Not long after we moved to St. Louis, we visited the Eugene Field House Museum. I remember
an overcast day, a not-well-lit museum, and a focus more on old toys than on Eugene Field, the man
once called “the poet laureate of childhood.” And I remember a small story
about the museum – it had been saved by schoolchildren.
The museum sits at what was originally known as 634 S. Fifth
Street and now known as South Broadway. It is just south of Busch Stadium, on
the southern edge of downtown. Built about 1845, the row house was one of 12 known
as Walsh’s Row. Attorney Roswell Field, who represented his law firm’s janitor,
Dred Scott, in the landmark Supreme Court case, moved his wife and baby son
Eugene there in 1851. A second son, Roswell, came shortly after. When Eugene
was six, his mother died, and his father sent both boys to live with a cousin
in Amherst, Mass.
When
Eugene was 18, his father died. He attended three colleges, including the
University of Missouri at Columbia, but never graduated. At 21, he received his
share of his father’s estate, went to Europe, and spent it. Two years later, he
returned, got married, and went to work for a St. Louis newspaper.
To
continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
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