Cheltenham, St. Louis

Cheltenham
St. Louis neighborhood

Location of Cheltenham within St. Louis
Country United States
State Missouri
City St. Louis
Wards 17, 24
Area
  Total 0.33 sq mi (0.9 km2)
Population (2010)[1]
  Total 620
  Density 1,900/sq mi (730/km2)
ZIP code(s) Part of 63110
Area code(s) 314
Website stlouis-mo.gov

Cheltenham is a neighborhood of St. Louis, Missouri, within a section known as Dogtown. It is bound by Forest Park on the north, Macklind on the east, Manchester Avenue on the south, and Hampton Avenue on the west. Businesses located in Cheltenham include the St. Louis Community College at Forest Park, which is built on the site of the former Forest Park Highlands amusement park. It is also the former home of FOX-affiliate KTVI, as well as the St. Louis Arena.

History

In October, 1856, Icarians, led by Frenchman Etienne Cabet, settled in St. Louis, Missouri. The Icarians were a 19th-century French utopian movement which had established a number of egalitarian communes in the United States.[2][3]

The Icarians led by Cabet were dissident Icarians from Nauvoo, Illinois. These dissidents left in three different groups on October 15, 22, and 30. Cabet left Nauvoo with the final group on October 30, 1856. Cabet and his 180 loyal followers settled in "New Bremen" in the German section of St. Louis. Cabet had a stroke and died on November 8, 1856. Mercadier became the community's new president.[4] The situation in St. Louis was not ideal and the group had lost of number of dissatisfied members.

On February 15, 1858, the remaining 151 Icarians had chosen a site west of St. Louis and settled on a few hundred acres in Cheltenham. They purchased the land for $25,000 at 6% interest with a $500 down-payment.[5] Here they established workshops of tailors, joiners, wheelwrights, blacksmiths, painters, and shoemakers. The Cheltenham commune published a journal and a number of books, and it maintained in Paris, France, 'the Bureau' which printed and circulated brochures across France proclaiming the success of the commune. Schools wee opened for the boys and girls, and a "salle d'asile" - a sort of kindergarten - was opened for the smallest children.[6] The revising of the community's constitution, however, proved to be problematic.

Success of the community was not to be realized. Two radical distinct parties developed, where the majority adhered faithfully to the ideas entertained by the community's deceased founder Etienne Cabet, and believed in investing very large if not absolutely dictatorial authority in some chosen leader called a "Gérance" or "Gérant unique", who would direct the moral and material affairs of the community. The minority, however, who were led by a man named Vogel, a cap maker from Comar, France, were unalterably opposed to such an undemocratic system of government. Vogel and the dissidents would not accept compromise, and the General Assembly sessions of 1858 and 1859 were stormy. Vogel was accused by Mercadier of insulting Cabet's memory by insisting on a "parliamentary government." On February 17, 1859, the majority of the General Assembly, backing Mercadier, voted to reenact what they referred to as the "Engagement of October 13, 1856" which were the strict pledges that Cabet had demanded of his followers before leaving Navoo, Illinois. This pledge included a ban on smoking and drinking. For Vogel and the dissidents, this ban was deemed intolerable.[7] Differences of opinion degenerated into party strife; and the vanquished minority, numbering forty-two persons, left the community. The loss of Vogel and the dissidents caused a serious problem. Of those who left, many were the most skillful craftsmen, and the loss was irreparable. Furthermore, Vogel and his supporters took with them $188 in cash, $588 in IOUs, and $1,800 in clothing and tools. The depleted society struggled heroically for five years longer in spite of a series of events which otherwise would have brought them down. By January 1864 with Arsene Sauva as president, there were 8 "citoyens," 7 "citoyennes," and some children left in Cheltenham. With this internal strife, the loss of most of its members, young men leaving to fight on the Union side in the American Civil War, and growing debt, the remaining members of the colony eventually agreed at their last General Assembly to disband the community. The keys to the property were handed over to its original owner, Thomas Allen, in 1864. The Louis Gillet and Arsene Sauva families later joined the Icarian Community in Adams County, Iowa.[8]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
2000 480    
2010 620+29.2%

In 2010 Cheltenham's population was 67.3% White, 15.0% Black, 0.2% Native American, 10.6% Asian, 5.6% Two or More Races, and 1.5% Some Other Race. 3.7% of the population was of Hispanic or Latino origin.[9]

Racial composition 2010[10] 2000[11]
White 67.3% 80.0%
Black or African American 15.0% 14.0%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 3.7% 1.5%
Asian 10.6% 2.1%
Two or More Races 5.6% 1.7%

Other Cheltenhams

Cheltenham on the Twinning Fingerpost in Cheltenham Township, Pennsylvania.[12][13][14][15]

Six other places in the World are named "Cheltenham."

See also

References

Coordinates: 38°37′36″N 90°16′54″W / 38.6267°N 90.2817°W / 38.6267; -90.2817

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