Coordinates | 30°19′10″N81°39′36″N |
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Official name | City of St. Louis |
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Settlement type | Independent City |
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Nickname | Rome of the West, Gateway to the West, Mound City |
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Website | http://stlouis-mo.gov |
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Image seal | SaintLouisSeal.png |
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Map caption | Location in the state of Missouri |
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Coordinates region | US-MO |
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Subdivision type | Country |
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Subdivision type1 | State |
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Subdivision type2 | County |
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Subdivision type3 | Metro |
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Subdivision name | United States |
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Subdivision name1 | Missouri |
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Subdivision name2 | Independent city |
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Subdivision name3 | Greater St. Louis |
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Government type | Mayor–council government |
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Leader title | Mayor |
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Leader name | Francis G. Slay (D) |
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Established title | Founded |
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Established date | 1764 |
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Established title2 | Incorporated |
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Established date2 | 1822 |
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Area magnitude | 1 E8 |
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Area total km2 | 171.3 |
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Area total sq mi | 66.2 |
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Area land km2 | 160.4 |
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Area land sq mi | 61.9 |
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Area water km2 | 11.0 |
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Area water sq mi | 4.2 |
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Population total | 319,294 (58th) |
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Population as of | 2010 |
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Population metro | 2,845,298 (16th) |
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Population density km2 | 1,990.6 |
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Population density sq mi | 5,158.2 |
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Population demonym | St. Louisan |
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Timezone | CST |
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Utc offset | −6 |
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Timezone dst | CDT |
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Utc offset dst | −5 |
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Area code | 314 |
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Latns | N |
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Coordinates | 38°37′38″N90°11′52″N |
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Longew | W |
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Elevation ft | 466 |
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Elevation m | 142 |
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Elevation footnotes | |
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Website | http://stlouis-mo.gov/ |
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St. Louis ( or ; French: ''Saint-Louis'' or ''St-Louis'', ) is an independent city on the eastern border of Missouri, United States. According to the 2010 U.S. Census, its population of 319,294 made it the 58th-largest U.S. city, while the Greater St. Louis combined statistical area's population of 2,845,298 made it the 16th-largest urban area in the country and the largest in the state. It also made it the fourth largest metropolitan area in the Midwest.
The city of St. Louis was founded in 1764 by Pierre Laclède and Auguste Chouteau, and after the Louisiana Purchase, it became a major port on the Mississippi River. Its population expanded after the American Civil War, and it became the fourth-largest city in the United States in the late 19th century. It seceded from St. Louis County in 1876, allowing it to become an independent city and limiting its political boundaries. In 1904, it hosted the 1904 World's Fair and the 1904 Olympic Games. The city's population peaked in 1950, then began a long decline.
With its French past and numerous Catholic immigrants in the 19th and 20th centuries, St. Louis is one of the largest centers of Roman Catholicism in the United States. The economy of St. Louis relies on service, manufacturing, and tourism, and the region is home to several major corporations, including Express Scripts, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, Graybar Electric, Scottrade, Edward Jones Investments, Emerson Electric, Energizer, and Monsanto. St. Louis is home to three professional sports teams, including the St. Louis Cardinals, one of the most successful Major League Baseball clubs; the hockey St. Louis Blues and football St. Louis Rams. The city is commonly identified with the Gateway Arch, part of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial in downtown St. Louis.
History
The area that would become St. Louis was a center of Native American
Mississippian culture, which built numerous temple and residential
earthwork mounds in the region, giving the city its nickname, the "Mound City". European exploration of the area began in 1673, when French explorers
Louis Jolliet and
Jacques Marquette traveled through the Mississippi River valley. Five years later,
La Salle claimed the region for France, and the earliest settlements in the area were built in Illinois during the 1690s and early 1700s at
Cahokia,
Kaskaskia, and
Fort de Chartres. Migrants from the eastern French villages founded
Ste. Genevieve, Missouri across the Mississippi River from Kaskaskia, and in early 1764,
Pierre Laclède and his stepson
Auguste Chouteau founded the city of St. Louis.
