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Dresden is an abandoned village in Brazeau Township in Perry County, Missouri, United States.

Etymology

Dresden was named after Dresden in Saxony, Germany, the city where Pastor Martin Stephan's church was located and where his movement had originated.[2]

History

Dresden was a short-lived town near Altenburg, one of the seven colonies established in 1839 in the Saxon Migration.[2] Pastor Carl Frederick Wilhelm Walter ministered to the village of Dresden.

A log-cabin Lutheran seminary “college” was founded in 1839 at Dresden by J. F. Bürger, T. Brohm, O. Fuerbringer, and Walther; classes, however, soon moved to Altenburg.[3][4][5] Most of Dresden's inhabitants came from Dresden, Germany. After Stephan's downfall, it was assigned for a time to the care of Walther, but most of the other pastors also lived there because it contained most of the habitable dwellings of the first Saxon settlers. It must have immediately adjoined Altenburg, probably on the south, because the "special partition" between them for a while was unfixed, and in 1841, when Walther left to take over his brother's church in St. Louis, it was made a subsidiary parish or branch of Altenburg. This probably marked its end as an independent settlement. The log cabin erected for the college in 1839 is originally said to have been located within the territory of Dresden, but subsequently has always been spoken of as Altenburg, where it is exhibited today.[2]

References

  1. ^ cartographic.info http:// cartographic.info/usa/map.php?id=736914
  2. ^ a b c State Historical Society of Missouri: Perry County Place Names http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/ramsay/ramsay_perry.html Archived 2016-03-31 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod http://cyclopedia.lcms.org/display.asp?t1=l&word=LUTHERANCHURCH-MISSOURISYNOD.THE
  4. ^ Margot Ford McMillen (1994). Paris, Tightwad, and Peculiar: Missouri Place Names. ISBN 9780826209726.
  5. ^ Douglas, Robert Sidney (1912). History of Southeast Missouri: A Narrative Account of Its Historical Progress, Its People and Its Principal Interests. Vol. I. Chicago and New York: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 479–481. Retrieved January 12, 2024.