A history of the W. C. Smith home, formerly located at Atlantic and Grant streets, is recounted in this 1959 article.
An early Greene County cemetery located on property owned by the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners is spotlighted in this 1931 newspaper article.
More...
The Steigner Hotel, also known as the Planters' House, burned in 1896. Its burning caused great excitment since Adam Rief was temporarily trapped in the burning building. The hotel had been built in 1867.
More...
For the 1931 Springfield City Directory, the Chamber of Commerce added an early history of Springfield and many statistics.
More...
Was there a cemetery on the Springfield Public Square? This 1933 newspaper article speculates about the possiblity after workmen found a tombstone.
Is there a cave under your house? A 1954 article discusses much of the folklore surrounding Springfield area caves.
St. Louis, Missouri native Rusty Wallace will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on February 8, 2013. Before his national success, Wallace was a regular competitor at the Fairgrounds in Springfield.
More...
In 1954 a boxcar full of military ordnance that had stopped in Springfield caught fire and exploded, sending some unexploded shells into the surrounding neighborhoods. This article describes the clean up and the fate of the dangerous projectiles.
The Battle of Springfield's 150th anniversary programs and exhibits begin Tuesday, January 8, at 6:30 p.m. with the program "Quinine and Courage: Marmaduke's Raid on Springfield" presented by William Piston and John Rutherford. Click "read more" to see a complete list of programs and exhibits.
More...
January 8-13, 2013 the Library Center is presenting several events or exhibits relating to the Battle of Springfield. Here is a brief history of the Battle of Springfield.
More...
A description of some of the holiday light displays in Springfield in 1967, including the newly annexed Parkcrest addition.
More...
Lucius Rountree's landmark home is featured in a 1954 article. In addition to the history of the house, Luclie Morris Upton also gives a history of the Rountree family, one of Greene County's earliest settlers.
More...
A sneak peek at the new St. John's Hospital from Bias Magazine, July 15, 1952
More...
The murder of John Roberts by Judge Charles S. Yancey, considered the first murder in Greene County, and the murder of Judge H. C. Christian by Jacob Thompson are taken from histories of Greene County available online.
More...
A fire, believed to have started in an oven, destroyed the Springfield Cracker Factory in 1885. Firemen were able to keep the fire from spreading to neighboring warehouses.
More...
A biography of Judge Charles B. McAfee is just one of many biographies that can be found in our digitized collection on line.
More...
Bolivar, Missouri is described in an 1851 newspaper article, especially the businesses on the square. This article is from the Southwestern Flag newspaper. The Local History department has recently acquired a copy of the microfilm.
More...
An article about the Wilson's Creek Battlefield 1961 Centennial describes the many exhibits, programs and demonstrations that were available at the battlefield and in Springfield.
More...
A fourteen year dispute between the Walnut Grove Community Club and the Greene County Courthouse over a Civil War era cannon was settled in favor of Walnut Grove in 1926.
During the 1910 Springfield Chautauqua, Miss Helen Roberts Perkins, delivers a passionate plea to Springfield to establish a kindergarten in Springfield.
More...
A tuberculosis hospital was added to the Greene County Farm in 1926. This hospital was for persons considered incurable. Those not diagnosed as incurable would go to the state sanitarium in Mount Vernon.
More...
The Springfield Vocational-Technical School began classes for secretarial training in 1963. The twelve week course included typing, shorthand, business English and record keeping.
More...
In 1917 the Springfield Fire Department decided to sell their horses in favor of motor hose wagons.
More...
Ely Paxson was installing his own telephone lines between his home and business in 1884.
More...
Springfield's Barbershoppers' chorus competed in a contest in Washington D. C. in 1954.
More...
Join us for a screening of "The Conspirator," rated PG-13, about Mary Surratt, the first woman executed by the U.S. government following her arrest for conspiring to assassinate Abraham Lincoln. Read T. H. B. Dunnegan's experience in St. Louis after Lincoln's assination.
More...
A jail break at the Greene County jail in 1883 led locals on a lively race around the downtown area. The local newspaper editor gave an interesting tongue- in- cheek essay of the events.
More...
The annual spring Shrine Carnival attracted more than 5,000 persons in 1923. It was located at Clay Avenue and Central Street.
More...
A reminiscent look back at short line railroads in Southwest Missouri.
More...
Louis Armstrong played two shows at the Shrine Mosque in 1953. He and Benny Goodman were touring together that year. Benny Goodman could not make the concert but his orchestra did.
More...
