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The Old Calaboose
200 Block of N. Second Street
Elsberry, MO


A calaboose was a
common term for a jail in the west and southwest in the 19th century and
the term comes from the Louisiana French calabouse, which was a
modification of calabozo, Spanish for dungeon. Calabooses were once common
feature in towns across Missouri but only four or five remain
in the state. Elsberry's first caboose was a wooden structure and was built
shortly after the town's incorporation in 1883. It was used for eight to
ten years before some "impatient convivialist who had been
incarcerated set fire to some newspapers in order to attract attention and
was in dire danger of being burned to death before he could be
released." After the fire destroyed the wooden jail, the town council
decided that a fireproof building was needed and commissioned a stone
building now known as the Old Calaboose.
The exact date of the
construction of the Old Calaboose is not known but is believed to be 1896.
In the 1960s Margaret Ann Watts of The Elsberry Democrat researched the
origins of the stone building by interviewing some of Elsberry's oldest
residents. She found that a stonemason came to Elsberry to build the
Calaboose, put the foundation under the present Methodist Church, and put a
foundation under the house that is now the Sacred Heart Rectory. The
church's history shows that the first church was a red brick building
erected in 1881. Because of a defective foundation, this building was unsafe
and was torn down in 1896 and the foundation for the new church was built in
the fall of the same year. The stones in this foundation have the same
cutting marks and are the same size as those in the walls of the Old
Calaboose.
Stone for the Old
Calaboose came from a quarry on the north side of the old Page Branch Road
operated by two African-American brothers, Ira and Tom Smith, and was hauled
to town on a sled pulled by oxen. The stones used are rather large,
measuring 36 inches in length, 17 inches in width, and 17 inches in depth.
The overall measurements of the building are 15 feet in length, 11 feet in
width, 10 feet in height on the sides, and 14 feet in height at the apex
of the ends. The building has one large cell on the north side and was
heated by a stove (soot still coats the ceiling) that stood in a small
walkway.
In
the fall of 1992 the Junior Elsberry Community Betterment Association began
to work to rehab the interior of the Old Calaboose (photo left.) A local welder put the
old cell bars back into the wall and the JECBA installed a potbellied stove.
In 2005 the Elsberry Historical Society relocated a one of Elsberry's oldest
homes next to the Old Calaboose and is in the process of restoring it with
the purpose of providing a town museum and Society headquarters. In 2007 the
city funded a
restoration project to repair the crumbling exterior of the Old Calaboose.
Visiting the Old Calaboose
There is no charge to visit the Old
Calaboose 
Directions:
The
Old Calaboose is located at the corner of N. Second and Dubois Streets, 1
1/2 blocks north of Broadway on N. Second Street or 1 block west of MO-79 on
Dubois Street.
Learn
more about the Elsberry
area.
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