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History
- Public Works
With the permission of
the Kirkwood Historical Society, the following excerpts on the
beginnings of the Kirkwood Public Works Department are provided
from “A History of Kirkwood,” by June Wilkinson Dahl,
published in 1965 by the Kirkwood Historical Society of Kirkwood,
Missouri, pp. 208-209.
Sanitation History:
... By the time spring came in 1919 and the sun
began to shine again, Kirkwood residents could look back at the
long, cold and unhappy winter of 1918-1919 with the feeling that
it had been bad but it could have been worse so they turned their
attention to other problems which still existed in their little
city. One matter which had been conspicuous by its absence from
the records of both the trustees and the aldermen concerned
garbage collection. Not since the days when the trustees declared
it to be a misdemeanor to deposit garbage on the public
thoroughfares had the matter of garbage and trash disposal found
its way into the deliberations of the governing bodies of
Kirkwood. This was probably because the aldermen were too involved
with other problems because the problem did exist. The
editor of the Kirkwood Tablet mentioned on July 4, 1908,
that:
"The aldermen should take action and provide
garbage cans for the business streets and also pass an ordinance
requiring that waste things be placed in them. Some people are in
the habit of throwing almost anything on the sidewalks and
streets. Banana peelings are dangerous when thrown on the
sidewalks and the waste paper flying about the streets give the
city a decidedly untidy appearance."
In 1916 a solution to the problem of garbage
disposal was presented by a Mr. Frank Goffke who offered to
collect it at no expense to the city but the aldermen took no
action on his proposal, referring it, instead, to the Board of
Health. Shortly thereafter the Butler Hog Farm was given
permission to collect garbage from all families "who care to
furnish it."
Since there was no municipal sanitation system for
the collection of garbage and other refuse, most Kirkwood families
had refuse pits some place on their property where all garbage was
deposited and into which most children managed to fall with some
degree of regularity! Like the proverbial puddle of water around
which no small boy ever walks, garbage pits seemed to attract the
younger generation almost magnetically in spite of maternal
admonitions!
Streets History, pages
210, 214:
... The Board of Aldermen addressed themselves to
an unbelievably large number of problems during the thirty-one
years that they served as the governing bodies of Kirkwood. One of
the problems which consumed a large portion of their time was the
improvement of Kirkwood's streets. The first improvement initiated
by the aldermen was the sprinkling of streets as soon as the water
mains had been laid and street hydrants were in operation. This
was most welcome because the dust had been a real nuisance.
Establishing grades, curbing, guttering, oiling, sprinkling,
macadamizing, building of culverts and hearing protests of
residents who did not want to be taxed for street improvements
were among the problems which the Board of Aldermen handled
between 1906 and the outbreak of World War I. Aldermen and
residents discussed in detail the proposed improvement of almost
every street in the city before any action was taken.
... The alternate thawing and freezing during the
winter always took its toll on the streets and each year one
reliable harbinger of spring was the appearance of new holes in
the surface of the streets. Sometimes repairs were not made on the
less heavily traveled streets for several months because the
street maintenance crew was small. The aldermen usually
received complaints if residents did not feel that repair work was
being done promptly enough! In July, 1929, one resident insisted
that the Board of Aldermen pay for two broken springs on his
automobile. Both had been broken when he struck the same hole in
the street twice! Maybe July 22 in 1929 was one of those hot,
humid days when a sense of humor has been known to leave even the
most light hearted! At any rate, something caused the aldermen to
take a very dim view of the problem of the bill of the two broken
springs of the car which fell in the same hole twice! Snapped one
member of the Board of Aldermen, "This bill should not be
paid in view of the fact that this man hit the same hole twice ...
and after hitting it once, he should have been on the look-out for
it!"
Maintenance Division
History, page 216:
... In July, 1920, the city purchased a much
needed tractor to be used in street maintenance work. To these two
machines the aldermen decided in 1921 to add a "Ford
Roadster" to be used by city officials in the discharge of
their official duties. Because this mechanical equipment required
regular maintenance, the aldermen felt it was advisable to employ
a mechanic to look after "the road machinery and other
machines" at a salary of $25 per month. This very simple
arrangement was the first of many steps which eventually led to
the award-winning maintenance department of 1964 under the
supervision of Jesse C. Farrar. From a total of four machines (the
fire engine, the Ford truck, the tractor, and the
"roadster") owned by the city and maintained by one
mechanic, Kirkwood's rolling stock grew to a total in 1964 of
eighty-four pieces of equipment of all types. The little one-man
garage next to the jail grew to the present city garage on Monroe
and Taylor Avenues where a crew of seven men under Mr. Farrar's
supervision keep the vehicles for the police, fire, street, park,
forestry, water, sanitation, and electric departments of the city
of Kirkwood in top running order.
Building
Commissioner's Office History, page 217:
... The growth of Kirkwood not only created a need
for enlarged facilities in which to carry on the administrative
work of the city, but it also meant that the aldermen received an
increasing number of requests for building permits of all types of
structures. This was really a two-fold problem. It involved the
establishment and enforcement of building codes and secondly, it
involved the problem of an over-all plan for the city. The
Missouri state legislature passed an act in 1925 authorizing
zoning ordinances in cities. Very shortly thereafter Kirkwood's
City Attorney, Robert C. Powell, suggested that Kirkwood invite
Harlan Bartholemew to address the Board of Aldermen on the subject
of zoning. The idea was so well received that the explanation to
the residents of Kirkwood resulted in private subscriptions
totaling almost $1,500 from 103 individuals and businesses for the
purpose of employing Mr. Bartholemew to set up a plan for
Kirkwood's development.
As soon as arrangements were completed,
Bartholemew and Associates made a complete survey of Kirkwood and
then recommended the establishment of districts into which the
city should be divided so that it would develop along prearranged
lines. Some areas were established for single family dwellings
only while others were set aside for two-family residences as well
as apartments. Plans were set up for the building of community
stores, commercial establishments, and light and heavy industry.
Planning & Zoning
Ordinance and Commission History,
page 218:
In 1927, Mayor R.L. Jacobsmeyer appointed a Zoning
and Planning Commission, of which J.R. Thursby was chairman.
Others who worked with Mr. Thursby in long-range planning for
Kirkwood were George M. Schmick, Dan Kelly, R.M. Henley, M.R.
McDonnell, W.C. Berry, Paul Y. Versen, and William J. Donworth.
The original zoning ordinance was not revised until 1936, but
since that time there have been several revisions as needed. One
portion of the Zoning Ordinance was reminiscent of ordinances
established by early Boards of Trustees for the Zoning Ordinance
prohibited the establishment in Kirkwood of those enterprises
which "... in general may be obnoxious, or offensive by
reason of emission of odor, dust, smoke, gas or noise." After
the ordinance was passed, its legality was questioned and tested
in the Circuit Court in 1929, but it was upheld. From time to time
there have been rumblings from a few disgruntled residents who
have run afoul of the ordinance's provisions but most Kirkwoodians
have agreed with William H. Wilson when he wrote many years later
that, "A city is not beautiful by accident. It is, by design
or indifference, an ugly, unplanned array of buildings and streets
that becomes beautiful only when men strive to transform its
deformities."
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