sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostMar 29, 2022#1076

Yes, the Taylor’s are responsible for the Mill Creek Valley clearance because of “elites” or whatever haha. This website can be exhausting with the idiocy sometimes.

In reality, Enterprise was formed in 1957 (several years after the federal urban renewal law passed. Interestingly enough Raymond Tucker signed the Mill Creek clearance law on August 7th, 1954), but yes…the WWII veteran that named his company after the aircraft carrier he served on is somehow responsible for what City politicians carried out with heaps federal money before he even founded that company. God forbid they do what literally no one else in St. Louis did and actually mention it…

Those goddamned Taylors!

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PostMar 29, 2022#1077

Happy to see an allee of trees lining brickline. So few places in the City where pedestrians can experience this simple pleasure.

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PostMar 29, 2022#1078

sc4mayor wrote:
Mar 29, 2022
Yes, the Taylor’s are responsible for the Mill Creek Valley clearance because of “elites” or whatever haha.  This website can be exhausting with the idiocy sometimes.

In reality, Enterprise was formed in 1957 (several years after the federal urban renewal law passed.  Interestingly enough Raymond Tucker signed the Mill Creek clearance law on August 7th, 1954), but yes…the WWII veteran that named his company after the aircraft carrier he served on is somehow responsible for what City politicians carried out with heaps federal money before he even founded that company.  God forbid they do what literally no one else in St. Louis did and actually mention it…

Those goddamned Taylors!
No of course the Taylors are not personally responsible for the clearance of Mill Creek Valley, but Andy Taylor literally sat on the board of Civic Progress, Kelly Taylor was a Queen of Love and Beauty, and Jack Taylor was of course CEO of one of the largest companies in St. Louis. He went to Olin Business school so I am guessing he didn't exactly come from the working classes. If the Taylors aren't part of the elite that has always called the shots in St. Louis, I really don't know who qualifies. So I apologize if I am not blown away that they included a little memorial to a neighborhood they would never have stepped foot in as part of their real estate development.

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PostMar 29, 2022#1079

sc4mayor wrote:
Mar 29, 2022
Yes, the Taylor’s are responsible for the Mill Creek Valley clearance because of “elites” or whatever haha.  This website can be exhausting with the idiocy sometimes.

In reality, Enterprise was formed in 1957 (several years after the federal urban renewal law passed.  Interestingly enough Raymond Tucker signed the Mill Creek clearance law on August 7th, 1954), but yes…the WWII veteran that named his company after the aircraft carrier he served on is somehow responsible for what City politicians carried out with heaps federal money before he even founded that company.  God forbid they do what literally no one else in St. Louis did and actually mention it…

Those goddamned Taylors!
Enterprise is a great company. Jack Taylor was a great man. The Taylors are a great family. City SC demolishing historic buildings adjacent to the demolished neighborhood that its heart now publicly bleeds for is disingenuous and embarrassing. City SC's garage will be a blight. This was a missed opportunity to learn from the mistakes of the past. The very mistakes now being memorialized.

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PostMar 29, 2022#1080

The Brickline Greenway + memorial and Centene Stadium were planned simultaneously.

This was more a honorable merging of two different efforts and less an effort CITY sought out.

PostMar 29, 2022#1081

Here is a different memorial concept prior to the stadium being moved north of Market.


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PostMar 29, 2022#1082

One thing I'm particularly curious to see the impact on is Union Statiom. You have the Blues and Enterprise on the southeast corner throughout the winter months, you're now going to have MLS on the northwest corner throughout the summer. I'm eager to see how this helps with the year round health and vibrancy of US. I hope and think that it should.

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PostMar 29, 2022#1083

^I am rather surprised that the Union Station owners haven't announced an Apartment project on one of those lots east of the practice fields... especially knowing they are building in West Port (I think)... either something is coming soon, or they don't think they can convince people to live there, idk

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PostMar 29, 2022#1084

pattimagee wrote:
Mar 29, 2022
^I am rather surprised that the Union Station owners haven't announced an Apartment project on one of those lots east of the practice fields... especially knowing they are building in West Port (I think)... either something is coming soon, or they don't think they can convince people to live there, idk
I am surprised they haven't proposed a large parking garage on that lot.  Not something to get excited about but it seems like the most obviousl use case.  I wonder if some of there development plans took a hit due to COVID.  Not sure how US is doing financially now that the pandemic is mostly behind us but prior to COVID it was the shiny new thing.  Hopefully it has maintained/recovered alot of that mojo.

