I travel fairly often, and particularly love going to Italy, and the following places are locations around the United States and the world that I've visited. They give a good idea of context to St. Louis; what they're doing is often better or worse than St. Louis, and they also help show us where from and how St. Louis developed.
Baltimore, Maryland
Founded at the point inland on the Chesapeake Bay where several rugged rivers met the sea, Baltimore was an industrial powerhouse, much like St. Louis, in the Nineteenth Century. Suffering many of the same problems as it western counterpart, the city still struggles to recover from its decline in the mid-Twentieth Century.
Read about Baltimore; see it on the map
Central Illinois
Central Illinois is where my family has lived since the 1840's and still owns a farm east of Peoria. Long settled, the area is culturally and architecturally rich, and I set out to document the places where my family lived and worked for over 150 years.
Read about Central Illinois; see it on the map
Chicago
Long St. Louis's competitor to the north, Chicago passed the city by as its railroad connections pushed west, bypassing St. Louis and assuring its hegemony over the Midwest hinterlands. Possessing some of the most stunning skyscrapers of the turn of the Twentieth Century, the city is a vibrant, if sometimes troubled counterpoint to many of the failed decisions of past St. Louis leadership.
Read about Chicago; see it on the map
Iowa
I've had the opportunity to travel all over the state of Iowa, and it has some of the most beautiful architectural legacy of anywhere I've traveled in America. From its iconic courthouses and Second Empire and Italianate farmhouses, the built environment is rich with history.
Read about Iowa; see it on the map
Naples, Campania, Italy
One of the oldest cities in Europe, and possessing a natural setting unrivaled for a major city, Naples is dirty, rough around the edges, and full of history. In many ways, I find it the most like St. Louis of all of the cities of Europe I've visited, possibly past its glory days but still proud.
Read about Naples; see it on the map
Northeast Missouri
I fell in love with the desolate rolling hills and small, quaint towns of Northeast Missouri while in college at Truman State University. While the area is losing population, it still possesses a distinctive and charming character.
Read about Edina and Kirksville; see it on the map
Rome, Italy
More so than any other city in the world, the architecture of Romee has influenced St. Louis architecture for most of its history. Home to ancient ruins, Renaissance marvels and more domed churches than you can count, its legacy is obvious.
Read about Rome; see it on the map
Washington, District of Columbia
The architecture of Washington, outside the monumental core, is humanly scaled, well-preserved and possessing some of the best Italianate, Second Empire and Gilded Age mansions in the entire United States. Beyond the Washington Monument, there's a whole city to explore.
Read about Washington; see it on the map
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