Compton Hill Water Tower Park & Preservation Society

Compton Hill Water Tower Park & Preservation Society

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Compton Hill Water Tower Park & Preservation Society, PO Box 2156 (South Grand Avenue & Shaw), St. Louis, MO.

04/18/2026

Hopefully Mother Nature is easy on us with the spring storm season. ⛈️🌩️🌪️
Remember to have a plan in case the worst happens. 🏥🔦⛑️

Even though we’re temporarily closed it doesn’t mean things are standing still. We are always helping in the gardens. Sometimes through group projects and most times just looking things over as we visit the park on a leisurely walk.
We appreciate our members and volunteers who help with gardening. It would be nothing without everyone’s efforts. 🧑‍🌾🌷🌼🌹

If you aren’t part of our family of volunteers, we’d be delighted if you’d join in our efforts to help maintain the tower, gardens and future park improvements. 😊 👍

It’s a nice community park and an extension of everyone’s backyard. 🧺🏞️🎾🧑‍🧑‍🧒‍🧒

Consider joining us today to keep this unique landmark available for generations to come. People just enjoy climbing to the top and enjoying the view.

Support Us - Water Tower & Park Preservation Society Support Us The Water Tower & Park Preservation Society is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to protecting and preserving this great landmark and its surrounding grounds. By becoming part of this organization you can be part of an exciting effort to celebrate a monument to St. Louis history. YO...

02/16/2026

The time is here for us all to spring into action! Become a member today and invite your friends and neighbors. 👍👯‍♂️

Photos from Compton Hill Water Tower Park & Preservation Society's post 12/28/2025

Tonight.
Happy holidays! 🎄

12/06/2025

Anyone ever hear of a local urban legend? There’s been some about the water tower too.

St. Louis Urban Legend: Hitchhiker Annie
Just about every region, city, and small town has its share of urban legends, and St. Louis isn't any different. Despite what most Anthropologists claim, most urban legends I've found through my own research have an initial spark of truth. Sometimes, a notable event can spark a long-standing story that becomes part of a place's folklore and oral history. Over time, this story usually gets exaggerated and morphs into something paranormal, but there's always an actual event that triggers it.

Now most major cities have a "Hitchhiker Annie" story, and St. Louis is no different. Now, the basic premise of every Hitchhiker Annie story goes something like this. It's usually a dark, rainy, or snowy evening, and a motorist is traveling down a desolate road next to a cemetery. The motorist sees a young woman walking along the side of the road and stops to offer her a ride. The young woman gets into the vehicle and says nothing to the driver. The driver pulls away, and shortly after, he turns to ask the woman where she is going. Upon asking the question, the young woman vanishes from the vehicle without a trace.

Now St. Louis has its own version of this story, which is supposed to take place along Calvary Avenue. Calvary Avenue runs between Bellefontaine and Calvary Cemeteries. Calvary Avenue is an east-to-west running street that connects North Broadway and West Florissant Avenue. Calvary Avenue is a "Y" shaped street comprising Calvary Avenue, South Calvary Avenue, and North Calvary Avenue. Where these three streets meet is where the St. Louis version of the Hitchhiker Annie story started.

If you go to where these three streets meet and look up the hill on the Calvary Cemetery side of the intersection, you will see the crypt of Thomas Caute and Heloise Marie Reynolds. Thomas Reynolds has a checkered past when it comes to St. Louis History. During the American Civil War, he supported the Confederacy. He advocated overthrowing the Pro-Union State Government of Missouri and forming a Pro-Confederacy State Government, in which he would serve as its Governor. Despite his checkered past, Thomas Reynolds loved his wife Heloise dearly. Heloise was described as one of the most beautiful women in St. Louis.

Heloise died of pneumonia, and her death started a long and painful mourning period for Thomas, which ultimately ended in his su***de. Thomas ended his life by throwing himself down an elevator shaft in the St. Louis Customs House. But years after his wife's death, Thomas was known to sit outside his wife's crypt that sat on the hill above the Calvary Avenue intersection for hours talking to his deceased wife. Travelers up and down Calvary Avenue reported seeing him sitting next to his wife's crypt. After Thomas' death, people traveling Calvary Avenue continued to report seeing Thomas Reynolds sitting on top of the hill, next to the crypt, still holding his daily vigil.

Fast-forward to the days of the automobile and the years of exaggeration later, and Thomas Reynolds' ghost story could very well be the initial spark for St. Louis' version of the Hitch Hike Annie urban legend. Now I have traveled up and down Calvary Avenue several times over the years to verify the urban legend, to no avail. But I have spoken with St. Louisans who adamantly claim they saw Annie walking along Calvary Avenue on dark, stormy nights, still trying to solicit a ride from an unsuspecting motorist.

06/20/2025

This beautiful photo was taken by Amber Griffith as a storm was rolling in on June 18.

10/01/2024

We’re still working on getting the tower restored. Please consider becoming a member and or donating to restore the tower.

Support Us - Water Tower & Park Preservation Society Support Us The Water Tower & Park Preservation Society is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to protecting and preserving this great landmark and its surrounding grounds. By becoming part of this organization you can be part of an exciting effort to celebrate a monument to St. Louis history. YO...

Photos from Compton Hill Water Tower Park & Preservation Society's post 05/04/2024

Cheryl Carlson recently visited the area and fell in love with the tower. Here’s a couple of pictures she shared with us.
Thank you Cheryl! 😃

Photos from Compton Hill Water Tower Park & Preservation Society's post 12/22/2023

Clouds are hanging low today.

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PO Box 2156 (South Grand Avenue & Shaw)
St. Louis, MO
63158