In 1765, St. Louis was made the capital of French Upper Louisiana, and after 1768, control of the region was given to the Spanish. In 1780, St. Louis was attacked by British forces, mostly Native Americans, during the American Revolutionary War. St. Louis was transferred back to France in 1800, then sold to the United States in 1803 as part of the Louisiana Purchase, and the city became the territorial capital. Shortly after the purchase, the Lewis and Clark Expedition left St. Louis in May 1804, reaching the Pacific Ocean in summer 1805, and returning on September 23, 1806. Both Lewis and Clark lived in St. Louis after the expedition. Many other explorers, settlers, and trappers (such as Ashley's Hundred) would later take a similar route to the West. The city elected its first municipal legislators (called trustees) in 1808.
Steamboats first arrived in St. Louis in 1817, improving connections with New Orleans and eastern markets. Missouri became a state in 1821, at which point the capital moved from St. Louis. However, St. Louis was incorporated as a city in 1822, and continued to see growth due to its port connections. Immigrants from Ireland and Germany arrived in St. Louis in significant numbers starting in the 1840s, and the population of St. Louis grew from less than 20,000 in 1840, to 77,860 in 1850, to more than 160,000 by 1860.
During the American Civil War, St. Louis was the site of significant divisions, although no combat took place in the city after the 1861 Camp Jackson Affair. The war hurt St. Louis economically, due to the blockade of river traffic to the South, although the St. Louis Arsenal constructed ironclads for the Union. St. Louis profited via trade with the West after the war, and in 1874, the city completed the Eads Bridge, the first bridge over the Mississippi River in the area. On August 22, 1876, the city of St. Louis voted to secede from St. Louis County and become an independent city, and industrial production continued to increase during the late 19th century. The city also produced a number of notable people in the fields of literature, including Tennessee Williams and T.S. Eliot, and major corporations such as the Anheuser-Busch brewery and Ralston-Purina company were established. St. Louis also was home to several brass era automobile companies, including the Success Automobile Manufacturing Company; St. Louis also is the site of the Wainwright Building, an early skyscraper built in 1892.
In 1904, the city hosted the 1904 World's Fair and the 1904 Summer Olympics, becoming the first non-European city to host the Olympics. Proceeds from the fair provided the city with the Saint Louis Art Museum and the Missouri History Museum.
Discrimination in housing and employment were common in St. Louis, and starting in the 1910s, many property deeds included racial or religious restrictive covenants. During World War II, the NAACP campaigned to integrate war factories, and restrictive covenants were prohibited in 1948 by the Shelley v. Kraemer U.S. Supreme Court decision, which originated as a lawsuit in St. Louis. However, de jure educational segregation continued into the 1950s, and de facto segregation continued into the 1970s, leading to a court challenge and interdistrict desegregation agreement.
St. Louis expanded in the early 20th century due to the formation of many industrial companies and due to wartime housing shortages, and it reached its peak population of 856,796 at the 1950 census. Suburbanization from the 1950s through the 1990s dramatically reduced the city's population, and although small increases in population were seen in the early 2000s, the city of St. Louis lost population from 2000 to 2010. Several urban renewal projects commenced in the 1950s, and the city achieved notoriety for its housing projects, particularly Pruitt-Igoe. Since the 1980s, revitalization efforts have focused on downtown St. Louis, and gentrification has taken place in the Washington Avenue Historic District. Because of the upturn in urban revitalization, St. Louis received the World Leadership Award for urban renewal in 2006.
Geography
Topography
According to the
United States Census Bureau, St. Louis has a total area of 66.2 square miles (171.3 km²), of which 61.9 square miles (160.4 km²) is land and 4.2 square miles (11.0 km² or 6.39%) is water. The city is built primarily on
bluffs and terraces that rise 100–200 feet above the western banks of the Mississippi River, in the
Midwestern United States just south of the
Missouri-Mississippi confluence. Much of the area is a fertile and gently rolling prairie that features low hills and broad, shallow valleys. Both the Mississippi River and the Missouri River have cut large valleys with wide flood plains.
Limestone and dolomite of the Mississippian epoch underlie the area, and parts of the city are karst in nature. This is particularly true of the city south of downtown, with numerous sinkholes and caves. Most of the caves in the city have been sealed, but many springs are visible along the riverfront. Coal, brick clay, and millerite ore were once mined in the city, and the predominant surface rock, the ''St. Louis Limestone'', is used as dimension stone and rubble for construction.
