A Landmark Decision, A Landmark Location
11:00AM
Panel Discussion is free; $35 for lunch only
This event is part of a series.
Click here to find out more.
Old Courthouse
11 North 4th Street
St. Louis, 63102
zstovall@stlbeacon.org
(314) 649-7852

The first Dred Scott decision, which continues to reverberate in St. Louis and throughout the United States, was handed down in St. Louis at the Old Courthouse in St. Louis. For the Beacon Festival, the Hon. Michael Wolff, recently retired as a justice of the Missouri Supreme Court, will talk about that court's decision 155 years ago requiring that Dred Scott remain a slave. Joining Wolff are David Konig, a historian at Washington University and Dred Scott expert and Lynne Jackson, a great-great granddaughter of Dred and Harriet Scott. William Freivogel, legal affairs reporter for the Beacon, will moderate and bring the discussion forward to today as the Supreme Court ponders the end of affirmative action. They all will come together at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, June 27, in the Old Courthouse to discuss the Dred Scott decision. The panel discussion event is free. After the discussion, participants are invited to join the panelists for lunch at Kemoll’s Restaurant in the nearby Met Life Building. Tickets for the luncheon should be made in advance.
PLEASE NOTE THIS CHANGE: The panel discussion is free and open to the public. The luncheon following at Kemoll's Restaurant is $35. Reservations are necessary for the luncheon only.
The third Beacon Festival bursts forth from its previous one-week bounds to shower you with a month’s worth of picnics, dinners, lectures, gospel music and lunch music, tours, readings, acrobatics, vaudeville, dancing dogs, Lamella roofs and Victorian funerary art, a party with the composer and the stars of a brand new opera and a trip back 160 years for a re-examination of the Dred Scott Case, presented at the Old Courthouse in downtown St. Louis.
Browse through and choose the events you want to attend. You can designate your choices online or by mail. Whichever way you choose, you’re walking through a magic portal to the promise of a cultural adventure that is the Beacon Festival.
All tickets are first come, first served. There are no refunds.
