Missouri Department of Natural Resources
If the National Park Service feels like a spotlight, Missouri State Parks is the steady hands on the ladder. They represent the more local approach influencing local Missourians to lead the careful stewardship of these bygone treasures. At Felix Vallé House State Historic Site, you time-travel to the moment after the Louisiana Purchase when Ste. Geneviève’s French community didn’t vanish—it adapted, negotiated, and kept its identity while American influence rolled in like a new accent in an old song. Built in 1818 in American-Federal style and furnished to evoke the 1830s, the Vallé House tells a story that’s sneakily modern: cultural change is a bit messy—new rules, old traditions, and a thousand daily compromises. These state sites are where you go to understand how “frontier” wasn’t just wilderness; it was paperwork, commerce, family networks, and taste—right down to what people displayed in their homes when they wanted you to know they belonged.



