Volker Homes Built Around 1910 To Meet The Needs of Immigrants

Most of the homes we now occupy in Midtown were built in a relatively short period – from 1900 to about 1920. While some of Kansas City’s wealthiest families had moved south in the 1880s, the majority of homes were constructed to meet a rapidly-growing population after the turn of the century. For example, the […]

Volker Homes Built Around 1910 To Meet The Needs of Immigrants Read More »

How Central Hyde Park Prepared for Thanksgiving

As Thanksgiving approached in 1927, it’s a pretty good bet that Effie Kauffman of Central Hyde Park was working on her holiday planning. Mrs. Kauffman’s prize-winning Thanksgiving menu was shared in the Nov. 22 Kansas City Star that year. It included a grapefruit cocktail, turkey with oyster dressing, peas in cream, leaf lettuce with Thousand

How Central Hyde Park Prepared for Thanksgiving Read More »

In 1910, a Block of Immigrant Families in Valentine

As Kansas City neighborhoods filled up with residents after the turn of the 20th century, this block, like many others in Midtown, became home to many immigrants. In 1910, the residents of the area from Summit to Jefferson between 34th to 35th Streets came from Russia, Ireland, Denmark, Sweden, Germany, and Canada, mixing in with other families who

In 1910, a Block of Immigrant Families in Valentine Read More »

In 1923, Work Began on First Block of Country Club Plaza

J.C. Nichols, certainly one of the most important residential developers in Kansas City, started developing this block of the Country Club Plaza in 1922. Nichols had been building residential neighborhoods to the south of Brush Creek since 1907, and he saw the need for an area to provide goods and services for the new residents

In 1923, Work Began on First Block of Country Club Plaza Read More »

UMKC Block Includes Historic Carriage House Slated for Demolition Sept. 24

Before the establishment of what would become UMKC, the block bounded by 51st and 52nd between Rockhill and Holmes was home to one of Kansas City’s most splendid mansions. Walter Dickey, a prominent businessman, chose the site for his 25-room home on the crest of a wooded hill. The Dickey mansion, now used by UMKC as Scofield

UMKC Block Includes Historic Carriage House Slated for Demolition Sept. 24 Read More »

Scores of Schoolchildren, Judges and Bishops Visited this Southmoreland Home

If old houses hold the memories of those who have lived in and visited them, this home at 3959 Warwick would have had more stories to tell than most. The home—now replaced by an apartment building—was the long-time residence of lawyer and prominent philanthropist Sanford Ladd, and in his waning years, it was the frequent

Scores of Schoolchildren, Judges and Bishops Visited this Southmoreland Home Read More »