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Missouri
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Key Information
Missouri (see pronunciation) is a landlocked state in the Midwestern region of the United States.[6] Ranking 21st in land area, it borders Iowa to the north, Illinois, Kentucky and Tennessee to the east, Arkansas to the south and Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska to the west. In the south are the Ozarks, a forested highland, providing timber, minerals, and recreation. At 1.5 billion years old, the St. Francois Mountains are among the oldest in the world. The Missouri River, after which the state is named, flows through the center and into the Mississippi River, which makes up the eastern border. With over six million residents, it is the 19th-most populous state of the country. The largest urban areas are St. Louis, Kansas City, Springfield, and Columbia. The capital is Jefferson City.
Humans have inhabited present-day Missouri for at least 12,000 years. The Mississippian culture, which emerged in the ninth century, built cities with pyramidal and other ceremonial mounds before declining in the 14th century. The Indigenous Osage and Missouria nations inhabited the area when European people arrived in the 17th century. The French incorporated the territory into Louisiana, founding Ste. Genevieve in 1735 and St. Louis in 1764. After a brief period of Spanish rule, the United States acquired Missouri as part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. Americans from the Upland South rushed into the new Missouri Territory, taking advantage of its productive agricultural plains; Missouri played a central role in the westward expansion of the United States.[7] Missouri was admitted as a slave state as part of the Missouri Compromise of 1820. As a border state, Missouri's role in the American Civil War was complex, and it was subject to rival governments, raids, and guerilla warfare. After the war, both Greater St. Louis and the Kansas City metropolitan area became large centers of industrialization and business.
Today the state is divided into 114 counties and the independent city of St. Louis. Missouri has been called the "Gateway to the West",[8] the "Mother of the West", the "Cave State", and the "Show Me State".[9] Its culture blends elements of the Midwestern and Southern United States. It is the birthplace of the musical genres ragtime, Kansas City jazz and St. Louis blues. The well-known Kansas City-style barbecue, and the lesser-known St. Louis-style barbecue, can be found across the state and beyond.
Missouri is a major center of beer brewing and has some of the most permissive alcohol laws in the U.S.[10] It is home to Anheuser-Busch, the world's largest beer producer, and produces Missouri wine, especially in the Missouri Rhineland. Outside the state's major cities, popular tourist destinations include the Lake of the Ozarks, Table Rock Lake and Branson. Some of the largest companies based in the state include Cerner, Express Scripts, Monsanto, Emerson Electric, Edward Jones, H&R Block, Wells Fargo Advisors, Centene Corporation, and O'Reilly Auto Parts. Well-known universities in Missouri include the University of Missouri, Saint Louis University, and Washington University in St. Louis.[11]
Etymology and pronunciation
[edit]The state is named for the Missouri River, which was named after the indigenous Missouria, a Siouan-language tribe. French colonists adapted a form of the Illinois language-name for the people: Wimihsoorita. Their name means 'one who has dugout canoes'.[12]
The name Missouri has several different pronunciations even among its present-day inhabitants,[13] the two most common being /mɪˈzɜːri/ ⓘ mih-ZUR-ee and /mɪˈzɜːrə/ ⓘ mih-ZUR-ə.[14][15] Further pronunciations also exist in Missouri or elsewhere in the United States, involving the realization of the medial consonant as either /z/ or /s/; the vowel in the second syllable as either /ɜːr/ or /ʊər/;[16] and the third syllable as /i/ or /ə/.[15] Any combination of these phonetic realizations may be observed coming from speakers of American English. In British Received Pronunciation, the preferred variant is /mɪˈzʊəri/, with /mɪˈsʊəri/ being a possible alternative.[17][18]
Donald M. Lance, a professor of English at the University of Missouri, stated that no pronunciation could be declared correct, nor could any be clearly defined as native or outsider, rural or urban, southern or northern, educated or otherwise.[19] Politicians often employ multiple pronunciations, even during a single speech, to appeal to a greater number of listeners.[13] In informal contexts respellings of the state's name, such as "Missour-ee" or "Missour-uh", are occasionally used to distinguish pronunciations phonetically.
Nicknames
[edit]There is no official state nickname.[20] However, Missouri's unofficial nickname is the "Show Me State", which appears on its license plates. This phrase has several origins. One is popularly ascribed to a speech by Congressman Willard Vandiver in 1899, who declared that "I come from a state that raises corn and cotton, cockleburs and Democrats, and frothy eloquence neither convinces nor satisfies me. I'm from Missouri, and you have got to show me." This is in keeping with the saying "I'm from Missouri", which means "I'm skeptical of the matter and not easily convinced."[21] However, according to researchers, the phrase "show me" was already in use before the 1890s.[22] Another one states that it is a reference to Missouri miners who were taken to Leadville, Colorado, to replace striking workers. Since the new miners were unfamiliar with the mining methods, they required frequent instruction. Pit bosses began saying, "That man is from Missouri. You'll have to show him."[20]
Other nicknames for Missouri include "The Lead State", "The Bullion State", "The Ozark State", "The Mother of the West", "The Iron Mountain State", and "Pennsylvania of the West".[23] It is also known as the "Cave State"[24]: 53 because there are more than 7,300 recorded caves in the state (second to Tennessee). Perry County is the county with the most caves and the single longest cave.[25][26]
The official state motto is "Salus Populi Suprema Lex Esto", Latin for "Let the welfare of the people be the supreme law."[27]
History
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2017) |
Early history
[edit]Archaeological excavations along river valleys have shown continuous habitation since about 9000 BCE.[28] Beginning before 1000 CE, the people of the Mississippian culture created regional political centers at present-day St. Louis and across the Mississippi River at Cahokia, near present-day Collinsville, Illinois. Their large cities included thousands of individual residences. Still, they are known for their surviving massive earthwork mounds, built for religious, political and social reasons, in platform, ridgetop and conical shapes. Cahokia was the center of a regional trading network that reached from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. The civilization declined by 1400 CE, and most descendants left the area long before the arrival of Europeans. St. Louis was at one time known as Mound City by the European Americans because of the numerous surviving prehistoric mounds since lost to urban development. The Mississippian culture left mounds throughout the middle Mississippi and Ohio river valleys, extending into the southeast and the upper river.
The land that became the state of Missouri was part of numerous different territories, possessed changing and often indeterminate borders, and had many different Native American and European names between the 1600s and statehood. For much of the first half of the 1700s, the west bank of the Mississippi River that would become Missouri was mostly uninhabited, something of a no man's land that kept peace between the Illinois on the east bank of the Mississippi River and to the North, and the Osage and Missouri Indians of the lower Missouri Valley. In the early 1700s, French traders and missionaries explored the whole of the Mississippi Valley, and named the region "Louisiana". Around the same time, a different group of French Canadians established five villages on the east bank of the Mississippi River and identified their settlements as being in le pays des Illinois, "the country of the Illinois". When settlers of French Canadian descent began crossing the Mississippi River to establish settlements such as Ste. Genevieve, they continued to identify their settlements as being in the Illinois Country. At the same time, the French settlements on both sides of the Mississippi River were part of the French province of Louisiana. To distinguish the settlements in the Middle Mississippi Valley from French settlements in the lower Mississippi Valley around New Orleans, French officials and inhabitants referred to the Middle Mississippi Valley as La Haute Louisiane, "The High Louisiana", or "Upper Louisiana".

The first European settlers were mostly ethnic French Canadians, who created their first settlement in Missouri at present-day Ste. Genevieve, about 45 miles (72 km) south of St. Louis. They had migrated in about 1750 from the Illinois Country. They came from colonial villages on the east side of the Mississippi River, where soils were becoming exhausted and there was insufficient river bottom land for the growing population. The early Missouri settlements included many enslaved Africans and Native Americans, and slave labor was central to both commercial agriculture and the fur trade. Sainte-Geneviève became a thriving agricultural center, producing enough surplus wheat, corn and tobacco to ship tons of grain annually downriver to Lower Louisiana for trade. Grain production in the Illinois Country was critical to the survival of Lower Louisiana and especially the city of New Orleans.
St. Louis was founded on February 14, 1764, by French fur traders Gilbert Antoine de St. Maxent, Pierre Laclède, and Auguste Chouteau.[29] From 1764 to 1803, European control of the area west of the Mississippi to the northernmost part of the Missouri River basin, called Louisiana, was assumed by the Spanish as part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain, due to Treaty of Fontainebleau[30] (in order to have Spain join with France in the war against England). The arrival of the Spanish in St. Louis was in September 1767.
St. Louis became the center of a regional fur trade with Native American tribes that extended up the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, dominating the regional economy for decades. Trading partners of major firms shipped their furs from St. Louis by river down to New Orleans for export to Europe. They provided a variety of goods to traders for sale and trade with their Native American clients. The fur trade and associated businesses made St. Louis an early financial center and provided the wealth for some to build fine houses and import luxury items. Its location near the confluence of the Illinois River meant it also handled produce from the agricultural areas. River traffic and trade along the Mississippi were integral to the state's economy. As the area's first major city, St. Louis expanded greatly after the invention of the steamboat and the increased river trade.
19th century
[edit]
Part of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase by the United States, Missouri earned the nickname Gateway to the West because it served as a significant departure point for expeditions and settlers heading to the West during the 19th century. St. Charles, just west of St. Louis, was the starting point and the return destination of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, which ascended the Missouri River in 1804, to explore the western lands to the Pacific Ocean. For decades, St. Louis was a major supply point for parties of settlers heading west.
Missouri was historically a Southern state. As many of the early settlers in western and southeastern Missouri migrated from the Upper South including Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia, they brought enslaved African Americans as agricultural laborers, and they desired to continue their culture and the institution of slavery. They settled predominantly in 17 counties along the Missouri River, in an area of flatlands that enabled plantation agriculture and became known as "Little Dixie".
The state was rocked by the 1811–12 New Madrid earthquakes. Casualties were few due to the sparse population.
Admission as a state in 1821
[edit]
In 1821, the former Missouri Territory was admitted as a slave state, under the Missouri Compromise, and with a temporary state capital in St. Charles. In 1826, the capital was shifted to its permanent location of Jefferson City, also on the Missouri River.
Originally the state's western border was a straight line, defined as the meridian passing through the Kawsmouth,[31] the point where the Kansas River enters the Missouri River. The river has moved since this designation. This line is known as the Osage Boundary.[32] In 1836 the Platte Purchase was added to the northwest corner of the state after purchase of the land from the native tribes, making the Missouri River the border north of the Kansas River. This addition increased the land area of what was already the largest state in the Union at the time (about 66,500 square miles (172,000 km2) to Virginia's 65,000 square miles, which then included West Virginia).[33]
In the early 1830s, Mormon migrants from northern states and Canada began settling near Independence and areas just north of there. Conflicts over religion and slavery arose between the 'old settlers' (mainly from the South) and the Mormons (mainly from the North). The Mormon War erupted in 1838. By 1839, with the help of an "Extermination Order" by Governor Lilburn Boggs, the old settlers forcibly expelled the Mormons from Missouri and confiscated their lands.
Conflicts over slavery exacerbated border tensions among the states and territories. From 1838 to 1839, a border dispute with Iowa over the so-called Honey Lands resulted in both states' calling-up of militias along the border.
With increasing migration, from the 1830s to the 1860s, Missouri's population almost doubled with every decade. Most newcomers were American-born and Southern, but many later arrivals were Northern migrants as well as Irish and German immigrants who arrived in the late 1840s and 1850s. As a majority were Catholic, they set up their own religious institutions in the state, which had been mostly Protestant. Many settled in cities, creating a regional and then state network of Catholic churches and schools. 19th-century German immigrants created the wine industry along the Missouri River and the beer industry in St. Louis.
While many German immigrants were strongly anti-slavery,[34][35] many Irish immigrants living in cities were pro-slavery, fearing that liberating African-American slaves would create a glut of unskilled labor, driving wages down.[35]
Most Missouri farmers practiced subsistence farming before the American Civil War. The majority of those who held slaves had fewer than five each. Planters, defined by some historians as those holding 20 slaves or more, were concentrated in the counties known as "Little Dixie", in the central part of the state along the Missouri River as well as southeastern Missouri. The tensions over slavery chiefly had to do with the future of the state and nation. In 1860, enslaved African Americans made up less than 10% of the state's population of 1,182,012.[36] In order to control the flooding of farmland and low-lying villages along the Mississippi, the state had completed construction of 140 miles (230 km) of levees along the river by 1860.[37]
American Civil War
[edit]
After the secession of Southern states began in 1861, the Missouri legislature called for the election of a special convention on secession. This convention voted against secession, but also qualified their support of the Union. In the aftermath of Battle of Fort Sumter Pro-Southern Governor Claiborne F. Jackson ordered the mobilization of several hundred members of the state militia who had gathered in a camp in St. Louis for training. In secret, he also requested Confederate arms and artillery to help take the St. Louis Arsenal. Alarmed at this action, and discovering the Confederate aid, General Nathaniel Lyon struck first, encircling the camp and forcing the state troops to surrender. Lyon directed his soldiers, largely non-English-speaking German immigrants, to march the prisoners through the streets, and this led to riot by pro-secession citizens. While it is disputed how it started, this riot led to violence and Union soldiers killed by St. Louis civilians. The event as a whole, is called the Camp Jackson Affair.
These events sharpened the divisions within the state. Governor Jackson appointed Sterling Price, president of the convention on secession, as head of the new Missouri State Guard. In the face of Union General Lyon's rapid advance through the state, Jackson and Price were forced to flee the capital of Jefferson City on June 14, 1861. In Neosho, Missouri, Jackson called the state legislature into session to call for secession. However, the elected legislative body was split between pro-Union and pro-Confederate. As such, few of the pro-unionist attended the session called in Neosho, and the ordinance of secession was quickly adopted. The Confederacy recognized Missouri secession on October 30, 1861.
With the elected governor absent from the capital and the legislators largely dispersed, the state convention was reassembled with most of its members present, save twenty who fled south with Jackson's forces. The convention declared all offices vacant and installed Hamilton Gamble as the new governor of Missouri. President Lincoln's administration immediately recognized Gamble's government as the legal Missouri government. The federal government's decision enabled raising pro-Union militia forces for service within the state and volunteer regiments for the Union Army.
Fighting ensued between Union forces and a combined army of General Price's Missouri State Guard and Confederate troops from Arkansas and Texas under General Ben McCulloch. After winning victories at the battle of Wilson's Creek and the siege of Lexington, Missouri and suffering losses elsewhere, the Confederate forces retreated to Arkansas and later Marshall, Texas, in the face of a largely reinforced Union Army.
Though regular Confederate troops staged some large-scale raids into Missouri, the fighting in the state for the next three years consisted chiefly of guerrilla warfare. "Citizen soldiers" or insurgents such as Captain William Quantrill, Frank and Jesse James, the Younger brothers, and William T. Anderson made use of quick, small-unit tactics. Pioneered by the Missouri Partisan Rangers, such insurgencies also arose in portions of the Confederacy occupied by the Union during the Civil War. Historians have portrayed stories of the James brothers' outlaw years as an American "Robin Hood" myth.[38] The vigilante activities of the Bald Knobbers of the Ozarks in the 1880s were an unofficial continuation of insurgent mentality long after the official end of the war, and they are a favorite theme in Branson's self-image.[39]
Reconstruction and later 19th century
[edit]
Missouri remained electorally competitive during the Jim Crow era, and did not disenfranchise African Americans, who comprised less than 10% of the state's population from 1870 to 1960. In particular, Missouri never implemented a poll tax as a requirement to vote.[40]
However, Missouri did enact racial segregation. Democratic President Harry S. Truman grew up in Missouri, where segregation was practiced and largely accepted. Truman would later issue Executive Order 9981 in July 1948, prohibiting racial segregation in the armed forces.[41]
20th century
[edit]
The Progressive Era (1890s to 1920s) saw numerous prominent leaders from Missouri trying to end corruption and modernize politics, government, and society. Joseph "Holy Joe" Folk was a key leader who made a strong appeal to the middle class and rural evangelical Protestants. Folk was elected governor as a progressive reformer and Democrat in the 1904 election. He promoted what he called "the Missouri Idea", the concept of Missouri as a leader in public morality through popular control of law and strict enforcement. He successfully conducted antitrust prosecutions, ended free railroad passes for state officials, extended bribery statutes, improved election laws, required formal registration for lobbyists, made racetrack gambling illegal and enforced the Sunday-closing law. He helped enact Progressive legislation, including an initiative and referendum provision, regulation of elections, education, employment and child labor, railroads, food, business, and public utilities. Several efficiency-oriented examiner boards and commissions were established during Folk's administration, including many agricultural boards and the Missouri library commission.[42]

Between the Civil War and the end of World War II, Missouri transitioned from a rural southern state to a hybrid industrial-service-agricultural midwestern state as the Midwest rapidly industrialized and expanded into Missouri. The expansion of railroads to the West transformed Kansas City into a major transportation hub within the nation, and led to major Midwestern migration after the war overtaking the state's original Southern population. The growth of the Texas cattle industry along with this increased rail infrastructure and the invention of the refrigerated boxcar also made Kansas City a major meatpacking center, as large cattle drives from Texas brought herds of cattle to Dodge City and other Kansas towns. There, the cattle were loaded onto trains destined for Kansas City, where they were butchered and distributed to the eastern markets. The first half of the 20th century was the height of Kansas City's prominence, and its downtown became a showcase for stylish Art Deco skyscrapers as construction boomed.
In 1930, there was a diphtheria epidemic in the area around Springfield, which killed approximately 100 people. Serum was rushed to the area, and medical personnel stopped the epidemic.

During the mid-1950s and 1960s, St. Louis and Kansas City suffered deindustrialization and loss of jobs in railroads and manufacturing, as did other Midwestern industrial cities. St. Charles claims to be the site of the first interstate highway project in 1956.[43] Such highway construction made it easy for middle-class residents to leave the city for newer housing developed in the suburbs, often former farmland where land was available at lower prices. These major cities have gone through decades of readjustment to develop different economies and adjust to demographic changes. Suburban areas have developed separate job markets, both in knowledge industries and services, such as major retail malls.
21st century
[edit]In 2014, Missouri received national attention for the protests and riots that followed the shooting of Michael Brown by a police officer of Ferguson,[44][45][46] which led Governor Jay Nixon to call out the Missouri National Guard.[47][48] A grand jury declined to indict the officer, and the U.S. Department of Justice concluded, after careful investigation, that the police officer legitimately feared for his safety.[49] However, in a separate investigation, the Department of Justice also found that the Ferguson Police Department and the City of Ferguson relied on unconstitutional practices in order to balance the city's budget through racially motivated excessive fines and punishments,[50] that the Ferguson police "had used excessive and dangerous force and had disproportionately targeted blacks,"[51] and that the municipal court "emphasized revenue over public safety, leading to routine breaches of citizens' constitutional guarantees of due process and equal protection under the law."[52]
A series of student protests at the University of Missouri against what the protesters viewed as poor response by the administration to racist incidents on campus began in September 2015.[53][54]
On June 7, 2017, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People issued a warning to prospective African-American travelers to Missouri. This is the first NAACP warning ever covering an entire state.[55][56] According to a 2018 report by the Missouri Attorney General's office, for the past 18 years, "African Americans, Hispanics and other people of color are disproportionately affected by stops, searches and arrests."[57] The same report found that the biggest discrepancy was in 2017, when "black motorists were 85% more likely to be pulled over in traffic stops".[58]
In 2018, the USDA announced its plans to relocate Economic Research Service (ERS) and National Institute of Food & Agriculture (NIFA) to Kansas City. They have since decided on a specific location in downtown Kansas City, Missouri.[59] With the addition of the KC Streetcar project and construction of the Sprint Center Arena, the downtown area in KC has attracted investment in new offices, hotels, and residential complexes. Both Kansas City and St. Louis are undergoing a rebirth in their downtown areas with the addition of the new Power & Light (KC) and Ballpark Village (STL) districts and the renovation of existing historical buildings in each downtown area.[60] The 2019 announcement of an MLS expansion team in St. Louis is driving even more development in the downtown west area of St. Louis.[61] Kansas City has experienced a boom in population, with new developments such as Three Light apartments being centered in Downtown Kansas City,[62][63] as well as suburban development in the Northland.[64]

Geography
[edit]Missouri borders eight different states, a figure equaled only by its neighbor, Tennessee. Missouri is bounded by Iowa on the north; by Illinois, Kentucky, and Tennessee across the Mississippi River on the east; on the south by Arkansas; and by Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska (the last across the Missouri River) on the west. Whereas the northern and southern boundaries are straight lines, the Missouri Bootheel extends south between the St. Francis and the Mississippi rivers. The two largest rivers are the Mississippi (which defines the eastern boundary of the state) and the Missouri River (which flows from west to east through the state), essentially connecting the two largest metros of Kansas City and St. Louis.