Near the southern boundary of the City of St. Louis (separating it from St. Louis County) is the River des Peres, virtually the only river or stream within the city limits that is not entirely underground. Most of River des Peres was confined to a channel or put underground in the 1920s and early 1930s. The lower section of the river was the site of some of the worst flooding of the Great Flood of 1993.
The Missouri River forms the northern border of St. Louis County, exclusive of a few areas where the river has changed its course. The Meramec River forms most of its southern border. To the east is the City and the Mississippi River.
Climate
St. Louis lies in the transitional zone between the
humid continental climate type and the
humid subtropical climate type (
Köppen ''Dfa'' and ''Cfa'', respecively), with neither large mountains nor large bodies of water to moderate its temperature. It is subject to both cold Arctic air and hot, humid tropical air from the
Gulf of Mexico. The city has four distinct seasons. Spring is the wettest season and produces severe weather ranging from tornadoes to
winter storms. Summers are hot and humid, and temperatures of or higher occur between 35 and 40 days a year, while days of or higher occur usually no more than five days per year. Fall is mild with lower humidity and can produce intermittent bouts of heavy rainfall with the first
snow flurries usually forming in early or mid November. Winters are often cold and snowy with temperatures frequently below freezing. Winter storm systems, such as
Alberta Clippers and
Panhandle hooks, can bring days of heavy freezing rain, ice pellets, and snowfall.
The average annual temperature for the years 1970–2000, recorded at nearby Lambert-Saint Louis International Airport, is , and average precipitation is . The normal high temperature in July is , and the normal low temperature in January is , although this varies from year to year. Both and temperatures can be seen on an average 2 or 3 days per year. The official record low is on January 5, 1884, although there were unofficial readings of on January 29, 1873 and on January 1, 1864; and the records high is on July 14, 1954.
Winter (December through February) is the driest season, with an average of precipitation. The average seasonal snowfall is . Spring (March through May), is typically the wettest season, with of precipitation. Dry spells lasting one to two weeks are common during the growing seasons.
St. Louis experiences thunderstorms 48 days a year on average. Especially in the spring, these storms can often be severe, with high winds, large hail and tornadoes. St. Louis has been affected on more than one occasion by particularly damaging tornadoes.
Some late autumns feature the warm weather known as Indian summer; some years see roses in bloom as late as early December.
Flora and fauna
Before the founding of the city, the area was prairie and open forest maintained by burning by Native Americans. Trees are mainly
oak,
maple, and
hickory, similar to the forests of the nearby
Ozarks; common understory trees include
Eastern Redbud,
Serviceberry, and
Flowering Dogwood.
Riparian areas are forested with mainly
American sycamore. Most of the residential area of the city is planted with large native shade trees. The largest native forest area is found in Forest Park. In Autumn, the changing color of the trees is notable. Most species here are typical of the Eastern Woodland, although numerous decorative non-native species are found; the most notable invasive species is
Japanese honeysuckle, which is actively removed from some parks.
Large mammals found in the city include urbanized coyotes and usually a White-tailed deer. Eastern Gray Squirrel, Cottontail rabbit, and other rodents are abundant, as well as the nocturnal Virginia Opossum. Large bird species are abundant in parks and include Canada goose, Mallard duck, as well as shorebirds, including the Great Egret and Great Blue Heron. Gulls are common along the Mississippi River; these species typically follow barge traffic. Winter populations of Bald Eagles are found by the Mississippi River around the Chain of Rocks Bridge. The city is on the Mississippi Flyway, used by migrating birds, and has a large variety of small bird species, common to the eastern US. The Eurasian Tree Sparrow, an introduced species, is limited in North America to the counties surrounding St. Louis. Tower Grove Park is a well-known birdwatching area in the city.
Frogs are commonly found in the springtime, especially after extensive wet periods. Common species include the American toad and species of chorus frogs commonly called spring peepers that are found in nearly every pond. Some years have outbreaks of cicadas or ladybugs. Mosquitos and houseflies are common insect nuisances; because of this, windows are nearly universally fitted with screens, and screened-in porches are common in homes of the area. Invasive populations of honeybees have sharply declined in recent years, and numerous native species of pollinator insects have recovered to fill their ecological niche.
