File:Olive Street looking west from Fourth Street, 1903. Ann Lucas Hunt building is on the right.jpg

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Description
English: Olive Street looking west from Fourth Street, 1903. The Ann Lucas Hunt building is on the right of photo, at the northwest corner of the intersection. A streetcar in the image advertises a direct route to the World's Fair grounds. The Anne Lucas Hunt Building went up in 1872. It was named for Anne Lucas Hunt, the daughter of John Baptist Lucas, a prominent St. Louis judge and businessman in the early 19th century. Anne and her family moved to St. Louis from Pennsylvania in 1805 after her father was appointed by President Thomas Jefferson to be commissioner of land claims and territorial judge in the Louisiana Territory. In 1817 her brother was killed in a duel with Thomas Hart Benton, prompting the now married Anne to move her young family to the county, to a house that would become famous later as Ulysses Grant’s home, White Haven. Anne would go on to marry twice and have eight children, although only three lived to adulthood. She was an early St. Louis philanthropist, supporting Catholic institutions throughout the city, including giving the land for St. Ann’s Church in the suburb of Normandy and the land at Third and Gratiot for Our Lady of Victories Church.
Title: Olive Street looking west from Fourth Street, 1903. Ann Lucas Hunt building is on the right.
Date
Source Missouri History Museum
URL: http://images.mohistory.org/image/9ABC478A-FB08-3295-498E-2B3B9613DAEA/original.jpg
Gallery: http://collections.mohistory.org/resource/146468
Author Emil Boehl
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UND - Copyright undetermined

MHS Open Access Policy: You are welcome to download and utilize any digital file that the Missouri Historical believes is likely in the public domain or is free of other known restrictions. This content is available free of charge and may be used without seeking permission from the Missouri Historical Society.
Identifier
InfoField
N22970
Part of
InfoField
Olive Street west from Fourth Street (folder 2 of 4)
Subjects
InfoField
Emil Boehl
vertical
black and white
outdoors
Downtown (Saint Louis, MO)
Olive Street
Fourth Street
Ann Lucas Hunt Building
Germania Trust
Postal Telegraph Cable Co.
power lines
streetcar
trolley
Pedestrians
Horses
wagon
cart
buggy
carriage
Commercial buildings
St. Louis Street Scenes
Resource
InfoField
146468
GUID
InfoField
9ABC478A-FB08-3295-498E-2B3B9613DAEA

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This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional, public domain work of art. The work of art itself is in the public domain for the following reason:
Public domain
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

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Note: This tag should not be used for sound recordings.PD-1923Public domain in the United States//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Olive_Street_looking_west_from_Fourth_Street,_1903._Ann_Lucas_Hunt_building_is_on_the_right.jpg
The official position taken by the Wikimedia Foundation is that "faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain".
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current04:01, 15 August 2017Thumbnail for version as of 04:01, 15 August 20174,133 × 5,097 (3.74 MB) (talk | contribs)Missouri History Museum. Olive Street looking west from Fourth Street, 1903. Ann Lucas Hunt building is on the right. #783.12 of 2574

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