Pages
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Title
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Westport Public Schools
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Description
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Schedules for openings of Westport public schools, including the Penn School for "colored" or black children.
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Date
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1895-09-14
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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Westport 'