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Father Dickson Cemetery

1903 establishments in MissouriAfrican-American cemeteriesAfrican-American history in St. LouisCemeteries in MissouriCemeteries on the National Register of Historic Places in Missouri
History of St. Louis County, Missouri
Father Dickson Cemetery
Father Dickson Cemetery

Father Dickson Cemetery is a historic African-American cemetery located on 845 South Sappington Road in Crestwood, St. Louis County, Missouri. It has been listed as one of the National Register of Historic Places since October 6, 2021.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Father Dickson Cemetery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Father Dickson Cemetery
Sappington Road, Crestwood

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Wikipedia: Father Dickson CemeteryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.5658 ° E -90.3858 °
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Address

Sappington Road

Sappington Road
63126 Crestwood
Missouri, United States
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Father Dickson Cemetery
Father Dickson Cemetery
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Nearby Places

Meacham Park (neighborhood)

Meacham Park is a neighborhood of the city of Kirkwood, Missouri outside of St. Louis City in St. Louis County. It was established in 1892 by Elzey E. Meacham as an unincorporated community largely of African Americans and was eventually annexed by the city of Kirkwood, which relocated many of its residents to make way for a mall and other commercial property. Kirkwood previously annexed another strip and, along with the construction of a highway, physically divided the communities. Years of discrimination and neglect followed with Meacham used for public housing projects but not receiving the public services of its neighboring city. After it was annexed and hundreds of residents relocated or departed, tensions continued as its school was closed, requests for a community center at the closed school denied, and contracts made for city business with firms outside Meacham. During segregation Meacham Park stood apart with its own institutions.On February 7, 2008, Charles L. "Cookie" Thornton, a disturbed construction business owner who had been in dispute with Kirkwood officials for years, shot up a Kirkwood city council meeting killing five people.The former J. Milton Turner School building in Meacham Park is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Also, the neighborhood's First Baptist Church, established in 1907 and originally built next to the J. Milton Turner School, was one of the first buildings in the St. Louis area that was owned by African Americans.The area includes the 1.25 acre Meacham Memorial Park.