Mississippi River Tales Mural

Mural by Thomas Melvin in Cape Girardeau, Missouri
37°18′21″N 89°31′03″W / 37.30582°N 89.51748°W / 37.30582; -89.51748
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The Mississippi River Tales is a mural containing 24 panels covering nearly 18,000 square feet (1,700 m2) of the 15-foot (4.6 m)-high downtown floodwall in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. It illustrates the area's history, beginning with the Native Americans who inhabited it between 900 and 1200. Each panel tells a story: Louis Lorimier platting the city in 1793, the transfer of Upper Louisiana from France to the United States in 1804, Missouri gaining statehood in 1821, the coming of the railroad in 1880, the Big Freeze of 1918-19 and the completion of the Bill Emerson Memorial Bridge, among many others. The paintings are in a style similar to that of painter Thomas Hart Benton. (Pamela Selbert, Chicago Tribune, November 18, 2007). The mural was painted by Chicago artist Thomas Melvin,[1] in collaboration with several local artists and was dedicated at a public ceremony on July 7, 2005.

Panels

  • Planning a City
    Planning a City
  • Lewis and Clark
    Lewis and Clark
  • The Louisiana Purchase
    The Louisiana Purchase
  • Missouri Statehood
    Missouri Statehood
  • The Trail of Tears
    The Trail of Tears
  • The Civil War
    The Civil War
  • The Civil War
    The Civil War
  • St. Vincent's Young Ladies' Academy
    St. Vincent's Young Ladies' Academy
  • River Commerce
    River Commerce
  • President Taft's Visit
    President Taft's Visit
  • The Great Fire
    The Great Fire
  • The Big Freeze
    The Big Freeze
  • The Three "Cape Girardeaus"
    The Three "Cape Girardeaus"
  • Riverboat Jazz
    Riverboat Jazz
  • The Big Flood
    The Big Flood
  • River Industry
    River Industry
  • The Great Wall
    The Great Wall
  • River Fest
    River Fest

References

  1. ^ Thomas Melvin
  • "Murals". Cape Girardeau Visitors Bureau. Retrieved 2014-01-23.


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