Pages
-
-
Title
-
Revolutionary Cigar Factory Didn't Last Long in Kansas City
-
Description
-
The American Cigar Co. announced in 1929 that they would open "the world's largest and finest cigar factory in Kansas City." The company opened in early 1930 at 6300 St. John in northeast Kansas City. But just two years later the company would close and remain empty until 1935, when Luce Packwood Manufacturing Co. located its operations there.
-
Date
-
1989-01-04
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Wiedenmann Family Came to Westport Area in 1850's
-
Description
-
Reprint of an article written by Dory DeAngelo that appeared in the Kansas City Star on July 20, 1988 about the Wiedenmann family that owned and operated a store on the northwest corner of Westport Road and Pennsylvania, which is now Kelly's Bar.
-
Date
-
2011-11
-
Object Type
-
Magazine Article
-
-
Title
-
When the Circus Came to the Northeast
-
Description
-
Kansas City historian and author, Dory DeAngelo, reminisces about the days when traveling circuses would visit Kansas City and put on performances in the Northeast neighborhood. From the early-1930s through the mid-1950s, the circuses would set up in a field near St. John Avenue and Belmont Boulevard across from the old Montgomery Wards building. The Northeast neighborhood was an ideal location because the KC Terminal Railiroad ran through the area.
-
Date
-
2007-11-21
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
Pages