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Picture
of the Spanish Government House
This is Our St. Louis,
p. 22.
[Block 6C] Spanish Government House
On the northwest corner of this block stood
the Spanish Government House.Canadian
fur trader J.B. Martigny built this stone house, which measured
25 x 40 feet, in 1766. The property was purchased Lt. Gov. Francisco
Cruzat in 1783 and used as the headquarters of the Spanish Government
until the transfer of Louisiana to the Americans on March 9-10,
1804. The populace of St. Louis was subject to Spanish law. The
Spanish administered not only St. Louis but the entire Upper Louisiana
Territory from this stone house, a vast land stretching from the
Mississippi River west to the Rocky Mountains and north to Canada.
The transfer ceremony which turned the territory over to the United
States took place in front of the building.

Painting, the Day of the Three Flags, NPS
It's flagpole was the scene of the "Three
Flags Ceremony," which was attended by Spanish Lt.
Gov. Charles Dehault Delassus,
Capt. Amos Stoddard, Capt. Meriwether Lewis, and Charles
Gratiot among others. During the course of the Lewis and Clark
Expedition this building was purchased by Maj. William Christy,
an old friend of Clark's, and turned into the Eagle Tavern. Upon
their return in 1806, the explorers stored their baggage and possessions
at the Eagle Tavern.
This
view highlights the peaceful, parklike
setting of the grounds of the Gateway Arch looking west toward the
Old Cathedral. At one time this spot was the corner of Walnut and
First streets, the site of the Spanish Government House.
This
view, looking northeastward, was taken from the site of the Spanish
Government House at the corner of Walnut and First streets.
This modern view, taken from
the site of the Spanish Government House looking north, shows
how close the site is to the south leg of the Gateway Arch.
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