Although today it is usually considered part of the Midwest,[65] Missouri was historically seen by many as a border state, chiefly because of the settlement of migrants from the South and its status as a slave state before the Civil War, balanced by the influence of St. Louis. The counties that made up "Little Dixie" were those along the Missouri River in the center of the state, settled by Southern migrants who held the greatest concentration of slaves.
In 2005, Missouri received 16,695,000 visitors to its national parks and other recreational areas totaling 101,000 acres (410 km2), giving it $7.41 million in annual revenues, 26.6% of its operating expenditures.[66]
Topography
[edit]
North of, and in some cases just south of, the Missouri River lie the Northern Plains that stretch into Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas. Here, rolling hills remain from the glaciation that once extended from the Canadian Shield to the Missouri River. Missouri has many large river bluffs along the Mississippi, Missouri, and Meramec Rivers. Southern Missouri rises to the Ozark Mountains, a dissected plateau surrounding the Precambrian igneous St. Francois Mountains. This region also hosts karst topography characterized by high limestone content with the formation of sinkholes and caves.[67]
The southeastern part of the state is known as the Missouri Bootheel region, which is part of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain or Mississippi embayment. This region is the lowest, flattest, warmest, and wettest part of the state. It is also among the poorest, as the economy there is mostly agricultural.[68] It is also the most fertile, with cotton and rice crops predominant. The Bootheel was the epicenter of the four New Madrid Earthquakes of 1811 and 1812.

Climate
[edit]
Missouri generally has a humid continental climate with cool, sometimes cold, winters and hot, humid, and wet summers. In the southern part of the state, particularly in the Bootheel, the climate becomes humid subtropical. Located in the interior United States, Missouri often experiences extreme temperatures. Without high mountains or oceans nearby to moderate temperature, its climate is alternately influenced by air from the cold Arctic and the hot and humid Gulf of Mexico. Missouri's highest recorded temperature is 118 °F (48 °C) at Warsaw and Union on July 14, 1954, while the lowest recorded temperature is −40 °F (−40 °C) also at Warsaw on February 13, 1905.
Located in Tornado Alley, Missouri also receives extreme weather in the form of severe thunderstorms and tornadoes. On May 22, 2011, a massive EF-5 tornado killed 158 people and destroyed roughly one-third of the city of Joplin. The tornado caused an estimated $1–3 billion in damages, killed 159 people and injured more than a thousand. It was the first EF5 to hit the state since 1957 and the deadliest in the U.S. since 1947, making it the seventh deadliest tornado in American history and 27th deadliest in the world. St. Louis and its suburbs also have a history of experiencing particularly severe tornadoes, the most recent one of note being an EF4 that damaged Lambert-St. Louis International Airport on April 22, 2011. One of the worst tornadoes in American history struck St. Louis on May 27, 1896, killing at least 255 people and causing $10 million in damage (equivalent to $3.9 billion in 2009 or $5.72 billion in today's dollars).
| Monthly normal high and low temperatures for various Missouri cities in °F (°C). | |||||||||||||||
| City | Avg. | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Columbia | High | 37 (3) |
44 (7) |
55 (13) |
66 (19) |
75 (24) |
84 (29) |
89 (32) |
87 (31) |
79 (26) |
68 (20) |
53 (12) |
42 (6) |
65.0 (18.3) |
|
| Columbia | Low | 18 (−8) |
23 (−5) |
33 (1) |
43 (6) |
53 (12) |
62 (17) |
66 (19) |
64 (18) |
55 (13) |
44 (7) |
33 (1) |
22 (−6) |
43.0 (6.1) |
|
| Kansas City | High | 36 (2) |
43 (6) |
54 (12) |
65 (18) |
75 (24) |
84 (29) |
89 (32) |
87 (31) |
79 (26) |
68 (20) |
52 (11) |
40 (4) |
64.4 (18.0) |
|
| Kansas City | Low | 18 (−8) |
23 (−5) |
33 (1) |
44 (7) |
54 (12) |
63 (17) |
68 (20) |
66 (19) |
57 (14) |
46 (8) |
33 (1) |
22 (−6) |
44.0 (6.7) |
|
| Springfield | High | 42 (6) |
48 (9) |
58 (14) |
68 (20) |
76 (24) |
85 (29) |
90 (32) |
90 (32) |
81 (27) |
71 (22) |
56 (13) |
46 (8) |
67.6 (19.8) |
|
| Springfield | Low | 22 (−6) |
26 (−3) |
35 (2) |
44 (7) |
53 (12) |
62 (17) |
67 (19) |
66 (19) |
57 (14) |
46 (8) |
35 (2) |
26 (−3) |
45.0 (7.2) |
|
| St. Louis | High | 40 (4) |
45 (7) |
56 (13) |
67 (19) |
76 (24) |
85 (29) |
89 (32) |
88 (31) |
80 (27) |
69 (21) |
56 (13) |
43 (6) |
66.2 (19.0) |
|
| St. Louis | Low | 24 (−4) |
28 (−2) |
37 (3) |
47 (8) |
57 (14) |
67 (19) |
71 (22) |
69 (21) |
61 (16) |
49 (9) |
38 (3) |
27 (−3) |
48.0 (8.9) |
|
| Source:[69] | |||||||||||||||
Flora and fauna
[edit]Missouri is home to diverse flora and fauna, including several endemic species.[70] There is a large amount of fresh water present due to the Mississippi River, Missouri River, Table Rock Lake and Lake of the Ozarks, with numerous smaller tributary rivers, streams, and lakes. North of the Missouri River, the state is primarily rolling hills of the Great Plains, whereas south of the Missouri River, the state is dominated by the Oak-Hickory Central U.S. hardwood forest.
Recreational and commercial uses of public forests, including grazing, logging, and mining, increased after World War II. Fishermen, hikers, campers, and others started lobbying to protect forest areas with a "wilderness character". During the 1930s and 1940s, Aldo Leopold, Arthur Carhart and Bob Marshall developed a "wilderness" policy for the Forest Service. Their efforts bore fruit with the Wilderness Act of 1964, which designated wilderness areas "where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by men, where man himself is a visitor and does not remain." This included second growth public forests like the Mark Twain National Forest.[71]
Counties
[edit]Missouri has 114 counties and one independent city, St. Louis, which is Missouri's most densely populated—5,140 people per square mile. The largest counties by population are St. Louis (1,004,125), Jackson (717,204), and St. Charles (406,262). Worth County is the smallest (1,973). The largest counties by size are Texas (1,179 square miles) and Shannon (1,004). Worth County is the smallest (266).
Cities and towns
[edit]Jefferson City is the capital city of Missouri, while the state's five largest cities are Kansas City, St. Louis, Springfield, Columbia, and Independence.[72]
St. Louis is the principal city of the largest metropolitan area in Missouri, composed of 17 counties and the independent city of St. Louis; eight of its counties are in Illinois. As of 2022, St. Louis was the 21st-largest metropolitan area in the nation with 2.80 million people. If ranked using Combined Statistical Area, it is also the 21st-largest with 2.91 million people in 2022. Some of the major cities making up the St. Louis metro area in Missouri are O'Fallon, St. Charles, St. Peters, Florissant, Chesterfield, Wentzville, Wildwood, University City, Ballwin, and Kirkwood.
Kansas City is Missouri's largest city and the principal city of the fourteen-county Kansas City Metropolitan Statistical Area, including five counties in the state of Kansas. As of 2022, it was the 31st-largest metropolitan area in the U.S., with 2.21 million people. In the Combined Statistical Area in 2022, it ranked 29th with 2.55 million. Some of the other major cities comprising the Kansas City metro area in Missouri include Independence, Lee's Summit, Blue Springs, Liberty, Raytown, Gladstone, Grandview, and Belton.
Springfield is Missouri's third-largest city and the principal city of the Springfield-Branson Metropolitan Area, which has a population of 549,423 and includes seven counties in southwestern Missouri. Branson is a major tourist attraction in the Ozarks in southwest Missouri. Some of the other major cities comprising the Springfield-Branson metro area include Nixa, Ozark, and Republic.
| Rank | Name | County | Pop. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kansas City | Jackson, Clay, Platte, and Cass | 509,297 | ||||||
| 2 | St. Louis | Independent city | 286,578 | ||||||
| 3 | Springfield | Greene | 170,067 | ||||||
| 4 | Columbia | Boone | 128,555 | ||||||
| 5 | Independence | Jackson | 121,202 | ||||||
| 6 | Lee's Summit | Jackson and Cass | 103,465 | ||||||
| 7 | O'Fallon | St. Charles | 93,663 | ||||||
| 8 | St. Charles | St. Charles | 71,184 | ||||||
| 9 | St. Joseph | Buchanan | 70,656 | ||||||
| 10 | Blue Springs | Jackson | 59,518 | ||||||
Demographics
[edit]| Census | Pop. | Note | %± |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1810 | 19,783 | — | |
| 1820 | 66,586 | 236.6% | |
| 1830 | 140,455 | 110.9% | |
| 1840 | 383,702 | 173.2% | |
| 1850 | 682,044 | 77.8% | |
| 1860 | 1,182,012 | 73.3% | |
| 1870 | 1,721,295 | 45.6% | |
| 1880 | 2,168,380 | 26.0% | |
| 1890 | 2,679,185 | 23.6% | |
| 1900 | 3,106,665 | 16.0% | |
| 1910 | 3,293,335 | 6.0% | |
| 1920 | 3,404,055 | 3.4% | |
| 1930 | 3,629,367 | 6.6% | |
| 1940 | 3,784,664 | 4.3% | |
| 1950 | 3,954,653 | 4.5% | |
| 1960 | 4,319,813 | 9.2% | |
| 1970 | 4,676,501 | 8.3% | |
| 1980 | 4,916,686 | 5.1% | |
| 1990 | 5,117,073 | 4.1% | |
| 2000 | 5,595,211 | 9.3% | |
| 2010 | 5,988,927 | 7.0% | |
| 2020 | 6,154,913 | 2.8% | |
| Source: 1910–2020[73] | |||

The United States Census Bureau estimates that the population of Missouri was 6,137,428 on July 1, 2019, a 2.48% increase since the 2010 United States census.[74]
Missouri had a population of 5,988,927, according to the 2010 census; an increase of 137,525 (2.3 percent) since the year 2010. From 2010 to 2018, this includes a natural increase of 137,564 people since the last census (480,763 births less 343,199 deaths) and an increase of 88,088 people due to net migration into the state. Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net increase of 50,450 people, and migration within the country produced a net increase of 37,638 people. More than half of Missourians (3,294,936 people, or 55.0%) live within the state's two largest metropolitan areas—St. Louis and Kansas City. The state's population density of 86.9 people per square mile in 2009, was also closer to the national average (86.8 in 2009) than any other state. The top countries of origin for Missouri's immigrants in 2018 were Mexico, China, India, Vietnam and Bosnia and Herzegovina.[75]
According to HUD's 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, there were an estimated 5,992 homeless people in Missouri.[76][77]
2020 census
[edit]| Race / Ethnicity (NH = Non-Hispanic) | Pop 1980[78] | Pop 1990[79] | Pop 2000[80] | Pop 2010[81] | Pop 2020[82] | % 1980 | % 1990 | % 2000 | % 2010 | % 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White alone (NH) | 4,311,598 | 4,448,465 | 4,686,474 | 4,850,748 | 4,663,907 | 87.69% | 86.93% | 83.76% | 81.00% | 75.78% |
| Black or African American alone (NH) | 510,885 | 545,527 | 625,667 | 687,149 | 692,774 | 10.39% | 10.66% | 11.18% | 11.47% | 11.26% |
| Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) | 12,310 | 18,873 | 23,302 | 24,062 | 23,496 | 0.25% | 0.37% | 0.42% | 0.40% | 0.38% |
| Asian alone (NH) | 23,088 | 40,087 | 61,041 | 97,221 | 132,158 | 0.47% | 0.78% | 1.09% | 1.62% | 2.15% |
| Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander alone (NH) | x [83] | x [84] | 2,939 | 5,763 | 9,293 | x | x | 0.05% | 0.10% | 0.15% |
| Other race alone (NH) | 7,152 | 2,419 | 5,291 | 5,372 | 22,377 | 0.15% | 0.05% | 0.09% | 0.09% | 0.36% |
| Mixed race or Multiracial (NH) | x [85] | x [86] | 71,905 | 106,142 | 307,840 | x | x | 1.29% | 1.77% | 5.00% |
| Hispanic or Latino (any race) | 51,653 | 61,702 | 118,592 | 212,470 | 303,068 | 1.05% | 1.21% | 2.12% | 3.55% | 4.92% |
| Total | 4,916,686 | 5,117,073 | 5,595,211 | 5,988,927 | 6,154,913 | 100.00% | 100.00% | 100.00% | 100.00% | 100.00% |
The U.S. census of 2010 found that the population center of the United States is in Texas County, while the 2000 census found the mean population center to be in Phelps County. The center of population of Missouri is in Osage County, in the city of Westphalia.[87]
In 2004, the population included 194,000 foreign-born people (3.4 percent of the state population).
The five largest ancestry groups in Missouri are: German (27.4 percent), Irish (14.8 percent), English (10.2 percent), American (8.5 percent) and French (3.7 percent).

German Americans are an ancestry group present throughout Missouri. African Americans are a substantial part of the population in St. Louis (56.6% of African Americans in the state lived in St. Louis or St. Louis County as of the 2010 census), Kansas City, Boone County and in the southeastern Bootheel and some parts of the Missouri River Valley, where plantation agriculture was once important. Missouri Creoles of French ancestry are concentrated in the Mississippi River Valley south of St. Louis (see Missouri French). Kansas City is home to large and growing immigrant communities from Latin America esp. Mexico and Colombia, Africa (i.e. Sudan, Somalia and Nigeria), and Southeast Asia including China and the Philippines; and Europe like the former Yugoslavia (see Bosnian American). A notable Cherokee Indian population exists in Missouri, and 30,518 identified as being Native American alone in 2020, while 152,917 did in combination with one or more other races.[88]
In 2004, 6.6 percent of the state's population was reported as younger than 5, 25.5 percent younger than 18, and 13.5 percent 65 or older. Females were approximately 51.4 percent of the population. 81.3 percent of Missouri residents were high school graduates (more than the national average), and 21.6 percent had a bachelor's degree or higher. 3.4 percent of Missourians were foreign-born, and 5.1 percent reported speaking a language other than English at home.
In 2010, there were 2,349,955 households in Missouri, with 2.45 people per household. The homeownership rate was 70.0 percent, and the median value of an owner-occupied housing unit was $137,700. The median household income for 2010 was $46,262, or $24,724 per capita. There was 14.0 percent (1,018,118) of Missourians living below the poverty line in 2010.
The mean commute time to work was 23.8 minutes.
Non-Hispanic White 50–60%60–70%70–80%80–90%90%+Black or African American 40–50%
Birth data
[edit]In 2011, 28.1% of Missouri's population younger than age 1 were minorities.[89]
Note: Births in table do not add up, because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number.
| Race | 2013[90] | 2014[91] | 2015[92] | 2016[93] | 2017[94] | 2018[95] | 2019[96] | 2020[97] | 2021[98] | 2022[99] | 2023[100] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 57,361 (76.2%) | 57,150 (75.8%) | 57,092 (76.1%) | 55,455 (74.2%) | 53,800 (73.7%) | 53,697 (73.3%) | 52,523 (72.8%) | 50,190 (72.4%) | 50,705 (73.0%) | 49,846 (72.3%) | 48,538 (72.3%) |
| Black | 11,722 (15.6%) | 11,783 (15.6%) | 11,660 (15.5%) | 10,445 (14.0%) | 10,495 (14.4%) | 10,589 (14.4%) | 10,501 (14.6%) | 10,156 (14.6%) | 9,443 (13.6%) | 9,188 (13.3%) | 8,506 (12.7%) |
| Asian | 2,075 (2.8%) | 2,186 (2.9%) | 2,129 (2.8%) | 1,852 (2.5%) | 1,773 (2.4%) | 1,698 (2.3%) | 1,814 (2.5%) | 1,610 (2.3%) | 1,625 (2.3%) | 1,684 (2.4%) | 1,543 (2.3%) |
| Pacific Islander | ... | ... | ... | 199 (0.3%) | 183 (0.3%) | 199 (0.3%) | 228 (0.3%) | 249 (0.3%) | 246 (0.3%) | 265 (0.4%) | 260 (0.4%) |
| American Indian | 402 (0.5%) | 423 (0.6%) | 359 (0.5%) | 156 (0.2%) | 167 (0.2%) | 140 (0.2%) | 145 (0.2%) | 163 (0.2%) | 184 (0.2%) | 160 (0.2%) | 169 (0.2%) |
| Hispanic (any race) | 3,931 (5.2%) | 3,959 (5.3%) | 4,042 (5.4%) | 4,136 (5.5%) | 4,156 (5.7%) | 4,409 (6.0%) | 4,386 (6.1%) | 4,469 (6.4%) | 4,606 (6.6%) | 5,224 (7.6%) | 5,518 (8.2%) |
| Total | 75,296 (100%) | 75,360 (100%) | 75,061 (100%) | 74,705 (100%) | 73,034 (100%) | 73,269 (100%) | 72,127 (100%) | 69,285 (100%) | 69,453 (100%) | 68,985 (100%) | 67,123 (100%) |
- Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.
Language
[edit]
The vast majority of people in Missouri speak English. Approximately 5.1% of the population reported speaking a language other than English at home. The Spanish language is spoken in small Latino communities in the St. Louis and Kansas City Metro areas.[101]
Missouri is home to an endangered dialect of the French language known as Missouri French. Speakers of the dialect, who call themselves Créoles, are descendants of the French pioneers who settled the area then known as the Illinois Country beginning in the late 17th century. It developed in isolation from French speakers in Canada and Louisiana, becoming quite distinct from the varieties of Canadian French and Louisiana French. Once widely spoken throughout the area, Missouri French is now nearly extinct, with only a few elderly speakers able to use it.[102][103]
Religion
[edit]- Protestantism (58.0%)
- Roman Catholicism (16.0%)
- Mormonism (1.00%)
- Other Christian (2.00%)
- No religion (20.0%)
- Buddhism (1.00%)
- Other religion (2.00%)
According to a Pew Research study[104] conducted in 2014, 80% of Missourians identify with a religion. 77% affiliate with Christianity and its various denominations and the other 3% are adherents of non-Christian religions. The remaining 20% have no religion, with 2% specifically identifying as atheists and 3% identifying as agnostics (the other 15% do not identify as "anything in particular").
