380 Market St.,
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Lovegoods Candy + Toys – Where Magic Meets Nostalgia at Downtown’s Gateway At the corner of Market and 4th Street—the literal entrance to Sainte Geneviève’s historic downtown—Lovegoods Candy + Toys occupies the building with the town’s most Instagram-worthy feature: a colorful mural spelling out “STE GENEVIEVE” that draws photographers and selfie-takers before they even step inside. Opened in August 2025, Lovegoods brings whimsy and wonder to Missouri’s oldest town, creating a candy and toy destination where magic meets classic American nostalgia in a shop that’s part sweet emporium, part toy wonderland, part downtown landmark. Lovegoods channels a spirit of open-mindedness, creativity, individuality, and finding magic in unexpected places through eclectic inventory mixing traditional favorites with unique discoveries, creating shopping experience where kids find classic toys and candies their grandparents remember while adults discover novelty treats they’ve never encountered. The mural-adorned building serves as downtown gateway marker—arriving visitors driving up 4th Street toward Market see “STE GENEVIEVE” spelled out large and bright, signaling they’ve reached the historic core while Lovegoods itself welcomes them with doors full of possibilities for treats, toys, gifts, and discoveries. The Sweet Side: Candy for Every Craving Lovegoods’ candy selection spans the full spectrum from nostalgic classics Read more…
: 10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Mon
3:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Tue
3:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Wed
10:00 am – 7:00 pm
Thu
10:00 am – 7:00 pm
Fri
10:00 am – 7:00 pm
Sat
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Sun
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
360 Market St.,
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
About the Museum Learning Center: If you’re looking for something that will dazzle you to see in a small town, be sure to stop by the Museums Learning Center (otherwise known as the “Dinosaur Musuem.” This place is one huge labor of love and a microcosm of what makes this community special. Your adventure starts in the hall of giants, a room full of massive life-like dinosaur and other Cretaceous Period animal replicas. Surrounding those are shadow boxes filled with actual fossils from different periods. On the west end of the hall is a glassed-in room where live Archaeologists periodically work in front of visitors scrupulously chiseling away the clay around the bones of the Missouri dinosaur. The next layer of exhibits centers around the fossils of that now-famed dinosaur and the current dig happening just south of Sainte Geneviève. The entire upstairs moves more toward modern times and focuses on interesting collections from a variety of topics, from Civil War Battlefields, to the objects found buried in the outhouses that used to reside in the yards of early St. Louisans. The story that you won’t get that makes this so impressive is the collections on display, and the dinosaur Read more…
: 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Mon
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Tue
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Wed
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Thu
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Fri
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sat
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sun
10:00 am – 5:00 pm
35 North 5th Street,
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve Memorial Cemetery – Missouri’s Oldest Cemetery Most historic cemeteries offer orderly rows of weathered headstones, carefully maintained grounds, and clear boundaries separating the living from the dead. Memorial Cemetery operates differently. This is a 5th and Merchant Streets hillside where more than 3,500 people—perhaps up to 5,000—lie in graves that are mostly unmarked, their wooden crosses having rotted away over the 235+ years since the cemetery’s establishment in 1787. The oldest marked grave belongs to Louis Le Clere (dated 1796, though burials certainly occurred earlier), and remarkably, burials continued 15 years after the official 1882 closure when the cemetery had become so crowded and weedy that it posed a health hazard. This is where Missouri’s territorial representative John Scott rests alongside French commandant Jean Baptiste Vallé, where Revolutionary War soldier Jacques Misse sleeps near Civil War Colonel killed at Shiloh, where enslaved people lie in their enslavers’ plots while free African Americans and Native Americans occupy the uphill section, and where Senator Lewis Linn was buried three times—the third interment occurring in 1938 when his nearly 100-year-old corpse was found remarkably preserved in its air-tight, lead-lined coffin, and people lined up to view his face through the window Read more…
302 Market Street,
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Silver Sycamore Gallery of Fine Art – Connecting the 1930s Art Colony Legacy to Today’s Rising Stars Through Storytelling, Curation, and the Kind of Personal Service That Makes Buying Art an Experience Worth the Journey Most art galleries sell paintings. Silver Sycamore Gallery of Fine Art sells stories—stories that happen to come with extraordinary artwork attached. When you walk through the door at 302 Market Street, the paintings genuinely take your breath away, but what transforms browsing into buying, what makes people travel from St. Louis or Cape Girardeau and carefully transport large-scale pieces home instead of purchasing something similar locally, is the narrative that connects each work to Sainte Geneviève’s remarkable artistic heritage. This is the only gallery where you can purchase work by Ali Cavanaugh—the internationally recognized watercolorist whose portraits have graced Time Magazine covers and who chose to make Sainte Geneviève her home—in her actual hometown, displayed alongside the 1930s Art Colony works (Thomas Hart Benton, Joe Jones, Jessie Beard Rickly, Aimee Schweig) that established this small Missouri river town as “the Mecca of Midwestern art.” This is where M. Charles Rhinehart’s paintings connect that Depression-era Regionalist tradition directly to contemporary practice through his training with Colony Read more…
: 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Mon
Closed
Tue
Closed
Wed
Closed
Thu
11:00 am – 5:00 pm
Fri
11:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sat
11:00 am – 5:00 pm
Sun
12:00 pm – 3:00 pm
100 N Main St.,
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
U.S. 250 in Sainte Geneviève – Commemorating America’s Forgotten Western Front May 30-May 31, 2026 Missouri’s oldest town becomes the center of Revolutionary War commemoration as Sainte Geneviève hosts its U.S. 250 celebration the weekend after Memorial Day, honoring the 245th anniversary of the Battle of Fort San Carlos—the westernmost engagement of the American Revolution and a pivotal moment in determining control of the Mississippi River. This two-day living history event brings to life the diverse forces that shaped America’s founding on the frontier, featuring appearances by George Washington and Spanish Governor Bernardo de Gálvez, military encampments representing French, Spanish, British, Osage, and American forces, hands-on historical experiences, period vendors, and a spectacular fireworks finale. The Forgotten Battle That Saved the Mississippi On May 26, 1780, the small Franco-Spanish village of St. Louis faced an assault by nearly 1,000 British-allied Native American warriors and fur traders intent on seizing control of the Mississippi River. Spanish Lieutenant Governor Fernando de Leyba had hastily constructed Fort San Carlos—a single stone tower with trenches—and desperately needed reinforcements. Sainte Geneviève answered the call. François Vallé, a 64-year-old former French militia captain, sent his two sons and 60 well-trained militiamen north to St. Louis, along Read more…






