Columbia
Columbia, city, seat of Boone county, near the Missouri River, central Missouri, U.S., midway between St. Louis and Kansas City. It was originally established (1819) as Smithton, but an inadequate water supply forced its move in 1821, when it was laid out and renamed Columbia. The rerouting of Boone’s Lick Trail (1822) stimulated its growth. In 1839 the town’s residents pledged $117,900 for the location in their city of a state university (now the University of Missouri), the first west of the Mississippi River. Stephens College for women was founded in the town in 1833, and Columbia College in 1851. Schools, professional associations, health care organizations, and insurance companies are now the main economic support, with some light manufacturing (air filters, automotive products, electronic components). A state cancer hospital and mental health clinic are also in the city. Finger Lakes State Park and Rock Bridge Memorial State Park are nearby. The MKT Trail links downtown Columbia to the Katy Trail, a limestone path following the old Kansas Texas Railroad route between Sedalia and St. Charles. Inc. 1826. Pop. (2010) 108,500; Columbia Metro Area, 172,786; (2020) 126,254; Columbia Metro Area, 210,864.