The religious demographics of Missouri are as follows:
- Christian 77%
- Protestant 58%
- Evangelical Protestant 36%
- Mainline Protestant 16%
- Historically Black Protestant 6%
- Catholic 16%
- Mormon 1%
- Orthodox Christian <1%
- Jehovah's Witness <1%
- Other Christian <1%
- Protestant 58%
- Non-Christian Religions 3%
- Jewish <1%
- Muslim <1%
- Buddhist 1%
- Hindu <1%
- Other World Religions <1%
- Unaffiliated (No religion) 20%
- Atheist 2%
- Agnostic 3%
- Nothing in particular 15%
- Don't know <1%
The largest denominations by number of adherents in 2010 were the Southern Baptist Convention with 749,685; the Roman Catholic Church with 724,315; and the United Methodist Church with 226,409.[105]
Among the other denominations there are approximately 93,000 Mormons in 253 congregations, 25,000 Jewish adherents in 21 synagogues, 12,000 Muslims in 39 masjids, 7,000 Buddhists in 34 temples, 20,000 Hindus in 17 temples, 2,500 Unitarians in nine congregations, 2,000 of the Baháʼí Faith in 17 temples, five Sikh temples, a Zoroastrian temple, a Jain temple and an uncounted number of neopagans.[106]
Several religious organizations have headquarters in Missouri, including the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, which has its headquarters in Kirkwood, as well as the United Pentecostal Church International in Hazelwood, both outside St. Louis.
Independence, near Kansas City, is the headquarters for the Community of Christ (formerly the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints), the Church of Christ (Temple Lot) and the group Remnant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This area and other parts of Missouri are also of significant religious and historical importance to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), which maintains several sites and visitor centers.
Springfield is the headquarters of the Assemblies of God USA and the Baptist Bible Fellowship International. The General Association of General Baptists has its headquarters in Poplar Bluff. The Unity Church is headquartered in Unity Village. Springfield is particularly known as a Christian center in the state[107] and is considered by some to be a "buckle" of the Bible Belt.[108]
The Hindu Temple of St. Louis is the largest Hindu Temple in Missouri, serving more than 14,000 Hindus.
Economy
[edit]
- Total employment in 2016: 2,494,720
- Total Number of employer establishments in 2016: 160,912[110]
The U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis estimated Missouri's gross state product was $422 billion in 2023.[111] Per capita personal income in 2023 was $61,302, ranking 34th in the nation.[112] Major industries include agriculture, aerospace, transportation equipment, food processing, chemicals, printing/publishing, electrical equipment, light manufacturing, and financial services.
The agriculture products of the state are beef, soybeans, pork, dairy products, hay, corn, poultry, sorghum, cotton, rice, and eggs. Missouri is ranked sixth in the nation for the production of hogs and seventh for cattle. Missouri is ranked in the top five states in the nation for production of soy beans, and it is ranked fourth in the nation for the production of rice. In 2001, there were 108,000 farms, the second-largest number in any state after Texas. Missouri actively promotes its rapidly growing wine industry. According to the Missouri Partnership, Missouri's agriculture industry contributes $33 billion in GDP to Missouri's economy, and generates $88 billion in sales and more than 378,000 jobs.[113]

Missouri has vast quantities of limestone. Other resources mined are lead, coal, and crushed stone. Missouri produces the most lead of all the states. Most of the lead mines are in the central eastern portion of the state. Missouri also ranks first or near first in the production of lime, a key ingredient in Portland cement.
Missouri also has a growing science, agricultural technology, and biotechnology field. Monsanto, formerly one of the largest biotech companies in America, was based in St. Louis until it was acquired by Bayer AG in 2018. It is now part of the Crop Science Division of Bayer Corporation, Bayer's U.S. subsidiary.
Tourism, services, and wholesale/retail trade follow manufacturing in importance; tourism benefits from the many rivers, lakes, caves, and parks throughout the state. In addition to a network of state parks, Missouri is home to Gateway Arch National Park in St. Louis and the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. A much-visited show cave is Meramec Caverns, near Stanton.

Missouri is the only state in the Union to have two Federal Reserve Banks: one in Kansas City (serving western Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Colorado, northern New Mexico, and Wyoming) and one in St. Louis (serving eastern Missouri, southern Illinois, southern Indiana, western Kentucky, western Tennessee, northern Mississippi, and all of Arkansas).[114]
The state's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in April 2017 was 3.9 percent.[115] In 2017, Missouri became a right-to-work state,[116] but in August 2018, Missouri voters rejected a right-to-work law with 67% to 33%.[117][118][119]
Taxation
[edit]Personal income is taxed in ten different earning brackets, ranging from 1.5% to 6.0%. Missouri's sales tax rate for most items is 4.225%, with some additional local levies. More than 2,500 Missouri local governments rely on property taxes levied on real property (real estate) and personal property.
Most personal property is exempt, except for motorized vehicles. Exempt real estate includes property owned by governments and property used as nonprofit cemeteries, exclusively for religious worship, for schools and colleges, and purely charitable purposes. There is no inheritance tax and limited Missouri estate tax related to federal estate tax collection.
In 2017, the Tax Foundation rated Missouri as having the fifth-best corporate tax index,[120] and the 15th-best overall tax climate.[120] Missouri's corporate income tax rate is 6.25%; however, 50% of federal income tax payments may be deducted before computing taxable income, leading to an effective rate of 5.2%.[121]
Energy
[edit]In 2012, Missouri had roughly 22,000 MW of installed electricity generation capacity.[122] In 2011, 82% of Missouri's electricity was generated by coal.[123] Ten percent was generated from the state's only nuclear power plant,[123] the Callaway Plant in Callaway County, northeast of Jefferson City. Five percent was generated by natural gas.[123] One percent was generated by hydroelectric sources,[123] such as the dams for Truman Lake and Lake of the Ozarks. Missouri has a small but growing amount of wind and solar power—wind capacity increased from 309 MW in 2009 to 459 MW in 2011, while photovoltaics have increased from 0.2 MW to 1.3 MW over the same period.[124][125] As of 2016, Missouri's solar installations had reached 141 MW.[126]
Oil wells in Missouri produced 120,000 barrels of crude oil in fiscal 2012.[127] There are no oil refineries in Missouri.[125][128]
Culture
[edit]Music
[edit]
Many well-known musicians were born or have lived in Missouri. These include guitarist and rock pioneer Chuck Berry, singer and actress Josephine Baker, "Queen of Rock" Tina Turner, pop singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow, Michael McDonald of the Doobie Brothers, rap producer Metro Boomin, and rappers Nelly, Chingy, and Akon, all of whom are either current or former residents of St. Louis.
Country singers from Missouri include Perryville native Chris Janson, New Franklin native Sara Evans, Cantwell native Ferlin Husky, West Plains native Porter Wagoner, Tyler Farr of Garden City, and Mora native Leroy Van Dyke, along with bluegrass musician Rhonda Vincent, a native of Greentop. Rapper Eminem was born in St. Joseph and also lived in Savannah and Kansas City. Ragtime composer Scott Joplin lived in St. Louis and Sedalia. Jazz saxophonist Charlie Parker lived in Kansas City. Rock and Roll singer Steve Walsh of the group Kansas was born in St. Louis and grew up in St. Joseph.
The Kansas City Symphony and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra are the state's major orchestras. The latter is the nation's second-oldest symphony orchestra and achieved prominence in recent years under conductor Leonard Slatkin. Branson is well known for its music theaters, most of which bear the name of a star performer or musical group.
Literature
[edit]
Missouri is the native state of Mark Twain. His novels The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn are set in his boyhood hometown of Hannibal. Authors Kate Chopin, T. S. Eliot and Tennessee Williams were from St. Louis. Kansas City-born writer William Least Heat-Moon resides in Rocheport. He is best known for Blue Highways, a chronicle of his travels to small towns across America, which was on The New York Times Bestseller list for 42 weeks in 1982–1983. Novelist Daniel Woodrell, known for depicting life in the Missouri Ozarks, was born in Springfield and lives in West Plains.
Sports
[edit]Missouri hosted the 1904 Summer Olympics at St. Louis, the first time the games were hosted in the United States.
Professional major league teams:
- MLB: St. Louis Cardinals, Kansas City Royals
- NFL: Kansas City Chiefs
- NHL: St. Louis Blues
- MLS: St. Louis City SC
Former professional major league teams:
- National Football League:
- St. Louis Cardinals (moved from Chicago in 1960; moved to Tempe, Arizona, in 1988 and are now the Arizona Cardinals)
- St. Louis All Stars (active in 1923 only)
- Kansas City Blues/Cowboys (active 1924–1926, folded)
- St. Louis Gunners (independent team, joined the NFL for the last three weeks of the 1934 season and folded thereafter)
- St. Louis Rams 1995–2015 moved from Los Angeles and then back to Los Angeles
- Major League Baseball (American League):
- St. Louis Browns (moved from Milwaukee in 1902; moved to Baltimore, Maryland after the 1953 season and are now the Baltimore Orioles)
- Kansas City Athletics (moved from Philadelphia in 1955; moved to Oakland, California after the 1967 season and are now the Oakland Athletics)
- National Basketball Association:
- St. Louis Bombers (charter BAA franchise in 1946, joined the NBA when it formed in 1949; ceased operations in 1950)
- St. Louis Hawks (moved from Milwaukee in 1955; moved to Atlanta in 1968 and are now the Atlanta Hawks)
- Kansas City Kings (moved from Cincinnati in 1972; moved to Sacramento in 1985 and are now the Sacramento Kings; prior to locating in Kansas City, they were known as the Cincinnati Royals)
- National Hockey League:
- Kansas City Scouts (1974 expansion team, moved to Denver, Colorado in 1976 and became the Colorado Rockies, and would move again to Newark, New Jersey; now called the New Jersey Devils)
- St. Louis Eagles (1934 relocation of the original Ottawa Senators, folded after the 1934–35 season)
- Major League Soccer:
- Kansas City Wiz/Kansas City Wizards (founded in 1995, but moved from Kansas City, Missouri, to Kansas City, Kansas, in 2010 and became Sporting Kansas City)
Heritage
[edit]Ste. Geneviève National Historical Park, which preserves the story of Missouri's oldest permanent European settlement.[129][130] The park's historic buildings, like the Amoureux House, showcase rare French Colonial architecture, including a unique "poteaux-en-terre" or "post-in-ground" construction style.[131][132]
Government and politics
[edit]The Constitution of Missouri, the fourth constitution for the state, was adopted in 1945. It provides for three branches of government: the legislative, judicial, and executive branches. The legislative branch consists of two bodies: the House of Representatives and the Senate. These bodies comprise the Missouri General Assembly.
The House of Representatives has 163 members apportioned based on the last decennial census. The Senate consists of 34 members from districts of approximately equal populations. The judicial department comprises the Supreme Court of Missouri, which has seven judges, the Missouri Court of Appeals (an intermediate appellate court divided into three districts), sitting in Kansas City, St. Louis, and Springfield, and 45 Circuit Courts which function as local trial courts. The executive branch is headed by the Governor of Missouri and includes five other statewide elected offices. Following the departure from office of State Auditor Nicole Galloway on January 9, 2023, there are no Democrats holding statewide elected positions in Missouri.[133]
Harry S Truman (1884–1972), the 33rd President of the United States (Democrat, 1945–1953), was born in Lamar. He was a judge in Jackson County and then represented the state in the United States Senate for ten years, before being elected vice-president in 1944. He lived in Independence after retiring as president in 1953.
In a 2020 study, Missouri was ranked as 48th on the Cost of Voting Index with only Texas and Georgia ranking higher.[134]
Missouri retains the death penalty. Authorized methods of execution include the gas chamber.[135] Abortion in Missouri is legal as a result of 2024 Missouri Amendment 3.[136]
Former status as a political bellwether
[edit]
Prior to 2008, Missouri had been widely regarded as a bellwether in American politics, often making it a swing state. The state had a longer stretch of supporting the winning presidential candidate than any other state, having voted for the winning candidate in every election from 1904 to 2004 with a single exception: 1956 when Democratic candidate Adlai Stevenson of neighboring Illinois lost the election despite carrying Missouri. However, since 2000, Missouri has always voted for the Republican Presidential candidate, with the last Democrat winning the state being Bill Clinton in 1996. Missouri voted for John McCain and Mitt Romney over Democrat Barack Obama of neighboring Illinois, despite Obama being elected to the Presidency in both 2008 and 2012. Missouri voted for Mitt Romney by nearly 10% in 2012 and voted for Donald Trump by over 18% in 2016 and 2024, and 15% in 2020.
On October 24, 2012, there were 4,190,936 registered voters.[137] At the state level, both Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill and Democratic Governor Jay Nixon were re-elected.
On November 3, 2020, there were 4,318,758 registered voters, with 3,026,028 voting (70.1%).[138] By this time, the state had favored more Republican candidates for federal offices. The offices held by Democratic party officials a decade before were subsequently held by Republican Senator Josh Hawley and Republican Governor Mike Parson.
Missouri's accuracy rate for the last 29 presidential elections is now 89.66%. This percentage is on par with that of Ohio, which has voted for the winner of every presidential election since 1896, except in 1944, 1960 and 2020.
Alcohol and tobacco laws
[edit]Missouri has been known for its population's generally "stalwart, conservative, noncredulous" attitude toward regulatory regimes, which is one of the origins of the state's unofficial nickname, the "Show-Me State".[20] As a result, and combined with the fact that Missouri is one of America's leading alcohol states, regulation of alcohol and tobacco in Missouri is among the most laissez-faire in America. In 2013, the Mercatus Center ranked Missouri third for alcohol freedom and first for tobacco freedom.[139] The state's alcohol laws are notably lax, with no blue laws, low taxes, and broad access to alcohol in locations like drugstores and gas stations. Additionally, Missouri's tobacco laws are equally permissive, including the lowest cigarette excise tax in the nation.[139] Missouri law makes it "an improper employment practice" for an employer to refuse to hire, to fire, or otherwise to disadvantage any person because that person lawfully uses alcohol or tobacco products outside of work.[140]
With a large German immigrant population and the development of a brewing industry, Missouri always has had among the most permissive alcohol laws in the United States. It has never enacted statewide prohibition. Missouri has no statewide open container law or prohibition on drinking in public, no alcohol-related blue laws, no local option, no precise locations for selling liquor by the package (allowing even drug stores and filling stations to sell any kind of liquor), and no differentiation of laws based on alcohol percentage. State law protects persons from arrest or criminal penalty for public intoxication.[141]
Missouri law expressly prohibits any jurisdiction from going dry.[142] Missouri law also expressly allows parents and guardians to serve alcohol to their children.[143] The Power & Light District in Kansas City is one of the few places in the United States where a state law explicitly allows persons over 21 to possess and consume open containers of alcohol in the street (as long as the beverage is in a plastic cup).[144]
Missouri had the lowest cigarette excise taxes in the United States in 2016, at 17 cents per pack,[145] and the state electorate voted in 2002, 2006, 2012, and twice in 2016 to keep it that way.[146][147] According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2008 Missouri had the fourth highest percentage of adult smokers among U.S. states, at 24.5%.[148] Although federal law prohibits the sale of tobacco to persons under 21, tobacco products can be distributed to persons under 21 by family members on private property.[149]
No statewide smoking ban ever has been seriously entertained before the Missouri General Assembly, and in October 2008, a statewide survey by the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services found that only 27.5% of Missourians support a statewide ban on smoking in all bars and restaurants.[150] Missouri state law permits restaurants seating less than 50 people, bars, bowling alleys, and billiard parlors to decide their own smoking policies, without limitation.[151]
Cannabis laws
[edit]In 2014, a Republican-led legislature and Democratic governor Jay Nixon enacted a series of laws to partially decriminalize possession of cannabis by making first-time possession of up to 10 grams no longer punishable with jail time and legalizing CBD oil. In November 2018, 66% of voters approved a constitutional amendment that established a right to medical marijuana and a system for licensing, regulating, and taxing medical marijuana.
Education
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2020) |
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The Missouri State Board of Education has general authority over all public education in the state of Missouri. It is made up of eight citizens appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Missouri Senate.
Primary and secondary schools
[edit]Education is compulsory from ages seven to seventeen. It is required that any parent, guardian, or another person with custody of a child between the ages of seven and seventeen, the compulsory attendance age for the district, must ensure the child is enrolled in and regularly attends public, private, parochial school, home school or a combination of schools for the full term of the school year. Compulsory attendance also ends when children complete sixteen credits in high school.
Children in Missouri between the ages of five and seven are not required to be enrolled in school. However, if they are enrolled in a public school, their parent, guardian, or custodian must ensure they regularly attend.
Missouri schools are commonly but not exclusively divided into three tiers of primary and secondary education: elementary school, middle school or junior high school and high school. The public school system includes kindergarten to 12th grade. District territories are often complex in structure. In some cases, elementary, middle, and junior high schools of a single district feed into high schools in another district. As another example, special education and related services for students in the twenty-two school districts of St. Louis County are provided by staff employed by a special school district, a local education agency that serves students county-wide. High school athletics and competitions are governed by the Missouri State High School Activities Association (MSHSAA).
Homeschooling is legal in Missouri and is an option to meet the compulsory education requirement. It is neither monitored nor regulated by the state's Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.[152]
Another gifted school is the Missouri Academy of Science, Mathematics and Computing, which is at the Northwest Missouri State University.
Colleges and universities
[edit]The University of Missouri System is Missouri's statewide public university system. The flagship institution and largest university in the state is the University of Missouri in Columbia. The others in the system are University of Missouri–Kansas City, University of Missouri–St. Louis, and Missouri University of Science and Technology in Rolla.
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the state established a series of normal schools in each region of the state, originally named after the geographic districts: Northeast Missouri State University (now Truman State University) (1867), Central Missouri State University (now the University of Central Missouri) (1871), Southeast Missouri State University (1873), Southwest Missouri State University (now Missouri State University) (1905), Northwest Missouri State University (1905), Missouri Western State University (1915), Maryville University (1872) and Missouri Southern State University (1937). Lincoln University and Harris–Stowe State University were established in the mid-nineteenth century and are historically black colleges and universities.
Among private institutions Washington University in St. Louis and Saint Louis University are two top ranked schools in the US.[153] There are numerous junior colleges, trade schools, church universities and other private universities in the state. A.T. Still University was the first osteopathic medical school in the world. Hannibal–LaGrange University in Hannibal, Missouri, was one of the first colleges west of the Mississippi (founded 1858 in LaGrange, Missouri, and moved to Hannibal in 1928).[154]
The state funds a $3000, renewable merit-based scholarship, Bright Flight, given to the top three percent of Missouri high school graduates who attend a university in-state.
The 19th-century border wars between Missouri and Kansas have continued as a sports rivalry between the University of Missouri and University of Kansas. The rivalry was chiefly expressed through football and basketball games between the two universities, but since Missouri left the Big 12 Conference in 2012, the teams no longer regularly play one another. It was the oldest college rivalry west of the Mississippi River and the second-oldest in the nation. Each year when the universities met to play, the game was coined the "Border War". Following the game, an exchange occurred where the winner took a historic Indian War Drum, which had been passed back and forth for decades. Though Missouri and Kansas no longer have an annual game after the University of Missouri moved to the Southeastern Conference, rivalry still exists between them.
