Ermine Case, Jr., Park (N39⁰6’11” W94⁰35’34”)
is 2 acres and part of the 31-acre West Terrace Park. The park extends from 7th
Street south to 11th Street, west of Pennsylvania Avenue, Jefferson
Street, and Summit Street. The traffic circle and overlook at 8th
Street and Jefferson Street is known as Clark’s Point. This is one of only a handful
of locations along the lower Missouri River that can be documented as a place
that Lewis and Clark stood. It is a site on the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail. The explorers climbed this bluff in 1806 on the return
journey from the Pacific and noted that it would be a good place to build a fort. They also
gathered pawpaw fruits here. In 1804, on the western journey, they saw an
immense flock of Carolina parakeets near here. In the center of the traffic circle
is the Corps of Discovery statue by Eugene Daub, depicting William Clark,
Meriwether Lewis, York, Sacagawea, Jean Baptiste Charbonneau (her baby), and
Seaman (Lewis’ dog). The statue contains an inscription, “of courage undaunted
and a fidelity to truth,” along with a quote from Thomas Jefferson, “I could
have no hesitation in confiding the enterprise to him.” A rock wall at Clark’s
point was constructed by the Works Progress Administration in 1941.
Also at Clark’s Point are markers erected by the Chouteau
Society, describing the French settlement and heritage of the area. The Missouri
River from St. Louis to north of Kansas City was initially mapped by Etienne
Veniard, Sieur de Bourgmont, in 1713. He noted the low range of hills on the
south side of the river near the confluence with the Kansas River. In 1724,
Bourgmont visited a Kansa village site near present-day Fort Leavenworth and also
journeyed toward Santa Fe. In 1742, Verendryes explored the Missouri River to
near its headwaters in Montana. Fort de Cavagnial (1744 to 1764) was a French
trading post at the village of the Kansa. Le Page du Pratz published a 1758 map
and narrative which described the river, and Indians told the French of the Great
Salt Lake, Bitterroot Mountains, and the Snake and Columbia Rivers. The Kansa
later moved to the mouth of the Kansas River, and Francois Choteau set up a
trading post, Chez Les Canses, at what was called Kawsmouth. Because news of
the Louisiana purchase from France may not have reached throughout the
Louisiana territory, Lewis carried a French passport.
At 10th and Jefferson Street within the park is a
Choteau Society marker describing Chez Les Canses, or Chouteauville settlement.
In 1799, French-speaking traders and farmers moved from the French Colonial
area of present-day Illinois to the present-day Kansas City area. One
settlement was at Randolph Bluffs, near the Missouri River confluence with Rock
Creek (Chouteau Bridge-State Route 210 area) on the north side of the Missouri
River, and a second was at French Bottoms, now called the West Bottoms. The West
Bottoms settlement was French speaking until at least 1840; and consisted of
strip farms on either side of Turkey Creek. The community was served by a French
Catholic church of St. Francis Regis near the present-day intersection of 11th
Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. The settlement was eradicated by the flood of 1844.
Within Case Park is the James Pendergast Memorial statue,
erected in 1913 in Mulkey Square Park and moved later to this location. It is
surrounded by picnic tables. The monument was erected by his younger brother,
Thomas Pendergast, who ran county politics at the time. It overlooks the West
Bottoms, where he operated a saloon and began the Pendergast political machine.
A plaque by the Equal Justice Initiative’s Community
Remembrance Project was located in the park until 2020, when it was vandalized.
The historic marker memorialized the 1882 lynching of Levi Harrington by a mob
of several hundred white people in Kansas City, for the crime of shooting a
police officer. The next day another man was arrested for the killing. No one
was held accountable for the lynching.
Case Park includes the off-leash West Terrace Dog Park at
the north end. Adjacent to the dog park near the corner of 8th
Street and Pennsylvania Avenue is a sculpture by Stacey Sharpe, called Air
Play. Near 10th Street is a playground, including a structure called
the Bamboo Jungle. West Terrace Park from 7th Street south to 17th
Street was part of the original George Kessler 1906 Parks and Boulevard System
plan. Case Park is crossed by the Riverfront Heritage Trail, which enters the
park at 9th and Jefferson Streets and leaves at 10th and
Summit Streets. The park adjoins the Quality Hill Historic District and Quality
Hill Center Historic District.