Fountain of the Centaurs

The fountain consists of two separate components, the granite pool containing the bronze centaurs and other figures by Adolph Alexander Weinman and the Signing of the Louisiana Purchase Agreement, a large high relief by Karl Bitter.

[1] Although the mythical beings in the fountain are labeled as “centaurs” they are in fact “ichthyocentaurs".

Since it was all made of staff and thus perusable and “swept into the dust bins of time,” only his relief showing the signing of the Louisiana Purchase by Robert R. Livingston, James Monroe and “the amiable” François Barbé-Marbois was saved.

Following the close of the fair, Bitter was employed to make “improvements in a score of delicate details” of the work and it was cast in bronze and placed in the Jefferson Memorial in St.

[3] Bitter was comfortable with the proposed changes and made them, “without any special thumbscrew to my conscience”[4] A decade later, the Missouri Capitol Decoration Committee received permission from Bitter's widow to make another bronze casting of the work and place it in Jefferson City.

The Fountain of the Centaurs
Signing of the Louisiana Purchase Agreement
U.S. postage stamp (c. 1953) commemorating the Louisiana Purchase