Transportation
[edit]Parts of this article (those related to reference from 2010 about Chicago Hub Network high-speed rail) need to be updated. (June 2023) |
Airports
[edit]Missouri has two major airport hubs: St. Louis Lambert International Airport and Kansas City International Airport. Southern Missouri has the Springfield–Branson National Airport (SGF) with multiple non-stop destinations.[155] Residents of Mid-Missouri use Columbia Regional Airport (COU) to fly to Chicago (ORD), Dallas (DFW) or Denver (DEN).[156]
Rail
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Two of the nation's three busiest rail centers are in Missouri. Kansas City is a major railroad hub for BNSF Railway, Norfolk Southern Railway, Kansas City Southern Railway, and Union Pacific Railroad, and every class 1 railroad serves Missouri. Kansas City is the second-largest freight rail center in the U.S. (but is first in the amount of tonnage handled). Like Kansas City, St. Louis is a major destination for train freight. Springfield remains an operational hub for BNSF Railway.
Amtrak passenger trains serve Kansas City, La Plata, Jefferson City, St. Louis, Lee's Summit, Independence, Warrensburg, Hermann, Washington, Kirkwood, Sedalia, and Poplar Bluff. A proposed high-speed rail route in Missouri as part of the Chicago Hub Network has received $31 million in funding.[157]
The only urban light rail/subway system operating in Missouri is MetroLink, which connects the city of St. Louis with suburbs in Illinois and St. Louis County. It is one of the largest systems (by track mileage) in the United States. The KC Streetcar in downtown Kansas City opened in May 2016.[158]
The Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center in St. Louis is the largest active multi-use transportation center in the state. It is in downtown St. Louis, next to the historic Union Station complex. It serves as a hub center/station for MetroLink, the MetroBus regional bus system, Greyhound, Amtrak, and taxi services.
In 2018, a Missouri Hyperloop was proposed to connect St. Louis, Kansas City, and Columbia, reducing travel time across the entire state to around a half hour.[159] The project stalled in December 2023, with the shutdown of the corporate partner Hyperloop One.
Bus
[edit]Many cities have regular fixed-route systems, and many rural counties have rural public transit services. Greyhound and Trailways provide inter-city bus service in Missouri. Megabus serves St. Louis, but discontinued service to Columbia and Kansas City in 2015.[160]
Rivers
[edit]
The Mississippi River and Missouri River are commercially navigable over their entire lengths in Missouri. The Missouri was channelized through dredging and jetties, and the Mississippi was given a series of locks and dams to avoid rocks and deepen the river. St. Louis is a major destination for barge traffic on the Mississippi.
Roads
[edit]Following the passage of Amendment 3 in late 2004, the Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) began its Smoother, Safer, Sooner road-building program with a goal of bringing 2,200 miles (3,500 km) of highways up to good condition by December 2007. From 2006 to 2011 traffic deaths have decreased annually from 1,257 in 2005, to 1,096 in 2006, to 992 in 2007, to 960 in 2008, to 878 in 2009, to 821 in 2010, to 786 in 2011.[161]
See also
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- ^ Don Colborn, PhD. "HLGU—About HLG". Hlg.edu. Archived from the original on November 22, 2011. Retrieved December 10, 2011.
- ^ "Non-stop Destinations | Springfield-Branson National Airport (SGF)". flyspringfield.com. Archived from the original on January 12, 2016. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
- ^ "Columbia Regional Airport". www.flycou.com. Archived from the original on January 12, 2016. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
- ^ "Fact Sheet: High Speed Intercity Passenger Rail Program: Chicago–St. Louis–Kansas City". Archived from the original on January 28, 2017. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
- ^ "KC Streetcar—About KC Streetcar". Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 27, 2013.
- ^ della Cava, Marco (January 30, 2018). "Is Missouri ready for 700 mph hyperloop commutes?". USA Today. Archived from the original on March 28, 2019. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
- ^ "Megabus canceling service in Kansas City, Columbia". kansascity. Archived from the original on February 1, 2016. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
- ^ "Number of Persons Killed or Injured in Missouri Crashes by Year". Missouri State Highway Patrol. Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
External links
[edit]- Missouri Government
- Missouri Digital Heritage, Missouri Government, archived from the original on February 15, 2021, retrieved December 4, 2009
- Missouri State Guide, from the Library of Congress Archived December 1, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
- Missouri State Tourism Office, archived from the original on February 17, 2021, retrieved July 31, 2010
- Energy & Environmental Data for Missouri, US: DoE, archived from the original on December 29, 2010, retrieved December 6, 2018
- Missouri State Facts, USDA[dead link]
- "American Library Association Government Documents Roundtable", List of searchable databases produced by Missouri state agencies, archived from the original on October 31, 2020, retrieved April 2, 2018
- Missouri History, Geology, Culture, UM system, archived from the original on March 26, 2016, retrieved March 14, 2011
- Historic Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps of Missouri, UM system, archived from the original on April 10, 2011
- 1930 Platbooks of Missouri Counties, UM system, archived from the original on October 21, 2016, retrieved March 14, 2011
- Scientific American, "Ancient Man in Missouri Archived January 12, 2023, at the Wayback Machine", September 11, 1880, p. 169
Missouri
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Name origin and pronunciation
The name "Missouri" derives from the Missouri River, which French explorers named in the late 17th century after the indigenous Missouria people, a Chiwere-speaking Siouan tribe inhabiting the region near the river's confluence with the Osage River.[7] The term originates from the Miami-Illinois language (an Algonquian dialect spoken by neighboring tribes), recorded as ouemessourita or similar variants, translating to "those who have dugout canoes" or "people of the big canoes," referring to the tribe's use of large log canoes for river navigation.[8] [9] A common folk etymology interprets it as "muddy water," based on the river's silt-laden appearance, but linguistic analysis confirms the canoe-related meaning as the accurate indigenous derivation, with "muddy water" arising from later mistranslations by European settlers.[9] [10] The standard pronunciation in American English is /mɪˈzʊri/ (mih-ZOOR-ee), with stress on the second syllable and a clear "ee" ending.[11] Within Missouri, regional variations persist, including /məˈzʊrə/ (muh-ZOOR-uh) or /mɪˈzuːrə/ (mih-ZOO-ruh), reflecting historical French influences and local dialects, though a 2023 poll found 90% of state residents favoring the "Missour-ee" form.[12] [13] Neither variant is definitively "correct," as both have documented usage dating to the 19th century, but "Missour-ee" predominates in national media and official contexts.[14]Nicknames and state symbols
Missouri's predominant nickname is the "Show-Me State," an unofficial designation that signifies the pragmatic and evidence-demanding disposition attributed to its inhabitants. The phrase "I'm from Missouri; you have got to show me" gained prominence from a September 1899 speech by U.S. Congressman Willard Duncan Vandiver at a naval banquet in Philadelphia, where he emphasized skepticism toward unsubstantiated claims. An earlier, contested origin traces to Missouri lead miners in Leadville, Colorado, during the mid-1890s, who reportedly insisted on practical demonstrations amid labor disputes. This nickname appears on state license plates and encapsulates a cultural ethos of verification over assertion, though Missouri lacks a legislated official nickname.[4][15] Historically, Missouri has borne other informal nicknames reflecting its geography and economy, such as "The Cave State" for hosting over 7,500 caves—more than any other U.S. state—and "Bullion State" or "Lead State" due to its position as the top domestic lead producer, with historical output exceeding 500 million tons from the Southeast Missouri Lead District since the 1720s.[16] Missouri has enacted numerous official state symbols via legislation, totaling over 40 designations that highlight its natural resources, history, and cultural heritage, as cataloged by the Secretary of State.[17] The Great Seal, adopted January 11, 1822, features two grizzly bears supporting a shield with symbols of state sovereignty, including a helmet and motto "United we stand, divided we fall," encircled by 24 stars for the entry order among states.[18] The state flag, adopted in 1904 and modified in 1913 to include 30 white stars representing Missouri as the 30th state, centers the seal on blue-and-white stripes symbolizing national colors.[19] Prominent biological symbols include the eastern bluebird as state bird (adopted 1935), the white hawthorn blossom as floral emblem (adopted 1923), and the flowering dogwood as tree (adopted 1955). The mule serves as state animal (adopted 1995), recognizing its role in 19th-century agriculture and mining, while the Missouri Fox Trotting Horse is the state horse (adopted 2002) for its gait suited to Ozark terrain. Geological emblems encompass mozarkite as state rock (adopted 1967), galena as mineral (adopted 1967), and crinoid as fossil (adopted 1989). The state motto, "Salus Populi Suprema Lex Esto" ("Let the welfare of the people be the supreme law"), derives from the 1820 constitution. Cultural symbols feature the "Missouri Waltz" as state song (adopted 1949) and square dancing as folk dance (adopted 1995).[17][19][20]| Category | Symbol | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| State Bird | Eastern bluebird | Sialia sialis; symbolizes happiness |
| State Flower | White hawthorn blossom | Crataegus punctata; adopted 1923 |
| State Tree | Flowering dogwood | Cornus florida; adopted 1955 |
| State Animal | Mule | Hardy draft animal; adopted 1995 |
| State Rock | Mozarkite | Chert variety; adopted 1967 |
| State Fossil | Crinoid | Marine echinoderm; adopted 1989 |
Geography
Topography and geology
Missouri's topography features a diverse range of landscapes, spanning from the elevated and dissected Ozark Plateau in the southern and central portions to the relatively flat Northern Plains and the low-lying Mississippi Alluvial Plain in the southeast Bootheel region.[21] The Ozark Plateau, covering about two-thirds of the state, includes rugged hills, deep valleys, and karst features shaped by erosion and dissolution of underlying bedrock.[21] [22] Northern Missouri transitions into prairie-dominated lowlands with gentle rolling terrain, while the southeastern Bootheel consists of broad, flat floodplains averaging less than 300 feet (91 m) in elevation.[21] The state's highest elevation is Taum Sauk Mountain in Iron County, reaching 1,772 feet (540 m) above sea level within the St. Francois Mountains of the Ozark highlands.[23] The lowest point lies at 230 feet (70 m) along the St. Francis River where it forms the border with Arkansas in Dunklin County.[24] These extremes reflect Missouri's position across multiple physiographic provinces, with overall elevations ranging from low riverine flats to uplifted plateaus dissected by streams.[21] Geologically, Missouri is dominated by Paleozoic-era sedimentary rocks, including extensive limestones and dolomites from the Cambrian to Mississippian periods, which underlie much of the Ozarks and facilitate widespread karst development.[22] This karst terrain, formed by groundwater dissolution of soluble bedrock, produces characteristic features such as sinkholes, springs, losing streams, and over 7,500 documented caves, earning the state the nickname "Cave State."[22] In contrast, the St. Francois Mountains expose Precambrian igneous and metamorphic rocks dating back over 1.4 billion years, representing the eroded remnants of ancient volcanic activity and among the oldest exposed formations in the central United States.[25] Northern and western areas feature younger Pennsylvanian and Pleistocene glacial deposits overlying sedimentary strata, contributing to fertile soils but minimal topographic relief.[21] The Bootheel's unconsolidated Quaternary alluvium supports agriculture but poses risks from subsidence and flooding due to its loose, water-saturated composition.[21]Climate and natural hazards
Missouri features a temperate climate with distinct four seasons, transitioning from humid continental (Köppen Dfa) in the northern Ozarks and northern plains to humid subtropical (Cfa) in the southern Bootheel region.[26] Summers are hot and humid, with statewide July average highs reaching 88°F (31°C), while winters bring cold snaps, January average lows around 23°F (-5°C), and occasional snowfall accumulating 13-20 inches annually in northern areas.[27] Annual precipitation averages 40-45 inches, distributed fairly evenly but peaking in spring and summer from thunderstorms, supporting agriculture but contributing to flood risks.[28] The state faces frequent severe weather, ranking high in tornado activity as part of Tornado Alley; from 1980 to 2024, Missouri experienced 82 billion-dollar severe storm events, the most common disaster type.[29] Flooding occurs regularly along the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers, with nine billion-dollar flood events in the same period, exacerbated by heavy spring rains and river basin geography.[29] Winter hazards include ice storms and blizzards, with nine billion-dollar winter storm events recorded.[29] Earthquake risk stems primarily from the New Madrid Seismic Zone in southeast Missouri, where 1811-1812 events reached magnitudes 7-8, the strongest in U.S. history east of the Rockies.[30] Paleoseismic data indicate recurrence of magnitude 7-8 quakes every 500 years over the past 1,200 years, with a 25-40% probability of a magnitude 6.0 or larger event in the next 50 years.[30][31] Droughts, affecting 16 billion-dollar events since 1980, pose agricultural threats, particularly in western regions.[29]Hydrology, flora, fauna, and conservation
Missouri's hydrology features extensive river systems, with the Missouri River and Mississippi River serving as primary waterways that drain much of the central United States. The Missouri River basin covers approximately 529,000 square miles, while the Mississippi River forms the state's eastern boundary for over 600 miles, facilitating navigation, irrigation, and flood control challenges. Major tributaries include the Osage, Gasconade, and Meramec rivers in the central and eastern regions, contributing to a network that supports agriculture but also experiences frequent flooding, as evidenced by high runoff periods in the Lower Missouri River Basin. The state maintains over 100,000 miles of streams and rivers, monitored through the Missouri Hydrology Information Center for water quality and quantity.[32][33][34] Artificial reservoirs dominate Missouri's lakes, with Lake of the Ozarks being the largest at 93 miles long and encompassing 54,000 acres, created by damming the Osage River in 1931 for hydroelectric power and recreation. Other significant impoundments include Truman Lake (550 miles of shoreline) and Stockton Lake, managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for flood risk reduction and water supply. Groundwater from karst aquifers in the Ozarks supplies much of the state's drinking water, though vulnerabilities to contamination from agricultural runoff persist. Interstate waters, including segments of the White River, fall under compacts for shared management among states.[34][35] Flora in Missouri encompasses diverse habitats, historically featuring tallgrass prairies across up to 70% of the landscape, dominated by warm-season grasses such as big bluestem and Indian grass reaching heights of 2 to 6 feet. Upland forests and woodlands, covering about 30% of the state, include oak-hickory associations with understories of sedges, tick clovers, and little bluestem. The Ozark region hosts over 2,000 vascular plant species, including endemic wildflowers adapted to glades and savannas. Prairie remnants and restored areas preserve species like prairie dock and compass plant, though habitat fragmentation from agriculture has reduced original prairie extent to less than 1%.[36][37][38][39] Fauna includes over 70 mammal species, such as white-tailed deer, eastern cottontail, and nine-banded armadillo in southern areas; more than 400 bird species, featuring wild turkey and bald eagle; and around 200 fish species in rivers and reservoirs, including bass, catfish, and paddlefish. Reptiles and amphibians number over 80 species, with common examples like the spiny softshell turtle. Federally endangered species total 42, predominantly aquatic, including the pallid sturgeon in the Missouri River, least tern, and piping plover along shorelines; threats stem from habitat loss, dams, and pollution rather than overhunting in most cases.[40][41][42] Conservation efforts center on the Missouri Department of Conservation, established in 1937 with a self-funded model via hunting and fishing licenses, managing 1,000 conservation areas and restoring habitats like prairies and wetlands. Mark Twain National Forest spans 1.5 million acres for biodiversity protection, while state parks and natural areas safeguard unique ecosystems, including karst springs and glades. Wildlife management emphasizes sustainable harvest, with regulated seasons preventing overexploitation, and initiatives address flooding resiliency through levees and soil moisture monitoring for drought prediction. Protected lands total about 4% of the state, focusing on species recovery for endemics like the Missouri bladderpod plant and hellbender salamander.[43][44][45][33]Administrative divisions and urban centers
Missouri is subdivided into 114 counties and the independent city of St. Louis, which operates as a county equivalent separate from St. Louis County.[46][47] These counties handle local governance, including property taxes, law enforcement, and public services, with boundaries largely established during the 19th century territorial period. Incorporated municipalities number 944, comprising cities, towns, and villages; cities are categorized by population as third-class (3,000–29,999 residents), fourth-class (under 3,000), or constitutional charter cities with greater autonomy.[48][46] Township governments, functioning as minor civil divisions for administrative purposes, exist in 22 counties, primarily in northern and central regions, while the remaining 92 counties use townships solely as geographic subdivisions without separate governing bodies.[46] Urban population is concentrated in the eastern and western borders, with sparse density across the central Ozarks; as of 2020, approximately 51% of residents lived in metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs).[49] The state's principal urban centers include Kansas City, the largest city by population at 516,032 (2024 estimate), serving as a major transportation and economic hub straddling the Missouri-Kansas line.[3] St. Louis, with 279,695 residents, functions as an independent city and anchors the Midwest's second-largest port on the Mississippi River.[3] Other significant cities are Springfield (170,596), a regional center for healthcare and education in the southwest, and Columbia (130,900), home to the University of Missouri and noted for rapid growth.[3][50]| Rank | City | County/Status | 2024 Population Estimate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kansas City | Jackson, Clay, Platte, Cass | 516,032[3] |
| 2 | St. Louis | Independent city | 279,695[3] |
| 3 | Springfield | Greene | 170,596[3] |
| 4 | Columbia | Boone | 130,900[3] |
| 5 | Independence | Jackson | 122,899[3] |
History
Pre-Columbian era and European contact
The region comprising modern Missouri was inhabited by Paleo-Indians as early as 11,000 BCE, with evidence of Clovis culture artifacts indicating big-game hunting of mammoth and mastodon.[53] By the Archaic period (circa 8000–1000 BCE), populations transitioned to diverse subsistence strategies including fishing, gathering, and early horticulture, as evidenced by sites yielding stone tools and shell middens along river valleys.[54] The Woodland period (1000 BCE–1000 CE) saw the development of pottery, bow-and-arrow technology, and mound-building precursors, with Hopewell-influenced trade networks exchanging copper and mica across the Midwest.[53] The Mississippian culture, flourishing from approximately 800 to 1600 CE, represented the most complex pre-Columbian societies in the area, characterized by maize-based agriculture, hierarchical chiefdoms, and large earthen platform mounds for ceremonial and elite residences. Key sites include Powers Fort in southeast Missouri, a civic-ceremonial center dating to around 1350 CE with multiple mounds and plazas supporting an estimated population of several thousand; Towosahgy (formerly Beckwith Fortified Village) in the northern Bootheel, featuring defensive palisades and agricultural fields; and the Common Field site near Ste. Genevieve, occupied from the late 13th to 15th centuries with evidence of intensive farming and trade goods like marine shells.[55][56][57] These communities, influenced by the nearby Cahokia polity near present-day St. Louis—which peaked at 10,000–20,000 residents around 1050–1200 CE—declined due to environmental factors, overhunting, and possibly social upheaval by the 1400s, leaving depopulated landscapes at the time of sustained European arrival.[58] At European contact, the primary indigenous groups were Siouan-speaking tribes including the Osage, who dominated central and western Missouri with villages along the Osage River and an estimated pre-contact population of 4,000–6,000 focused on hunting, farming, and matrilineal clans; the closely related Missouri (Missouria) and Otoe-Missouria, occupying the lower Missouri River valley; and smaller groups like the Iowa and Kansa to the north and west.[59][60] Eastern riverine areas hosted remnants of Algonquian and Dhegihan peoples, such as the Quapaw downstream, amid a landscape altered by prior Mississippian collapses and inter-tribal conflicts. Total regional population estimates remain uncertain due to disease-induced declines predating direct observation, but archaeological density suggests thousands rather than tens of thousands by the late 17th century.[53] The first recorded European sighting of the Missouri River occurred in June 1673, when French explorers Father Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet, descending the Mississippi, noted its turbid waters and inquired about upstream tribes from local Illinois and Missouri Indians.[61] In 1682, René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, reached the Missouri's mouth and claimed the Mississippi watershed—including Missouri—for France, initiating nominal colonial interest in fur resources.[62] Systematic exploration followed with Étienne Veniard, Sieur de Bourgmont, who in 1713–1714 ascended the Missouri River, mapped tribes, and intermarried with the Missouria, fostering early alliances through trade in pelts and horses that enhanced native military capabilities against rivals like the Apache.[63] Bourgmont established Fort Orléans in 1723 near the Missouria village, the first European outpost on the river, though it was abandoned by 1728 due to tribal hostilities and supply issues; these contacts generally involved reciprocal exchanges rather than conquest, with French adaptability to native diplomacy contrasting later English patterns.[64][65]Louisiana Purchase and territorial development
