Ferguson

demonstrators in Ferguson, MissouriDemonstrators in Ferguson, Missouri, on August 15, 2014, after the identification of the police officer who shot and killed an unarmed teenager, Michael Brown, six days earlier.

Ferguson, city, St. Louis county, eastern Missouri, U.S. It is a northwestern residential suburb of St. Louis. Ferguson’s roots date to 1855, when farmer William B. Ferguson deeded a strip of land to the North Missouri Railroad. He stipulated that the railroad construct a depot on the site and make regular stops there. A residential and commercial community developed on the surrounding land as Ferguson sold it off to settlers. The advent of commuter trains and streetcars in the late 19th century facilitated the growth of the town, and in 1894 it was incorporated as a city. Ferguson grew steadily in the early 20th century and experienced an economic and population boom in the post-World War II era. Ferguson became a charter city in 1954 and adopted a council-manager system of government.

Ferguson is the headquarters of Emerson Electric, an international manufacturing and technology company that was founded in St. Louis in 1890 and moved to Ferguson beginning in the 1940s. The city is accessible to several interstate highways. Among its public recreational facilities are January-Wabash Memorial Park, which features a lake that is stocked for year-round fishing. The city is home to the Florissant Valley campus of the St. Louis Community College. In August 2014 the fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed African American teenager, by Darren Wilson, a white police officer, resulted in days of civil unrest and protests fueled by tensions between Ferguson’s predominantly black population and its predominantly white government and police department. The incident drew national and international attention. In November 2014 there was another round of unrest in Ferguson, after it was announced that Wilson would not face criminal charges in connection with the shooting, and protests also occurred in other American cities. Pop. (2000) 22,205; (2010) 21,203.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Noah Tesch.