Belleville
Belleville, city, seat (1814) of St. Clair county, southwestern Illinois, U.S. It lies east of the Mississippi River, about 16 miles (26 km) from St. Louis, Missouri.
Located on bluffs forming the eastern rim of a floodplain along the Mississippi River, it was founded by George Blair of France in 1814 and given the French name for “Beautiful City.” For decades beginning in the 1830s, the city was transformed by an influx of German immigrants and the opening of coal mines in the vicinity. Belleville’s economy was diversified, with coal mining and manufacturing (cooking and heating equipment) as the primary factors. Scott Air Force Base (1917) is just east and forms the basis of the city’s economy. Agriculture (corn [maize], soybeans, wheat, and livestock) is also important, and there is some manufacturing of appliances and space heaters. Belleville is the seat of Southwestern Illinois (community) College (1946). Local attractions include a historical museum, located in a Greek Revival-style home built in 1866; the (Roman Catholic) Cathedral of St. Peter, founded in 1842 and modeled after a church in Exeter, England; and Emma Kunz House Museum, located in a typical German “street house” built in 1830. The 200-acre (80-hectare) National Shrine of Our Lady of the Snows (1958) is located just northwest. MidAmerica St. Louis Airport is located in Mascoutah, east of Belleville. Inc. village, 1819; city, 1850. Pop. (2000) 41,410; (2010) 44,478.