The Louisiana Purchase, finalized on April 30, 1803, transferred approximately 828,000 square miles of territory from France to the United States for $15 million, effectively doubling the nation's size and incorporating the region encompassing modern Missouri.[66][67] The formal transfer occurred on October 20, 1803, with the Senate ratifying the treaty earlier that month, marking the shift from French and Spanish colonial control to American governance.[68] Initially organized as the District of Louisiana under the Indiana Territory, the area was restructured into the Louisiana Territory in 1804, facilitating administrative oversight and early exploration efforts like the Lewis and Clark expedition, which departed from St. Louis in 1804 to map the newly acquired lands.[69][70] In 1805, the District of Louisiana was separated from the broader territory, covering what became Missouri and Arkansas, setting the stage for localized development.[71] The Missouri Territory was formally established on June 4, 1812, by congressional act, comprising the northern portion of the Louisiana Territory with boundaries extending north to British possessions, west into unorganized lands toward the Rocky Mountains, south to the Arkansas Territory, and east along the Mississippi River.[72] This reorganization granted the territory a degree of self-governance, including a legislative assembly that convened for the first time in October 1812, organizing initial counties such as St. Charles, St. Louis, Cape Girardeau, New Madrid, and Howard.[73] Territorial development accelerated post-War of 1812, as American settlers from southern states like Kentucky and Virginia migrated northward via the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, drawn by fertile soils suitable for hemp, tobacco, and corn cultivation in regions like the Boonslick area around Boone's settlement.[74] Population surged from 20,845 in 1810 to 66,586 by 1820, reflecting rapid inland expansion beyond established French outposts like St. Louis (founded 1764) and Ste. Genevieve (1735).[75] The economy centered on subsistence farming, lead mining in the southeast (notably at Mine La Motte), and the fur trade, bolstered by riverine transport; the arrival of the first steamboat on the Missouri River in 1819 enhanced connectivity and commerce.[76] Limited Native American conflicts, including raids during the War of 1812, prompted fortified settlements, but treaties with tribes like the Osage facilitated land cessions, enabling further American encroachment by the late 1810s.[74] By 1818, with population thresholds met, territorial leaders petitioned Congress for statehood, highlighting economic self-sufficiency through agriculture and mining, though debates over slavery's extension loomed.[77] Infrastructure improvements, including rudimentary roads and county organizations, supported administrative growth, positioning Missouri for admission as the 24th state in 1821.[78]Statehood, Missouri Compromise, and antebellum tensions
Missouri Territory, organized in 1812 from lands acquired in the Louisiana Purchase, experienced rapid population growth due to migration from southern and mid-Atlantic states, prompting petitions for statehood in 1817.[79] By 1819, the territory's population exceeded 60,000 free inhabitants, meeting the constitutional threshold for admission, but congressional debates erupted over the extension of slavery into the region.[80] Representative James Tallmadge Jr. of New York proposed an amendment to the enabling act that would gradually prohibit slavery in Missouri and bar further importation of slaves, igniting a sectional crisis as southern representatives viewed it as an infringement on state sovereignty and property rights. The impasse persisted until the Missouri Compromise of 1820, enacted on March 3 and signed by President James Monroe on March 6, which paired Missouri's admission as a slave state with Maine's entry as a free state to preserve the Senate's balance of 12 slave and 12 free states.[81] The legislation further prohibited slavery in the unorganized Louisiana Purchase territories north of the 36°30' parallel, excluding Missouri itself, establishing a geographic line intended to regulate future admissions.[80] However, Missouri's 1820 constitutional convention inserted a provision excluding free Black people from residency, prompting northern opposition and delaying final admission until August 10, 1821, when Congress accepted a revised enabling act without endorsing the exclusion but allowing the state to enforce it internally.[82] In the antebellum era, Missouri's economy increasingly depended on slave labor, particularly in the fertile river counties of the Boonslick region known as "Little Dixie," where hemp, tobacco, and livestock production thrived on plantations mirroring Upper South models.[83] The enslaved population grew from 10,222 in 1820 to 114,931 by 1860, comprising about 10% of the state's total of 1,182,012 residents, with concentrations highest in riverine areas supporting cash crops.[84][85] This reliance fueled tensions, as non-slaveholding yeoman farmers in upland areas resented elite planters' political dominance, while border proximity to free states like Illinois and Iowa encouraged manumissions and fugitive escapes, heightening slaveholder vigilance against abolitionist influences.[83] National controversies amplified local strains, including the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act's repeal of the Missouri Compromise line, which spurred violent clashes over Kansas slavery that spilled into Missouri through pro-slavery "Border Ruffians" aiding territorial elections.[86] The 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford Supreme Court decision, originating from a suit by Missouri slave Dred Scott claiming freedom after residence in free territories, invalidated the Compromise's restrictions and asserted Congress's inability to bar slavery from territories, deepening divisions by affirming slave property rights under the Constitution. These events underscored Missouri's precarious position as a slave state with significant non-slaveholding Unionist sentiment, foreshadowing wartime fractures without resolving underlying economic dependencies on coerced labor.[83]Bleeding Kansas and path to Civil War
The Kansas-Nebraska Act, signed into law on May 30, 1854, organized the territories of Kansas and Nebraska west of Missouri, replacing the Missouri Compromise's ban on slavery north of 36°30' with popular sovereignty, allowing settlers to decide the issue via vote.[87] This shift alarmed Missouri slaveholders, who feared a free Kansas would harbor fugitives and encircle their state with antislavery territory, prompting the formation of proslavery emigration societies in Missouri to encourage settlement and voting in Kansas elections.[88] Missouri's proximity facilitated incursions by armed "border ruffians"—proslavery vigilantes—who crossed the border to influence outcomes, as seen in the March 30, 1855, territorial legislature election where thousands of nonresident Missourians voted illegally, securing a proslavery assembly that convened in Lecompton.[89][90] Antislavery "free-soilers" from the North responded by establishing the rival Topeka government under a free-state constitution adopted on October 23, 1855, rejected by Congress but fueling parallel authority and clashes.[89] Violence erupted prominently on May 21, 1856, when approximately 800 border ruffians from Missouri and elsewhere, under proslavery Territorial Governor Andrew Reeder's successor, sacked Lawrence, destroying the free-state hotel, two newspapers, and a printing press while killing one defender; this raid exemplified Missouri's direct role in suppressing antislavery organizing.[89] In retaliation, abolitionist John Brown and followers massacred five proslavery settlers along Pottawatomie Creek on May 24-25, 1856, escalating guerrilla warfare that claimed around 50-200 lives over the next several years, with Missouri ruffians conducting raids like the Marais des Cygnes massacre on October 25, 1858, where they killed five free-state men.[91][92] These border conflicts exposed popular sovereignty's flaws, as electoral fraud and Missouri's invasions undermined fair voting, radicalizing both sections: northern outrage birthed the Republican Party in 1854, while southerners viewed Kansas violence as northern aggression justifying secession.[93] Missouri's divided populace—slaveholding border counties versus upcountry unionists—mirrored national fissures, with proslavery guerrillas like those later led by William Quantrill foreshadowing the state's Civil War chaos, including its 1861 Camp Jackson affair where state militia seized federal arsenal amid secession debates.[94] The Lecompton Constitution, a proslavery draft submitted in 1857 and backed by President James Buchanan despite evident fraud, further eroded Democratic unity, paving the way for the party's 1860 fracture and Abraham Lincoln's election, which triggered southern secession on December 20, 1860.[89] Thus, Missouri's aggressive defense of slavery extension in Kansas crystallized irreconcilable conflicts over territorial expansion, rendering compromise untenable and hastening the Civil War's outbreak in April 1861.[92]Civil War divisions and battles
Missouri, as a slave-holding border state, experienced profound internal divisions during the American Civil War, with loyalties split between Union supporters and Confederate sympathizers. Governor Claiborne Fox Jackson, elected in 1860, favored secession and organized the Missouri State Guard as a pro-Confederate militia, while Unionists, including many German immigrants in St. Louis, opposed disunion.[95] In May 1861, federal forces under Captain Nathaniel Lyon captured the Camp Jackson militia encampment near St. Louis, sparking riots that killed 28 civilians and escalating tensions.[96] Jackson fled southward, allying with Confederate troops, but a Unionist state convention installed Hamilton Rowan Gamble as provisional governor, establishing dual governments: a Union loyalist administration in Jefferson City and a Confederate exile government led by Jackson.[95] Early conventional battles highlighted Missouri's strategic importance in the Trans-Mississippi Theater. On June 17, 1861, Union forces defeated the Missouri State Guard at Boonville, securing central Missouri for the North with minimal casualties.[97] The Battle of Wilson's Creek on August 10, 1861, near Springfield, marked the first major engagement west of the Mississippi, where Confederate forces under Sterling Price and Ben McCulloch routed Lyon's army, killing Lyon himself; Union losses totaled 1,317 (including 258 dead), while Confederates suffered 1,374 casualties.[98] This victory temporarily gave Confederates control of southwestern Missouri, followed by the Siege of Lexington (September 13–20, 1861), where 3,500 Confederates captured a Union garrison of 2,800, seizing 5 million cartridges but soon abandoning northern Missouri due to supply issues.[98] Federal victories at Pea Ridge (March 7–8, 1862, in Arkansas) involving Missouri troops effectively cleared organized Confederate presence from the state until 1864.[97] Guerrilla warfare defined much of Missouri's conflict, with over 1,200 engagements, mostly irregular skirmishes that terrorized civilians and eroded social fabric. Pro-Confederate bushwhackers, including William Quantrill and "Bloody Bill" Anderson, conducted hit-and-run raids, often targeting Union militias and sympathizers; Anderson's band killed 24 disarmed Union soldiers in the Centralia Massacre on September 27, 1864.[99] Union responses involved the Missouri State Militia, authorized by federal subsidy, which focused on suppressing these irregulars through patrols and punitive expeditions, though atrocities occurred on both sides, exacerbating feuds like those spilling from "Bleeding Kansas."[95] This asymmetric fighting, sustained by local Southern families providing aid, prevented full Union control and contributed to an estimated 27,000 military deaths in Missouri engagements.[100] In late 1864, Confederate Major General Sterling Price's Missouri Expedition sought to disrupt Union rear areas and influence the presidential election. Price's 12,000 troops entered southeastern Missouri in September, suffering a repulse at Fort Davidson (Pilot Knob) on September 27, where 1,500 Confederates fell to 184 Union defenders.[101] Advancing northward, Price clashed at Westport on October 23 near Kansas City—the war's largest battle west of the Mississippi—where 9,000 Union troops under Alfred Pleasonton defeated 6,000 Confederates, inflicting around 1,500 casualties per side and forcing Price's retreat into Kansas and Arkansas.[102] These failures, combined with William Tecumseh Sherman's March to the Sea, ended significant Confederate threats to Missouri, solidifying Union dominance amid the state's lingering divisions.[103]Reconstruction, populism, and industrialization
Missouri's Reconstruction era, distinct from the federal program imposed on Confederate states, began after the state's January 11, 1865, ordinance of emancipation, which immediately freed approximately 114,000 enslaved people without compensation to owners, predating the Thirteenth Amendment.[104] This action stemmed from the 1863 state constitution under Radical Unionist control, which required an "iron-clad oath" of loyalty for officeholders and voters, disenfranchising about 20,000 former Confederates and their sympathizers.[105] Political divisions intensified as Radicals, favoring harsh penalties on ex-rebels, dominated the 1865 constitution, banning Confederate leaders from office and prohibiting interracial marriage while mandating segregated schools; however, guerrilla violence persisted, with groups like former bushwhackers targeting freedmen and Unionists amid economic disruption from destroyed infrastructure and labor shortages.[105] By 1866, Radicals aligned with the nascent Republican Party, while Conservatives merged with Democrats, leading to contested elections marred by fraud claims; Radical Governor Thomas C. Fletcher maintained control until 1870, when federal troops' withdrawal and court rulings easing the loyalty oath enabled Conservatives to regain power, ending Radical dominance and restoring ex-Confederates' rights through amnesty.[105] This shift reflected Missouri's border-state status, where Union loyalty coexisted with Southern sympathies, resulting in over 100 lynchings of freedmen between 1865 and 1877, often unpunished, as local authorities prioritized white reconciliation over Black civil rights enforcement.[104] Economically, sharecropping emerged on former plantations, trapping many freedmen in debt peonage, while Unionist small farmers faced foreclosures amid falling cotton and tobacco prices. In the 1880s and 1890s, agrarian discontent fueled the Farmers' Alliance in Missouri, organizing over 20,000 members by 1890 to combat falling crop prices—wheat dropped from $1.19 per bushel in 1881 to 68 cents in 1890—and railroad monopolies charging discriminatory freight rates, such as 30-40% higher for short hauls versus long ones.[106] The Alliance advocated cooperative stores, subtreasuries for crop loans at lower interest, and regulation of banks and grain elevators, drawing from national models but adapting to Missouri's diversified farming of corn, hogs, and cattle. This evolved into the People's Party (Populists) by 1891, which secured 5-15% of the vote in state elections, electing a few legislators but failing to unseat Democratic dominance due to urban-rural divides and fusion attempts with Republicans that splintered support.[107] Northern Missouri saw particular Alliance strength among debt-burdened smallholders, yet the movement waned after 1896, as silverite demands collapsed with William Jennings Bryan's Democratic nomination, revealing Populism's limited appeal in a state with growing industrial ties.[108] Industrialization accelerated post-Reconstruction through railroad expansion, with track mileage surging from 817 miles in 1860 to 8,072 by 1900, linking rural producers to national markets and enabling St. Louis's rise as the fourth-largest U.S. city by 1900 with a population of 575,238.[109] Lines like the Missouri Pacific and Wabash railroads facilitated export of lead from southwest mines—output reaching 140,000 tons annually by 1890—and grain from the fertile plains, while spurring manufacturing: St. Louis produced 15% of U.S. stoves, 20% of wagons, and dominated brewing with Anheuser-Busch employing 1,000 workers by 1890.[110] Kansas City's stockyards processed 1.5 million cattle yearly by 1900, integrating agriculture with meatpacking industries that employed 5,000 workers, though labor conditions included child exploitation, as documented in Kirksville factories where minors operated hazardous machinery for 10-12 hour shifts at 50 cents daily.[111] This shift diversified the economy beyond agriculture, which still comprised 70% of employment, but exposed farmers to volatile commodity prices and urban capital dominance, fueling populist grievances without derailing overall growth.[112] ![PASSENGERS_JAM_THE_INTERIOR_OF_THE_ST._LOUIS%252C_MISSOURI%252C_UNION_STATION_IN_A_COPYRIGHTED_PICTURE_TAKEN_BY_B.A.ATWATER...-NARA-_556056.jpg][float-right]20th-century progressivism and world wars
In the early 20th century, Missouri's Progressive Era featured efforts to address political corruption, urban growth, and social inequities through municipal reforms, social welfare legislation, and economic regulations tailored to local conditions.[113] Governor Joseph W. Folk, inaugurated in 1905, prioritized anti-bribery initiatives, prosecuting St. Louis political machine figures and enacting laws to curb graft in public contracts and elections.[114] These reforms reflected broader Progressive ideals of restoring democratic accountability amid industrialization, though implementation varied by city, with Kansas City pursuing civic beautification and St. Louis focusing on vice suppression.[115] Women's suffrage campaigns in Missouri, active since 1867 with repeated petitions for constitutional amendments, faced repeated defeats, including the 1914 initiative's failure linked to associations with prohibition.[116] Labor reforms targeted child exploitation, evident in early 1900s documentation of underage workers in Kirksville factories, prompting eventual state laws restricting child employment by the 1910s.[117] The initiative and referendum process, introduced as a Progressive tool, enabled later voter-driven policies but originated in this era's push for direct democracy.[118] Missouri's role in World War I was amplified by native son General John J. Pershing, born in Laclede in 1860, who commanded the American Expeditionary Forces from 1917 to 1919, leading U.S. troops to key victories including the Meuse-Argonne Offensive that contributed to the Armistice on November 11, 1918.[119] Approximately 156,000 Missourians served in the war, suffering around 10,000 casualties, while the state supplied mules and other logistics critical to Allied efforts.[120] During World War II, Missouri's industrial base, particularly in St. Louis and Kansas City, produced munitions, aircraft components, and other war materials, with defense plants employing thousands and sustaining postwar economic activity.[121] An estimated 475,000 state residents entered military service, supporting operations across theaters.[122] The USS Missouri, a battleship named for the state and commissioned in June 1944, participated in Iwo Jima and Okinawa campaigns before hosting Japan's surrender on September 2, 1945.[123] These contributions underscored Missouri's transition from agrarian roots to modern industrial participation, bridging Progressive-era infrastructure investments with wartime mobilization.Post-WWII economic boom and social changes
Missouri's economy expanded in the postwar period as factories retooled from wartime production to consumer goods, with St. Louis serving as a manufacturing hub where industries including shoes, brewing, and appliances drove employment. Factories, railroads, and mills accounted for more than one-third of the St. Louis area's workforce in the immediate postwar years. The city's shoe sector peaked in 1959, producing millions of pairs annually before facing foreign competition. Smaller cities like Springfield saw industrial diversification, infrastructure upgrades such as highways and airports, and job creation that fueled local growth through the 1950s and 1960s.[124][125][126] Statewide population grew from 3,954,653 in 1950 to 4,319,813 in 1960, reflecting the baby boom, returning veterans, and migration to urban centers for manufacturing and service jobs. Urbanization intensified initially, but suburban expansion soon followed, supported by federal highway construction and low-interest loans; in Kansas City, population increased 12% from 1946 to 1964 while annexed land area more than doubled, enabling residential sprawl. Agriculture mechanized with tractors and chemicals, boosting productivity but displacing rural workers toward cities.[127][128] Socially, the era brought demographic shifts from the ongoing Great Migration, as African Americans from the rural South relocated to Missouri's industrial cities like St. Louis for factory work, increasing urban black populations from about 10% in 1940 to over 25% by 1960 in some areas. Civil rights activism emerged prominently; in St. Louis, the Congress of Racial Equality conducted nonviolent sit-ins at lunch counters from 1949 to 1953, achieving desegregation at key establishments despite resistance. School districts nominally integrated after the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, but de facto segregation endured through the 1960s due to neighborhood patterns and policies, with most black students remaining in predominantly black schools. Housing discrimination, enforced by restrictive covenants until ruled unconstitutional in 1948 and later practices, confined many black families to central city neighborhoods, contributing to emerging urban-rural divides.[129][130][131]21st-century politics, economy, and events
