By Lynn Venhaus

First time Art Hill was used for sledding?

January 5, 1905. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat reported that Louisiana Purchase Exposition employees had discovered a new use for the hill in front of the Palace of Fine Arts. Now cleared of trees, “Art Hill” made a perfect toboggan slope. The employees used discarded folding chairs as sleds.

A five-home run day for Stan “The Man” Musial?

May 2, 1954. Stan Musial slammed five home runs and drove in nine in a doubleheader against the Giants in St. Louis. The Cardinals won the first game 10–6 but lost the nightcap, 9–7. Musial also set a record with 21 total bases in the two games. He went 4-for-4 with a
walk in game one and 2-for-4 with a walk in game two.

Eight-year-old Nate Colbert was in attendance that day. In 1972, Colbert would become the only other player to hit five homers in a doubleheader.

Those are just two fun facts out of hundreds in Joe Sonderman’s new book, “This Day in St. Louis History.”

A longtime radio host and traffic reporter, Joe enjoys fun facts about his hometown so much so that he’s been in search of interesting nuggets of information nearly his entire life. His fascination with our region has led to him publishing “The remarkable, the outrageous, the spectacular, and everything in between.”

The book, published by Reedy Press, arrives on area bookshelves on Aug. 31. He has book signings scheduled for September and October too. It’s his 18th book.

His answer to the most St. Louis of questions is: “Hazelwood West, 1980.”

Joe said he always loved researching history and trivia, and clipped “Through the Years” feature in the old St. Louis Globe-Democrat, which led to more library research that eventually turned into a database. On the air, he started doing a Day in History feature, which led to a project in 2002 called “St. Louis 365.”

Once he started a Facebook page called “Vintage St. Louis,” he posted daily, and it was so popular with followers that he dug back into research. And ta-da! Now a book.

“So what we have here is what I thought to be an interesting cross section of St. Louis history and trivia. It ranges from the important events to the trivial and pop-culture oriented,” he said.

The colorful book is laden with photographs, magazine covers and other interesting sites.

“The goal is not to present a serious historical work but to provide things you may not know about St. Louis history, personalities, historic
buildings, institutions, roads, bridges, TV and radio, and sports. I hope you find it interesting, no matter where you went to high school,” he said. (And for the record, Academy of Notre Dame, Belleville, Ill., 1972)

His first signing is Saturday, Aug. 31, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Eugene Field House Museum, 634 S. Broadway, St. Louis.

You may also be familiar with him as “The Route 66 expert” and he was a major contributor to the Missouri History Museum’s comprehensive Route 66 exhibit in 2016, “Route 66: Main Street Through St. Louis.”

His other books on Route 66 include:
Route 66 in St. Louis (Images of America)
Route 66 Missouri
Route 66 in Illinois (Images of America)
Get Your Pics on Route 66: Postcards from America’s Mother Road
Route 66 in the Missouri Ozarks (Postcards of America)
Route 66 Roadside Signs and Advertisements
Travel Route 66: A Guide to the History, Sights, and Destinations Along the Main Street of America

See more books by Joe on Amazon. He wrote about the 1904 World’s Fair in St Louis, more postcard books, and books on other Midwestern cities.


Take Ten Questions and Answers with Joe Sonderman

1.What is special about your latest project?

“It’s the culmination of decades of collecting dates, facts and trivia about St. Louis. I started collecting dates when I was a kid.”

2. Why did you choose your profession?

“It was a love of music radio as it was. I grew up listening to the great top 40 jocks of the 1970s on KXOK, KSLQ and then when KHTR signed on in 1982, it was like a lightning bolt.”

3. How would your friends describe you?

“A perfectionist. Almost to a fault. I want every thing from a traffic report to a book to be just perfect.”

4. How do you like to spend your spare time?

“Driving Route 66 in my pride and joy, a 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air. But it currently is giving me a little difficulty. Old cars can be cantankerous and I think mine needs a little work. I also collect Route 66 memorabilia and have a collection of over 5,000 postcards from Route 66 on line at www.66postcards.com.”

5. What is your current obsession?

“That’s hard to say. In the winter, I would say I am obsessed with our Blues. Over the summer, it’s writing and collecting. And of course, work!”

6. What would people be surprised to find out about you?

“That’s a tough question. I think people might be surprised to discover we do traffic reports for cities all across the Midwest. I also do reports during the day in Kansas City, Des Moines and Springfield, MO. Technology makes it all possible.”

7. Can you share one of your most defining moments in life? 

“Meeting my wife Lorraine. She is my rock. We met while working at the old Flaming Pit Restaurant in Village Square, Hazelwood.”