John P. Campbell deeded 50 acres to Greene County to start the city of Springfield as the county seat. Campbell's daughter, Sarah Rush Owen, contended that moving the courthouse off the square would cause the property to revert to the Campbell heirs.
More...
Front-page news in 1925 was the new traffic signals in Springfield on the Public Square and at the intersection of St. Louis Street and Jefferson Avenue. The Chief of Police advised drivers to "keep their heads up and look where they are going".
More...
Springfield City Water Company had a picnic at Valley Lake, now known as Valley Water Mill Park, to show off the "new" extensive landscaping and improvements in 1925. The intention was to attract tourists and picnic parties.
More...
The last of the old houses in the Springfield business district, the area around the square, was torn down in 1938 to add a larger lot to the Herrick Motor Company. It was located on the south side of College Street and was 60 feet east of Main Street.
More...
A newspaper article from the 1866 Springfield Missouri Patriot gives a description of how the newly opened Springfield Library worked.
1951 Roller skating at the Roll Arena. A Bias magazine article about the "good clean healthful fun" of roller skating, its impact on Springfield and the professional skaters who started at local rinks.
Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West show came to Springfield in October of 1900. It took fifty train cars to haul the tents, seats, horses, wagons, cooking outfits, teamsters and helpers. A parade from the train station down Boonville Avenue entertained everyone.
More...
An announcement of the building of the Sequiota Fish Hatchery appears in the Springfield Leader in 1920. Sequiota Park later became a destination stop on the Chadwick Branch of Frisco Railroad.
More...
A patron found this article, "Springfield's Progress in 1909", listing the progress of businesses and public works in the Springfield Republican. Newspapers often made reports of this type to attract new businesses to the area.
More...
Bias magazine published an in-depth biography of this Springfield mayor, Spanish-American War veteran, lawyer and grocer in 1951.
More...
The Parkview concert band recorded an album to raise money to travel to the New York World's Fair in 1964-1965. The 1965 Parkview Viking Log yearbook states, "At the request of Governor Warren E. Hearnes, the band will represent its school and state at the New York World's Fair on Missouri Day".
More...
A wreck near the Rail Haven Motor Court in 1952 as reported in Bias magazine. The wreck occured in the intersection of St. Louis and Glenstone and "by a miracle no body was killed".
More...
Springfield Union Stockyards had to expand in the 1950's. Livestock trading was so brisk that on one day, 3,700 cattle and 1,400 calves were handled and the "hog house" had to be expanded by 10,000 square feet.
More...
In 1921 the Springfield Leader published that a Branson drug store owner had found a new lake in Marvel Cave, an Ozarks attraction for many years. Several Springfield men went to explore the new lake and were disappointed due to their lack of equipment but left a wonderful description of the journey.
More...
Joplin and Carthage went to the aid of Oronogo, Mo. after the town was hit by a tornado in May 1883.
More...
The Memorial Day observances of 1933 are given in the Springfield News & Leader. In addition to ceremonies at the National Cemetery in Springfield many churches and organizations were having services or ceremonies in Greene County and surrounding communities.
More...
The Lyon Monument Association held a meeting in 1865 to raise money by subscription to erect a monument to General Nathaniel Lyon on the Wilson's Creek battlefield.
More...
The First Congregational Church, which began in 1868-69, was the focus of a Bias magazine article in 1952 after the church burned. It tells the history of the church in photographs.
More...
The razing of an old mill at Preston in 1968, long a landmark in the community, inspired a nostalgic comment by a member of a pioneer Hickory County family.
Red Foley came to Springfield in 1954 to try to establish Springfield as the capital of the hillbilly music world.
More...
Reminiscences about Wild Bill Hickok from a resident that knew him while he lived in Springfield.
A reproduction of a Springfield timeline by Edward M. Shepard that appears to be a working copy for an article Dr. Shepard had published in the Missouri Historical Review in October 1929. Many issues of the Missouri Historical Review are now available on line.
More...
In 1889, eyebrows are raised when a member of the pension examining board is given a pension for wounds received during the Civil War.
More...
Louis Houck, a railroad pioneer in Southeast Missouri, was also a noted historian. This map shows what he believed to be early Native American trails and warpaths throughout the state of Missouri, including the Virginia Warriors Path and the Osage Trace that ran through Greene County.
More...
The Springfield Leader reports on the snow that was the "deepest in history of city". Stranded street cars and snow and ice falling from buildings were major concerns.
Girl Scout and Brownies cookie sales are covered in a 1952 Bias magazine article. Money raised was used for the girls' summer camping program, with special emphasis on acquiring a camp site near Springfield.