Missouri's political landscape in the 21st century shifted toward Republican dominance, reflecting broader rural and suburban conservatism amid urban Democratic strongholds in St. Louis and Kansas City. Democratic Governor Bob Holden served from 2001 to 2005 before losing reelection to Republican Matt Blunt, who governed until 2009.[132] Democrat Jay Nixon then held office from 2009 to 2017, followed by Republican Eric Greitens in 2017–2018, who resigned amid scandals; Lieutenant Governor Mike Parson (R) succeeded him and won reelection in 2020, serving until 2025, when Mike Kehoe (R) assumed the governorship.[133] [134] In presidential elections, Missouri supported the Republican candidate in every contest from 2000 to 2024, including narrow margins for George W. Bush in 2000 and decisive wins thereafter.[135] The state legislature gained sustained Republican majorities post-2002, enabling policies like a 2017 right-to-work law prohibiting compulsory union dues, which voters rejected via referendum in 2018 by a 67–33 margin, preserving union influence in a manufacturing-heavy economy.[136] Following the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision overturning Roe v. Wade, Missouri enforced a near-total abortion ban under the 2019 Right to Life of the Unborn Child Act, allowing exceptions only for medical emergencies, with abortions ceasing immediately upon the ruling.[137] In November 2024, voters approved Amendment 3, enshrining reproductive freedom including abortion rights up to viability in the state constitution by a 51–49 margin, though ongoing litigation and a May 2025 Missouri Supreme Court order temporarily blocked expanded access, maintaining de facto restrictions amid debates over exceptions and enforcement.[138] [139] U.S. Senators Roy Blunt (R, 2011–2023) and Josh Hawley (R, 2019–present) underscored the state's conservative bent on issues like Second Amendment rights and federal overreach.[140] Economically, Missouri's real GDP grew from approximately $240 billion in 2000 to $356.7 billion in 2024, averaging about 1.5–2% annual real growth, driven by manufacturing, agriculture, and services despite recessions in 2001, 2008–2009, and 2020.[141] [142] Manufacturing contributed 9.5% of total earnings in the 2020s, with over 8,000 establishments producing transportation equipment, chemicals, and food products in hubs like St. Louis (Boeing operations until partial relocation) and Springfield.[143] Agriculture added $93.7 billion annually to the economy as of 2021, supporting 87,000+ farms focused on soybeans, corn, cattle, and hogs, bolstered by the state's central location and Mississippi River access for exports.[144] Services, including professional and business sectors, led GDP contributions in 2024 at around 15–20%, while challenges like Boeing's 2019–2020 workforce cuts (thousands of jobs lost) highlighted vulnerabilities to national supply chain disruptions.[145] Key events included the 2014 Ferguson unrest, sparked by the police shooting of Michael Brown on August 9, leading to weeks of protests, riots, looting, and a National Guard deployment, exposing tensions over policing and municipal governance in St. Louis County's majority-Black suburbs. The COVID-19 pandemic reached Missouri with its first confirmed case on March 7, 2020, prompting varied local responses—St. Louis imposed strict lockdowns, while state-level orders emphasized voluntary measures—resulting in over 35,000 deaths by 2025 and economic contractions of 2–3% in 2020 GDP.[146] Natural disasters persisted, with 2019 Midwest floods causing $1.5 billion in agricultural losses statewide and infrastructure damage, compounded by 2022 flash floods in Ferguson affecting hundreds of homes.[147] These events underscored Missouri's exposure to riverine flooding and its reliance on federal aid for recovery.Demographics
Population size, growth, and distribution
As of July 1, 2024, the estimated resident population of Missouri was 6,245,466, according to data derived from U.S. Census Bureau estimates.[2] This figure marked a 0.6% increase from the 2023 estimate of 6,208,038 and represented a total growth of about 1.5% since the April 1, 2020, decennial census count of 6,154,913.[2][148] Missouri's annual growth rate ranked it 19th among U.S. states, aligning with its position as the 19th most populous state.[149] Between 2020 and 2024, population changes were driven entirely by net migration gains of 101,152 individuals from domestic and international sources, as natural increase remained negative with deaths exceeding births.[148][150] This migration offset demographic pressures from an aging population and low fertility rates, contributing to modest overall expansion below the national average.[151] Historically, Missouri has experienced slower growth than Sunbelt states, relying less on in-migration and more on natural change prior to recent trends.[151] Population distribution exhibits significant urban-rural disparities, with roughly 70% of residents in urban areas despite rural land covering 97.4% of the state.[152][49] Over half of the population—approximately 55%—resides in the Kansas City and St. Louis metropolitan statistical areas, concentrated along the state's western and eastern borders.[6] The largest cities include Kansas City (516,032 residents), St. Louis (279,695), Springfield (170,596), and Columbia (130,900), while rural densities remain low in central and southern regions like the Ozarks.[3] This pattern reflects economic opportunities in metro hubs and persistent out-migration from agricultural and non-metro counties.[153]Racial, ethnic, and ancestry composition
Missouri's racial composition, as reported in the 2020 United States Census, consisted of 77.0% identifying as White alone, 11.3% as Black or African American alone, 5.0% as two or more races, 2.1% as Asian alone, 0.5% as American Indian and Alaska Native alone, 0.1% as Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone, and 4.0% as some other race alone.[154] [155] Among these, non-Hispanic Whites comprised 76.8% of the population, reflecting a slight decline from prior decades due to differential birth rates, aging demographics, and immigration patterns favoring other groups.[156] Black or African American non-Hispanics accounted for 11.0%, concentrated primarily in urban areas such as St. Louis and Kansas City, stemming from historical migration during slavery and subsequent Great Migration reversals.[156] [127] The Hispanic or Latino population (of any race) stood at 4.9% in 2020, rising to an estimated 4.8% by 2022, marking the fastest-growing segment through immigration from Latin America and higher fertility rates compared to the state average.[154] [127] Asians represented 2.1%, with subgroups including Indians, Chinese, and Vietnamese, largely in metropolitan hubs driven by employment in technology, healthcare, and education sectors.[154] Multiracial identifications increased notably to 5.0%, attributable to expanded Census options allowing multiple selections and rising intermarriage rates, particularly among younger cohorts.[154] Native American populations remain small at 0.5%, with concentrations in the Ozarks linked to historical tribal presences like the Osage before 19th-century removals.[154] Self-reported ancestry data from the American Community Survey highlight European origins predominant among the White population: German ancestry is the most common at approximately 27%, followed by Irish at 11%, English at 9%, and American (often denoting Scotch-Irish or colonial-era unmixed descent) at 6%.[157] [158] These patterns trace to 19th-century German immigration to central and western Missouri for farming, Irish labor in railroads and mining, and earlier Anglo-Scottish settlers in the upland south.[157] French ancestry appears at lower levels (around 4%), tied to early colonial fur trade outposts like St. Louis, while African ancestry underlies the Black population's composition, with genetic studies confirming West and Central African roots from the transatlantic slave trade.[157] Regional variations persist, with German dominance in rural counties and higher African American proportions in the Bootheel and urban east.[157]| Racial/Ethnic Group (2020 Census) | Percentage |
|---|---|
| White alone (non-Hispanic) | 76.8% |
| Black or African American alone (non-Hispanic) | 11.0% |
| Hispanic or Latino (any race) | 4.9% |
| Asian alone | 2.1% |
| Two or more races | 5.0% |
| Other (including Native American) | 0.2% |
Language, immigration patterns, and cultural assimilation
Approximately 92.6% of Missouri residents aged five and older speak only English at home, with 7.4% speaking a language other than English.[159] Spanish is the most prevalent non-English language, spoken in about 165,840 households, followed by Chinese (including Mandarin), German, and Arabic, each with over 10,000 speakers.[156] These figures reflect a linguistically homogeneous state, where non-English speakers constitute a small minority concentrated in urban areas like St. Louis and Kansas City. Historically, Missouri's immigration patterns were shaped by 19th-century European inflows, with Germans forming the largest group, settling in rural counties and contributing to agricultural communities and cultural institutions such as breweries and festivals.[160] Irish immigrants followed, often in urban centers for railroad and mining work, while later waves included southern and eastern Europeans. Internal migration from the American South, particularly African Americans during the early 20th century, supplemented these patterns but differed from international immigration. In recent decades, Missouri's foreign-born population has remained low at 4.9% of the total (approximately 301,300 individuals as of 2023), below the national average.[159] [161] Top countries of origin include Mexico (15.5%), India (7.4%), China (5.6%), the Philippines (4.1%), and Vietnam (3.8%), with immigrants comprising 6.2% of the labor force and showing concentrations in meatpacking, manufacturing, and professional services.[161] Growth has been modest statewide, though metro areas like St. Louis experienced a 23.2% increase in foreign-born residents from 2022 to 2023, driven by refugee resettlement and economic opportunities.[162] Cultural assimilation among Missouri's immigrants appears facilitated by the state's small foreign-born share and lack of large ethnic enclaves, promoting rapid integration compared to high-immigration states. Nearly half of immigrants are naturalized U.S. citizens, indicating civic engagement.[161] English proficiency varies by origin—higher among Europeans and Indians, lower among some Latin American and Vietnamese groups (e.g., 58.6% limited proficiency for Vietnamese speakers)—but overall trends show second-generation immigrants achieving near-universal fluency, supported by public schools and community pressures for adaptation.[163] Intermarriage rates and occupational mobility further evidence assimilation, though challenges persist in rural areas with isolated non-English communities.[164]Religion, family structure, and social indicators
Missouri's religious landscape is dominated by Christianity, with 62% of adults identifying as Christian according to the Pew Research Center's Religious Landscape Study, including 31% evangelical Protestants, 10% mainline Protestants, 5% historically Black Protestants, and approximately 16% Catholics.[165][166] An additional 4% adhere to non-Christian faiths, while 33% are religiously unaffiliated, reflecting a national trend of rising "nones" driven by secularization and skepticism toward institutional religion.[165] Church attendance has declined alongside affiliation; in the St. Louis metro area, weekly service participation fell from 30% in 2014 to lower levels by the mid-2020s, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic's disruption of in-person worship.[167] Statewide Christian identification dropped 15% over the past decade, correlating with broader cultural shifts away from traditional religiosity in the Midwest.[168] Family structure in Missouri emphasizes traditional two-parent households for a majority of children, with 67.1% living in married-parent families as of 2019-2023 data from the KIDS COUNT project, though single-parent households account for about 23.5% of children, predominantly mother-led.[169] Alternative estimates place the single-parent share higher at around 33%, highlighting variability in measurement but underscoring elevated risks of poverty and educational challenges in such homes, as children in single-parent families face fourfold higher odds of living in poverty compared to those in intact families.[170] Missouri's crude divorce rate stood at 3.7 per 1,000 population in 2021, down from 5.5 in 1990, reflecting longer-term declines possibly linked to later marriages (median age 29.4 for women, 31.5 for men in 2020) and cultural emphasis on marital stability in religious communities.[171][172] Fertility remains below replacement level at 55.8 births per 1,000 women aged 15-44 in 2023, equivalent to a total fertility rate of approximately 1.72 children per woman, influenced by economic pressures and delayed childbearing rather than explicit policy restrictions.[173] Social indicators reveal correlations between family intactness, religiosity, and outcomes: Missouri's child poverty rate stands at 18%, disproportionately affecting single-parent and non-religious households, while the state's near-total abortion ban since 2022 has reduced procedures to historic lows (fewer than 100 annually post-Roe v. Wade overturn), aligning with conservative Christian values prevalent in rural areas.[174][175] High religiosity buffers against family dissolution; evangelical counties exhibit lower divorce rates and higher marriage persistence, per county-level data from religious archives, though urban areas like St. Louis show weakening traditional structures amid rising unaffiliation.[176] Overall, these patterns suggest causal links between intact families and religious adherence in fostering social stability, with empirical studies indicating that children from two-biological-parent homes experience 50% lower rates of behavioral issues and higher economic mobility.[177]Economy
Macroeconomic overview and GDP trends
Missouri's real gross domestic product (GDP), measured in chained 2017 dollars, stood at $356.7 billion in 2024, reflecting a 2.3% increase from $348.5 billion in 2023 and representing the state's highest annual figure to date.[145] This places Missouri's economy as the 22nd largest among U.S. states by nominal GDP, with estimates around $422 billion in recent years, driven primarily by metropolitan areas like St. Louis and Kansas City.[178] Per capita real GDP reached $57,106 in 2024, ranking the state 36th nationally, below the U.S. average due to factors including a relatively lower concentration of high-productivity sectors compared to coastal states.[145][179]| Year | Real GDP (chained 2017 dollars, billions) | Annual Growth Rate (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 316.2 | -2.6 |
| 2021 | 331.6 | 4.9 |
| 2022 | 337.2 | 1.7 |
| 2023 | 346.9 | 2.8 |
| 2024 | 356.7 | 2.3 |
Primary sectors: agriculture, manufacturing, and resources
Missouri's primary economic sectors encompass agriculture, manufacturing, and natural resource extraction, which together form foundational components of the state's goods-producing industries, though services dominate the overall economy. Agriculture remains a cornerstone, generating $34.9 billion in gross domestic product (GDP) contributions as of 2021 data extended into recent analyses, while supporting nearly 500,000 jobs across the $93.7 billion agribusiness sector.[182] Manufacturing adds substantial value, accounting for 11.6% of Missouri's 2024 gross state product at $52.38 billion, with over 8,000 establishments employing approximately 290,000 workers, or 10% of total nonfarm payroll.[183] [184] Resource extraction, primarily mining, contributes modestly at 0.3% of GDP, focused on minerals like lead rather than broad energy production.[185] These sectors face challenges from commodity price volatility, labor constraints, and environmental regulations, yet leverage Missouri's central location and fertile soils for sustained output. Agriculture in Missouri centers on row crops and livestock, with soybeans leading production at 286 million bushels in 2024, reflecting a yield of 49 bushels per acre across reduced acreage amid lower prices.[186] Corn follows as a key commodity, alongside cattle and calves, with statewide cattle inventory at 3.95 million head as of January 2025; hogs and broilers also rank prominently among top outputs.[187] [188] The state hosts nearly 88,000 farms averaging 308 acres, enabling diverse operations that generated $14.9 billion in cash receipts in 2022, though net farm income fell 16% to $3.7 billion in 2024 due to declining crop prices and a 1.4 billion dollar drop in crop receipts from reduced planting.[144] [189] [190] Soybean and corn dominate northern and central regions, while livestock thrives statewide, underscoring agriculture's role in export-oriented supply chains despite weather and market pressures. Manufacturing drives industrial output through diverse subsectors including transportation equipment, food processing, and chemicals, with employment holding steady at 290,700 in April 2024 after flat growth over the prior year.[191] The sector's establishments produce goods contributing 12.4% of GDP as of 2022 figures, bolstered by Missouri's logistics advantages from river and rail access, though annual employment averaged 284,200 in 2024, down slightly from 286,700 in 2023 amid broader national trends.[192] [193] Key hubs like St. Louis and Springfield host aerospace and automotive assembly, with projections for 1.5% job growth through 2033 driven by reshoring and technology integration, yet constrained by skilled labor shortages.[194] Natural resource extraction emphasizes mining in the southeast's "Lead Belt," where the Viburnum Trend yields lead, copper, and zinc essential for batteries and infrastructure, building on historical output exceeding 17 million tons of lead since the 18th century.[195] [196] Lead mining persists across 66 counties, with significant production in 40 posing reclamation challenges due to contamination risks, though 2024 activities focus on sustainable extraction amid federal supply chain priorities.[197] Coal plays a minor role in mining output, overshadowed by lead; while Missouri relies on coal for 57% of in-state electricity generation in 2024, domestic production remains limited, contributing to the sector's small 0.3% GDP share.[198] [185] Forestry and quarrying supplement resources, but environmental legacies from legacy sites necessitate ongoing remediation efforts.[199]Services, trade, and emerging industries
The services sector constitutes the largest component of Missouri's economy, accounting for 73 percent of the state's GDP in 2023 and employing a majority of the workforce.[185] Key subsectors include healthcare and social assistance, which supported 498,192 jobs as of recent data, and retail trade with 413,176 positions.[200] Professional and business services led GDP contributions in 2024, reflecting strengths in financial services centered in St. Louis, home to firms like Edward Jones managing over $1.9 trillion in assets as of 2023.[145] Healthcare stands out with major systems such as BJC HealthCare and SSM Health operating extensive networks, driving employment and innovation in medical services.[201] Tourism bolsters services, generating significant visitor spending through attractions like Branson's entertainment district and the Lake of the Ozarks, with the sector ranking as a top employer outside manufacturing.[202] In fiscal year 2021, travel supported broad economic impacts including jobs and tax revenue, a trend continuing amid recovery from pandemic disruptions.[203] Missouri's trade leverages its central location and infrastructure, including the Mississippi River port in St. Louis and Kansas City's rail and logistics hubs. The state recorded $31 billion in goods and services exports in 2023, with 5,842 exporting companies, 84 percent of which were small and medium-sized enterprises.[204] [205] Major exports encompass aircraft parts from Boeing in St. Louis, transportation equipment, and agricultural products, while imports focus on machinery and vehicles; monthly figures in January 2024 showed exports at $1.5 billion and imports at $2.26 billion.[206] Emerging industries emphasize high-tech applications, with Missouri investing in agtech, geospatial analysis, cybersecurity, and biosciences, particularly in St. Louis's Cortex Innovation Community fostering life sciences startups.[207] The state ranks among the top 10 for projected tech manufacturing job growth through 2030, supported by initiatives in advanced manufacturing and sectors like animal health innovation.[208] These developments build on clusters in human health and data analytics, attracting investments amid a pro-business climate.[209]Taxation, regulation, and business climate
Missouri imposes a state individual income tax with a top marginal rate of 4.7 percent for tax year 2025, following reductions triggered by revenue growth exceeding benchmarks; this structure is set to transition to a flat 4.7 percent rate beginning in tax year 2026 under House Bill 798.[210][211] The corporate income tax rate stands at 4 percent for tax years beginning after January 1, 2020, though recent legislation in House Bill 798 lowers it to 3.75 percent effective for 2025, with potential for further phased reductions if revenue conditions are met.[212][213] The state sales and use tax rate is 4.225 percent, with local additions from counties, cities, and districts pushing combined rates to an average of 8.39 percent and highs near 10 percent in urban areas like St. Louis.[214] Property taxes, levied by local governments, carry an average effective rate of approximately 0.88 to 0.91 percent of assessed value, ranking Missouri mid-tier nationally, with median annual payments around $1,198 per household.[215][216] Recent reforms emphasize tax relief to bolster competitiveness. In 2025, Missouri became the first state to fully eliminate capital gains taxation on individual and certain corporate investment income, exempting such gains from state income tax under legislation signed in June, alongside increases in standard deductions and credits for military personnel.[217][218] Governor Mike Kehoe signed House Bills 567 and 594 in July 2025, enacting pro-business measures including enhanced tax credits for job creation and R&D, while Senate Bill 3 mandates voter referenda in most counties by April 2026 to cap property tax growth at inflation rates, aiming to curb local revenue hikes.[219][220] These changes build on prior cuts, such as the 2017 corporate rate drop from 6.25 percent, driven by legislative priorities favoring lower burdens to attract investment amid empirical evidence that high taxes correlate with slower business formation.[221] On regulation, Missouri lacks statewide right-to-work protections, having repealed a 2017 law via referendum in 2018, resulting in mandatory union dues in unionized workplaces under federal labor law section 14(b) opt-out; this status classifies it as a forced-unionism state, potentially elevating labor costs compared to the 26 right-to-work jurisdictions.[222][223] The state maintains at-will employment presumptions with limited mandates beyond federal minimums, no prevailing wage requirements on most private projects, and streamlined occupational licensing in select fields, though local zoning and environmental rules vary, contributing to middling regulatory rankings.[224][225] Missouri's business climate benefits from competitive taxation but faces challenges in regulatory efficiency. The Tax Foundation's 2025 State Tax Competitiveness Index ranks Missouri 13th overall, praising its individual income tax neutrality (top-10) and sales tax structure while noting property tax code complexities as a drag.[226] Broader assessments, such as CNBC's 2025 Top States for Business ranking (34th), highlight workforce quality strengths offset by infrastructure and cost-of-living factors; empirical data links recent tax reforms to improved firm retention, with low energy and labor costs (25 percent below national commercial electricity averages) aiding manufacturing inflows.[227][228]| Tax Type | Rate/Details (2025) |
|---|---|
| Individual Income | 4.7% top marginal; flat 4.7% in 2026 |
| Corporate Income | 3.75% (reduced from 4%) |
