Palmyra

Palmyra (HM11GZ)

Location: Palmyra, MO 63461 Marion County
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Country: United States of America
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N 39° 47.958', W 91° 31.396'

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Inscription
Side A:
Palmyra, founded in 1819, was for many years the northernmost town on the Salt River Trail from St. Charles to the Des Moines River. A Federal Land Office for the Salt River area located here, 1824 - 58, led all others in the state in the sale of public land. In 1827 Palmyra became the seat of a newly organized county named for Revolutionary General Francis Marion.

On the Mississippi near here is the site of Marion City, laid out, 1835, by promoter William Muldrow. His wide sale of lots in the East resulted in an immigration called the "Eastern Run." Development of the new town was stopped by Mississippi floods.
Muldrow also laid out Philadelphia, west of Palmyra, where Presbyterian minister David Nelson had founded Marion College, the first Protestant college chartered in Missouri, 1831. Eastern funds and teachers gave the school early fame, but, in time, it closed for lack of money. In 1842 the Masonic Grand Lodge of Missouri bought it, renamed it Masonic College, and moved it to Lexington, MO. in 1847. In Palmyra was St. Paul's (Episcopal) College, opened, 1848.

Side B:
Palmyra, called the "Handsomest City in North Missouri" by 1860, was settled largely by Southerners on land ceded by the U.S. by Iowa, Sauk, and Fox tribes, 1824. First white settler in the county area was Frenchman Maturin Bouvet, 1795. He shipped salt from his salines from a point southeast on the Mississippi until killed by Indians, 1800.

In a noted trial here in 1841 the Illinois abolitionists George Thompson, James Burr, and Alanson Work were sent to prison for attempting to entice slaves to run away.

A monument at the courthouse honors victims of the infamous Palmyra Massacre of October 18, 1862. By order of Union Col. John McNeil, 10 Confederate prisoners were shot when Confederate Col. John C. Porter could not return a captured pro-Union civilian.

Here lived T.B. Anderson, pioneer lawyer; Jacob Sosey, founder of the "Spectator," 1839, oldest family-owned paper in Missouri; and World War I General W.P. Jackson. In local cemeteries lie W.H. Russell, founder of the Pony Express, and George "Pegleg" Shannon, member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Details
HM NumberHM11GZ
Tags
Year Placed1955
Placed ByState Historical Society of Missouri and State Highway Commission
Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Tuesday, September 30th, 2014 at 4:25am PDT -07:00
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Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)15S E 626424 N 4406524
Decimal Degrees39.79930000, -91.52326667
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 39° 47.958', W 91° 31.396'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds39° 47' 57.48" N, 91° 31' 23.76" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Area Code(s)573
Closest Postal AddressAt or near 100-198 S Main St, Palmyra MO 63461, US
Alternative Maps Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps, Yahoo Maps, MSR Maps, OpenCycleMap, MyTopo Maps, OpenStreetMap

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