p hk5 ~r ,,oRABY OF CONGRESS 014 572 345 ORIGIjST BIG MOUND OF ST. LOUIS, A nm UM) wmu m st. louis \m\m of srjENOL By prof, spencer SMITH. 3 This remarkable feature in the topography of the city has disappeared : it succumbed to the irresistible spirit of the railroad. Cotton or any other commodity may, in the constantly changing course of human events, rise to the dignity of a financial king ; but its sway can never be so stern and unyielding as that of the "iron horse." Hill and valley, lake and river, must acknowledge his power ; the landscape bows before him, and yields implicit submission. A few months since the Directors of the North Missouri railroad were in need of a certain amount of earth to fill up and grade its track in the city. "The Big Mound" was the most available bank, and had it been historically as valuable as one of the P3^ramids of Egypt, it would probably have been sacrificed. I first saw this mound in 1843. It was then in a perfect state, with the exception of changes incident to time and weather. In 1844, a small house of refreshment was built on the top of it. In building this house, the summit of the Mound was leveled down a very little, probably not more than two feet. Thi- enterprise did not succeed, and in a few years tlie building was removed. Some time after, streets were cut through the northern *?>,> and southern ends of the Mound ; but its actual hight was not affected till the leveling process of the railroad commenced. The Big Mound was one of the most prominent features in the landscape, and attracted the attention of the earl}^ settlers of St. Louis. In primitive surveys, it was made a standard landmark under the name of "La Grange de Terre." Subsequently, its exact location became a point in a lawsuit growing out of these earlier transactions. An}^ description, however, in feet and inches fails in giving an idea of its appearance. To speak in general terms, it was about four hundred feet long and two hundred wide at its base ; but these figures are necessarily not precise, because it is very dillicult to say where (admitting that a part of it was artificial) the natural portion ended and the artificial began. Before any earth had been removed from the top so as to afiect the hight of the Mound, I measured it with a theodolite, and found it fift3^-three feet above the sidewalk on Broadway. The direction of the major axis was nearly north and south. The name given (" Grange dc Terre ") by the jcarly French settlers was not inap- propriate. If we assume as a model the old-fashioned New England barn, the north end would have to be hipped to a long slant and the south merely rounded ofT as abruptly as possible, to complete the resemblance. The slant on the eastern side was much steeper than on the Western; and the Hon. James H. Lucas informed me that in the earliest times this eastern side was beautifully terraced, while the western was comparatively smooth. The highest point was about one-third of the length from the south end. Fine photographs of the Mound, both of the eastern and western sides, have been taken b}^ Mr. G. Farrington, photographer. These give, at a glance, a definite idea of the shape of the Mound, which it is impossible to accomplish in words. These pictures will be valuable as theonly existing representatives of w^hat was once a remarkable feature in the topography of St. Louis, and from which it received its cognomen of the "Mound City." But the Big Mound has passed away ; its site is now level with the street. It was dug down, and removed by wagon-loads, and all surmises as to what might be hidden in this vast heap of earth are set at rest. Not so, however, with specukitions with regard to it. How, by whom, and when it was built, or whether built at all, are still mooted questions. This last point is the one which we now propose to examine. The remarkable earth-works in Ohio were discovered and described many years before the " Big Mound " had attracted the attention of antiquarians. The preconceived ideas of these gen- tlemen regarding it, resulting from their observations of the aforesaid earth-works, led them too hastily, as I think, to place this and most of the mounds in the Mississippi Valley in the same category. It is a well-established principle, both in scientific and antiqua- rian researches, not to ascribe an extraordinary cause when an ordinary one may be found which will answer all the conditions of the question. Now^ the first and most obvious conclusion with regard to any hill is, that it is a natural elevation. If on examination, however, we find proof that this conclusion is incor- rect, and that there are evidences of human design, we must necessarily make up our opinion upon these evidences. To assume, then, that because their are earth-works in Ohio, that this is an artificial mound, and that, too, before we have examined into the arguments for or against human agency, seems mere assiunption. Yet, so strong was this conviction in the minds of m;iny, that it was — nay, I may say, is a sort of heresy to assert the contrary. More tlian twenty years ago I was convinced, from personal observation, that the "Big Mound" was a natural mound, and owed its elevation to natural causes ; and the following were my reasons, which its demolition hag but served to strengthen and confirm : I. If it w-as artificial, there must have been desi