Abstract
The St. Louis Hegelians existed as a loosely organized group from
approximately 1858 to 1880. Before the Civil War they participated in the
St. Louis Literary and Philosophical Society which dissolved when most
of its members left the city to fight in the war. After the guns fell silent,
a few of these “respectable vagabonds,” most notably Henry Conrad
Brokmeyer and William Torrey Harris, organized the St. Louis
Philosophical Society in January 1866. Both organizations were part of a
larger “St. Louis Movement” which included an art club, an Aristotle
club, a Shakespeare society, the St. Louis Academy of Science, the St.
Louis Philharmonic Society, and the Academy of Useful Science. All of
these organizations were primarily composed of local professionals –
public school teachers and administrators, judges, and attorneys.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,General Arts and Humanities
Cited by
10 articles.
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