8. Who do you admire most?

“That’s hard to say right now. I hate to get political but I admire Kamala Harris a great deal. Also Barack Obama.”

9. What is at the top of your bucket list?

“I really want to travel more…..I think I would like to take my wife to Europe one of these days.”

10. How were you affected by the pandemic years, and anything you would like to share about what got you through and any lesson learned during the isolation periods? Any reflections on how the arts were affected? And what it means to move forward?

“The effect of the pandemic years was to cause me to appreciate working with people more. I missed not coming into the office as much. Even now, when we are not required to come in every day, I still try to come in as often as I can because I like working from the office better than setting home alone. I think radio was affected in that we became even more isolated from the audience than we already were because of consolidation etc. We have to get that connection back somehow or our business is done for.”

11. What is your favorite thing to do in St. Louis? 

“Blues hockey!”

12. What’s next?
“I haven’t given it much thought. I am going to take a break from writing for awhile because this is my 18th book and I still edit the Route 66 Association of Missouri’s magazine, which really takes a lot of my time.”

“Route 66: Then and Now” is one of Joe’s books.

More Information about Joe Sonderman:

Name: Joe Sonderman
Age: 62
Birthplace: St. Louis
Current location: Hazelwood
Family: Wife Lorraine (Married since 1982). Two daughters, Cathy and Kim.
Education: St. Louis Community College – Florissant Valley
Day job: Traffic anchor at Iheartmedia
First job: Dishwasher, Flaming Pit 1978
Favorite jobs or work in your medium? I loved being a DJ and I also miss the days when traffic reporters were airborne. But those days are gone forever I am afraid.
Dream job/opportunity: My happiest times were on KHTR in the 1980s. I wish it could be like that again.
Favorite quote/words to live by: Each day is a gift. Live like it
A song that makes you happy: I would have a hard time picking just one. It would probably be 1980s pop though, something like “Walking on Sunshine” (By Katrina and The Waves”

Joe and his classic car, 1957 Chevrolet Bel-Air.

The new book St. Louis Cardinals: Everything You Need to Know! offers a unique approach to telling the story of Cardinals baseball for fans young and old.

Hundreds of vivid photos and accompanying vignettes allow readers to experience the players, teams, and special moments of one of baseball’s greatest franchises. Within these pages, readers will find the love and joy that fans call “Cardinal baseball.” Relive the 19 pennants, the 11 World Series Championships, and all the special moments in-between.

Which Redbird players were the best at each position and which ones made it to the Hall of Fame? Can you name their lone Triple Crown winner or the team’s MVPs? What are the “Perfectos” and who’s in the “Gashouse Gang?” It’s a story over 140 years in the making that will simply make Redbird fans of all ages “Go Crazy” for Cardinal baseball! 

St. Louis author and baseball historian Ed Wheatley covers this storied franchise with an illustrated collection of highlights from the 1800s to today. Look back at your favorite Cardinals moments or discover things you never knew in St. Louis Cardinals: Everything You Need to Know!

Book Signings:

Saturday, May 20 at 11 a.m.
Main Street Books
307 S. Main Street in St. Charles, MO

Monday, June 5 at 6 p.m.
Scenic Regional Library
111 Lamar Parkway in Pacific, MO

Mike Shannon

Reedy Press is pleased to announce the release of its newest local interest book, Hannibal: A Walk Through History, by Dea Hoover.

Immortalized by the writing of its most famous resident, Samuel Clemens, aka Mark Twain, Hannibal is known around the world as much for its history as for the characters it birthed.

Take a guided walk through that history in America’s Hometown. Enjoy the opportunity to trace the paths of the childhood adventures that Mark Twain shared through the stories of Tom and Huck, or follow the path of the Women of Hannibal or seek a bit more adventure with the Cave, Chaos and Cemeteries Path. Readers can use this new book to carve out their own adventure.

Local author and tour director Dea Hoover deftly guides readers around her birthplace like an old friend. Her carefully planned walks will inspire visitors to explore life along the Mississippi and create memories that last a lifetime.

Hannibal: A Walk Through History is available wherever books are sold.

BOOK DETAILS

Hannibal: A Walk Through History, by Dea Hoover,

ISBN: 9781681063249

softcover, 8.5 x 11

48 pages

$16.00 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

As a veteran tour director, Hannibal-born Dea Hoover is accustomed to hearing the familiar mantra, “Are We There Yet?” – thus the name of her full-service tour operation in the city of St. Louis. In 2008, Are We There Yet?, LLC expanded its operations with the acquisition of St. Louis’ first local receptive tour operation Discover St. Louis, LLC, founded in 1975.