Demographics
According to the 2010 United States Census, in the city of St. Louis, there were 319,294 people living in 142,057 households, of which 67,488 households were families. The population density was ..... people per square mile (...../km²). The age distribution of the city showed approximately 24 percent of the population was 19 or younger, 9 percent were 20 to 24, 31 percent were 25 to 44, 25 percent were 45 to 64, and 11 percent were 65 or older. The median age was approximately 34 years. The racial makeup of the city of St. Louis was approximately 49.2 percent African-American, 43.9 percent White (42.2% Non-Hispanic White), 2.9 percent Asian, 0.3 percent Native American/Alaska Native, 2.4 percent two or more races, and 1.3 percent some other race. Approximately 3.5 percent of the city's population was Hispanic or Latino of any race.
19 percent of the city's housing units were vacant, and slightly less than half of these were vacant structures not for sale or rent. In 2000, the median income for a household in the city was $29,156, and the median income for a family was $32,585. Males had a median income of $31,106 versus $26,987 for females. The per capita income for the city was $18,108.
St. Louis experienced slow growth from its founding in the 1760s through the American Civil War, and after the war it grew quickly with industrialization, reaching its peak population in 1950. It experienced a population shift to the suburbs in the 20th century; first because of increased demand for new housing following World War II, and later white flight from older neighborhoods to newer ones.
In 2010, the city of St.Louis was awarded for being one of the most generous large cities in the United States for online monetary donations and has also been recognized for having an extremely high volunteer rate in comparison to other major U.S cities.
Economy
According to the 2007 Economic Census, manufacturing in the city conducted nearly $11 billion in business, followed by the healthcare and social service industry with $3.5 billion, professional or technical services with $3.1 billion, and the retail trade with $2.5 billion. The sector employing the largest number of workers in the city was the healthcare sector with 34,000 workers, followed by administrative and support jobs with 24,000 workers, manufacturing with 21,000 workers, and food service with 20,000 workers.
The rivers of St. Louis play a large role in moving goods, especially bulk commodities such as grain, coal, salt, and certain chemicals and petroleum products. The Port of St. Louis in 2004 was the third-largest inland port by tonnage in the country, and the 21st-largest of any sort.
Major companies and institutions
As of 2011, the St. Louis area is home to nine
Fortune 500 companies, including
Express Scripts,
Emerson Electric,
Monsanto,
Reinsurance Group of America,
Ameren,
Charter Communications,
Peabody Energy,
Graybar Electric, and
Centene. Other notable corporations from the area include
Edward Jones Investments,
Scottrade,
Wells Fargo Advisors (formerly A.G. Edwards),
Energizer Holdings,
Ralcorp,
Hardee's, and
Enterprise Holdings (parent company of several
car rental companies). Significant healthcare and biotechnology institutions with operations in St. Louis include
Pfizer, the
Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, the
Solae Company,
Sigma-Aldrich, and
Multidata Systems International.
Although it was purchased by Belgium-based InBev, Anheuser-Busch continues its presence in the city, as does Mallinckrodt Incorporated in spite of its purchase by Tyco International. The May Department Stores Company (which owned Famous-Barr and Marshall Field's stores) was purchased by Federated Department Stores, but Federated maintained its regional headquarters in the area. General Motors continues to produce railroad cars in the St. Louis area, although Chrysler closed its production facility in the region, which was located in Fenton, Missouri. Despite its purchase by Nestle, Ralston Purina remained headquartered in St. Louis as a wholly owned subsidiary. St. Louis is also home to Boeing Phantom Works (formerly McDonnell-Douglas). In addition, the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis in downtown is one of two federal reserve banks in Missouri.
Culture
Many St. Louis cultural attractions are located in the city of St. Louis, such as the
Gateway Arch, although surrounding communities contribute to the culture of the region. St. Louis County and the city of St. Louis have a combined special tax district to support the
Saint Louis Art Museum, the
Missouri History Museum, and the
St. Louis Zoo, all three of which are located in the city. The culture of Greater St. Louis is also defined by music and the performing arts, especially its association with
ragtime,
rock and roll, and
blues, and its current association with
classical music,
hip hop music, and
rap. Several places of worship in the city are also notable, including the
Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis.
Sports
St. Louis is home to professional
Major League Baseball,
National Football League, and
National Hockey League teams, notable collegiate-level soccer teams, and has hosted several collegiate sports tournaments.
