Mechanics' Institute of St. Louis Records, 1816-1894
Finding Aid by Benjamin D. Breun
September 1989
Revised October 1991
INTRODUCTION TO THE COLLECTION
During the period from November 17, 1943, to April 1, 1944, Judge W. McMurray donated to the National Park Service records of the Mechanics' Institute of St. Louis, as well as a few records of the MacMurray-Judge Architectural Iron Company Works and other unrelated items.
It is doubtful that these are the complete records of the Mechanics' Institute. The majority of these records date from 1839 to 1846, along with six diplomas from 1848 and a financial statement from 1861. The only possible connection the financial statement has with the Mechanics' Institute is that it is addressed to J.J. Clark, a possible relative of M.L. Clark, president of the Institute during the period these records were created.
The Mechanics' Institute was founded in 1839 by Samuel A.M. Shipp, Thornton Grimsley, and their associates, the two most significant of these being John H. Ferguson, the chairman of the Council of the Mechanics' Institute, and Meriwether Lewis Clark, the president of the Members of the Mechanics' Institute. According to its charter, the goals of the Institute were to:
...promote and encourage manufactures, and the mechanic and useful arts, by the establishment of popular Lectures on the sciences connected with them, by the formation of a cabinet of metals, Minerals, and a library and reading rooms; by offering premiums on all objects; deemed worthy of encouragement; by examining all new inventions submitted to them; by establishing schools for young mechanics and other miners, and by other means to the said society deemed expedient.
The Mechanics' Institute was chartered by the Missouri General Assembly on February 13, 1841.
The Institute held annual fairs open to the public at which it displayed machines, art, and architectural models, and demonstrated chemical reactions. The public could also buy many things at the fairs, and there were competitions for the best manufactured item. The winners received diplomas and cash awards. At least two of these annual fairs were held in St. Louis' Old Courthouse, now part of Jefferson National Expansion Memorial.
The Institute held annual lectures that were also open to the public. Unlike the fairs, the lectures were usually held at the Institute. Both the fairs and the lectures were sources of income for the Institute.
Members of the Institute paid weekly dues, and the president of the Members of the Mechanical Institute received an annual report from the Council chairman.
Information obtained from this collection must be properly cited, whether used in publications or in other formats. A citation suggested for this collection is:
National Park Service
Gateway Arch National Park Archives
Mechanics' Institute of St. Louis Records, 1816-1894
Box__, Folder__
Researchers are advised that before records, photographs, and any other unpublished materials from this collection can be published or exhibited, permission from the National Park Service must be obtained in writing.