CHAPTER I RENEE DE LONGUEVILLE
CHAPTER II OLD ST. LOUIS
CHAPTER III A NEW HOME
CHAPTER IV THE SOWING OF A THORN
CHAPTER V WITH A TOUCH OF SORROW
CHAPTER VI BY THE FIRESIDE
CHAPTER VII AT THE KING'S BALL
CHAPTER VIII THE SURPRISE
CHAPTER IX PRISONERS
CHAPTER X IN THE WILDERNESS
CHAPTER XI WAS EVER WELCOME SWEETER
CHAPTER XII HER ANSWER
CHAPTER XIII PASSING YEARS
CHAPTER XIV AT THE BALL
CHAPTER XV GATHERING THISTLES
CHAPTER XVI THE RISE IN THE RIVER
CHAPTER XVII RIVALS
CHAPTER XVIII A FINE ADJUSTMENT
CHAPTER XIX THIS WAY AND THAT
CHAPTER XX WHEN A WOMAN WILL
CHAPTER XXI FROM ACROSS THE SEA
CHAPTER XXII A NEW ST. LOUIS
Title: A Little Girl in Old St. Louis
Author: Amanda Minnie Douglas
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
E-text prepared by Roger Frank
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
A LITTLE GIRL IN OLD ST. LOUIS
By
Amanda M. Douglas
AUTHOR OF “A LITTLE GIRL IN OLD BOSTON,”
“A LITTLE GIRL IN OLD DETROIT,”
“A LITTLE GIRL IN OLD WASHINGTON,” ETC.
NEW YORK
DODD, MEAD & COMPANY
1903
Copyright, 1903.
By Dodd, Mead and Company.
Published, September, 1903.
BURR PRINTING HOUSE,
NEW YORK.
Cities that have grown from small hamlets seldom keep register of their earlier days, except in the legends handed down in families. St. Louis has the curious anomaly of beginning over several times. For the earliest knowledge of how the little town looked I wish to express my obligations for some old maps and historical points to Mr. Frederick M. Crunden, Public Librarian, Miss Katharine I. Moody, and Colonel David Murphy.
A. M. Douglas.