
Ruth Ferris
Ruth Ferris taught younger generations what the rivers mean to the nation and introduced hundreds of young students
the St. Louis Community School to the wonders of the rivers and steam navigation.
One of her greatest achievements was the preservation of the pilothouse of the steamer Golden Eagle. This last St. Louis
steamer sank at Grand Tower Towhead early in the morning of May 18, 1947. The pilothouse was trucked to the Community
School where it became a famous attraction for many years, giving students a look at a real steamboat relic.
When Miss Ferris retired from the school, she became curator of river material at the Missouri Historical Society, and the
pilothouse was brought there as focal point of the River Room. Miss Ferris then set up a river museum on the former U.S.
Engineers steamer Becky Thatcher, where she continued to impress visitors with the history and importance of the river.
Miss Ferris, who died in 1993, preserved many papers and pictures of the rivers past and inspired a profound
interest in the rivers in many, including Grammy-winning musician John Hartford, who wrote a song about her.
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