in Collinsville, Illinois, being a significant exception.
On Mondays St. Louis on the Air, host Sarah Fenske talked with Patricia Cleary, a St. Louis native who is currently working on a book about the mounds that she plans to publish leading up to Missouris bicentennial celebration of statehood in 2021. Clearys visit came in advance of her James Neal Primm Lecture at the Missouri History Museum, set for Monday evening.
Cleary discussed what she has described as the life, death and aftermath of St. Louis ancient mounds. Within St. Louis current city limits, only one of the mounds remains intact to this day.
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