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Big Mound originally had a terrace extending off its east side before citizens of St. Louis Missouri began dismantling the mound over a period of 30 years. The east side terrace is similar to another of the mounds in the St Louis Mounds Group, the other being the three terraced Falling Gardens Mound. The single terrace on Big Mound is visible in rare sketches of the site. Beginning in the early 40s, citizens of 'Mound City' had already started cutting into the mound to build homes and roads. And in 1844, Field & Vandeventer Lumber Company removed the top two feet of Big Mound to create a platform for a wooden pavilion they constructed named Big Mound Pavilion, a pleasure resort. From this resort, which extended something around 80 feet above the streets below at its peak, residents had a view of the city and Mississippi river, including the notorious Bloody Island where people would stage duels.
But it seems that the Big Mound Pavilion failed to attract enough tourists and in 1848, for reasons not entirely clear, despite the fact that the mound was located adjacent to a fire station, the wooden pavilion burned to the ground. A successful structure placed atop Big Mound, may have oddly led to its preservation. But this fire may mark the final nail in the coffin that eventually led to the full dismantling of the historic indigenous site built by the Mississippian culture.
But it seems that the Big Mound Pavilion failed to attract enough tourists and in 1848, for reasons not entirely clear, despite the fact that the mound was located adjacent to a fire station, the wooden pavilion burned to the ground. A successful structure placed atop Big Mound, may have oddly led to its preservation. But this fire may mark the final nail in the coffin that eventually led to the full dismantling of the historic indigenous site built by the Mississippian culture.