St. Louis Region
Two rivers define the county: the Mississippi and the Cuivre
The county is bracketed by the big Mississippi on the east and the smaller Cuivre running through it, two very different waters that shape recreation, flooding, and land use.
Lincoln County is shaped by two very different rivers. The Mississippi forms the eastern boundary as a wide, working commercial river with bottomland and levees behind it. The Cuivre River is a smaller inland stream that winds through the county and lends its name to Cuivre River State Park. The two waters play different roles: the Mississippi drives floodplain, levee, and drainage questions on the eastern edge, while the Cuivre is more about local stream corridors and recreation. For anyone learning the county, separating the two rivers is the first step to understanding where flood risk, farmland, and parkland sit. Conservation and state-parks sources are the reliable anchors for fishing, access, and natural-area information on these waters.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Lincoln County. See every local note for the county on its page.