|
Landing was a disembarking location for
merchandise and early settlers for those coming from St. Louis and
other points from the east. The steamboats would fire a cannon
when they were several miles away from Liberty in order to give
merchants and the town's people time to reach the dock before the
boat arrived. During this decade, as many as five
"steamers" would move up the river daily and at least one
would dock at the Liberty Landing.
The Liberty Jail, built in 1833, is known for
its most famous prisoner, Joseph Smith, first president and prophet
of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Later Day Saints. Mr.
Smith and six of his followers were housed in the jail during the
winter of 1839. From the late 1840s through the 1860s, an
exodus of more than 70,000 Mormons passed through on their way to
their "New Zion" in Salt Lake City, Utah.
William Jewell College, one of the oldest
private colleges in Missouri, was founded in 1849 with a $10,000
donation from Dr. William Jewell of Columbia, Missouri.
There was also the Liberty Female Institute (also known as the
Liberty Ladies College) on the opposite side of town that provided a
comparable education for women.
The Clay County Savings Bank was the site of
the first successful daylight bank robbery on February 13, 1866
- allegedly committed by the James-Younger Gang.
The Interurban Railroad ran through Liberty,
from Excelsior Springs to Kansas City, beginning in 1913 to 1933.
Several trains stopped each day at the depot located on Mill Street.
From 1943 to 1945 during World War II, a German
prisoner of war camp was set up at a turkey farm. The
prisoners stayed in turkey laying houses that were adapted for
living quarters. Approximately 600 prisoners were housed in this
location. The prisoners were transported to areas farms to
work and produce crops for the local economy and war effort.
Liberty today is home to five local historic
districts, six districts on the National Register of Historic
Places, a thriving downtown historic Square and surrounding area,
three museums and many notable sites of interest.
Copied from the City
of Liberty website and used with permission.
You might want your
own copy of Liberty, Missouri's 175th
Anniversary book! Or, order your DVD copy of The
Story of Liberty - from settlement to suburb produced by
the Clay County Archives and Historical Library.
A more thorough
history of Liberty, prepared for the National Register of Historic
Places, can be found here.
|