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PostMar 29, 2022#1085

Union Stations only plans for the lot to the west behind Maggie O's in the next 5 years is repave it before the MLS season starts next year 

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PostMar 29, 2022#1086

Acknowledging there was a neighborhood there is the first step to making it feel like a neighborhood again. Personally I think between the stadium, Butler Bros conversion, and Midtown momentum Downtown West is in a good position for growth. 

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostMar 29, 2022#1087

^ I would agree. Not sure what to make of equating what happened with 1900 Olive with the forced removal of 20,000 mostly black folks from the Mill Creek Valley and the destruction of their businesses, churches, community centers, etc.

I don’t support the parking garage on the 1900 block of Olive either. But the two are not the same and acknowledging what happened in 1954 is not a “grotesque” thing.

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PostMar 29, 2022#1088

Yeah the demolition of a strip of usable human scale buildings for parking sucks but the demolition of such a massive neighborhood just seems morally wrong and, as we see now, extremely short sighted.

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PostMar 29, 2022#1089

While we discuss the evilness of St. Louis SC and how the Taylor family has been so bad for St. Louis, some of us can appreciate this view.


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PostApr 19, 2022#1090

$5M building permit issued for phase 2 of the HQ offices at 326 S 21St St.

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PostApr 20, 2022#1091

I'm seeing irrigation ditches being laid on the practice fields... with spring here and summer coming, I'd wager we'll get sod laid fairly soon. 

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PostApr 20, 2022#1092

pattimagee wrote:
Apr 20, 2022
I'm seeing irrigation ditches being laid on the practice fields... with spring here and summer coming, I'd wager we'll get sod laid fairly soon. 
Funny. Earlier today two big trucks from some nursery/turf company made me miss the green light at Jefferson and Olive.

Good guess about putting down turf and having a full growing season instead of waiting until summer or fall and not having deeper roots.

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PostApr 20, 2022#1093

dweebe wrote:
Apr 20, 2022
pattimagee wrote:
Apr 20, 2022
I'm seeing irrigation ditches being laid on the practice fields... with spring here and summer coming, I'd wager we'll get sod laid fairly soon. 
Funny. Earlier today two big trucks from some nursery/turf company made me miss the green light at Jefferson and Olive.

Good guess about putting down turf and having a full growing season instead of waiting until summer or fall and not having deeper roots.
Seems about the right time - I wonder if we get a USMNT game pre-World Cup tune up this summer as a test run for the stadium 
 

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PostApr 20, 2022#1094

dweebe wrote:
pattimagee wrote:
Apr 20, 2022
I'm seeing irrigation ditches being laid on the practice fields... with spring here and summer coming, I'd wager we'll get sod laid fairly soon. 
Funny. Earlier today two big trucks from some nursery/turf company made me miss the green light at Jefferson and Olive.

Good guess about putting down turf and having a full growing season instead of waiting until summer or fall and not having deeper roots.
In the landscape industry fall is typically regarded as the best time to plant. Specifically early fall when it’s cool but not going to freeze. Spring would be the next best if done mid spring and hopefully after the final freeze.

Sorry I plant a lot and had to nerd out for a moment. Carry on with soccer now.

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PostApr 20, 2022#1095

July 22nd is suppose to be the finish day but I’ve heard most like another 5-6 weeks after that

PostApr 24, 2022#1096

South side of Market.

Practice fields, training building, team HQ
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PostApr 24, 2022#1097

Ebsy wrote:
Mar 29, 2022
He went to Olin Business school so I am guessing he didn't exactly come from the working classes.
Jack Taylor went to Olin in 1940, when I'm guessing tuition was probably about $200 a semester, and maybe even less than that. At the time, Washington University was far from being one of the most prestigious schools in the country, and the whole reason "in St. Louis" was later added in 1976 is because most people in the country had no idea where the school even was, with most just assuming it was either in DC or Seattle. Attending that school in 1940 didn't have nearly the same socioeconomic implications as attending it in the last 30-40 years has. Harvard has pretty much always been Harvard, but Wash. U. didn't really start to become the school we know today until late in the 20th Century, during William Danforth's tenure as Chancellor.

