Hyde Park
Hyde Park stands as a testament to North St. Louis's turn-of-the-century prosperity, where grand Victorian and early modern structures like the iconic Grand Avenue Water Tower rise alongside robust institutional buildings such as the Divoll Library and Shenandoah School, each reflecting the neighborhood's evolution from residential refuge to community anchor. The tree-lined streets reveal layers of architectural ambition—from ornate facades to Arts and Crafts details—that speak to a time when this enclave attracted families seeking the best of urban living just beyond the city's core. Today, these buildings and their streetscapes offer an intimate portrait of how neighborhoods shaped themselves through civic investment and domestic aspiration in the early 1900s.