The county poor farm, also known as the Alms House, was sold in 1890 and moved to a location West of Springfield.
More...
The Frisco Railroad's Christmas gift to their customers in 1889/1890 was half price excursion rates with the minimum rate of fifty cents!
More...
In 1918 the Springfield police department instituted a campaign against chicken owners who allowed their fowls to run at large.
More...
The second part of an article written by John H. Miller and reprinted in the Springfield Farm Club News, January 5, 1933.
More...
Pioneer Life of 1833 was written by John H. Miller in the late 1800's and was republished in 1933 in the Farm Club News. Early manufacturers and businessmen, vigilante justice, the jail on Boonville and more are described in this first part. The second half of the article will be published next week.
The 1833 Star Shower and its effect on Greene county residents is recounted in the History of Greene County, Missouri 1883. The star shower, or meteor storm, was an unusual display of the annual Leonid Meteor shower.
More...
History and early descriptions of the property that would become the Dickerson Park Zoo.
More...
The Springfield Republican claimed that "Evil Spirits" were stalking Springfield and Greene County.
More...
Winoka Lodge...summer home or murder scene? Rumors persist that this property is haunted by the spirits of Girl Scouts that were murdered here. Research tells a different story.
More...
Interesting discovery on the farm of J. M. Greer in 1899.
More...
The Camp Sweeny Spy, published in Rolla, Mo. in 1861, gives great insight into the daily life of a Civil War camp. This publication was issued by Company K and D of the Third Regiment, U.S. Reserve Corps of Missouri.
More...
The Queen City of the Ozarks is the nickname for Springfield. However, when it was crowned with this name is shrouded in the mists of time. Springfield is not the only Queen City in the United States.
More...
Looking for your family's coat of arms? It may not be as easy as you think. Here is more information and links to heraldry websites.
More...
Doling Park 1906 - A newspaper article that describes the many improvements to the park, how the fish hatchery works, the trials of finding the perfect theater troop to play the summer season and how the "irresponsible hoodlums" are being kept out.
More...
Did you win a prize at the Springfield fair this year? We found a newspaper article that describes some of the prizes available at the third annual Southwest Agricultural Society Fair in 1858 and a brief description of the upcoming fair in Bolivar in 1859.
More...
To give you an idea of early travel connections, we are reprinting an advertisement from the Missouri State Gazetteer, 1860, that gives arrival and departure times for the St. Louis & Iron Mountain Railroad and the stagecoach connections you could make to points in the Southwest.
A list of historic Springfield area teams and a colorful account of a game between the Springfield club and the Ozark Invincibles in 1900.
More...
The Springfield Republican printed various articles about the Fourth of July celebration, including a description of the fireworks display in the square and who was hurt at other demonstrations.
More...
It wasn't as crowded as the public pools, but the Southwest Missouri State University pool was busy enough in the summer of 1952.
More...
Fellows Lake is one of two lakes that supply Springfield with water. Find more Information about Fellows Lake from this booklet published by the Springfield City Water Company [now a part of City Utilities].
More...
When George Foreman fought in Springfield in 1987 he was beginning a career comeback that would lead him to a world championship in 1994.
More...
Nelson Mill, owned by John 'Peg Leg' Nelson, was a large water mill on the James River just over the Greene County line. Built sometime before the Civil War, it was destroyed by fire around 1910.
More...
The closing of the railroad line to Chadwick, Mo., in 1933 gives rise to memories of the first sight of a steam engine and the mysteries of the telegraph.
Harry Truman Day is May 7 this year. An article in "Bias" magazine describes Harry Truman's visit to Springfield in 1952 for the 35th Division reunion at the Shrine Mosque. Truman served in the 35th Division during World War I.
More...
Take a look at former homes on St. Louis Street before the razing of the old Elms Hotel in 1954. In the late 1800's the property was the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Rathbone, a descendent of Thomas Keet.
More...
In 1924, Will Rogers stopped briefly in Springfield on his way to Oklahoma to visit relatives. This month, Will Rogers will again stop in Springfield as Doug Watson portrays Will Rogers at the Library chautauqua.
More...
Two important early roads in the Ozarks, the Wilderness and Pioneer roads, are described in a 1960 article from the Ozarks Mountaineer.
More...
This year marks the 100th anniversery in the United States for Boy Scouts of America. In 1952 local Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts banded together to form an Indian dance troupe.
More...
Back when bananas were big business, the Frisco railroad would speed them and other produce to their destinations in record time. Find out how carefully the bananas were packed and shipped from the Gulf coast.
More...
