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Clayton-Tamm Information
Clayton-Tamm is a traditionally Irish-American neighborhood located near the
western border of St. Louis, Missouri, USA, just South of Forest Park.
Its borders are Hampton Avenue to the East, Manchester Rd to the South,
Louisville and Dale on the West and Oakland/Highway 40/64 to the North.
Its name is derived from the intersecting streets of Clayon Ave and Tamm Ave,
which is the center of the neighborhood's business district. The Clayton-Tamm
neighborhood is one of three (with Franz Park and the Hi-Point) which make up
the widely renowned Irish section of St. Louis called "Dogtown".
The Earliest development in the (not yet) neighborhood was by Charles Gratiot,
who in 1785 requested use of the land from Spanish Authorities in the French
owned land before the Louisiana Purchase "to cultivate wheat, hemp, corn,
tobacco, etc., etc.", (Requoted from McCune Gill by Bob Corbett, 2000) The grant
was formalized by the Spanish governor in 1798 and reaffirmed in 1808 by the US
after the Louisiana Purchase. After Charles' Death his large land grant was
divided into 12 strips and given as inheritance. Major growth in Cheltenham (Dogtown)
defined the region in the late 19th century as it developed into a coal and clay
mining community. Growth was further accelerated by preparations and
construction for the 1904 World's Fair, "The Louisiana Purchase Exposition".
While there are a number of theories as to why this neighborhood is known as
Dogtown, the most credible account describes a group of coal miners working in
what is today Forest Park. When the city acquired the land to build the park in
1876, these people found sparsely populated areas south of the new park and
built shacks to live in as they found new work. In order to secure their
ramshackle homes, many of the squatters used watchdogs, which would defend their
territory.
