"Walter Schroeder has produced a definitive study of
a crucially important district, a district whose ultimate legacy
lies as far afield as Texas, California, and Oregon."—Terry G.
Jordan
As the oldest European settlement in Missouri, Ste. Genevieve was
the funnel through which the eastern Ozarks (the 5,000 square
miles beyond Ste. Genevieve's location on the Mississippi) was
established. A magisterial account of the settlement of this area
from 1760 through 1830, Opening the Ozarks focuses on the
acquisition and occupation of land, the transformation of the
environment, the creation of cohesive settlements, and the
building of neighborhoods and eventually organized counties.
The study begins with the French Creole settlement at Old Ste.
Genevieve in the middle of the eighteenth century. It describes
the movement of the French into the Ozark hills during the rest
of that century and continues with that of the American
immigrants into Upper Louisiana after 1796, ending with the
Americanization of the district after the Louisiana Purchase.
Walter Schroeder examines the cultural transition from a French
society, operating under a Spanish administration, to an American
society in which French, Indians, and Africans formed
minorities.
Schroeder used thousands of French- and Spanish-language
documents, including the Archives of the Indies in Seville,
Spain, as well as documents from Ste. Genevieve and St. Louis to
gather his information. He also utilized thousands of land
records from the American period, including deeds of land sales
and sales from the public domain, and plats from both the Spanish
and American periods. In addition, Schroeder performed years of
fieldwork and perused aerial photography of the area,
interviewing residents and searching for vestiges of the past in
the landscape.
As the only study to deal with the cradle of Missouri and the
first trans-Mississippi expansion of the Anglo-American frontier,
Opening the Ozarks will be invaluable to anyone interested
in America's geographical history, particularly that of Missouri.
About the Author
Walter Schroeder is on the faculty of the Department of Geography
at the University of Missouri-Columbia.