Early settlement The area was settled much earlier than Granite City's official founding. In the early 19th century, settlers began to farm the rich, fertile grounds to the east of St. Louis. Around 1801, the area had the establishment of Six Mile Settlement, a farming area that occupied the area of present-day Granite City, 6 miles (10 km) from St. Louis. Soon after, around 1806, the
National Road was to be constructed through the area, but it was never completed. In 1856, the area known as Six Mile was changed to Kinder. The resulting product was enormously popular. The brothers opened the Granite Iron Rolling Mills in St. Louis to provide
tin (imported from
Wales) to its prospering kitchen supplies manufacturer. The imported tin had a $22 per ton
tariff. Frederick ran for Congress in Missouri in 1888. During his one term in the
51st Congress, he successfully urged the passage of a new tariff of 50% of value on imported iron and tin. With the increased tariff, the U.S. steel industry (including their iron plant) took off. As they planned expansion of their
Bessemer process steel works, they were blocked by the city of St. Louis, which did not want the expansion. Also, the
Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis planned to tax coal crossing the
Mississippi River into Missouri. This land extended from the Mississippi River across the
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad tracks for their new Granite City. With the help of the St. Louis city engineer, a street grid was laid out, with streets listed in alphabetic order plus numbered streets, and the only exception being Niedringhaus Avenue. The Niedringhaus family required that its employees live in the town. Houses were purchased with Niedringhaus mortgages. Unlike Pullman, however, they did not exert major control over the day-to-day lives of their employees and left the government of the city up to the residents. The first seven years went as planned with rapid growth. Henry Fossiek was hired as the first policeman, a school board of directors was appointed by the mayor, four schools opened, the First Church of the Concordian Lutheran Church was built, Stamping Company changed its name to National Enameling and Stamping Company (NESCO), and lots were sold for a new subdivision to be named Granite Park (more commonly known as West Granite, today). Then in 1903, a massive flood covered all of West Granite while the rest of the town stayed relatively dry. Starting in 1906, about 10,000 persons emigrated to Granite City from
Macedonia,
Bulgaria,
Hungary, and other parts of Central and Eastern Europe, during a two-year period. Most of these immigrants, primarily those from Hungary, moved to present-day
Lincoln Place. At the time, this area was called Hungary Hollow. During the
Panic of 1907, the neighborhood of Hungary Hollow was nicknamed Hungry Hollow, as many immigrants starved during this period. The following year, one of the founding fathers of the city and of NESCO, William Niedringhaus, died, leading to the beginning of a new era in both the company and the city's future. Also during this period, St. Joseph Catholic Church was organized and a canal and levee system were built. Methody Bulgarian Church in America was built in Hungary Hollow for the large number of
Bulgarians (incl. many
Macedonian Bulgarians) living there. At the time, Granite City had the largest concentration of Bulgarians in the country and boasted the only American newspaper printed in the
Bulgarian language. After the 1915
Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire, thousands of
Armenians fled the country and migrated to the United States. The promise of jobs at steel mills in Granite City created a thriving Armenian community in the town, with many Armenians settling in Lincoln Place. Since then, they have kept a church and community center, along with the Granite City "Antranig" Chapter of the
Armenian Youth Federation. Around 1903, Granite City expelled its African American residents. In 1967, the
Congress of Racial Equality alleged that Granite City was a
sundown town. Mayor Donald Partney acknowledged that the city was commonly understood to have a sundown ordinance, but denied that it was official.
2000s history , several large manufacturing corporations operate in the city, including
U.S. Steel, Precoat Metals,
Capri-Sun,
Kraft Foods, Heidtman Steel, Prairie Farms, and American Steel. In July 2018, President
Donald Trump visited the city to deliver a speech about industry growth at the U.S. Steel plant. A 2024 investigation into 17
coke-burning facilities in the US estimated that the SunCoke Energy plant in Granite City could be responsible for up to 11 premature deaths, increased
asthma symptoms, and other health impacts for residents every year. ==Geography==