May 28, 2021

Missouri|historical black and white image of President at Ronald Reagan Hickman HighSchool|black and white historical image of a brick building on South Ninth Street in Columbia

COMO Trivia

How many of these interesting facts did you know? In 1968, the city constructed canopies over downtown sidewalks on Broadway. They were built to protect pedestrians from the sun. From the ’90s to the early 2000s, there was a Downtown Twilight Festival held every Thursday of June and September. Stephens College was originally named Columbia

COMO Trivia Read More »

Conley House

Tucked away in the middle of MU’s campus, the Sanford Conley House serves as a reminder of the rich history found in Columbia. Citing the house as a “rare, local example of the Italianate style in Columbia, Missouri,” the application to the National Register of Historic Places noted that “most of these examples are concentrated

Conley House Read More »

Missouri|aerial view of football field near Columbia Missouri with the current view side by side with the historical image of the football field outside of Columbia

Change Is in the Air

Downtown Columbia, Circa 1925-1933.(Roe F. Montgomery Scrapbook. P0054. 023140-2. The State Historical Society of Missouri. Photograph Collection.) Interstate 70, 1960. (Missouri Ruralist Photographs. P0030-4800. The State Historical Society of Missouri. Photograph Collection) 1. I-702. Business Loop3. MU Women’s and Children’s Hospital 4. Highway 635. Conley Road6. Exit 1287. Walmart Supercenter8. Columbia Country Club Industrial Development Site,

Change Is in the Air Read More »

Circa 1870|black and white vintage postcard of Wabash Railroad Depot

James L. Stephens

When the earliest pioneers settled in Boone County, people lived in log cabins daubed with mud and covered in boards, with roofs secured by poles. Corn cost the settlers 20 cents per bushel; land cost between $2 and $6 per acre; and a horse cost between $20 and $40.  Among the first settlers who came

James L. Stephens Read More »

Richard & Ann Hawkins Gentry

Let’s meet Richard and Ann Hawkins Gentry, a pioneering couple whose union changed the history of Columbia and Missouri forever. If you’ve driven through Gentry County or attended Ann Hawkins Gentry Middle School here in town, you’ve witnessed their legacy for yourself.  Although they were founders of Columbia, their story started further east, in Madison

Richard & Ann Hawkins Gentry Read More »