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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
A re-post of what I'm building on ssp. Source: KC Library (public domain) In the 20's and 30's, KC was the It city between Chicago and San Francisco. Because KC was the only city to completely ignore the Prohibition and was less impacted by the Great Depression, KC thrived in the early half of the 20th century. KC was a major jazz center during the Prohibition because it was the best place for musicians to get work - bars were freely open and didn't close. As a result, KC was the third largest convention city in that period. 1921. Union Station is the second largest train station in the US, behind Grand Central. Check out the people on the roof.  Late 20's. Fidelity Bank building under construction. 36 floors. Is now renovated into residential, the tallest residential in midwest outside Chicago.  Late 20's. Power and Light building under construction. 34 floors. Also proposed for residential conversion.  1920's winter scene.    Cigar counter  Westgate Hotel. Gone.  Waiting for streetcars.  Late 20's. Power and Light under construction. When TWA was based in KC....  Hundreds more coming...
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Last edited by ignatius on Thu Feb 05, 2009 10:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:44 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:45 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
From the KC library... "Queens" of the Priests of Pallas festivals (1887-1924) were disguised and their identity never disclosed during the festival events. It was later revealed that the "queens" were, in fact, men. At the time, it was felt the parade and other activities would be too strenuous for a woman. Drawing cross-dressers from the region, many burlesque performers at cabaret clubs during the jazz era were actually men. Yes, the library claims these are men at least in the first 2 pics. Could the term 'queen' be taken any more literally? 1896. Check out the goth dude. 1905 1900 Early 30's. All women hotel.. lesbos inn? Opened years before San Francisco's first lesbian bar.  1890s? Strike a pose.  And while on topic.... Bank building, now a lesbian bar. 
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Last edited by ignatius on Wed May 04, 2011 3:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:46 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
1929. Ruled as bankrupt suicide. Jumped off the 20-story Commerce bank
building onto the loading dock. Stock market crash victim or
tangled up with the wrong crowd?
Original City Hall
Gone.. (fire)

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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:47 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
1929. Ruled as bankrupt suicide. Jumped off the 20-story Commerce bank
building onto the loading dock. Stock market crash victim or
tangled up with the wrong crowd?
Original City Hall
Gone.. (fire)

____________________________ City guide via MAX bus
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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:47 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
1950, when TWA was based in KC...
ca. 1930. It's hard to see but the two tallest buildings are being topped off at the same same. P&L lower left and Fidelity Bank upper right.

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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:48 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
THE RAILS
KC began as a rail hub and is now the second largest rail center in the US.
Check out my 'Hiking The Rails' thread...
http://www.skyscraperpage.com/forum/showthread.php?s=&threadid=25789&highlight=hiking+the+rails
This shot was taken from downtown looking down into the
West Bottoms industrial district. About 1900.
This is a cable car run, not street car. KC had lots of street cars but also had the 3rd largest cable car system.

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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:49 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
More cable cars...
1880's. Cable car line under construction. The building on the
right is now that awful Mexican restaurant next to the Peanut.

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| Tue May 04, 2004 11:50 pm |
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tat2kc
Bryant Building
Joined: Thu Feb 20, 2003 12:32 am Posts: 4196 Location: freighthouse district
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
Excellent photo history of the city! its a shame how much we've lost.
_________________ Are you sure we're talking about the same God here, because yours sounds kind of like a dick.
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| Wed May 05, 2004 12:00 am |
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KCK
Bryant Building
Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2003 4:40 pm Posts: 3561 Location: Kansas City, Kansas
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
KC still is a powerhouse.
_________________ New Body, New Job, New SOUL!!!!
KCK IS BACK!!!!
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QueSi2Opie
Bryant Building
Joined: Tue Nov 12, 2002 8:05 pm Posts: 3864 Location: Hangin' with the cons, crazies, and crackheads on 11th & Grand.
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
I'd love to have a time machine!
_________________ The Pendergast Poltergeist Project!
I finally divorced beer and proposed to whiskey, but I occassionally cheat with fine wine.
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| Wed May 05, 2004 3:09 am |
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trailerkid
City Center Square
Joined: Mon Oct 07, 2002 10:49 pm Posts: 11221 Location: San Francisco, California
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
This should be titled "When downtown was a powerhouse"... \
Downtown will be back, better than ever.
_________________Say hi to me here: @hatercopter / Facebook / kolbecktrain@gmail.com
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| Wed May 05, 2004 3:39 am |
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GRID
City Center Square
Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 6:20 pm Posts: 13819
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
ignatius, I love these historic threads you create. The ones on SSP are great. I really enjoy reading your captions, I have trully learned quite a bit from them. Keep up the great research on KC!
Nice job, now you get a sticky 
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| Wed May 05, 2004 4:45 am |
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tat2kc
Bryant Building
Joined: Thu Feb 20, 2003 12:32 am Posts: 4196 Location: freighthouse district
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
I think my favorite pic is the one of a block of buildings, very victorian, with domes, and turrets, and bay windows and such. I think its an old block of rowhouses. They are just incredible! Its too bad they didn't survive. I'd love to see someone build a housing development like that again today. It has so much character.
_________________ Are you sure we're talking about the same God here, because yours sounds kind of like a dick.
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| Wed May 05, 2004 2:07 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
Then...
Now...
[img]http
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| Sun May 16, 2004 4:22 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
Then... (1910)
Now... (yes, 12 stories were added in the 30's - now renovating to condos)

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| Sun May 16, 2004 4:23 pm |
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ignatius
Oak Tower
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 8:42 pm Posts: 4633 Location: Midtown/Downtown
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
Then... 1920's
Same building 1940's. Mid-nite burlesque shows anyone?
Now... Note the different placemenet of fire escapes.

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| Sun May 16, 2004 4:24 pm |
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KCK
Bryant Building
Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2003 4:40 pm Posts: 3561 Location: Kansas City, Kansas
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
Do you mind if I add a couple of small pictures from Kansas City, KS? After all the two cities are linked to the past.
This is Minnesota looking west from 6th street in the 1930's.
This is the 500 block of Minnesota in the early 1900's.
This is Central Ave. between 7th and 8th streets back in 1909.
This is a picture of them building the scottish rite temple in 1908.
Here is the temple as it stands today. Minus the big green flag.
Here is the Elks Club Building aka. the Huron Building. The cities first, and last great skyscraper.

_________________ New Body, New Job, New SOUL!!!!
KCK IS BACK!!!!
Last edited by KCK on Thu May 27, 2004 10:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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| Thu May 27, 2004 10:09 pm |
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KCK
Bryant Building
Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2003 4:40 pm Posts: 3561 Location: Kansas City, Kansas
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
I wanted to add that in 1950 was 18.7 square miles, had a population of 129,553, and a population density of 6928 a square mile, which meant it was slightly more dense than Kansas City, MO.
_________________ New Body, New Job, New SOUL!!!!
KCK IS BACK!!!!
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| Thu May 27, 2004 10:14 pm |
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KCDevin
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 When Downtown KC was a powerhouse - A must see for all
umm, I've brought this up before, you cannot take population and divide it by area for the density, because it doesn't reflect true density.
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| Thu May 27, 2004 10:18 pm |
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