Cape Girardeau Heritage Museum

Cape Girardeau Heritage Museum The museum features exhibits on local history in a historic building.

NAME CHANGE: CAPE GIRARDEAU HERITAGE MUSEUM:
(formerly know as, Cape River Heritage Museum)

HOURS: Thursday, Friday & Saturday 11:00AM - 3:00PM

WE ARE CLOSED: MID-DECEMBER - through -MID-MARCH

Once a generation or so ……. a Renaissance man like Dirty Dick McClard comes along. We should be thankful if he even cast...
08/18/2025

Once a generation or so ……. a
Renaissance man like Dirty Dick McClard comes along. We should be thankful if he even casts his shadow in our direction.  We’re not worthy.
🧐🥰🫡🇺🇸

Tomorrow - August 9th @ 11:00 AM; 538 Independence in Cape Girardeau. THE SPECIAL SPEAKER SERIES PRESENTS: “FRENCH SETTL...
08/08/2025

Tomorrow - August 9th @ 11:00 AM; 538 Independence in Cape Girardeau.

THE SPECIAL SPEAKER SERIES PRESENTS: “FRENCH SETTLEMENT OF EASTERN MISSOURI AND THE OZARKS” by John C Fisher, Freelance writer and speaker.

About the Speaker: John C. Fisher, a native of Missouri's Bootheel region, was born in Kennett and grew up on a farm near Holcomb. After high school, he attended Southeast Missouri State University, earning a degree in geology. Following graduate work in geology at the University of Missouri-Columbia, John returned to operate diversified row-crop and vegetable farms in Dunklin and New Madrid counties. He managed a roadside produce stand featuring sweet corn, melons, purple hull peas, and other vegetables.

Fisher is a member of Hearland Writers Guild and the Missouri Writer's Guild. He is also a member of the State Historical Society of Missouri, Missouri Folklore Society, and the Central Mississippi Valley Archaeological Society. Fisher serves as a member of the Missouri Board on Geographic Names.

After farming for more than thirty years in southeast Missouri, John C. Fisher began freelance writing in 1995. He has written articles on growing vegetables and small farm agriculture for a variety of magazines including Kitchen Garden and Old Farmer's Almanac. Other writing interests include Missouri travel, restaurant reviews, and food history.

For several years he wrote a column for Missouri Life magazine. In 2003 the University of Missouri Press published Fisher's first book, Catfish, Fiddles, Mules, and More: Missouri's State Symbols. Another book, Pot Roast, Politics, and Ants in the Pantry: Missouri's Cookbook Heritage, followed in 2008, also with the University of Missouri Press. Fisher co-authored this book with his wife and writing partner, Carol Fisher. In 2011 McFarland published a third book, Food in the American Military: A History, also co-authored with Carol. This volume won first place in the Missouri Writer's Guild Walter Williams Major Work award competition. Fisher's fourth book, Southeast Missouri from Swampland to Farmland: The Transformation of the Lowlands, was released by McFarland in the spring of 2017.

More about John C. Fisher at:

www.johncfisher.com

www.facebook.com/johncfisher.author

Dr. Adam Criblez, chair of the history Department at SEMO will speak this morning (Saturday) at eleven as we continue ou...
06/21/2025

Dr. Adam Criblez, chair of the history Department at SEMO will speak this morning (Saturday) at eleven as we continue our monthly "Speaker' Series." He will talk about Louis Houck, an influential, and probably Southeast Missouri's most colorful individual. Please DONT MISS THIS UNFORGETTABLE PROGRAM!

06/21/2025
Please join us for the second event in our SPECIAL SPEAKER SERIES featuring esteemed SEMO University History Professor D...
06/15/2025

Please join us for the second event in our SPECIAL SPEAKER SERIES featuring esteemed SEMO University History Professor DR. ADAM CRIBLEZ Ph.D. Try to arrive about 10:30AM for seating as we are expecting a full house and we begin exactly at 11:00AM.

05/19/2025

The Cape Girardeau Heritage Museum will unveil a new three-panel Marilyn Singleton painting depicting the historic Girardeau Trading Post at Cape Rock during a public reception Friday, May 16.

