
T. S. Eliot - St. Louis, MO
N 38° 38.061 W 090° 12.893
15S E 742425 N 4279881
The boyhood home of T.S. Eliot in St. Louis, Missouri.
Waymark Code: WM16HYK
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 08/08/2022
Views: 2
At the boyhood home of T.S. Eliot a medallion type plaque is embedded in the concrete celebrating his accomplishment as a Nobel Laureate in Literature. The wording reads:
2635 Locust Street
birthplace and boyhood home of
T.S. Eliot
1888-1965
Poet
Philosopher
Literary Critic
Dramatist
Nobel Laureate
Etched around the perimeter of the plaque are the names of Eliot's greatest works: The Waste Land, Gerontion, Four Quartets, Portrait of a Lady, The Cocktail Party, Murder in the Cathedral, Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, Preludes, The Hollow Men, and Ash-Wednesday.
More information about the Nobel Prize can be found at
The Nobel Prize. The prize was awarded "for his outstanding, pioneer contribution to present-day poetry".
From
Finding Eliot in St. Louis we learn:
" Five blocks east of the St. Louis Symphoney and closer to downtown is the space that was once 2635 Locust Street, the home of Henry and Lottie Eliot and their six children, of whom Thomas Stearns Eliot, or Tom, was the youngest. His parents were 45 when he was born.
What was the home of the Eliots at 2635 Locust Street is now a parking lot. Even more, it is a fenced parking lot, replete with weeds and empty parking spaces. Crawford suggests that what was happening to the neighborhood might have contributed to the images of The Waste Land. “Waste land” could certainly describe what is there today."