1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry was one of the earliest African-American regiments organized during the American Civil War. Five hundred slaves liberated from Missouri formed its core.
More...
"Black Families of the Ozarks", a compilation of materials documenting the long history of black families in the Ozarks, is now available online.
A newspaper's tongue-in-cheek advice on how to get out of war service in 1862. Wonder if it worked?
More...
Who used to decide on the safety of bridges in Greene County? In 1914, county court judges and surveyors inspected several bridges for needed repairs and replacements. A link to a historic bridge database will let you look up bridge information.
More...
In 1933 an Auto Polo fund raiser for the American Legion promises crashes, overturns, spills and collisions at State Teacher College, now known as MSU. Auto polo followed the general rules for pony polo, using stripped down Model A Fords.
More...
Springfield got a new head librarian in 1952. Vivian Maddox gave an interview to the Bias magazine about her family, her schooling, her accomplishments and some plans for the Springfield library.
More...
"Swearing off" or making New Years Resolutions is discussed in the Springfield Express and the New Orleans Bee newspapers. Apparently, keeping resolutions has always been difficult.
More...
"It sure is a relief when you get that Thanksgiving crop on the market." Secrets of a turkey grower are revealed in a 1951 article about Bill Barrett's turkey raising operation near Springfield.
More...
When Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean in 1932, it was remembered that her father briefly lived in Springfield, while working for the Frisco.
More...
Amelia Earhart visits Springfield, Mo. in 1931 in an experimental autogiro. One year later, she was given the Distinguished Flying Cross medal for her non-stop solo transatlantic flight.
More...
In 1959, Gerald H. Pipes interviewed Newt and Alice Bruffett. This extensive news article has been divided into two parts. Part 2 covers Newt's moonshining career.
More...
Springlawn Farm, usually called the Albino Farm by thrill seekers, has been the center of many legends.
More...
The Springfield Old City Cemetery near Campbell and State Streets was relocated in the 1800's...or was it?
More...
Charivari or Shivaree were a loud and noisy way to welcome young newlyweds to their home. Enough noise was generated to have laws restricting "chivarees" in the Springfield city limits.
More...
One of the most prominent attractions at Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield is the Ray House, a silent witness to the bloody battle there on August 10, 1861.
More...
Frank James fires shots; causes stampede and escapes from Greene County jail. An interview in 1898 at the Fair.
More...
If you are planning a trip to Springfield, Missouri, this article will give you an outline of materials available at the Local History and Genealogy department at the Library Center.
More...
Alternative religious services for bicyclists proposed in St. Louis’ Forest Park area in 1897.
More...
The importance of family pets in the early 1900’s is illustrated in an obituary of the Dameron family’s pet horse.
More...
A newspaper article about the Hall family of the Frisco Railroad could inspire you to search for your family members.
More...
The healthful benefits of exercise is nothing new as seen in this newspaper article titled “Walking” from The Morning Herald, St. Joseph, Missouri, July 4, 1862, page 1
Were they balloons, experimental zeppelins, political forums, newspaper hoaxes or people from Mars?
More...
A review of A History of Southern Missouri and Northern Arkansas: Being an Account of the Early Settlements, the Civil War, the Ku-Klux, and Times of Peace by William Monks, and the Autobiography of Samuel S. Hildebrand: The Renowned Missouri Bushwhacker.
More...
Hunters, trappers, surveyors, road builders, businessmen and much more the Boone family played vital roles in the pioneering of the American frontier.
More...
We compiled a list of web sites you may find useful for researching your Civil War ancestor. The list includes general sites, sites for individual states and a few sites that require payment to access.
More...
Friday, April 3, 2009 the Baker Observatory is open to the public for NASA Observing night.
More...
In the good old days you could ship anything, any size, by parcel post from chickens to children. Fortunately, shipping children didn't catch on. The Springfield Republican reports one of the early deliveries by the new motor trucks in 1918.
Cotton was scarce in Missouri during the Civil War.
This desegregation milestone occurred in Springfield fully seventeen years before the passage of The Civil Rights Act of 1964.
More...
An 1860 era etiquette lesson from a Virginia newspaper reminding girls and ladies who should and, more importantly, who should not be the recipients of their photographic likenesses.
More...
Springfield Missouri Leader , November 24, 1925, page 1.
The ice storms of 1924 and 1848 are reminiscent of the 2007 and 2009 ice storms. Newspaper microfilm, available at the Library Center, and The History of Greene County Missouri, available online, give insight to how our ancestors dealt with severe weather.
Springfield Municipal airport manager announces reduced air fare prices in this article from the Springfield, Missouri Press.
More...

