“As if someone fled from a lion, and was met by a bear”*
by chuckofish
Are you prepared for the day of the Lord? For whom would it be good news? (Matthew 25: 1-13) These were the questions asked in our sermon yesterday. They are good ones to ask yourself. My rector was not terribly helpful in answering them, but that’s par for the course. You have to work out your own salvation anyway, so c’est la vie. I’m still stuck on old Amos’ imagery from the OT reading anyway (see above).
Well, the highlight of my weekend was an after-church jaunt to the Missouri History Museum with the OM. I had not been in years, but I had heard that the “250 in 250: A Yearlong Exhibit Commemorating the 250th Anniversary of the Founding of St. Louis” was not to be missed.
This turned out to be an over-statement. “Through the stories of 50 People, 50 Places, 50 Images, 50 Moments, and 50 Objects we were invited to learn all about St. Louis.” This kind of display is not really my cup of tea, but it was okay.
Across the hall, however, was a very cool exhibit–“The Louisiana Purchase: Making St. Louis, Remaking America”.
You will recall that in 1803 the United States agreed to pay France $15 million for the Louisiana Territory—828,000 square miles of land west of the Mississippi River. The United States doubled its size, expanding the nation westward. Beyond the geographic expansion, The Louisiana Purchase remade St. Louis into an American city—”and reshaped and redefined what it meant to be an American.” Featuring loans from the National Archives and documents and artifacts from the Missouri History Museum’s collections, the exhibition explores the complex negotiations related to The Louisiana Purchase and its after-effect on St. Louis. A highlight of the exhibition is the Treaty of Cession (in French), better known as The Louisiana Purchase Treaty. The Treaty was first drafted in French and then translated into English, so it can be said that the French text is the “original original.”
Anyway, the Museum has changed quite a lot since the days when we would visit with our mother. Nowhere in sight is the riverboat wheelhouse which was a favorite of mine and my dual personality’s as wee children. Also the gun collection, which made up a good part of the second floor exhibition space, is nowhere to be seen. Thankfully in moth balls is all the Veiled Prophet knick-knack-iture that also took up a lot of space in days gone by. Yes, it is all very 21st century and up-to-the-minute PC-wise, but I do miss the old-fashioned dusty taxidermy and Mark Twainia of the olden days.
Well, I’ve been there and done that now, but it is a good and mindful thing to be reminded of the wonderful and important part Missouri played in our national history.
There is a fancy restaurant in the museum, but we headed over to the Wildflower Cafe in the CWE for some eggs benedict. Yum.
How was your weekend?
*Amos 5:18 (Not Abraham Lincoln like you thought)



I’m with you on the new ” interactive” museum format. I just like to look and don’t care for all the push button look and listen stuff…just too much trouble and takes too long and I tire easily in museums. Had a nice weekend…attended a terrific Veterans Day program at a local airfield. They’ve come a long ways in honoring the vets since the Vietnam and early post-Vietnam days. And, of course, lots of good football (except for the Rams late collapse!).
Stay tuned for a Veterans Day post tomorrow…
I look forward to it.
The Treaty itself was phenomenal.
I enjoy seeing actual documents – the actual artifacts of history – but I was most moved by the Bill ratifying the Treaty with France and authorizing the issuance of bonds and payment of gold for the purchase, signed by Pres. Thos. Jefferson, Aaron Burr, Pres. pro tempore of the Senate and Nathaniel Macon, Speaker of the House.
Very nice!
I’m sad to hear that the pilot house is gone, but even more chagrined about the great gun collection. I suppose it’s in storage. Do they still have the cool gift shop?
They have a big fancy gift shop which I did not enter. The old one had a sort of “country store” feeling if I recall. That feeling is long gone.
I would like to know what happened to the pilot house too! They have William Clark’s rifle on display but that is the only gun I saw.