1. We're The Tops!
Olivette's elevation of 700 feet above sea level makes it one of the highest
communities in St. Louis County. Since water runs downhill, the City of St.
Louis decided this would be the perfect location to build the Stacy Park Water
Reservoir in 1926.
2. Load Up the Wagons
The corner of Old Bonhomme and Price Roads had great significance to travelers
in the 1800's. It was the exact half-way point for wagon trains heading west
between the Port of St. Louis on the Mississippi River and Howell's Landing
on the Missouri River.
3. For the Record
The album cover for the rock group Head East's 1975 smash record "Flat as a
Pancake" was shot in our own Olivette Diner.
4. Links to the Past
Olivette's Indian Meadows subdivision was once the site of an 18-hole golf course.
5. Four to One
In 1930, the city of Olivette was formed by combining four different communities:
Central, Olive, Stratmann and Tower Hill.
6. Hail, Caesar
The property that eventually became Stoneyside Lane was once owned by a man
named Julius Caesar.
7. A Force of One
The City of Olivette's original police department consisted of one town marshal.
8. Water Log
The Stacy Park Reservoir can hold up to 100-million gallons of water!
9. The Subdivision That Almost Wasn't
The original Oak Estates Subdivision, with streets named Brighton Ave. and Chelsea
Ave., was planned before WorldWar II. But plans were scrapped when city officials
deemed the lot sizes too small. Subdivision plans were finally revised and approved
in the 1950's.
10. Park It Here
Olivette has more city parks per people than most of our St. Louis area neighboring
communities. Five parks = a park for every 1500 citizens!
11. The Old School
Olivette has had a school at the corner of Price and Old Bonhomme Roads for
more than 150 years. When it was built, the original two-room building was the
only brick schoolhouse in the county.
12. Our Gang
During the 1920's and 30's, a notorious group of underworld gangsters, known
as Egan's Rats, made a large Olivette home known as the Maxwellton Club their
headquarters. Neighbors complained about the noise and flying bullets whenever
the gang held target practice. Ironically, the building was directly across
Olive Street Road from what is now the Olivette Police Department.
13. Definitely a Baseball Town
Hall of Famer Lou Brock, former Cardinal broadcaster Jay Randolph and Phil Ozersky
(the man who nabbed Mark McGwire's record-setting 70th home run) are all former
Olivette residents.
14. Okay, a Football Town, Too
Cardinal Football greats Johnny Roland, Jim Hart and Jim Bakken also once lived
here .
15. A Salute to the Scouts
The flagpole at Stacy Park was made possible by a 1967 fund drive conducted
by the Boy Scouts and Girls Scouts of Olivette
16. What's An Olivette?
The dictionary defines "Olivette" as "a large theatrical floodlight having a
single bulb." But our town probably was named Olivette because the main road
into St. Louis connected with Olive Street.
17. The Grocery List
Even though today we lack a Schnuck's or Dierberg's, Olivette has had many grocery
stores through the years: Schmidt's, Robyn's, Maile's, Niese's, The Olive Branch,
Faeger's and Mercurio's. The last two grocery stores in Olivette were National
(where Party City is now located) and Flotken's (where the TRG building now
stands.)
18. Memories On Ice
In the early 1900's many Olivette kids loved ice skating on Bock's Pond- on
the property now occupied by Stacy Park. Also, before Saint's on Warson Road
was a roller skating rink, it was an ice skating rink.
19. From Graveyard to Playground
Centerton Park on Old Bonhomme Road is the former site of St. Martin's cemetery,
dating back to the 1840's
20. This Old House
There are at least a dozen homes in Olivette which are a century old or older.
The Fishbone house on Old Bonhomme predates county records, begun in 1875.
21. Olivette Lays Down the Law > Many modern home development laws were pioneered in Olivette, including ordinances setting standards for residential land grading and the installation of home swimming pools.
22. How Do You Like Them Apples?
The largest apple orchard in St. Louis County once grew on the Steinmeyer property
on Old Bonhomme Road. The orchard was eventually leveled to make way for the
Arbor Road subdivision
23. Camp OB
In the 1920's, migrant workers building the Stacy Park Reservoir lived with
their families in tents on the land where Old Bonhomme School now stands.
24. Across the Border
If you stood in the middle of Price Road where Delmar ends, you'd be in three
cities at one time! (Olivette, University City and Ladue.) However, we don't
recommend you do this.
25. Don't Step in the Mud
Olive Street Road was created in 1851 when the Central Plank Road Company laid
wooden boards west from Olive Street to avoid muddy roads during the spring
rains.