Professional sports
The
St. Louis Cardinals, one of the oldest franchises in
Major League Baseball, have accumulated ten
World Series titles, and two
minor league baseball teams play in the area, the
Gateway Grizzlies and the
River City Rascals. The
St. Louis Rams, an
American football NFL team, play at the
Edward Jones Dome and have won one
Super Bowl championship. The
St. Louis Blues, a franchise of the
National Hockey League, play at the
Scottrade Center, and the region hosts
NHRA drag racing and
NASCAR events at the
Gateway International Raceway in
Madison, Illinois.
Amateur sports
At the collegiate level, St. Louis has hosted the
Final Four of both the women's and men's
college basketball NCAA Division I championship tournaments, and the
Frozen Four collegiate ice hockey tournament. Although the area does not support a
National Basketball Association team, it hosts an
American Basketball Association team called the
St. Louis Pioneers.
Saint Louis University has won 10
NCAA Men's Division I soccer championships, and the city has hosted the
College Cup several times. In addition to collegiate soccer, St. Louisans have played for the
United States men's national soccer team, and 20 St. Louisans have been elected into the
National Soccer Hall of Fame. St. Louis also is the origin of the sport of
corkball, a type of baseball in which there is no base running.
Parks
The city operates more than one hundred parks, with amenities that include sports facilities, playgrounds, concert areas, picnic areas, and lakes.
Forest Park, located on the western edge of city, is the largest park in the city, although it is not the largest park in the region. Another significant park in the city is the
Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, a
National Memorial located on the riverfront in downtown St. Louis. The centerpiece of the park is the 630 feet (192 m) tall
Gateway Arch, designed by noted architect
Eero Saarinen and completed on October 28, 1965. Also part of the park is the
Old Courthouse, where the first two trials of the
Dred Scott case were held in 1847 and 1850.
Other notable parks in the city include the Missouri Botanical Garden, Tower Grove Park, and Citygarden. The Missouri Botanical Garden, a private garden and botanical research facility, includes the Climatron, a greenhouse built as a geodesic dome. Immediately south of the Missouri Botanical Garden is Tower Grove Park, a gift to the City by Henry Shaw. Citygarden is an urban sculpture park located in downtown St. Louis, with art from Fernand Léger, Aristide Maillol, Julian Opie, Tom Otterness, Niki de Saint Phalle, and Mark di Suvero. The park is also divided into three sections, each of which represent a different theme: river bluffs; flood plains; and urban gardens. The park also has a restaurant – The Terrace View. Another downtown sculpture park is the Serra Sculpture Park, with the 1982 Richard Serra sculpture ''Twain''.
Government
The city of St. Louis has a
mayor-council government with legislative authority vested in the
Board of Aldermen of the City of St. Louis and with executive authority in the
Mayor of St. Louis and six other separately elected officials. The Board of Aldermen is made up of 28 members (one elected from each of the city's wards) plus a board president who is elected city-wide. As of 2004, 257,442 registered voters lived in the city.
Local and regional government
Municipal elections in St. Louis city are held in odd numbered years, with the primary elections in March and the general election in April. The mayor is elected in odd numbered years following the United States Presidential Election, as are the aldermen representing odd-numbered wards. The President of the Board of Aldermen and the aldermen from even-numbered wards are elected in the off-years. The
Democratic Party has dominated St. Louis city politics for decades. The city has not had a
Republican mayor since 1949 and the last time a Republican was elected to another city-wide office was in the 1970s. As of 2006, 27 of the city's 28 Aldermen are Democrats.
Although St. Louis City and County separated in 1876, some mechanisms have been put in place for joint funding management and funding of regional assets. The St. Louis Zoo-Museum district collects property taxes from residents of both St. Louis City and County and the funds are used to support cultural institutions including the St. Louis Zoo, St. Louis Art Museum and the Missouri Botanical Gardens. Similarly, the Metropolitan Sewer District provides sanitary and storm sewer service to the city and much of St. Louis County. The Bi-State Development Agency (now known as Metro) runs the region's MetroLink light rail system and bus system.
State and federal government
The city of St. Louis is represented by eleven districts in the
Missouri House of Representatives: the 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 63rd, 65th, 67th and 108th are entirely within the city limits, while the 64th and 66th include part of the city and part of St. Louis County. Two
Missouri State Senate districts, the 4th and 5th, are entirely within the city, while the 1st Senate district includes part of the city and part of St. Louis County.
