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- Q14688110 subject Q13245508.
- Q14688110 subject Q6957779.
- Q14688110 subject Q8628068.
- Q14688110 subject Q8667082.
- Q14688110 subject Q8706090.
- Q14688110 abstract "Sugarloaf Mound is the sole remaining Mississippian culture platform mound in St. Louis, Missouri, a city commonly referred to in its earlier years as "Mound City" for its approximately forty Native American earthen structures.One of the city’s best-known earthen structures,"Big Mound" was razed in the mid-1800s following a sale of the land to the North Missouri Railroad.In preparation for the 1904 World's Fair, an additional sixteen mounds were destroyed. Today, about 80 mounds are preserved in the nearby Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site directly across the Mississippi River.Sugarloaf Mound measures approximately 40 feet (12 m) in height, 100 feet (30 m) north/south and 75 feet (23 m) east/west. It is currently located entirely within the incorporated City of St. Louis, but previously was on the border between St. Louis and the formerly autonomous city of Carondelet. In 1809 the mound was used as a survey landmark when St. Louis was incorporated.A residence was constructed abutting Sugarloaf Mound in the 20th Century, and portions of the mound were also impacted by a quarry and the construction of Interstate 55. Although suppressed in some online municipal records, the Sugarloaf Mound house was standing and still bore a mailing address of 4420 Ohio Street as of March 2013.It was purchased by the Osage Nation in 2009 with the stated intention of preservation. The Osage Nation does not claim a direct link to the construction of the mound, but claims a kindred heritage of mound building in the American Midwest. "Preservation" does not include the existing residence, but, by 2013, seems to point to an intention to restore Sugarloaf Mound to a condition similar to its configuration before the advent of Non-Native American architectural embellishments and razings.".
- Q14688110 added "1984-02-17".
- Q14688110 area "4046.8564224".
- Q14688110 nearestCity Q38022.
- Q14688110 nrhpReferenceNumber "84002689".
- Q14688110 thumbnail Sugar_Loaf_Mound_at_4420_Ohio_in_St_Louis_MO_21.jpg?width=300.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q1052095.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q13245508.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q1497.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q1520847.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q333661.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q38022.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q5045516.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q6957779.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q7202294.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q8628068.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q8667082.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q8706090.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q94323.
- Q14688110 wikiPageWikiLink Q947650.
- Q14688110 added "1984-02-17".
- Q14688110 name "Sugarloaf Mound".
- Q14688110 nearestCity "St. Louis, Missouri".
- Q14688110 refnum "84002689".
- Q14688110 point "38.5748728 -90.2310482".
- Q14688110 type LandmarksOrHistoricalBuildings.
- Q14688110 type Place.
- Q14688110 type HistoricPlace.
- Q14688110 type Location.
- Q14688110 type Place.
- Q14688110 type Thing.
- Q14688110 type SpatialThing.
- Q14688110 comment "Sugarloaf Mound is the sole remaining Mississippian culture platform mound in St. Louis, Missouri, a city commonly referred to in its earlier years as "Mound City" for its approximately forty Native American earthen structures.One of the city’s best-known earthen structures,"Big Mound" was razed in the mid-1800s following a sale of the land to the North Missouri Railroad.In preparation for the 1904 World's Fair, an additional sixteen mounds were destroyed.".
- Q14688110 label "Sugarloaf Mound".
- Q14688110 lat "38.5748728".
- Q14688110 long "-90.2310482".
- Q14688110 depiction Sugar_Loaf_Mound_at_4420_Ohio_in_St_Louis_MO_21.jpg.
- Q14688110 name "Sugarloaf Mound".