County of house: St. Charles County
Location of house: S. Main St. & Tompkins St., NE corner, St. Charles
Built: 1808
Architectural Stye: Federal
District Map
Marker Text:
History of 426 South Main Street
Joseph Chancellier arrived with the first settlers of St Louis in 1764. He laid claim to property along St Charles riverfront and then orally conveyed it to the Roman Catholic Church in the 1780's.
In May 1804, Lewis and Clark visited "this village of about 100 houses and 450 inhabitants, chiefly French." Three flags have flown over St Charles, Spanish, French and American. Education began in St Charles in 1818 when four nuns established the Convent of the Sacred Heart. It was the first free school West of the Mississippi.
Joseph Pichet was one of the members of the Grand Jury of the Court of Common Pleas. In 1808, he issued a certificate for the property (now 246 S. Main). He built a house and received a license to operate a public house of entertainment on July 15, 1809.
In 1818, a land fraud case involving Lot 15 was contested. Three illiterate French speaking women signed their mark (crosses) to a sale agreement. They were represented by Thomas H. Benton who handled land title cases in the St Louis area. His success in the case lead eventually to his being elected the first Senator from the State of Missouri in 1820.
His daughter, Jessie B. Benton ("Missouri's Trailblazer"), met and married John C. Freemont ("Pathfinder to the West"). He became the 3rd Military Governor of California, Senator from California and later Governor of the Arizona Territory. They lived in San Francisco and are credited with naming the entrance to San Francisco Bay from the Pacific Ocean, "Golden Gate."
The present structure underwent reconstruction in 1855 and was described in 1886 as a brick building 2 ½ stories in height. In January 1900, the building housed a saloon. From 1908 to 1916, Charles Merx moved his saloon into the building which became known as M.K.&T. Saloon (Photo). A.T. Kohlhepp operated the saloon until Prohibition (1919) and then a soft drink company was operated by John L. Tayon until 1928.
Throughout the 1940's and afterwards the building was residential and occupied by the Stanley and Celia Witt family until 1988. Celia operated Celia's Beauty Shop out of the building. In 1990, the building housed Witt House Antiques shop and was the location of a $30,000 jewelry robbery that was reported in the St Louis Post-Dispatch.
In 2005, Vicky and Gordon Hansen restored the building and have operated a retail establishment.
"The structures on South Main Street are aligned, with facades adjacent to the sidewalk and ridge roofs commonly sharing the sane
northeast-southwest orientation as South Main Street. Characteristically the structures are 1½ to 2½ stories high with a rectangular plan front block and rear ell additions. The ridge roofs of the front sections are oriented parallel to the street passing in front. Chimneys" are centered on the vertical midlines of the gable end walls. In several examples adjacent structures have their gable end walls abutted. The structures were built for commercial and/or residential occupancy. The two story structures typically have living quarters located above the street level businesses." ~ NRHP Nomination Form