The City of St. Louis is split roughly in half north to south by Missouri's 1st and 3rd U.S. Congressional districts. The 1st is represented by Lacy Clay and the 3rd by Russ Carnahan. Both are members of the Democratic Party; a Republican has not represented a significant portion of St. Louis in the U.S. House since 1949. Each district also includes a significant portion of St. Louis County. Both the city and county lost population in the 2010 Census which contributed to Missouri losing a Congressional seat effective 2013. Initial redistricting maps indicate that the 3rd district would be absorbed into the 1st district placing Carnahan and Clay in the same district and giving St. Louis only one representative in Congress.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit and the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri are based in the Thomas F. Eagleton United States Courthouse in downtown St. Louis. St. Louis is also home to a Federal Reserve System branch, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) also maintains major facilities in the St. Louis area.
Crime
Since the mid 1990s, St. Louis
index crime rates have declined, although homicide rates in the city of St. Louis have remained higher than the
United States national average. St. Louis also frequently is ranked among the "most dangerous" in the country by
CQ Press, although these rankings are controversial and do not reflect the crime rate of Greater St. Louis.
Education
The
St. Louis Public Schools serves the city of St. Louis with 77 schools, and it is run by a state appointed board. With more than 25,000 students, the district is the largest in Greater St. Louis. The city of St. Louis has several private high schools, both secular and religiously affiliated, including numerous
Catholic and
Lutheran schools.
According to the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education, the city of St. Louis is home to two national research universities: Washington University in St. Louis and Saint Louis University. Washington University Medical Center is located in the city's Central West End neighborhood, while the majority of Washington University's main campus is located in adjacent St. Louis County.
Media
Greater St. Louis commands the 21st largest
media market in the United States, a position it has held with little variation for more than ten years. All of the major U.S. television networks have subsidiaries in St. Louis, including
KTVI 2 (
Fox),
KMOV 4 (
CBS),
KSDK 5 (
NBC),
KETC 9 (
PBS),
KPLR-TV 11 (
CW),
KDNL 30 (
ABC),
WRBU 46 (
MNTV), and
WPXS 51
Retro Television Network. Among the most popular radio stations in the St. Louis area are
KMOX, (AM sports and talk),
KLOU (FM oldies),
WIL-FM (FM country),
WARH (FM adult contemporary), and
KSLZ (FM top 40 mainstream). St. Louis also supports
public radio with
KWMU, an
NPR affiliate, and
community radio with
KDHX.
The ''St. Louis Post-Dispatch'' is the region's major daily newspaper. Other newspapers in the region include the ''Suburban Journals'', serving parts of St. Louis County, while the primary alternative newspaper is the ''Riverfront Times''. Three weeklies serve the African-American community: the ''St. Louis Argus'', the ''St. Louis American'', and the ''St. Louis Sentinel''. ''St. Louis Magazine'', a local monthly magazine, covers topics such as local history, cuisine, and lifestyles, while the weekly ''St. Louis Business Journal'' provides coverage of regional business news. St. Louis is also home to the nation's last remaining metropolitan journalism review, the ''Gateway Journalism Review'', based at Webster University in the suburb of Webster Groves. St. Louis also is served by an online newspaper, the ''St. Louis Beacon'', which operates in partnership and shares facilities with KETC 9 TV.
Infrastructure
Transportation
The city of St. Louis is served by four
interstates and several
U.S. highways and state roadways. Although there are no airports within the city limits, the city owns and operates
Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, located in northwest St. Louis County.
Freight rail and
passenger rail service operate in the city on tracks owned by
BNSF Railway, with passenger service provided by
Amtrak and served at the
Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center in downtown St. Louis.
Rapid transit and
commuter rail service in the city is provided by
MetroLink, while
bus service is provided by
MetroBus, both of which are owned and operated by the
Bi-State Development Agency. St. Louis also maintains a
port authority for river shipping, and
taxicabs are regulated within the city.
Healthcare
St. Louis is a center of medicine and
biotechnology. The
Washington University School of Medicine is affiliated with the
Barnes-Jewish Hospital, the fifth largest in the world. The School of Medicine is also affiliated with
St. Louis Children's Hospital, one of the country's top pediatric hospitals. Both hospitals are owned by
BJC HealthCare. The
School of Medicine ranks in the top five nationally.
