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Bloody Island (Mississippi River)

Bloody Island was a sandbar or "towhead" (river island) in the Mississippi River, opposite St. Louis, Missouri, which became densely wooded and a rendezvous for duelists because it was considered "neutral" and not under Missouri or Illinois control.[1]

History

After its first appearance above water in 1798, its continuous growth menaced the harbor of St. Louis. In 1837 Capt. Robert E. Lee, of U.S. Army Engineers, devised and established a system of dikes and dams that washed out the western channel and ultimately joined the island to the Illinois shore. In 1846 as the Miami people were being forcibly removed westward from their traditional homelands; the group stopped on Bloody Island.[2] According to Miami oral history, the group buried an infant and elderly member of the tribe on or near the island.[2]

The south end of the island is now under the Poplar Street Bridge at the site of a train yard. Samuel Wiggins bought 800 acres (3.2 km2) around the island in the early 19th century and operated a ferry between East St. Louis and St. Louis (at one point using an 8-horse team on the ferry to provide the propulsion). The Wiggins Ferry Service would develop the train yards which in the 1870s carted train cars across the river one at a time until the Eads Bridge opened in 1879. The train yard is now owned by the Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis.

Notable duels

References

  1. ^ "History of Bloody Island and its Duels". www.museum.state.il.us. Retrieved 2018-08-19.
  2. ^ a b "myaamiaki aancihsaaciki A Cultural Exploration of the Myaamia Removal Route" (PDF). miamination.com/node/11. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  3. ^ Dictionary of Missouri Biography by Lawrence O. Christensen (Editor), William E. Foley (Editor), Gary R. Kremer (Editor), Kenneth H. Winn (Editor) - University of Missouri Press (October 1999) ISBN 0-8262-1222-0
  4. ^ "Fatal Duel in the West". North Star. Danville, Vermont. 1831-09-27. p. 3.

Sources