She is the best-selling author of STL Scavenger: The Ultimate Guide to St. Louis’s Hidden Treasures (Reedy Press). Dea grew up in the Firestone tire and GE appliance store in Vandalia, Missouri that her mother still owns and operates. After moving to St. Louis to attend Washington University, Dea cut her teeth in retail at Famous-Barr, sold cars at Saturn of South County and then found her true calling as a natural-born storyteller in the guise of a tour guide. Her father foretold her future of public speaking when he enrolled her in a Dale Carnegie course at the age of 16. With her experiences as a 4-Her and as a first generation college graduate, she had the cards in her hand that she could play at different times in her adult life to find fulfillment and happiness.

Currently residing in The Hill neighborhood of St. Louis with her husband Declan, they own and operate their tour companies from their home. For leisure, Dea plays weekly in a league at the Italia-America Bocce Club. She is a voracious reader attending two Book Clubs and participating in all events to do with history and even leading some. Her favorite pastime is visiting with family and friends and basking in the glow of conversation. In this age of email and texting, Hoover remains a phone talker. 

The Hannibal Lighthouse

Scheduled Events for Hannibal: A Walk Through History

Presentation and Book Signing
Tuesday, July 26 from 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Washington Public Library
410 Lafayette St
Washington, MO 63090
(636) 390-1070
Free and open to the public

Presentation and Book Launch
Wed, July 27 from 5 p.m. – 7 p.m.
Oliva on The Hill
4915 Daggett Ave
St. Louis, MO 63110
(314) 899-6271
Free and open to the public

Presentation and Book Signing
Saturday, September 17 from 2 p.m. – 3 p.m.
Hannibal Public Library
200 S 5th St
Hannibal, MO 63401
(573) 221-0222
Free and open to the public

Presentation and Book Signing
Sunday, September 18 from 12 p.m. – 2 p.m.
Van-Far R1 High School
2200 US-54
Vandalia, MO 63382
(573) 594-6442
Open to the public (ticketed, admission fee)

Presentation and Book Signing
Thursday, September 22 from 2:30 – 3:30 p.m.
Audrain County-Mexico Public Library
305 W Jackson St
Mexico, MO 65265
(573) 581-4939
Free and open to the public

Presentation and Book Signing
Friday, September 23 from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Vandalia Public Library
312 S Main St
Vandalia, MO 63382
(937) 463-2665
Free and open to the public

Mark Twain meets with childhood friend Laura Hawkins, the inspiration for Twain’s character, Becky Thatcher

Join Her Scavenger Hunt in Her First Book, “STL Scavenger”

By Lynn Venhaus

Portions of this article were published in the Belleville News-Democrat on Aug. 22, 2021.

“How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant of the weak and strong. Because someday in your life you will have been all of these.”

~ George Washington Carver ~ Born in Diamond Grove, Missouri

Talk to Dea Hoover for five minutes, and it’s apparent she is a one-woman tourism bureau.

She has turned her passion for the bi-state region into operating two local tour companies and has written her first book, “STL Scavenger.”

In the spiral-bound softcover book, subtitled “The Ultimate Search for St. Louis’s Hidden Treasures,” she features 17 neighborhoods in both Missouri and Illinois areas of the St. Louis metropolitan region, providing clues and photos of buildings, businesses, statues, and architectural details for a scavenger hunt.

Hint from Hoover: look up!

“I want people to find new places that they might not have seen before,” she said. “Plan a day for each section and linger to enjoy the shops, restaurants and parks along your trail of discovery from St. Charles to Edwardsville, and many destinations in between.”

Hoover wanted to provide a one-of-a-kind experience, and with her expert eye and appreciation for the region, she used her extensive knowledge in a new way.

Reedy Press came up with the format so she could ‘gamify’ the experience – an entertaining and educational interaction with local sites. She credits Barbara Northcott, production manager of the St. Louis-based publishing company, with the concept.

“I would have been a rudderless ship without her. I am very grateful,” she said. “She made it so much better. We shortened the rhymes.”

The format allows for taking notes and multiple people participating, she said.

The book was so popular in its initial printing in May that they followed up with a second printing 13 days later, she said.

“The feedback has really made me happy,” she said. “It means something to people here.”

And while the country deals with a continuing coronavirus pandemic, she said that most neighborhoods included are known for their ‘walkability.”