Washington University School of Medicine and Barnes-Jewish Hospital operate the
Siteman Cancer Center. The school's Genome Sequencing Center played a major role in the
Human Genome Project.
Saint Louis University Medical School is affiliated with
Tenet's
Saint Louis University Hospital and
SSM Health Care's
Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital. It also has a cancer center, vaccine research center and a bioethics institute. Several different organizations operate hospitals in the area, including
BJC HealthCare,
SSM Health Care, Tenet and St. John's Mercy Healthcare, with operates St. John's Mercy Medical Center.
Architecture and neighborhoods
St. Louis possesses several significant examples of 19th century architecture, such as the early stone construction Emmanuel DeHodiamont House, the Greek Revival style Chatillon-DeMenil House in the Soulard neighborhood, the Victorian era Campbell House, and the Wainwright Building, an early Louis Sullivan skyscraper. The city is divided into 79 government-designated neighborhoods. The neighborhood divisions have no legal standing, although some neighborhood associations administer grants or hold veto power over historic-district development.
Sister cities
St. Louis has fifteen
sister cities.
–
Bologna, Italy
–
Bogor, Indonesia
–
Brčko, Bosnia and Herzegovina
–
Donegal,
Co. Donegal, Ireland
–
Galway,
Co. Galway, Ireland
–
Georgetown, Guyana
–
Lyon, France
–
Nanjing, China
–
Saint-Louis, Senegal
–
Samara, Russia
–
San Luis Potosí, Mexico
–
Stuttgart, Germany
–
Suwa, Japan
–
Szczecin, Poland
–
Wuhan, China
See also
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Louis
Caves of St. Louis
Great Flood of 1993
Heat wave of 2006 derecho series
LaClede Town
List of Mayors of St. Louis
History of the Jews in St. Louis, Missouri
National Register of Historic Places listings in St. Louis (city, A–L), Missouri
National Register of Historic Places listings in St. Louis (city, M-Z), Missouri
St. Louis in the Civil War
St. Louis smog episode (1939)
References
External links
Built St. Louis
St. Louis Convention & Visitors Bureau
St. Louis Regional Chamber and Growth Association
Category:Cities in Missouri
Category:Communities on U.S. Route 66
Category:Greater St. Louis
Category:Host cities of the Summer Olympic Games
Category:Independent cities in the United States
Category:Populated places established in 1764
Category:Populated places in Missouri with African American majority populations
Category:Missouri populated places on the Mississippi River
Category:United States colonial and territorial capitals
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eo:Sankta Luiso
eu:Saint Louis (Missouri)
fa:سنت لوئیس
fr:Saint-Louis (Missouri)
ga:St. Louis
gd:St. Louis
ko:세인트루이스
hr:St. Louis, Missouri
io:Saint Louis, Missouri
id:St. Louis, Missouri
ia:St. Louis, Missouri
is:St. Louis
it:Saint Louis (Missouri)
he:סנט לואיס
kn:ಸೈಂಟ್ ಲೂಯಿಸ್
pam:St. Louis, Missouri
ka:სენტ-ლუისი
sw:St. Louis, Missouri
ht:Saint Louis, Missouri
la:Urbs Sancti Ludovici
lv:Sentluisa
lt:Sent Luisas
lmo:Saint Louis
hu:St. Louis
mk:Сент Луис (Мисури)
mr:सेंट लुईस
ms:St. Louis, Missouri
nl:Saint Louis (Missouri)
ja:セントルイス
no:St. Louis
oc:Saint Louis (Missorí)
pms:Saint Louis
nds:St. Louis
pl:Saint Louis
pt:St. Louis (Missouri)
ro:Saint Louis, Missouri
qu:St. Louis (Missouri)
ru:Сент-Луис
sco:St. Louis, Missouri
simple:St. Louis, Missouri
sk:St. Louis
sr:Сент Луис
sh:St. Louis
fi:Saint Louis
sv:Saint Louis
tl:Saint Louis, Missouri
ta:செயின்ட் லூயிஸ் (மிசூரி)
te:సెయింట్ లూయిస్
th:เซนต์หลุยส์
tr:St. Louis, Missouri
uk:Сент-Луїс (Міссурі)
vi:St. Louis, Missouri
vo:Saint Louis (Missouri)
war:St. Louis, Missouri
bat-smg:Sent Loisos (Mėsūrės)
zh:圣路易斯 (密苏里州)