A City Divided: The Racial Landscape of Kansas City, 1900-1960
Binary
Title |
Title
Title
A City Divided: The Racial Landscape of Kansas City, 1900-1960
|
||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Content type |
Content type
|
||||||
Description |
Description
Section of the book which describes late 19th century and early 20th century African American housing sections of the city. These include Hell's Half Acre, Church Hill, Belvidere Hollow, and the Vine Street Corridor. Includes demographic graphs and U.S. census data from the time period.
|
||||||
Creator Name |
Creator Name
Creator: Schirmer, Sherry Lamb
|
||||||
Item Type |
Item Type
|
||||||
Date(s) |
Date(s)
2002
|
||||||
Subject (local) |
Subject (local)
|
||||||
Digital Collection(s) |
Digital Collection(s)
|
||||||
Note(s) |
Note(s)
Hell's Half Acre was located in a section of the West Bottoms and originated in the late 1860s; Church Hill was located just southeast of the city's commercial center and got its name from two black churches named Allen Chapel A.M.E. and Second Baptist; Belvidere and Hicks Hollows were in the North End east of the city's old commercial center roughly between 5th and Independence Ave. and Troost and Lydia; and the Vine Street Corridor was on the East side between Troost and Woodland and 12th to 25th Streets.
|
||||||
Part |
Part
|
||||||
Shelf Locator |
Shelf Locator
305.8 S337c
|
||||||
Restriction on Access |
Restriction on Access
This document is not available online. You may come to the Missouri Valley Room to view it or request a photocopy from the Library's Document Delivery service. http://www.kclibrary.org/copy-requests
|