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The Freedom Suits Memorial is a 14-foot-tall (4.3 m) bronze sculpture [1] in downtown St. Louis, Missouri. [2] Hundreds of people attended the ceremony. [3] It commemorates the freedom suits which were lawsuits filed by slaves against slaveholders to assert claims to freedom.
The U.S. Custom House and Post Office is a court house at 815 Olive Street in downtown St. Louis.. It was designed by architects Alfred B. Mullett, William Appleton Potter, and James G. Hill, [3] and was constructed between 1873 and 1884. [2]
During the 1930s and 1940s, it became the largest retail chain of men's clothing in the United States, best known for selling two-pant suits. In 1975, the company was sold to foreign investors, [2] then broken up and sold in smaller groups to its management. For instance, 13 stores were operated by the Proud Wind, Inc. company. [3]
ST. LOUIS – A longstanding bakery in St. Louis could soon be closing, and apparently it’s all because of an internal dispute between owners. A recently filed a petition in St. Louis Circuit ...
In St. Louis, if the court accepted a freedom suit, it assigned an attorney for the slave petitioner. Among the notable attorneys representing slaves in St. Louis were Edward Bates, future Attorney General under President Abraham Lincoln; and Hamilton Gamble, future Chief Justice of the Missouri Supreme Court. During the early nineteenth ...
The Carnahan Courthouse, originally the U.S. Court House and Custom House, is a former federal courthouse in St. Louis, Missouri. Its namesake is former Missouri governor Mel Carnahan . The architectural partnership of Mauran, Russell & Crowell designed the building which was completed in 1935 at 1114 Market Street at the corner of Market ...