Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction, Diane Mutti Burke, Jason Roe, and John Herron
Part One: Politics and Progress in Kansas City’s “Golden Age”
1. The Other Tom’s Town: Thomas T. Crittenden Jr., Black Disfranchisement, and the Limits of Liberalism in Kansas City, John W. McKerley
2. Big Deal in Little Tammany: Kansas City, the Pendergast Machine, and the Liberal Transformation of the Democratic Party, Jeffrey L. Pasley
3. J. C. Nichols and Neighborhood Infrastructure: The Foundations of American Suburbia, Sara Stevens
4. “A Magnificent Tower of Strength”: The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Jaclyn Miller
5. Our Time to Shine: The 1928 Republican National Convention and Kansas City’s Rising Profile, Dustin Gann
Part Two: Breaking Barriers in a Segregated City
6. Making Meat: Race, Labor, and the Kansas City Stockyards, John Herron
7. The Bitterest Battle: The Effort to Unionize the Donnelly Government Company, Kyle Anthony
8. Morally and Legally Entitled: Women’s Political Activism in Kansas City, K. David Hanzlick
9. Collaborative Confrontation in the “Persistent Protest”: Lucile Bluford and the Kansas City Call, 1939-1942, Henrietta Rix Wood
10. “As Good as Money Could Buy”: Kansas City’s Black Public Hospital, Jason Roe
11. Kansas City’s Guadalupe Center and the Mexican Immigrant Community, Valerie M. Menoza
Part Three: Culture and an American Crossroads
12. “The Event of the Season”: Race, Charity, and Jazz in the 1920s Kansas City, Marc Rice
13. Radio Pioneers: The Coon-Sanders Nighthawks, Chuck Haddix
14. Thomas Hart Benton and Kansas City’s “Golden Age,” Henry Adams
15. From Proscenium to Inferno: The Interwar Transformation of Female Impersonation in Kansas City, Stuart Hinds
16. Kansas City’s Liberty Memorial: Remembering Then and Now, Keith Eggener
Contributors
Index