How St. Louis became known as 'Mound City' despite settlers razing those monuments episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 10, 2025 · 54 MIN

How St. Louis became known as 'Mound City' despite settlers razing those monuments

from St. Louis on the Air

Cahokia Mounds in Collinsville hosts about 350,000 visitors each year. Much less well-known are the sites where 27 monuments once stood in St. Louis. The mounds, carefully constructed and engineered by Indigenous people between 800-1350 CE, were destroyed by white settlers to make way for urban development during the 19th century. In this encore episode, “Mound City” author and historian Patricia Cleary details the history of the mounds, the strange paradox of local settlers claiming the moniker of “Mound City” while destroying them, and the mounds’ contribution to the cultural identity of St. Louisans and Americans across the country.

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How St. Louis became known as 'Mound City' despite settlers razing those monuments

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This episode was published on January 10, 2025.

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Cahokia Mounds in Collinsville hosts about 350,000 visitors each year. Much less well-known are the sites where 27 monuments once stood in St. Louis. The mounds, carefully constructed and engineered by Indigenous people between 800-1350 CE, were...

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