Among her fun facts:

St. Louis is home to the second most free attractions after Washington D.C.

The Gateway Arch is the tallest national monument (630 feet), and the St. Louis Cardinals are the winningest team in the National League.

The St. Louis metropolitan region has 36 colleges and universities.

Join the Hunt

She has provided an incentive to answer all 366 clues – a contest, running now through Nov. 15 for submitted entries. On Dec. 1, the contest will conclude with a drawing for $500, first prize. Gift bags from STLMade.com, with tickets to local attractions and gift certificates, will be given for the second and third prizes.

For each correct answer you submit, you receive 1 point. The individual with the most correct answers will win the grand prize, and if there is a tie between multiple individuals, Hoover said they will randomly select the winner. Same goes for the local swag prize packs.

To join the hunt, submit answers and check out a bonus puzzle challenge, visit www.stlscavenger. You can submit the answers as an individual, even if you played as a group. You can’t change your answers once submitted.

You can purchase the book online for $20.95. Order at discover-stlouis.com or to pay by check, call her office at 314-522-6367 or email.  Dea said $20.95 + tax puts it at about $23.

The book is also available at local bookstores and gift shops.

You can follow along on social media @STLScavenger and #stlscavenger for extra points, challenges, giveaways, scoring updates, and special events.

The book has an accessible smartphone map.

And even if you do not participate in the contest, the book makes a delightful family activity at any time of year and is a gift idea this holiday season.

With an added twist of intrigue, the book makes a staycation more fun – and is a great way to learn the way for new residents.

“Whether you are a native or just arrived, this book will lead you to new places near and far,” she said.

Dea’s Mom Donna

‘Never Come Back the Same Way You Came’

As a tour company operator, Hoover has spent more than 20 years sharing the world with others.

Her love of adventure began while growing up in Vandalia, a small town in Missouri. Her wanderlust blossomed while attending Washington University in St. Louis, majoring in business administration and minoring in English literature.

“I always loved going places and reading. I am always learning whenever I am traveling. It feeds my soul,” she said.

Her childhood was spent in her parents’ Main Street Firestone Tire and Appliance business, where she was involved starting at age 5. A 1965 limited edition Mustang was her pride and joy as a teenager. For Firestone fans, she says she is “gum-dipped.”

Her mother still operates the Main Street retail business; her father is deceased.

“My parents gave me a great gift. Every year, we would come to St. Louis. We’d go to a ballgame, the Zoo and Six Flags,” she said.

“Never come back the same way you came” is her mantra.

Her full-service tour company, Are We There Yet? expanded its operations in 2008 when she acquired St. Louis’s first local receptive tour operation, Discover St. Louis LLC, which was founded in 1975.

She enjoys living a whirlwind existence on the go. For instance, this summer, she was on a day trip to Grafton, and then the next morning, left for a week’s tour in Delaware.

She is past president of the St. Louis Professional Tour Guide Association and previously served on the board of the Missouri Travel Association.

Hoover teaches classes on travel and tour conducting at St. Louis Community College and is a frequent guest speaker for corporations and private organizations.

Her father enrolled her in a Dale Carnegie public speaking course at 16, and she considers that “one of the bedrocks of my success in sales and public speaking.”

She spoke about Missouri’s past in The History Channel’s documentary, “The States.”

Dea and her husband, Declan Rutan, live just across from The Hill in the Southwest Garden neighborhood. She plays on a league at the Italia-America Bocce Club weekly and is vice president of The Hill Business Association.

“Declan jokes they moved the line when they found out he was Irish,” she said.

Hoover described him as her “partner in tourism and rhyme.” Together, they have visited six continents, with Antarctica next on the list.

He helped rhyme the questions.

Dea and her husband, Declan

Answers to the Take Ten Questionnaire:

1. Why did you choose your profession?

“Serendipity. I was working at Saturn and a customer worked for a tour company. I realized being a tour guide might be a good fit. I started 18 months before 9/11 as an over the road tour director. It was tough to continue but it is my passion. I hunger to learn and traveling feeds that hunger. And what makes learning fun is sharing it with others. I am gregarious and love helping people. I’ve found my home.

2. How would your friends describe you?

“Open, happy, outgoing, direct, compassionate, empathetic, knowledgeable, connected.”

3. How do you like to spend your spare time?

“I love TV, movies, and live theater. I grew up in a small-town tire and appliance store. We had the first VCR in town and had the first big screen. Our movie theatre was built by two doctors who saw that there needed to be some sort of entertainment in town to keep the kids employed and occupied. As a teenager I saw two plays that I will never forget, ‘Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat’ at a Washington, D.C. Dinner Theater and ‘Cabaret’ at Stephens College in Columbia, Mo. I acted in plays in high school and participated in drama competitions. I love and support live theatre, even having served on two boards!

