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==History== [[File:BrunswickMoSchool.JPG|thumb|Brunswick school constructed in 1871. It served until the early 1930s]] For thousands of years varying cultures of [[indigenous peoples]] settled by the Missouri River. At the time of European contact, historical tribes in the area included the [[Missouria|Missouri]], [[Osage Nation|Osage]], [[Kaw people|Kaw]], [[Otoe tribe|Otoe]] and others. In 1723 [[Etienne de Veniard, Sieur de Bourgmont]] built [[Fort Orleans]] near here, established on the [[Missouri River]] near the mouth of the [[Grand River (Missouri)|Grand River]]. It was occupied 1723-1726 as the first multi-year European fort and settlement in present-day Missouri. It was to be a trading centerpiece of ''[[La Louisiane]],'' the new territory claimed by the French. Following the [[Louisiana Purchase]] and the end of the French colonial period the area saw a large influx of immigrants from the U.S., especially [[Kentucky]] and [[Tennessee]]. They brought [[African-American]] [[slaves]] and slaveholding traditions with them. The new land owners planted and cultivate crops similar to those in the [[Upper South]]: [[hemp]] and [[tobacco]]. Chariton was one of several counties along the Missouri River to become known as [[Little Dixie (Missouri)|Little Dixie]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.missouridivision-scv.org/littledixie.htm|title=The Story of Little Dixie, Missouri|publisher=Missouri Division - Sons of Confederate Veterans|year=2001|accessdate=3 June 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120717050109/http://www.missouridivision-scv.org/littledixie.htm|archive-date=17 July 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref> The original town of Brunswick was laid out in 1836 by James Keyte. Keyte, an English immigrant and Methodist minister, was also the founder of [[Keytesville, Missouri]], the county seat of [[Chariton County, Missouri|Chariton County]].<ref name="Historical">''Historical, Pictorial, & Biographical Record of Chariton County, Missouri'', Pictorial and Biographical Publishing Co., Salisbury Missouri, 1896</ref> The original town plat was about 500 yards (457 meters) south of its current location, but due to changes in the Missouri and Grand rivers, the location is now underwater. A Mr. Keyte established the first store in the town, and its first industry, a sawmill. Early growth was slow for the community, with the population estimated at around 125 citizens by 1840. However, in the early 1840s a large influx of new residents increased the size of the town and scope of business offerings. They included a hotel, a wagon maker, brick factory, and a pork packing facility. Doctor Edwin Price, brother of famed [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] general [[Sterling Price]], was an early settler.<ref name="Historical"/> In the decades leading up to the [[American Civil War]] surrounding counties had no railroad over which to ship or receive goods and crops, thus Brunswick with its steamboat access, became a regional trading center. In 1849 Brunswick recorded 534 arrivals and departures by steamboats. The first school was established at Brunswick in June 1840 with approximately thirty-five students and a one-room log schoolhouse. It was also in 1840 that the first wave of German immigrants arrived in the Brunswick area. Another influx of Germans took place in 1842. ''The Brunswicker'', the town's first newspaper, began publication in October 1847 and continues today, making it one of the state's oldest.<ref name="Chamber">{{cite web|url=http://brunswickmo.com/about-brunswick/history/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101006064404/http://brunswickmo.com/about-brunswick/history/|url-status=dead|archive-date=6 October 2010|title=Brunswick history|publisher=Brunswick Area Chamber of Commerce|year=2012|accessdate=11 August 2012}}</ref> Brunswick's first bank, a branch of the Merchants Bank of St. Louis, opened.<ref name="Chamber2"/> After the Civil War and the loss of their slaves, farmers shifted to other less labor-intensive, crops. However, in 1880 Chariton County still led the state of Missouri in tobacco production, with 14 million pounds harvested. After nearly ten years of delay due to the war, the railroad finally reached Brunswick in 1867, reducing the reliance on steamboats to transport goods and people.<ref name="Chamber"/> Dr. W.W. Bowen established the Brunswick Institute of Pharmacy in 1910. The school would train more than 5,000 pharmacists and druggists before closing in 1937.<ref name="Chamber"/> In 1914, farmers organized the [[Missouri Farmers Association]] (MFA), a cooperative, based in Brunswick. It has since moved to [[Columbia, Missouri]]. Brunswick saw a growth of industry through the mid-20th century, with the construction of an alfalfa-drying plant constructed in 1939, the Chariton Electric Company in 1958, in 1965 the opening of the Tuloma Fertilizer blending plant, and in 1970 a glove factory. Also in 1965 the [[United States Coast Guard|U.S. Coast Guard]] built a small base near Brunswick to service increased river traffic; however, the facility was relatively short-lived, closing in March 1973.<ref name="Chamber2"/> Following World War II, Brunswick became the center of an area of pecan groves. In 1972 State Representative Creason secured a state resolution naming Brunswick the Pecan Capital of Missouri.<ref name="Chamber2"/> The Brunswick Pecan Festival was first held in 1980, celebrating the large number of pecans being harvested in the area. It would become an annual tradition that is held each October. The world's largest 20th-century pecan—a concrete replica—is located along Highway 24 in downtown Brunswick. It measures seven by twelve feet and weighs twelve thousand pounds. It was constructed in 1982 by George James in honor of the Starking Hardy Giant pecan, which he discovered on his property in 1947.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/2138|title=Worlds Largest 20th Century Pecan.|publisher=Roadside America.com travel website|year=2012|accessdate=7 August 2012}}</ref> [[Locust Hill (Brunswick, Missouri)|Locust Hill]] was listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 1980.<ref name="nris">{{NRISref|version=2010a}}</ref>
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