| Sales/Use | 4.225% state + local (avg. 8.39%) |
| Property (effective) | ~0.88-0.91% |
Labor market, unemployment, and recent developments
Missouri's civilian labor force participation rate reached 63.6 percent in August 2025, surpassing the national rate of 62.3 percent, reflecting a relatively robust attachment to the workforce amid demographic pressures like an aging population.[229] The state's unemployment rate held steady at 4.1 percent in August 2025, consistent with July's figure and below the U.S. average of 4.3 percent, indicating tighter labor market conditions than nationally.[230][231] Nonfarm payroll employment grew by 33,900 jobs year-over-year through August 2025, with total employment supported by expansions in services and manufacturing.[232] Key employment sectors include health care and social assistance, which added 18,536 jobs in recent annual data and continue to drive openings due to demand from an expanding elderly population.[185] Manufacturing employs about 293,000 workers across over 8,000 establishments, contributing nearly 10 percent of state earnings and benefiting from export activity that supported 54,000 jobs in 2022.[233][143] Other significant areas encompass accommodation and food services, construction, and retail trade, with small firms (under 50 employees) comprising 46.2 percent of businesses in early 2024.[209] Recent developments highlight recovery from pandemic disruptions, with job openings at 145,000 in July 2025, down slightly from June but signaling persistent demand.[234] Payroll employment rose 17,100 in July 2025 and 12,500 in February, fueled by healthcare surges and manufacturing projections of 1.5 percent growth through semiconductors and related fields.[235][236] Challenges persist in workforce quantity and skills mismatches, exacerbated by low population growth and a skills gap, though higher participation rates mitigate some shortages compared to national trends.[237] Missouri's rejection of right-to-work legislation via 2018 referendum has maintained union security options, potentially influencing wage dynamics in unionized sectors, though empirical comparisons show right-to-work states experiencing 5.2 percent faster private-sector growth from 2003 onward per Bureau of Labor Statistics data.[238][239]Government and Politics
Structure of state government
Missouri's state government operates under the Missouri Constitution of 1945, which establishes three co-equal branches: legislative, executive, and judicial.[240] The legislative branch enacts laws, the executive enforces them, and the judicial interprets them, with checks and balances including veto powers, overrides, and judicial review.[241] The legislative branch consists of the bicameral Missouri General Assembly. The House of Representatives comprises 163 members, each elected from single-member districts for two-year terms, with a lifetime limit of eight years in that chamber.[242] The Senate has 34 members, elected from single-member districts for four-year staggered terms, with an eight-year lifetime limit in the Senate; members may serve up to 16 years total across both chambers.[242] [243] The General Assembly convenes annually on the first Wednesday following the first Monday in January, with no constitutional limit on session length, though special sessions called by the governor are capped at 60 days and restricted to specified topics.[244] [245] It holds powers to pass bills, which become law upon gubernatorial approval or override of a veto by a two-thirds majority in each chamber, appropriate funds, and confirm certain appointments.[246] The executive branch is led by the governor, elected statewide for a four-year term with a limit of two consecutive terms.[134] The governor wields veto authority over legislation—including line-item vetoes for appropriations—and can convene special legislative sessions, serve as commander-in-chief of the state militia, grant pardons, and appoint officials subject to Senate confirmation.[246] Five other executive officials are popularly elected for four-year terms: lieutenant governor, secretary of state, state auditor, state treasurer, and attorney general.[247] These roles handle duties such as presiding over the Senate (lieutenant governor), managing elections and records (secretary of state), auditing state finances (auditor), investing state funds (treasurer), and representing the state in legal matters (attorney general). The branch includes 16 departments overseeing areas like health, education, and public safety.[241] The judicial branch is headed by the Supreme Court of Missouri, which consists of seven members: a chief justice and six judges.[248] Judges are selected through the Missouri Nonpartisan Court Plan, where a commission of attorneys and non-attorneys nominates three candidates to the governor for appointment; after a year in office, they face noncompetitive retention elections, with 12-year terms thereafter if retained by a majority of voters.[249] [248] The court has original jurisdiction over certain cases, such as habeas corpus and disciplinary matters, and appellate jurisdiction over cases involving the state's revenue, title to state office, or constitutional questions; it also transfers cases from the intermediate appellate courts as needed.[246] Below it, the Missouri Court of Appeals operates in three geographic districts with a total of about 28 judges, handling most appeals from circuit courts, while 45 circuit courts serve as trial courts of general jurisdiction across the state's eight districts.[246]Electoral history and party dominance
Missouri has participated in every U.S. presidential election since statehood in 1820, casting electoral votes for the national winner in 37 of 51 contests, a 73% success rate that earned it a reputation as a bellwether state until recent decades.[250] From 1900 to 2024, the state recorded 14 Democratic presidential victories and 18 Republican ones, with Democratic wins concentrated in the New Deal era and mid-20th century, such as Franklin D. Roosevelt's four terms (1932–1944) and Harry Truman's 1948 upset.[135] Republican dominance emerged post-2000, with the state supporting George W. Bush in 2000 (50.0%) and 2004 (53.3%), John McCain in 2008 (49.4%), Mitt Romney in 2012 (44.9%), Donald Trump in 2016 (56.8%), 2020 (56.8%), and 2024 (by an 18.4% margin over Kamala Harris).[135][251] This pattern reflects rural and suburban conservatism outweighing Democratic strength in urban centers like St. Louis and Kansas City, where turnout and margins have not overcome statewide Republican leans since 2000.[252] In gubernatorial elections, party control has alternated historically but tilted Republican since the 2010s. Democrats held the office from 2009 to 2017 under Jay Nixon, following Republican Matt Blunt's term (2005–2009), but Republicans regained it with Eric Greitens in 2016 (51.3%), succeeded by Mike Parson (2018–2025), who won full terms in 2020 (57.0%) and was term-limited.[133] In 2024, Republican Mike Kehoe secured the governorship with 57% of the vote against Democrat Crystal Quade.[253] Earlier cycles show volatility: Democrats dominated mid-20th century (e.g., Warren Hearnes, 1965–1973), but Republicans won in 1984 (Christopher Bond) and maintained intermittent control amid scandals and economic shifts.[254] Voter turnout in gubernatorial races averages around 40–50%, with Republican margins widening in rural districts due to demographic stability and opposition to state-level Democratic policies on taxation and regulation.[134] The Missouri General Assembly has seen Republican supermajorities since 2013, controlling the Senate (24–10 as of 2025) and House (111–52 as of 2025).[255] Democrats held unified control through the 1990s and early 2000s, but Republicans flipped the House in 2002 and Senate in 2001, consolidating via redistricting after 2010 censuses and voter realignments favoring limited government.[242] Post-2024 elections, Republicans retained total legislative dominance despite Democratic gains in urban seats, reflecting persistent rural turnout advantages (often 60%+ Republican) over urban Democratic strongholds.[256] This yields a Republican trifecta—governor plus legislative majorities—since 2017, enabling policy advances in areas like abortion restrictions and election laws without veto overrides.[255]| Year Range | Presidential Winner in MO | Margin (R-D) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000–2024 | Republican (all) | 3–18% | End of bellwether status; urban-rural divide key.[135] |
| 1968–1996 | Mixed (5D, 4R) | Varied | Last Democratic national alignment. |
| Gubernatorial (2016–2024) | Republican (all) | 2–17% | Trifecta solidified.[133] |
Shift from bellwether to Republican stronghold
Missouri served as a presidential bellwether state from 1904 to 2004, correctly predicting the national winner in 25 of 26 elections.[257] This pattern reflected the state's diverse mix of urban Democratic strongholds in St. Louis and Kansas City alongside rural and suburban conservative areas, mirroring broader American sentiments.[252] The streak ended in 2008, when Missouri supported Republican John McCain by 3.5 percentage points while Democrat Barack Obama secured the presidency.[257] Since 2000, Missouri has voted Republican in every presidential election, with margins widening over time: George W. Bush won by 7.0 points in 2000 and 3.0 points in 2004; McCain by 3.5 points in 2008; Mitt Romney by 9.4 points in 2012; Donald Trump by 19.2 points in 2016, the largest Republican margin since 1988; and Trump again by 15.4 points in 2020.[135] This consistent Republican tilt, even as national outcomes varied, marked a departure from bellwether status, with the state increasingly aligning right of former swing states like Ohio and outperforming Republican baselines in some Southern states by 2020.[258] Analysts attribute the shift partly to demographic stability in rural white working-class voters prioritizing cultural conservatism, gun rights, and economic populism, contrasted with national Democratic moves toward identity-focused policies that alienated moderate Missourians.[259] Rural voters in particular reported feeling abandoned by the Democratic Party's national evolution, while suburban areas like those around St. Louis trended Republican on issues like crime and education.[259] At the state level, Republicans solidified dominance in the 2000s. The party gained control of the Missouri Senate in 2002 and has held it continuously since, often with veto-proof majorities.[242] The House flipped Republican in 2011, enabling supermajorities by 2013 that persist today, facilitating policy agendas on tax cuts, abortion restrictions, and deregulation.[255] Gubernatorial elections reflected this: Democrats held the office from 2009 to 2017 under Jay Nixon, but Republicans won in 2016 with Eric Greitens (49.4%) and maintained it through Mike Parson (ascended 2018, elected 2020 with 57.0%) and current Governor Mike Kehoe (elected 2024 with 57.0%).[260] This yielded a Republican trifecta—governor plus legislative majorities—starting in 2017, unbroken as of 2025.[255] County-level data underscores the transition: from 2008 to 2024, Republican margins grew in 90% of counties, including modest gains in Democratic-leaning urban fringes, driven by ballot issues on abortion and crime yielding 60-70% Republican support statewide.[261] Polarization intensified this, with self-sorting reducing swing counties to about four by 2022, as voters clustered into ideological enclaves.[262] By 2024, Missouri's electorate leaned 38% Republican, 33% Democratic, and 27% independent, cementing its status as a Republican stronghold despite pockets of urban liberalism.[255]Federal representation and key policies
Missouri elects two United States Senators and eight members of the United States House of Representatives. The state's senior senator is Josh Hawley, a Republican serving since January 3, 2019, with his term expiring January 3, 2031.[263] The junior senator is Eric Schmitt, also a Republican, who assumed office on January 3, 2023, following his election to replace retiring Senator Roy Blunt; Schmitt's term ends January 3, 2029.[264] Both senators align with conservative priorities, including restrictions on federal regulatory overreach and support for agricultural subsidies critical to Missouri's economy. In the House of Representatives for the 119th Congress (2025-2026), Missouri's delegation consists of six Republicans and two Democrats, reflecting the state's Republican tilt at the federal level.[265] The districts include: Missouri's 1st (Democratic, St. Louis area), 2nd (Republican), 3rd (Republican), 4th (Republican, western Missouri), 5th (Republican, Kansas City suburbs post-redistricting adjustments), 6th (Republican), 7th (Republican, Springfield area), and 8th (Republican, southeast Missouri).[266] A new congressional map, signed into law by Governor Mike Kehoe on September 28, 2025, redraws boundaries to favor Republicans further, particularly targeting the Kansas City-area district previously held by a Democrat, though legal challenges delayed its immediate implementation for the 2024 cycle.[267] Key policies advanced by the delegation emphasize protecting Missouri's agricultural and manufacturing interests, such as Hawley's introduction of bills to reinstate SNAP work requirements and oppose expansions of federal welfare programs, arguing they undermine self-reliance.[268] Schmitt has prioritized election integrity measures and opposition to federal mandates on states, including resistance to Biden-era environmental regulations impacting energy production.[264] House members like Sam Graves (R-6th) have led efforts on infrastructure funding for the Missouri River navigation system, securing billions in federal appropriations for flood control and barge traffic vital to grain exports.[269] The delegation collectively opposes expansive federal spending, with multiple cosponsors of legislation to curb Big Tech censorship and antitrust enforcement against monopolies, citing empirical evidence of market distortions from unchecked platform dominance.[268] On national security, representatives advocate for sustained funding to Missouri's military installations, including Whiteman Air Force Base, which houses B-2 bombers, totaling over $2 billion annually in federal defense allocations. These stances prioritize causal links between policy and economic outcomes, such as reduced regulatory burdens fostering job growth in rural districts over ideologically driven interventions.Law and Public Policy
Criminal justice system and policing
Missouri's criminal justice system grapples with elevated violent crime rates, particularly in urban centers like St. Louis and Kansas City, where per capita violent offenses reached 1,439 and 1,483 per 100,000 residents, respectively, in 2023.[270] Statewide, violent crime has shown variability, with an overall crime rate decline of 8.6% from 2023 to 2024, though murders and aggravated assaults remain concerns amid national trends.[271] These patterns reflect concentrated risks in Democratic-led municipalities, where prosecutorial leniency and reduced enforcement have been linked to sustained disorder, contrasting with rural areas exhibiting lower incidence.[272] Policing in Missouri operates through a decentralized framework involving over 400 agencies, coordinated by the Missouri State Highway Patrol for statewide data collection under the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting program.[273] The 2014 shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson precipitated riots and a Department of Justice investigation, which identified patterns of unconstitutional stops and revenue-driven enforcement but stopped short of systemic racism claims, emphasizing instead discretionary biases.[274] Subsequent de-policing—manifest in reduced traffic stops and proactive engagements—correlated with crime spikes, as evidenced by a post-Ferguson drop in stops alongside rising hit rates for contraband among remaining interactions, supporting causal links between enforcement pullback and elevated violence rather than mere coincidence.[275][276] Reforms, including body cameras and use-of-force reporting mandated in 2021 legislation, have been implemented unevenly, with Ferguson itself lagging a decade later due to persistent revenue incentives over community trust-building.[277][278] The state's incarceration rate stands at 713 per 100,000 residents, exceeding most democracies and ranking Missouri among higher U.S. figures, with approximately 23,884 in prisons as of recent counts.[279][280] Capital punishment remains active, with lethal injection executions resuming post-2020; notable cases include the October 14, 2025, execution of Lance Shockley for a 2005 trooper murder, marking the 13th since 2020 amid gubernatorial denials of clemency despite claims of innocence.[281][282] Under Attorney General Catherine Hanaway, appointed in September 2025, the office's Public Safety Division pursues special prosecutions for felonies like child predation and defends convictions on appeal, prioritizing deterrence over expansive decarceration.[283][284] The Justice Reinvestment Initiative focuses recidivism reduction through evidence-based programs, admitting over 12,000 to prisons annually while emphasizing tools for reentry, though critics argue it underaddresses root drivers like family breakdown and urban policy failures.[285][286]Reproductive rights post-Roe and 2024 amendment
Following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization on June 24, 2022, which overturned Roe v. Wade, Missouri immediately enforced its 2019 trigger law (House Bill 126), prohibiting nearly all abortions with the sole exception for medical emergencies necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman.[287][288] The law lacks exceptions for rape, incest, or fetal anomalies, and violations are treated as felonies punishable by 5 to 15 years in prison for providers.[287] Missouri became the first state to activate such a ban post-Dobbs, leading to the closure of the state's last remaining abortion clinic in St. Louis by late June 2022, effectively eliminating legal abortion access.[289][290] The ban's narrow exception has been criticized for creating ambiguity in application, with medical professionals reporting hesitation to perform abortions even in life-threatening cases due to fear of prosecution, contributing to broader impacts on obstetric care availability.[288] Lawsuits challenging the ban's enforcement, including claims of unconstitutional vagueness, have yielded mixed results; while temporary blocks occurred, the core prohibition remained in effect through 2024.[291][292] On November 5, 2024, Missouri voters approved Amendment 3 by a margin of approximately 51.7% to 48.3%, enshrining a "right to reproductive freedom" in the state constitution, which includes abortion and related health care decisions up to fetal viability (generally around 24 weeks) and beyond if deemed necessary by a treating physician for the patient's life or health.[293][294][295] The measure, backed by pro-abortion rights groups, explicitly overrides conflicting state laws but permits post-viability regulations and does not preempt generally applicable health and safety laws.[293] Opponents, including Republican lawmakers, argued it lacked sufficient safeguards and could enable unregulated procedures, vowing legislative challenges despite the constitutional protection.[296] As of May 2025, the Missouri Supreme Court reinstated certain pre-existing restrictions, such as a 72-hour waiting period, in-person counseling requirements, and a telemedicine ban, rendering abortion access effectively unavailable despite the amendment's passage, pending further litigation.[297] Planned Parenthood and the ACLU filed suit in November 2024 to invalidate these holdover provisions, asserting they conflict with Amendment 3's protections, but resolution remains ongoing amid state Republican control of the legislature and judiciary.[298][290] This legal uncertainty has sustained Missouri's status among states with the strictest abortion limits, with out-of-state travel for procedures reported to have increased significantly since 2022.[289][299]Firearms rights and self-defense laws
Missouri's Constitution explicitly protects the right to keep and bear arms for defense of home, person, family, and property, stating that this right "shall not be questioned" and cannot be infringed by the state or its political subdivisions.[300] The state recognizes no requirement for registration of firearms, ammunition, or accessories, and prohibits local governments from enacting stricter regulations than state law.[300] Since the repeal of the permit-to-purchase requirement for handguns in 2007, Missouri has not mandated background checks or permits for private firearm sales or transfers, applying federal prohibitions only to those categories like felons or domestic abusers.[301] Open carry of firearms is generally permitted without a license for those eligible to possess them, while concealed carry operates under constitutional carry provisions enacted in 2017 via Senate Bill 656, allowing individuals aged 19 or older (or 18 for active military or honorably discharged veterans) who are not prohibited from possessing firearms to carry concealed handguns without a permit.[302] Missouri issues concealed carry permits on a shall-issue basis to qualified applicants, which facilitate reciprocity with over 40 other states and exempt holders from certain federal transportation restrictions.[300] The state preempts most local firearm regulations, though certain venues like schools and government buildings impose restrictions, with exceptions for permit holders in some cases.[300] Efforts to enact a "Second Amendment Preservation Act" in 2021 aimed to nullify federal gun regulations within the state, imposing penalties on officials for enforcement, but the law was struck down by federal courts as unconstitutional under the Supremacy Clause, with the U.S. Supreme Court declining review in October 2025.[303][304] Missouri codifies broad self-defense rights under Revised Statutes Section 563.031, authorizing the use of physical force, including deadly force, when reasonably believed necessary to protect against unlawful force, with no duty to retreat from an aggressor in any location where the defender is lawfully present.[305] This stand-your-ground provision, expanded in 2016, applies statewide and removes the common-law retreat requirement even in public spaces, provided the defender is not the initial aggressor.[306][307] The castle doctrine, integrated into Section 563.031, presumes reasonable fear of imminent harm and justifies deadly force against unlawful entry into a dwelling, residence, vehicle, or private property where the defender has a legal right to be, without a retreat obligation.[305][308] Successful invocation of these defenses results in immunity from civil liability and potential dismissal of criminal charges, though prosecutors may challenge the reasonableness of force used.[309]Drug policies: alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis
Missouri maintains relatively permissive policies toward alcohol consumption compared to many states, with the legal drinking age set at 21 years as mandated by federal law and state statute.[310] The state permits homebrewing of beer and wine for personal use, allowing up to 200 gallons annually for households with more than one adult or 100 gallons for single adults, provided it is not sold or used off-premises without permission.[311] Driving under the influence is prohibited, with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) limit of 0.08% for adults over 21, 0.04% for commercial drivers, and 0.02% for those under 21; violations trigger administrative license suspension alongside criminal penalties.[312][313] Open container laws restrict consumption in vehicles but allow it in passenger areas of limousines or buses if secured; the state lacks a uniform statewide ban on public consumption, deferring some regulations to local ordinances.[314] Tobacco policies in Missouri emphasize limited restrictions, earning the state failing grades in comprehensive tobacco control measures such as strong clean indoor air laws and youth access prevention.[315] The minimum age for tobacco product sales remains 18 under state law, though federal law enacted in December 2019 raised it to 21 nationwide, preempting state statutes and requiring retailers to verify age for those under 21; Missouri has not updated its statutes to align explicitly, leading to reliance on federal enforcement.[316][317] Smoking is banned in public schools and childcare facilities but permitted in many private workplaces, restaurants, and bars without comprehensive statewide prohibitions, except in designated areas comprising no more than 30% of public spaces; casinos and some hospitality venues often exempt from broader indoor bans.[318][319] The Missouri Tobacco Prevention and Control Program focuses on community coalitions for voluntary reductions rather than stringent mandates, contributing to higher adult smoking rates around 16% as of 2023.[320] Cannabis policies shifted markedly with voter-approved amendments establishing regulated access. Medical marijuana was legalized via Amendment 2, passed on November 6, 2018, allowing qualified patients to possess up to 8 ounces of non-concentrated products and creating a licensed dispensary system; commercial sales commenced February 2020 under the Department of Health and Senior Services.[321] Recreational use followed with Amendment 3, approved November 8, 2022, permitting adults 21 and older to possess up to 3 ounces of flower or equivalent, grow up to 6 plants per person (or 12 per household), and purchase from licensed facilities starting February 3, 2023.[322][323] The Division of Cannabis Regulation oversees licensing, testing, and taxation at 6% on retail sales, generating over $100 million in revenue by mid-2024, though critics argue legalization correlates with potential rises in impaired driving and youth exposure absent preemptive federal alignment.[324][325] Home cultivation requires secure facilities, and public consumption remains illegal, with penalties for excess possession or unlicensed sales intact.[326]Other policies: education choice, election integrity, and welfare
Missouri has implemented school choice initiatives to provide families with alternatives to traditional public schools, including the Missouri Empowerment Scholarship Accounts (ESA) program, a tax-credit funded education savings account allowing eligible parents to use funds for private school tuition, tutoring, and other educational expenses.[327] In May 2024, Republican Governor Mike Parson signed legislation expanding access to low-income K-12 students statewide, enabling broader participation beyond initial pilots.[328] Complementing this, the MOScholars program offers scholarships of up to $6,375 annually to students from low-income households or those with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs), usable at public, charter, or private schools.[329] In 2025, the state appropriated $50 million for these scholarships, establishing a recurring funding precedent despite legal challenges from opponents claiming diversion of public funds, which were rejected by courts in August 2025.[330][331] To bolster election integrity, Missouri mandates photo identification for in-person voting, accepting forms such as a non-expired Missouri driver's license, passport, or military ID; voters without ID may cast provisional ballots subject to later verification.[332] The state employs paper ballots and ballot-marking devices across its 116 independent election jurisdictions, banning direct-recording electronic machines since a 2022 law to ensure auditable records and reduce hacking risks.[333][334] For absentee and mail-in ballots, available without excuse, verification relies on matching the voter's signature affidavit to registration records, with no photo ID required but strict chain-of-custody protocols and post-election audits mandated by state law.[335] These measures, decentralized to avoid single points of failure, have been credited by state officials with maintaining secure elections amid national concerns over fraud vulnerabilities.[333] Missouri's welfare policies emphasize work participation to foster self-reliance, particularly through the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, which limits eligibility to households with resources under $1,000 (excluding home and one vehicle) and income below specified thresholds, requiring recipients to engage in work activities averaging 30 hours per week for single-parent families.[336][337] Noncompliance triggers a 50% benefit reduction, escalating to full ineligibility after repeated failures, aligning with federal maintenance-of-effort rules while prioritizing employment, job training, or volunteering.[338] For the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Missouri enforces federal work requirements for able-bodied adults without dependents (ABAWDs), mandating at least 80 hours monthly of work, training, or volunteering, with exemptions for hardships but time-limited waivers to encourage labor force attachment.[339][340] These provisions, implemented via the Department of Social Services, aim to reduce long-term dependency, though critics argue they increase administrative burdens without proportionally boosting employment outcomes.[341]Culture
Music, literature, and fine arts
Missouri has significantly influenced American music through genres originating in the state, including ragtime and Kansas City jazz. Ragtime, characterized by its syncopated rhythms, emerged in Sedalia in the late 19th century, with composer Scott Joplin producing key works like "Maple Leaf Rag" in 1899.[342] Kansas City jazz developed in the 1920s and 1930s, featuring improvisational styles from musicians such as Count Basie and Charlie Parker, who performed in local clubs before gaining national prominence.[343][344] Rock and roll pioneer Chuck Berry, born in St. Louis in 1926, shaped the genre with guitar riffs and lyrics in songs like "Johnny B. Goode" released in 1958, influencing generations of performers.[345][346] In literature, Missouri produced authors whose works captured regional life and broader human themes. Mark Twain, born Samuel Clemens in Florida, Missouri, in 1835 and raised in Hannibal, depicted Mississippi River culture in novels such as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and [Adventures of Huckleberry Finn](/page/Adventures_of_Huckleberry Finn) (1884), critiquing societal norms through satire.[347] T.S. Eliot, born in St. Louis in 1888, explored modernism in poetry like The Waste Land (1922), drawing from his early experiences in the city before relocating to England.[348] Langston Hughes, born in Joplin in 1901, advanced the Harlem Renaissance with jazz-influenced poems and stories reflecting African American experiences, as in The Weary Blues (1926).[347] Maya Angelou, born in St. Louis in 1928, chronicled racial and personal struggles in her autobiography I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969), which became a landmark in American literature.[349] Fine arts in Missouri feature realist painters who documented frontier and everyday scenes. George Caleb Bingham, who settled in Missouri as a child and painted actively from the 1830s to 1870s, produced works like Fur Traders Descending the Missouri (1845), emphasizing democratic ideals and river commerce.[350] Thomas Hart Benton, born in Neosho in 1889, created regionalist murals such as America Today (1930–1931), portraying industrial and rural American life with dynamic compositions.[351] These artists' contributions are preserved in institutions like the St. Louis Art Museum and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, which house extensive collections of American and European works.[352]Cuisine, festivals, and folk traditions
Missouri's cuisine draws from Midwestern farming staples like corn, beans, and pork, augmented by 19th- and 20th-century immigrant contributions from German, Italian, and Chinese settlers. Kansas City barbecue emphasizes slow-smoked beef brisket and ribs coated in molasses-sweetened tomato sauce, with burnt ends—trimmed, caramelized brisket pieces—traced to the 1940s at Arthur Bryant's Pit Bar-B-Q amid the city's meatpacking era.[353] St. Louis pork steaks, derived from the pig's shoulder blade, are seasoned, seared, and simmered in sauce, reflecting Southern barbecue adaptations in urban markets since the mid-20th century.[354] Gooey butter cake, a shortbread-like base topped with a gooey sugar-butter mixture, originated in 1930s St. Louis when a baker misread a recipe for yeast dough coffee cake.[353] Toasted ravioli, deep-fried ravioli parcels dipped in marinara, emerged in St. Louis's Hill neighborhood Italian enclave around 1947, possibly from a restaurant mishap involving dropped pasta.[354] Springfield-style cashew chicken, featuring battered, fried chicken chunks stir-fried with cashews and vegetables in brown gravy over fried rice, was devised in the 1950s by Chinese immigrant chef David Leong to suit local Midwestern palates.[353] Major festivals highlight agricultural roots and ethnic heritages, with the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia—established in 1901 as a harvest showcase—drawing approximately 350,000 visitors annually for livestock judging, tractor pulls, and midway rides by the 1970s onward.[355] Hermann's Oktoberfest, launched in 1977 in the German-founded town of Hermann, reenacts 19th-century Bavarian customs with oompah bands, keg-tapping, and yodeling contests, hosting about 10,000 attendees each fall.[356] County fairs, numbering over 100 statewide, preserve rural practices through events like mule skijoring and pie contests, with origins in 19th-century plowing matches.[357] The Birthplace of Route 66 Festival in Springfield, held since 2010, celebrates highway culture with car parades and music, peaking at 65,000 visitors in 2022.[358] Folk traditions in Missouri center on Ozark and Appalachian-derived practices, including square dancing—designated the official American folk dance in 1995—which involves four couples in quadrille formations called by a fiddler, evolving from 19th-century English and Scottish reels adapted by upland settlers.[359] Fiddle music, featuring cross-tuned instruments for modal tunes like "Soldier's Joy," sustains house parties and barn dances in the Ozarks, where informal gatherings blend playing, storytelling, and spoon percussion since pioneer times.[360] The Missouri Folklore Society, founded in 1906, documents oral narratives, ghost tales, and herbal remedies from Anglo-German frontiersmen, countering urban biases toward elite arts by archiving rural vernaculars.[361] Craft customs persist in blacksmithing and quilting bees, tied to self-reliant homesteading, while foodways like sorghum-making and persimmon pudding encode seasonal preservation techniques from Native and early settler exchanges.[362]Media, film, and popular culture
Missouri's print media landscape is dominated by daily newspapers in its major cities. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, founded in 1878, serves the St. Louis metropolitan area with coverage of local news, politics, and sports, maintaining a daily circulation that positions it as the state's largest newspaper.[363] The Kansas City Star, established in 1880, covers Kansas City and surrounding areas, focusing on regional issues including government and business.[364] In Springfield, the News-Leader provides coverage for southwest Missouri, emphasizing community events and state politics.[365] Smaller publications, such as weekly papers in rural areas, supplement these, though overall newspaper circulation has declined amid digital shifts.[366] Broadcast television in Missouri operates across distinct markets, with St. Louis and Kansas City as the largest. St. Louis affiliates include KSDK (NBC), KMOV (CBS), KTVI (Fox), and KDNL (ABC), delivering local news, weather, and sports programming.[367] Kansas City's market features KCTV (CBS), KMBC (ABC), and WDAF (Fox), serving over 1.5 million households with similar content.[368] Springfield's KY3 (ABC) and Columbia's KOMU (NBC) anchor smaller markets, often affiliated with national networks and focusing on regional agriculture, education, and weather events.[369] Public broadcasting through stations like KETC in St. Louis provides educational and cultural content.[370] Radio stations number over 400, concentrated in urban centers with formats spanning news-talk, country, hip-hop, and classic rock. iHeartMedia operates prominent outlets like 93.7 The Bull (country) and 104.9 The Patriot (news-talk) in St. Louis, while Kansas City features Entercom's 106.5 The Wolf (country).[371] Springfield's market includes KTTS (country) and public station KSMU, which airs NPR programming.[372] These stations serve diverse audiences, with AM frequencies often dedicated to sports and talk, reflecting Missouri's Midwestern listening habits.[373] The film industry in Missouri has gained traction through state tax incentives administered by the Missouri Film Office. The Show MO Act, effective through 2028, offers up to 42% tax credits on qualified production expenses, including a base 20% plus bonuses for rural filming (5%) and uplifting content (5-17%), attracting 39 projects by 2025 that spent an estimated $33.5 million and received $12.4 million in credits.[374][375] Notable films set in Missouri include Paper Moon (1973), depicting Depression-era con artists in Kansas City and rural areas; Gone Girl (2014), centered on a disappearance in Cape Girardeau; and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017), exploring rural justice themes.[376] Others like Up in the Air (2009) and Winter's Bone (2010) highlight corporate travel and Ozark poverty, respectively, though many are filmed partially or fully out-of-state due to prior incentive lapses.[377] Television productions set in Missouri often portray its rural and urban divides. Ozark (2017-2022) follows money laundering in the Ozarks, though filmed in Georgia.[378] Sharp Objects (2018), adapted from Gillian Flynn's novel, depicts psychological drama in a fictional Missouri town, filmed in Louisiana.[379] The Act (2019) dramatizes the Gypsy Blanchard case in Springfield, drawing from real events in southeast Missouri.[380] Local filming has increased with incentives, including reality shows like 19 Kids and Counting episodes. In popular culture, Missouri frequently symbolizes American heartland archetypes, from Mark Twain's Hannibal-inspired Tom Sawyer adaptations to depictions of Ozark resilience in Winter's Bone.[381] St. Louis's Gateway Arch appears in films like Escape from New York (1981), representing urban gateways, while Kansas City's jazz heritage influences media nods, though often stylized.[377] These portrayals blend empirical rural economics with narrative tropes, sometimes exaggerating isolation for dramatic effect, as critiqued in analyses of Ozark media stereotypes.[382]Sports teams and outdoor recreation
Missouri is home to multiple major league professional sports franchises, primarily concentrated in its two largest metropolitan areas. In Kansas City, the Chiefs of the National Football League have achieved prominence, securing Super Bowl victories in 2023 and 2024, drawing average home attendances exceeding 70,000 spectators per game in recent seasons. The Royals, Missouri's Major League Baseball team in Kansas City, have won the World Series twice, in 1980 and 2015, with Kauffman Stadium hosting capacities of around 37,000. Sporting Kansas City competes in Major League Soccer, while the Current fields a team in the National Women's Soccer League, both utilizing Children's Mercy Park with a seating capacity of approximately 18,000. In St. Louis, the Cardinals boast a storied MLB history with 11 World Series championships, the most recent in 2011, and Busch Stadium accommodating over 44,000 fans. The Blues of the National Hockey League captured their first Stanley Cup in 2019, playing at the Enterprise Center which holds about 18,000 for hockey. St. Louis City SC, an MLS expansion team debuting in 2023, reached the U.S. Open Cup final that year and plays at Citypark, capacity roughly 22,500. At the collegiate level, the University of Missouri Tigers compete in the Southeastern Conference across multiple sports, including football at Faurot Field (capacity 61,620) and basketball at Mizzou Arena (capacity 15,061), with notable achievements like a 1960 football national claim under coach Dan Devine. Missouri State University Bears participate in the Missouri Valley Conference for most sports and Conference USA for football, featuring basketball at JQH Arena (capacity 8,000). Other institutions, such as Saint Louis University Billikens in Atlantic 10 basketball and Southeast Missouri State Redhawks in Ohio Valley Conference football, contribute to the state's Division I landscape, though professional teams dominate fan engagement and media coverage.[383] Outdoor recreation thrives in Missouri due to its diverse geography, encompassing the Ozark Plateau, rivers, and forests. The state maintains over 50 state parks and historic sites, facilitating activities like hiking, camping, and boating; for instance, Lake of the Ozarks spans 54,000 acres and attracts millions for water sports annually.[384] Hunting and fishing are particularly prominent, with approximately 576,000 licensed hunters expending 10 million hunter-days yearly, supporting 18,000 jobs and generating substantial economic impact through deer, turkey, and waterfowl pursuits regulated by the Missouri Department of Conservation.[385] Angling opportunities abound in the Missouri and Mississippi rivers and reservoirs like Table Rock Lake, where bass and crappie fishing yields harvests exceeding 1 million fish combined in peak seasons, per conservation surveys.[386] Mark Twain National Forest, covering 1.5 million acres, offers trails for off-road vehicles, rock climbing, and birdwatching, underscoring Missouri's appeal for self-reliant outdoor pursuits amid its rural expanses.[387]Education
K-12 public and private systems
The public K-12 education system in Missouri is administered by the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE), which serves as the executive arm of the eight-member State Board of Education appointed by the governor.[388][389] DESE oversees standards, accreditation, funding distribution, and accountability for approximately 518 local school districts operating 2,261 schools.[390] In the 2021-22 school year, public enrollment totaled 884,587 students from prekindergarten through grade 12, with numbers declining slightly in subsequent years amid national trends of reduced public school attendance post-pandemic.[390][391] Local districts, funded primarily through a combination of state aid, local property taxes, and federal grants, receive an average per-pupil expenditure of about $11,397 as of recent fiscal data.[392] Student performance on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), known as the Nation's Report Card, indicates below-national-average proficiency in core subjects. In 2022, 30% of Missouri fourth-graders scored proficient or above in reading, down from prior assessments, while 24% achieved proficiency in math for eighth grade.[393][394] The state's four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate reached 90.79% in 2024, exceeding the national average of 87%, though this metric has faced criticism for potential inflation through alternative diplomas and credit recovery programs that may not reflect rigorous academic standards.[395][396] Achievement gaps persist, with racial disparities showing Black students scoring 20-30 points lower on NAEP scales than white peers in reading and math, exacerbated by socioeconomic factors and widened further during pandemic-related disruptions.[393][397]| Grade | Subject | % Proficient or Above (2022) | National Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | Reading | 30% | 32% |
| 4 | Math | Not specified in state data; aligned with declines | N/A |
| 8 | Reading | 26% | N/A |
| 8 | Math | 24% | N/A |
Higher education institutions and research
Missouri's higher education landscape features a combination of public institutions under the University of Missouri System and prominent private universities, serving approximately 300,000 students across more than 100 colleges and universities statewide. The University of Missouri System, established as Missouri's land-grant university, comprises four campuses—Columbia (the flagship), Rolla (Missouri University of Science and Technology), Kansas City, and St. Louis—with a combined enrollment exceeding 70,000 students and a focus on teaching, research, and public service across all 114 counties.[402] [403] The system's Columbia campus alone enrolls over 31,000 students, making it the largest university in the state, while emphasizing programs in agriculture, engineering, medicine, and journalism.[404] Private institutions, such as Washington University in St. Louis, complement this with selective admissions and strengths in biomedical sciences, law, and business; it consistently ranks among the top universities nationally, drawing significant external funding.[405] Other notable public universities include Missouri State University in Springfield, with around 23,000 students and emphases in education and business.[406] Research activity in Missouri's higher education sector is concentrated in a few leading institutions, with total R&D expenditures driven by federal grants, particularly in health sciences and engineering. Washington University in St. Louis leads nationally, ranking 26th in research funding and contributing to nearly $1.5 billion in combined R&D spending alongside the University of Missouri system, which ranks 70th.[407] The University of Missouri-Columbia reported research expenditures surpassing $500 million in fiscal year 2024, marking rapid growth and positioning it among the fastest-expanding public research universities.[408] Missouri University of Science and Technology specializes in STEM fields, with strengths in mining engineering and nuclear research, while Washington University's medical school advances clinical trials and biomedical innovations, supported by over $1 billion in annual research investments across disciplines.[409] These efforts yield patents, technology transfers, and collaborations with industry, though state funding constraints—often below national averages—limit broader expansion compared to coastal peers.[410]| Institution | Type | Enrollment (approx.) | Key Research Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Missouri-Columbia | Public | 31,000 | Agriculture, health sciences, journalism[404] |
| Washington University in St. Louis | Private | 16,000 | Biomedical research, medicine[409] |
| Missouri State University | Public | 23,000 | Education, public policy[406] |
| Missouri University of Science and Technology | Public | 7,000 | Engineering, materials science[402] |