And of course, I read. These days I listen since I can check books out of the library, and it gives my eyes a rest.

4. What is your current obsession?

“Goliath” — love Billy Bob Thornton.

Podcasts – “Terrible, Thanks for Asking” (Nora McInerny) and “Unlocking Us” (Brene Brown)

5. What would people be surprised to find out about you?

“That I love to knit.”

6. Can you share one of your most defining moments in life?

“Winning the Olin Cup Championship as a sophomore at Washington University. As a first-generation college student, Wash U. was a deep pond, more like an ocean for me. I was on a team with twin brothers who had graduated from the Illinois Math and Science Academy. I graduated from Van-Far R-I School District, which is quite a difference. When we won, we beat the seniors. They were not happy. We had a professor who had coached us through the process. It taught me that if you know someone with experience*, ask for it and use it. Dad had the foresight to send me through Dale Carnegie at 16 and that made a huge difference. He and Mom were Dale Carnegie graduates when they were selling insurance and it made a big impact on their lives. That education set me up to succeed at the Olin Cup event. It also prepared me for my life, which is public speaking every day, all day, about 60% of the year.”

When I sold cars at Saturn, my used car manager Ron Weltig taught me: “Experience is what you get right after you need it.” So true! I learned early to ask as many people as I could so I didn’t have to make every mistake in the book.

7. Who do you admire most?

Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sandra Day O’Connor, along with all the women that paved the way for my generation.

Both of my grandmothers. They raised kids under tough circumstances and lived to their 70s and 80s. Their lived hard lives. I’m not sure I would have made it.

8. What is at the top of your bucket list?

Travel to Antarctica, my seventh and last continent.

Write 10 books before it’s all over.

9. What is your favorite thing to do in St. Louis?

Visit the Zoo. 

10. What’s next?

A Walking Tour book of Hannibal, Mo., with Reedy Press

(I was born there because Vandalia, Mo., was too small to have a hospital and Dr. Dougherty had closed his office that had makeshift hospital rooms. And yes, I’m only 50. But it sounds like a pioneer childhood, doesn’t it?

The family business in Vandalia, Mo.

More about Dea (DEE-uh) Hoover

Age: 50

Birthplace: Hannibal, Mo., but my home was Vandalia, Mo., until I was 22

Current location: The Hill in St. Louis

Family: Husband – Declan Rutan and Mom – Donna Hoover, Vandalia, Mo., and proprietor of Vandalia Firestone, Appliance and Furniture at age 81!

Education: Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration – Olin School of Business at Washington University, with a minor in English Literature.

Day job: Tour Operator

First job: Taking the mail to the post office for Vandalia Firestone. I sold Fuller Brush in high school and then was a server at restaurant.

Favorite places you have been: Ireland, Galapagos Islands and Australia. And I love NYC.

Dream vacation: A trip around the world over a year’s time.

Awards/Honors/Achievements: 2015 Groups Today Innovator of the Year

https://groupstoday.com/component/tags/tag/innovator-of-the-year

Favorite quote/words to live by:

“How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant of the weak and strong. Because someday in your life you will have been all of these.” ~ George Washington Carver ~ Born in Diamond Grove, Missouri

And the quote earlier about experience.

A song that makes you happy: “Uptown Funk” – Mark Ronson with Bruno Mars; “Shambala” – Three Dog Night; and “Best Day Ever” – Sly and the Family Stone.

The Hoovers with Declan and Dea at their wedding.

Contact/Information:

Website: www.arewethereyetdea.com

Latest Brochure:  www.arewethereyetdea.com/pdf/AWTY%20Brochure.pdf

Facebook.com/arewethereyetdea

Twitter: @stltourgirl

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCc4OantmYvfmfYmGtJtuFiw/featured

Listen to my podcast interview about STL: https://wetravelthere.com/st-louis-missouri-dea-hoover/

Follow: Facebook.com/stlscavenger

Insta & Twitter: stlscavenger

Check out our sister company for local tours and private tours:

discover-stlouis.com

facebook.com/discoverstlouis

Dea and Declan on vacation in Denmark

Photos:

We visited Bilund, Denmark, the home of Lego en route to our Norway Cruise in December. These are some of our favorite photos.

Mom’s 80th.

The front of our Firestone store

Our wedding at Graham Chapel and we had our reception at the Whittemore House