KCQ: What happened to downtown Kansas City’s Christmas crowns?

Michael Wells

KCQ Reader Annette S. Bright asked The Kansas City Star and the Kansas City Public Library a question about an iconic set of KC holiday symbols.

“What happened to all the Christmas decorations that used to be downtown, particularly the crowns strung across the streets with garland?”

Short of digging through the attic at City Hall, my first thought was to consult longtime Kansas City Times and Star editor Monroe Dodd’s 2001 book Christmastime in Kansas City.

View looking west along 11th Street from Walnut Street. The section known as Petticoat Lane is outfitted with Christmas decorations.
Petticoat Lane during the Christmas shopping season in 1949 before the crowns were displayed. KANSAS CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY

According to Dodd, the Christmas shopping season was a modest affair in the years before World War I. The economic boom that followed the war changed things, and beginning in 1924, a group of downtown retailers pooled their resources to festoon the streets with garland and other decorations. In 1925, they added a parade to kick off the holiday season.

1932 KC Star clipping showing the downtown Christmas Parade
1932 KC Star clipping showing the downtown Christmas Parade. KANSAS CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY

As you might have guessed, holiday shopping took a hit during the Great Depression. The parade was even called off for two seasons beginning in 1930. In what must have been a signal of things to come, a new retail development to the south, the Country Club Plaza, held its first organized Christmas lighting ceremony that same year.

Postcard of the Country Club Plaza lights at Christmas in 1937.
1937 postcard showing the Christmas lights on the Country Club Plaza. KANSAS CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY

Even with the rise of the Plaza and other shopping destinations, downtown retail sales remained stable throughout World War II. Just like in the 1920s, spending really picked up after the war, driven by a period of unprecedented prosperity in American history. And while the Downtown Merchants Association (DMA) was poised to take advantage of the economic boom, the forces working against them must have been daunting. Each year cheaper and cheaper automobiles and the rush to the suburbs made downtown trips less and less attractive to shoppers.

1962 advertisement promoting the use of new expressways to bypass downtown.
1962 advertisement promoting the use of new expressways to bypass downtown. THE KANSAS CITY STAR

Hoping to make the downtown experience worth the trip, in 1962 the DMA drew up plans for a set of Christmas crowns to be suspended high in the air to dazzle shoppers. The Mannequin Company of Independence, Missouri (now Manneco, Inc.), was contracted to fabricate the crowns, each being about 13 feet high, 17 feet in diameter, and weighing approximately 2,000 pounds.

Postcard of Christmas crowns and decorations at 11th Street and Walnut along Petticoat Lane.
Postcard showing a downtown Christmas crown near the Emery, Bird, and Thayer department store. KANSAS CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY

Installing these behemoths each November was quite the undertaking. Specially designed brackets were attached to the third floor of each building at key intersections in the retail district, aircraft grade cable was attached to the crowns, and they were hoisted into position from a flatbed truck. In addition to the manpower needed to install the crowns, a great deal of electricity was also required to produce their warm holiday glow. In fact, each required a dedicated electrical transformer to safely power its more than 100 60-watt light bulbs.

Christmas crown suspended above a busy downtown Kansas City intersection
Christmas crown suspended above a busy downtown Kansas City intersection. THE KANSAS CITY STAR

The original crowns were displayed each Christmas season through 1966. The winter elements were hard on them over the years, and a new set of lighter weight, more energy efficient crowns were ordered for Christmas 1967. The DMA also ordered a set of smaller crowns that could be mounted to streetlights.

Unfortunately, downtown retail continued to decline through the 1970s, with the crowns making their final appearance for Christmas in 1976.

1983 Proposed redesign of Petticoat Lane, adding elevated walkways, escalators, and a glass ceiling to mimic the shopping mall experience
1983 Proposed redesign of Petticoat Lane, adding elevated walkways, escalators, and a glass ceiling to mimic the shopping mall experience. KANSAS CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY

In addition to evolving shopping habits, big changes to the downtown architectural environment also contributed to their demise. Safely installing the crowns required a building at the corner of each intersection. With Kansas City deep in the urban renewal era, buildings in the downtown retail district were coming down fast. Even if the DMA had wanted to keep displaying the crowns, it simply wasn’t physically possible for them to do so.

1983 map of downtown Kansas City from 1983 showing the loss of buildings
1983 map of downtown Kansas City from 1983 showing the loss of buildings (black dots represent vacant areas; pink dots represent parking). KANSAS CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY

Already struggling against competitors outside of the city center, the opening of Crown Center in the 1970s and modern shopping malls across the metropolitan area drew even more shoppers away from downtown.

Interior view of the Ward Parkway Shopping Mall. Retail storefronts and shoppers can be seen.
Shoppers enjoying an enclosed shopping experience at Ward Parkway Shopping Center. KANSAS CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY

With the future of downtown retail uncertain, the larger crowns were put into storage. The smaller streetlight crowns continued to appear until the early 1980s when the DMA was unable to raise the funds to light them. Shortly thereafter, they were sold to Kansas City, Kansas, and were used to decorate their downtown streets through the early 1990s.

The larger crowns remained in storage for a time, before reportedly being sold to the city of Holton, Kansas, to be refashioned into jungle gyms. Writing for The Star in 2004, Tim Engle reported that no one in the Holton city clerk’s office, even the old timers, had any memory of the purchase.

Zona Rosa Town Center revived the tradition in 2004 and displayed holiday crowns modeled after the originals that once hung downtown.

The crowns displayed in Zona Rosa were modeled after the downtown originals
The crowns displayed in Zona Rosa were modeled after the downtown originals. THE KANSAS CITY STAR

For the time being at least, the fate of the original downtown crowns remains a bit of a mystery.


 

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