St. Louis People
365
Almost a Disneyland, Bob Gibson and more
(Fourth in a series)
After Walt Disney ran into opposition to his plan to build
an alcohol-free tourist attraction in St. Louis, he began
buying land in Florida for what is now Disneyland. Another
November highlight was Cardinal pitcher Bob Gibson winning
the Cy Young award in 1968.
On the unusual side, a past November also marked the death
of a St. Louis woman who took arsenic to maintain her lily-white
complexion.
These are some of the historic happenings in St. Louis that
are included in the book, "St. Louis People 365." The book
was one of historic trivia written by author Joe Sonderman.
(Sonderman has given permission to Young Saint Louis.com
to quote selected items from his book. If you'd like a copy
of the book, check local book stores or go to www.booksonstlouis.com.)
Here are 10 of the 130 items in the November chapter of the
book:
Nov. 3, 1968: Bob Gibson was named the National League
Cy Young Award winner for 1968, the "Year of the Pitcher."
All Gibby had done that year was go 22 and nine, with 28 complete
games and 13 shutouts. His earned run average was an astounding
1.12.
Nov. 4, 1804: Lewis and Clark hired Toussaint Charbonneau,
a French Canadian trapper who was living among the Indians,
as an interpreter. He was married to a Shoshone woman named
Sacagawea. The Hidatsa tribe had kidnapped her and another
Shoshone girl and sold them to Charbonneau. Lewis and Clark
expected Sacagawea to help them when they reached Shoshone
territory.
Nov. 6, 1888: John George Taylor Spink was born. His
uncle had founded the Sporting News just two years earlier
and his father joined as manager of the paper. Spink started
out as an office boy and took over the paper in 1914. He ran
the Sporting News for the next 48 years, making it the "Bible
of Baseball." In 1962, the Baseball Hall of Fame established
the writer's award in Taylor Spink's honor and named him the
first recipient.
Nov. 10, 1871: John Rowlands Stanley uttered his famous
words "Doctor Livingstone, I presume" as he met the missing
Scottish missionary on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in Africa.
Stanley was a former reporter for the Globe-Democrat. It was
there he earned the reputation that got him hired by the New
York Herald, which sent him to Africa.
Nov. 11, 1957: The Mark C. Steinberg skating rink
in Forest Park opened for the first time. About 2,000 skaters
came out on opening day. Steinberg was an investment broker
who died in 1951. His widow founded a charitable trust and
decided a skating rink would be a good memorial to her husband,
who loved sports and children.
Nov. 13, 1934: The first penalty shot ever scored
in the National Hockey League occurred at The Arena. Ralph
Bowman of the St. Louis Eagles scored on his shot against
Montreal Maroons goaltender Alex Connell. It was the second
penalty shot attempted. The first one had failed three days
earlier. In those days, penalty shots were taken from a 10-foot
circle, 38 feet in front of the goal.
Nov. 19, 1968: Benjamin Goins became the first black
man to hold the office of city-wide license collector. Governor
Warren Hearnes appointed him to fill out the unexpired term
of the late Joseph T. Hayden. Goins would be elected in his
own right in 1970. He would fight a memorable battle for power
with Representative William Clay and the machine of the Steamfitters
Local 562.
Nov. 20, 1885: Kate Brewington Bennett died suddenly
at the age of 37. She was the toast of society and considered
the most beautiful woman in St. Louis. Other women envied
her lily-wide complexion. It turned out she had been taking
small doses of arsenic in order to keep her pale complexion.
She didn't know that arsenic is a poison that accumulates
in the bloodstream. She is buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery.
Nov. 21, 1963: "Gussie" threw a major roadblock in
front of plans by Walt Disney to build a family-oriented attraction
in St. Louis. Disney wouldn't allow liquor to be sold at the
proposed "Riverfront Square." At a meeting attended by Disney,
August Busch Jr. loudly said, "Any man who thinks he can design
an attraction that is going to be a success in this city and
not serve beer or liquor ought to have his head examined."
Within a few months, the deeply offended Disney began buying
up land in Florida.
Nov. 25, 1820: Governor Alexander McNair signed a
bill making St. Charles the capitol of Missouri upon admission
to the Union. On June 4, 1821, legislators met for the first
time on the second flood of adjoining buildings at 206 Main.
Charles and Ruluff Peck ran a dry goods store on the first
floor of one building. Chancy Shepard ran a carpentry shop
on the first floor of the other. The capitol moved to Jefferson
City in 1826.