Date:
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
Duration:
All Day
Categories:
This Day in Missouri *

On March 25, the following notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:

  • 1806: St. Louis traders, central to Missouri’s fur trade, began spring expeditions with Native American tribes, though no specific event is noted for this date.
  • 1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas,” escalating territorial violence as spring progressed.
  • 1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck, stationed in St. Louis, maintained Missouri’s federal hold, while rural Confederate guerrillas planned spring raids, deepening Civil War tensions.
  • 1864: In Arkansas, Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning, with Missouri seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.
  • 1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines, serving Cape Girardeau, supported regional commerce, with late March marking increased trade activity.
  • 1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis hard, with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and temporary employment.
  • 1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City, key to World War II, increased military production, with late March enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.