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Springfield sits at the crossroads of history!
Louisiana
Purchase -The territory known as Missouri
was included in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803.
Soon after, the Delaware received treaty land
where Springfield’s Sequiota Park and the
antique stores of its Galloway Village stand
today. To the west, 500 Kickapoo Native
Americans built their wickiups on the prairie
that still bears their name. Missouri became a
state in 1821.
Founding -
In 1833, the legislature designated most of the
southern portion of Missouri a single county. It
was named for Revolutionary War General
Nathanael Greene, largely through John Polk
Campbell’s campaign to honor a man he admired. A
Tennessee homesteader, Campbell was the founder
of Springfield, announcing his claim in1829.
Springfield was incorporated in 1838.
Trail of Tears
- In 1838, the Cherokee were forcibly removed by
the U.S. government from their homelands in
Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina and Georgia
then moved to the “Indian Territory.” The move
became known as the Trail of Tears due to the
thousands of Cherokee deaths on the journey and
those who perished as a result of the
relocation. The Trail of Tears traveled through
the Springfield area via what is known today as
the Old Wire Road. The Trail of Tears National
Historic Trail auto tour route is along
Interstate 44 westward to U.S. 160 (West By-pass
in Springfield) and westward along U.S. 60.
Old Wire Road
- The Old Wire Road, then known as the Military
Road, served until the mid-1840s as a connection
between Springfield and the garrison at Fort
Smith, Arkansas. By 1858, the Butterfield
Overland Stage began utilizing the road offering
passage to California. Two years later, the
region’s first telegraph line was strung along
the road at which time it was dubbed the
Telegraph or Wire Road. The road proved vital
during the Civil War, and its most historic
connection is to the Battle of Pea Ridge. While
portions of the road exist today, the most
easily accessible is within Wilson’s Creek
National Battlefield.
Battle
of Wilson’s Creek - - With civil war
imminent, Springfield was divided in its
sentiments. On August 10, 1861, army units
clashed near Wilson's Creek, the site of the
first major battle west of the Mississippi
River, involving about 5,400 Union troops and
12,000 Confederates. General Nathaniel Lyon was
killed, the first Union general to die in
combat. The Confederates were victorious. Union
troops fell back to Lebanon, then Rolla, and
regrouped. When they returned to Springfield,
the Confederates had withdrawn. The battle led
to increased military activity in Missouri and
set the stage for the Battle of Pea Ridge in
1862. The National Park Service, recognizing the
significance of the battle, designated Wilson's
Creek National Battlefield in 1960. The
1,750-acre battlefield remains greatly unchanged
and stands as one of the most historically
pristine battle sites in the country.
Battle of
Springfield - For two years following the Battle of Wilson’s
Creek, possession of the city seesawed. Then in
January 1863, Confederate forces under General
John S. Marmaduke advanced toward the town
square and battle ensued. As evening approached,
the Confederates withdrew. The next morning, the
Confederates left town and General Marmaduke
sent a message to Union forces asking for proper
burials for Confederate casualties. The city
would stay under Union control until the end of
the war.
Springfield
National Cemetery - Two years after the war
ended, the Springfield National Cemetery was
created, having the dead of both the North and
the South interred, though separated by a low
stone wall.
“Wild Bill”
Hickok - In the wake of the Civil War,
Springfield helped give birth to the Wild West
era. In July 1865, the town square was the site
of the nation’s first-recorded shootout. The
incident between “Wild Bill” Hickok and Dave
Tutt was also significant due to the incredible
marksmanship exhibited by “Wild Bill” that made
him known worldwide.
Following a poker
game in Kelly Kerr Saloon on Park Central
Square, Tutt claimed Hickok owed him money and
took his pocket watch as collateral. Tutt
claimed he would wear it in public to show that
Hickok didn’t pay his debts.
The next day from
75 yards away, Tutt fired a shot at Hickok,
barely missing his head. Hickok fired back and
killed Tutt with a bullet through the heart. The
event made nationwide news.
Arrival of the
Railroad - On April 21, 1870, the St.
Louis-San Francisco line rolled through
Springfield, bringing commercial and industrial
diversification to the city’s economy. Today
visitors can enjoy the view from the Jefferson
Avenue Footbridge, peering below to the
locomotive path which is still in use
24-hours-a-day.
Birthplace of
Route 66 - Officially recognized as the
birthplace of Route 66, it was in Springfield on
April 30, 1926, that officials first proposed
the name of the new Chicago-to-Los Angeles
highway. In 1938, Route 66 became the first
completely paved transcontinental highway in
America—the “Mother Road”—stretching from the
Great Lakes to the Pacific Coast.
Traces of the
Mother Road are still visible in downtown
Springfield and along the city’s northern
boundary. Travelers still see traces of history
along the famous thoroughfare. In some areas,
early gas stations and cafés are still in
operation, sitting alongside antique stores and
flea markets.
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