Relocation to Jefferson City, MO
Jefferson City is the capital of the U.S. state of Missouri and the county seat of Cole County. Located in Callaway and Cole counties, it is the main city of the Jefferson City metropolitan area, which encircles the entirety of both counties. In 2008, the population was 40,771 Jefferson City was named after Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States of America.
Jefferson City is on the northern edge of the Ozark Plateau on the south side of the Missouri River near the geographic center of the state, in a region known as Mid-Missouri. It is at the western edge of the Missouri Rhineland, which is a wine-producing region. The city is dominated by the domed Capitol, rising from a bluff overlooking the Missouri River to the north. Lewis and Clark passed beneath that bluff on their historic expedition upriver before Europeans established any settlement there.
In pre-Columbian times, this area was home of an ancient people known only as the Mound Builders. The Mound Builders had vanished into history by the time European settlers began arriving . The contemporary indigenous peoples were called the Osage Indians. When the Missouri Territory was organized in 1812 , St. Louis was the seat of government. St. Charles next served as the capital.
In the middle of the state, Jefferson City was chosen as the new capital in 1821 . The village was orginally called Lohman’s Landing. When the legislature decided to relocate there, they proposed the name “Missouriopolis” but later settled on Jefferson City. For a long time the village was little more than a trading postsituated in the wilderness about midway between Kansas Cityand St. Louis . In 1826 the Missouri legislature first met here and in 1839 the settlement was incorporated as a city.
During the American Civil War, Jefferson City was occupied by Union troops. Many of the people in the state supported the Union, although Missouri’s Little Dixie section along the river in western counties was strongly Confederate.
German immigrants created vineyards in small towns on either side of the Missouri River, especially on the north from Jefferson City east to Marthasville outside St. Louis. Known as the Missouri Rhineland for its vineyards, first established by German immigrants in the mid-19th century, this area has become a part of the agricultural and tourist economy.
Free Relocation Packages for Jefferson City, MO
Filed under Real Estate by on Jun 12th, 2010.