Anyway, he left Wash. U. before finishing his degree to go serve as a fighter pilot in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Not saying he grew up poor, but there's no real evidence to suggest he came from tremendous privilege, either.

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PostApr 25, 2022#1098

^His dad owned a Cadillac dealership. He was not a member of the working class, or even really the middle class. And while Wash. U. wasn't perhaps the institution it is today it was still the elite school in the state at a time when that meant more. Tuition alone isn't necessarily the best indicator of much. The movers and shakers in St. Louis mostly came out of Wash. U. even then. Just having a college education at the time set you on a path to success. And an education from a locally elite private school? That's where Missouri senators and St. Louis CEOs studied. And while the place wasn't Harvard . . . it still isn't.

Further, the fighter pilot thing is itself a class indicator. USN fighter pilots were, by and in large, from the upper, or at least upwardly mobile class. Before the war most came out of Annapolis. Prewar I believe there was precisely one squadron of enlisted pilots out of several dozen squadrons. Once wartime expansion really kicked in you started to see more ROTC "90 day wonders" joining the ranks, but the naval aviators were an elite in more ways than one.

Anyway, none of this is a knock on Taylor. But he didn't come out of nowhere. He had some significant advantages. Much like nearly everyone in that economic class. The myth of the self-made man is just that: a myth.

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PostApr 25, 2022#1099

symphonicpoet wrote:
Apr 25, 2022
^His dad owned a Cadillac dealership. He was not a member of the working class, or even really the middle class. And while Wash. U. wasn't perhaps the institution it is today it was still the elite school in the state at a time when that meant more. Tuition alone isn't necessarily the best indicator of much. The movers and shakers in St. Louis mostly came out of Wash. U. even then. Just having a college education at the time set you on a path to success. And an education from a locally elite private school? That's where Missouri senators and St. Louis CEOs studied. And while the place wasn't Harvard . . . it still isn't.

Further, the fighter pilot thing is itself a class indicator. USN fighter pilots were, by and in large, from the upper, or at least upwardly mobile class. Before the war most came out of Annapolis. Prewar I believe there was precisely one squadron of enlisted pilots out of several dozen squadrons. Once wartime expansion really kicked in you started to see more ROTC "90 day wonders" joining the ranks, but the naval aviators were an elite in more ways than one.

Anyway, none of this is a knock on Taylor. But he didn't come out of nowhere. He had some significant advantages. Much like nearly everyone in that economic class. The myth of the self-made man is just that: a myth.
So where does this land us on the question regarding
1) evilness of the Taylor family and their supposed hand in the destruction of Mill Valley?
2) do we boycott the St. Louis MLS team because Carolyn Kindle Betz is the beneficiary of multi-generational wealth?

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PostApr 25, 2022#1100

dweebe wrote:
Apr 25, 2022
symphonicpoet wrote:
Apr 25, 2022
^His dad owned a Cadillac dealership. He was not a member of the working class, or even really the middle class. And while Wash. U. wasn't perhaps the institution it is today it was still the elite school in the state at a time when that meant more. Tuition alone isn't necessarily the best indicator of much. The movers and shakers in St. Louis mostly came out of Wash. U. even then. Just having a college education at the time set you on a path to success. And an education from a locally elite private school? That's where Missouri senators and St. Louis CEOs studied. And while the place wasn't Harvard . . . it still isn't.

Further, the fighter pilot thing is itself a class indicator. USN fighter pilots were, by and in large, from the upper, or at least upwardly mobile class. Before the war most came out of Annapolis. Prewar I believe there was precisely one squadron of enlisted pilots out of several dozen squadrons. Once wartime expansion really kicked in you started to see more ROTC "90 day wonders" joining the ranks, but the naval aviators were an elite in more ways than one.

Anyway, none of this is a knock on Taylor. But he didn't come out of nowhere. He had some significant advantages. Much like nearly everyone in that economic class. The myth of the self-made man is just that: a myth.
So where does this land us on the question regarding
1) evilness of the Taylor family and their supposed hand in the destruction of Mill Valley?
2) do we boycott the St. Louis MLS team because Carolyn Kindle Betz is the beneficiary of multi-generational wealth?
Man, it sucks those are the only two options

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