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St. Clair County Courier
15 July 1976
Who Remembers
The town of Valley Forge (Missouri) was eventually abandoned, its
decline starting from the time operations got into full swing on the St.
Louis and Iron Mountain Railroad which was completed in 1858. This town
where, in the years before the Civil War, a thriving community existed.
It’s chief industry was the iron smelter, where blooms were made from
the ore hauled over the plank road from Iron Mountain and Pilot Knob.
At the Battle of Pilot Knob on September 27, 1864, that about 9,000
Confederate troops under the leadership of Gen. Sterling Price tried to
storm the Union garrison of Fort Davidson, commanded by Gen. Thomas
Ewing. There was about twenty minutes of dreadful carnage, in which
about one thousand assaulting Confederates were killed or wounded,
before the order to besieged Fort, about seventy five Union soldiers lay
dead. Before the Confederates could rally their forces and implement an
artillery barrage the next day, the Union forces slipped away in the
night.
Just a brief distance away, near the now known town of Stanton, forces
were operating powder kilns and leaching vats in a cave. The gun powder
mill and plant was captured and destroyed by Quantrill Irregulars under
General Price’s orders. All of this colorful history is now in our past,
and little remains to remind us of these events. The cave is now known
world wide as Meramec Caverns, named for the river which flows by its
entrance. There has however been more attention focused on its more
recent history and because of this, has brought Caverns world fame. In
the 1870s the same cave was used by Jesse James and his Gang as a
hideout.



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