Bois Brule Creek (Cinque Hommes Creek tributary)

Bois Brule Creek is a tributary of Cinque Hommes Creek in Perry County, Missouri.

Bois Brule Creek
Map
EtymologyFrench for “Burnt Wood”
Location
CountryUnited States
StateMissouri
Physical characteristics
MouthMississippi River
 • location
Mississippi River, MO
 • coordinates
37°47′20″N 89°44′50″W / 37.78889°N 89.74722°W / 37.78889; -89.74722
 • elevation
354 ft (108 m)
Highway 51 bridge at McBride, Missouri

Name

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The name Bois Brule (French: Bois Brûlé) means “Burnt Wood” was given to both the creek and the flood plain by early French settlers. The name was applied by the French to describe a burnt tract of forest found in the area.[1]

Physical geography

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Bois Brule Creek is a tributary of Cinque Hommes Creek and flows into Cinque Hommes Creek in Bois Brule Bottoms north of Menfro, Missouri at 354 feet (108 meters).[2] The stream's feature ID is 741394.[3][4] A number of drainage ditches empty into Bois Brule Creek, draining excess water out of Bois Brule Bottoms.[5]

Tributaries

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  • Blue Spring Branch
  • McClanahan Creek

Cultural geography

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Bridges that traverse Bois Brule Creek are the Bois Brule Creek CR 212 Bridge, the Bois Brule Creek CR 216 Bridge, the Route E Mystery Bridge, and the Route 51 Bois Brule Bridge at McBride, Missouri.[6]

History

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The first European settlers in the vicinity of Bois Brule Creek were French colonial settlers. However, in 1798, a number of Irish Catholics were given permission to settle in the Bois Brule area. The Bois Brule Township was organized in 1821 and named after the creek and bottoms, and was one of Perry County's original three townships.[7]

Communities

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Perry County Place Names Archived 2016-03-31 at the Wayback Machine. State Historical Society of Missouri.
  2. ^ Mytopo.com http://www.mytopo.com/locations/index.cfm?fid=714493
  3. ^ Missouri.hometownlocator.com http://missouri.hometownlocator.com/maps/feature-map,ftc,1,fid,741394,n,bois%20brule%20creek.cfm/ Archived 2013-11-04 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Lat-Long.com http://www.lat-long.com/Latitude-Longitude-714493-Missouri-Bois_Brule_Creek.html
  5. ^ U.S. Government Printing Office (1916). "Field Operations of the Bureau of Soils, Volume 15". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Bridgehunter.com http://bridgehunter.com/mo/perry/
  7. ^ Michael C. O'Laughlin (2007). Missouri Irish, the Original History of the Irish in St. Louis; Kansas City; the Irish Wilderness and More: From the Earliest Times to the Current Day in America. ISBN 9780940134263.