ANSWERS: 1
  • On St. Patick's Day, 1827, Drury Davis established a trading post about a half-mile west of what would become La Plata. The town would develop as the intersection of north and south stagecoach roads. The town was surveyed by Henry O. Clark in 1855. Clark presented a plat to settlers Louis Gex, Theodore Saunders and Dr. W. W. Moore. The men accepted the plan, and named the streets surrounding the city park for themselves (Clark chose a street one block south of the square, along his father's land). The town prospered as a small farming center, like Kirksville 10 miles to the North. According to local tradition, the name resulted from a lottery: the townsfolk were invited to put a proposed name into a hat, and "La Plata" was the one drawn; it had been Dr. Moore's choice, under the mistaken impression that it was French for "the silver river." The North Missouri (later known as the Wabash Railroad) came to town in 1867, and the Santa Fe Railroad twenty years later, passing through La Plata on its route from Chicago to Kansas City, MissouriKansas City. Amenities include a public library, two banks, one grocery store, two convenience stores, a pharmacy, U. S. Post Office, two doctors, a dental office, and many other businesses. Recreational facilities include an 18-hole golf course, two tennis courts, an outdoor basketball court, a city park, baseball/softball field, and a public lake for swimming and fishing. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Plata%2C_Missouri

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