Judge Stephen Limbaugh, Jr graced the Cape Girardeau Heritage Museum Saturday as their first Special Speaker of the year...
04/27/2025

Judge Stephen Limbaugh, Jr graced the Cape Girardeau Heritage Museum Saturday as their first Special Speaker of the year on the Bicentennial of Lafayette’s Farewell Tour of the United States by steam boat in 1825 making a short stop in Cape Girardeau. An enthusiastic group attended and were not disappointed with Limbaugh’s engaging and at times humorous presentation. He plans on repeating this fascinating talk at several other venues in the near future.

LAFAYETTE, HERO OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
The Marquis de Lafayette was so passionate to join the fight for independence in the American colonies that — at his own expense, against the wishes of family and king, and without the knowledge of his wife — he set sail on April 20, 1777 for a place he had never seen. The inexperienced 19-year-old French nobleman spoke no English but studied the language on his journey. In Philadelphia on July 31, 1777, Lafayette met George Washington, then 45 years old, and the two men formed a life-long friendship despite differences in age and nationality. They were united by a common belief in individual liberty and a democratic society that has set them apart as two of the greatest leaders in modern history. Lafayette found in Washington a father figure (his father was killed in battle when Lafayette was only two). To Washington, who had no children of his own, the courageous Lafayette met his expectations of the ideal son. Their relationship became known as “A Son and his Adoptive Father”.

Like Washington, Lafayette served without pay, supporting himself and his troops. From Lafayette’s initiation on the battlefield at Brandywine to his critical role in bringing France into the war as an ally and the decisive victory at Yorktown, the two men’s mutual respect and admiration grew. In a 1784 letter to the marquis, George Washington wrote, “It is unnecessary, I persuade myself to repeat to you my Dear Marqs. the sincerity of my regards and friendship, nor have I words which could express my affection for you, were I to attempt it."

In the years following the Revolutionary War, the families exchanged gifts and corresponded frequently. Lafayette’s strong abolitionist views no doubt influenced Washington’s evolving attitudes toward slavery. Lafayette returned to America in 1784 to visit his “family” at Mount Vernon. During the French Revolution, Lafayette fought for the same freedom and equality he had seen in America. As commander of the National Guard in Paris in 1789, Lafayette obtained one of the keys to the infamous Bastille prison, which the French revolutionaries had destroyed. With profound emotion, he sent it to Washington as “a tribute Which I owe as A Son to My Adoptive father, as an aid de Camp to My General, as a Missionary of liberty to its patriarch.” Through bankruptcy, prison, and exile, Lafayette clung to Washington’s example of character and leadership.

At the invitation of President James Monroe on behalf of the American people, Lafayette returned to the United States as “the Nation’s Guest” on Aug. 15, 1824. His landing at Castle Garden in New York was the first of many exuberant celebrations during his 13-month visit. Lafayette received numerous honors and was the first foreign dignitary to address Congress. In Lafayette, Americans saw a living link to George Washington and the glories of the founding era. During the trip, Lafayette reconnected with his American family – the Washingtons. He visited Mount Vernon to mourn at Washington’s tomb and to embrace the descendants of George and Martha Washington. Although Lafayette declined a soldier’s request to remain in the United States to be buried at his death alongside Washington, Lafayette did return to France with a trunk of American soil for his grave.

Much as France and America had mourned the death of George Washington in 1799, the two countries were brought together again in grief at the loss of Lafayette on May 20, 1834. The chambers of both houses of the U.S. Congress were draped in black. As the years passed, the milestones of Lafayette’s life — particularly those he shared with Washington — were memorialized in solemn celebration.

As the Hermione sails past Mount Vernon on June 9, it will pass the “Lafayette bed chamber” on the second floor of the Mansion, which faces the Potomac River. Lafayette stayed in this room during his 1784 visit to Mount Vernon. Today, visitors can pay their respects to the Marquis — the noble “Friend of America” — on a tour of Mount Vernon, where they can see the Key to the Bastille sent by Lafayette and the Lafayette Bedchamber.

Address

538 Independence Street
Cape Girardeau, MO
63703

Opening Hours

Thursday 11am - 4pm
Friday 11am - 4pm
Saturday 12pm - 4pm

Telephone

(573) 334-0405

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