Price Park

Coordinates: 39°26′05″N 92°56′12″W / 39.4348°N 92.9368°W / 39.4348; -92.9368
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Statue of Sterling Price, Keytesville, Missouri

Price Park is a small city park in Keytesville, Chariton County, Missouri.

Origin

From the late nineteenth century, the city block that became Price Park was the site of the Chariton County jail. In 1906–07, a new jail was built a short distance away, and the old jail was destroyed and the property sold by the county government.[1] The park plat—circa 0.6-acre (2,400 m2)—was eventually purchased by a group of "progressive women", who conveyed it to the local chapter of the United Confederate Veterans, who in turn, in 1915, transferred title to the city of Keytesville.[2] By that time, a bandstand had been built on the property, but the area was still encumbered with tree stumps, old concrete, and other debris.[3]

Statue of Sterling Price

In 1911, a campaign by Missouri state representative John D. Taylor (1883–1943),[4] acting at the behest of the local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) and other locally prominent women, resulted in a state appropriation of $5,000 to erect a monument to commemorate Sterling Price (1809–1867), a Mexican–American War hero, Missouri governor, and Confederate major general who had owned a hotel and mercantile business in Keytesville from the early 1830s.[5] The UDC contributed $11,000 toward the monument, and the state later voted an additional $2,000.[6]

In 1914, the commission for a statue of Price was awarded to the New York sculptor Allen George Newman (1875–1940), who specialized in military monuments and who had already created the iconic Spanish–American War statue The Hiker.[7] According to Newman's son, the sculptor had noted a man on a New York City street who he felt had the bearing and figure to be a general. By chance, the man had served as an aide to Price and agreed to serve as a model for the statue.[8] The statue and pedestal were fabricated by McNeel Marble Works of Marietta, Georgia, a company that eventually produced 140 Confederate statues.[9] The park was tidied up, and the statue was unveiled on June 17, 1915—without mention of the sculptor.[10]

By the late 1980s, the Price statue was deteriorating, and the granite pedestal was stained. The Friends of Keytesville organized a fund-raising campaign, and the statue was restored by Washington University Technology Associates. A rededication of the statue was held on June 17, 1990, and the statue has since been maintained by the Friends of Keytesville.[11]

Other memorials

In 1993, a stone and plaque memorializing the Potawatomi Trail of Death, which passed through Keytesville in 1838, was dedicated in Price Park.[12] Another monument recognizes former Keytesville mayor Dred Finnell and his wife Lula Fultz Finnell, creators of an educational and community trust for Keytesville.[13]

References

  1. ^ National Register nomination for Chariton County Jail and Sheriff's Residence.
  2. ^ "Unveiling Ceremonies of General Price Monument,"Chariton Courier, June 18, 1915, 1; "Monument Erected on Pedestal," Chariton Courier, May [?] 1915.
  3. ^ "Improve the Park," Chariton Courier, June 4, 1915; "After the Dedication,"Chariton Courier, June [?], 1915; "Unveiling Ceremonies of General Price Monument,"Chariton Courier, June 18, 1915, 1.
  4. ^ Taylor was a Democratic member of the Missouri state house of representatives from Chariton County (1909–12, 1935–40) and a member of Missouri state senate, 6th District (1917–18). Political Graveyard.
  5. ^ "Monument Association," Chariton Courier, March 31, 1911. The same day an appropriation of $10,000 was voted for a monument to honor Mark Twain, who had died the previous year.
  6. ^ "Will Erect Monuments," Chariton Courier, March 23, 1911, 1; "Unveiling Ceremonies of General Price Monument," Chariton Courier, June 18, 1915, 1. A hundred years after the statue was dedicated, the value of the $18,000 spent for the land and the statue was roughly $1-2 million. Measuring Worth.com.
  7. ^ Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog.
  8. ^ Jack Conklin, "The story behind Rhinebeck’s favorite statue 'Doughboy,'" (2014).
  9. ^ Brasch, Ben. "Marietta company made 140 of the South's Confederate statues". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. ISSN 1539-7459. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  10. ^ "Unveiling Ceremonies of General Price Monument," Chariton Courier, June 18, 1915, 1.
  11. ^ "Large crowd enjoys rededication activities Sunday," Chariton Courier, June 21, 1990, 1. Hazel Price, the general's great-granddaughter, who had participated in the original unveiling in 1915 as a 15-year-old, also participated in the rededication at age 90.
  12. ^ Melva Bennett, "Trail of Death," Chariton Courier, October 7, 1993.
  13. ^ Finnell Trust.

39°26′05″N 92°56′12″W / 39.4348°N 92.9368°W / 39.4348; -92.9368