“Remembering Cape Girardeau” Panel Discussions
Dates
- Creation: 2005 Nov-2006 Mar
Biographical / Historical
In the 1730’s, a Frenchman named Jean Baptiste Girardot, for whom Cape Girardeau is named, established a trading post on the west bank of the Mississippi River. However, Girardot was a trader, not a settler, and by the middle 1700’s Girardot had moved on. In 1793, the Spanish Government gave Frenchman Louis Lorimier a land grant to establish another trading post near the river, a few miles south of the site previously established by Girardot. Early in 1806, the town of Cape Girardeau was laid out in lots. A petition for incorporation was presented in 1808. Population expansion at first was slow; however, the age of steamboats allowed easy movement of manufactured goods on the river, which expedited growth. When the railroads were completed, it is said that the city’s population doubled in just a few months.
Extent
4 Compact Discs
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
DVD copies of live panel discussions sponsored by the Greater Cape Girardeau Historical Association, Inc., in conjunction with the Bicentennial Celebration for the City of Cape Girardeau, featuring long-time Cape Girardeau residents and writers reflecting on people, places, events, and significant changes in the community over its history.
Provenance
The Panel discussions were sponsored by the Greater Cape Girardeau Historical Association, Inc. and were produced by the Southeast Missouri State University Department of Communications.
- Title
- “Remembering Cape Girardeau” Panel Discussions 2005 Nov-2006 Mar
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Dr. Lisa Speer
- Date
- 2008
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- English
Repository Details
Part of the Special Collections and Archives Repository
One University Plaza, MS 4600
Cape Girardeau Missouri 63701 United States
5736512245
semoarchives@semo.edu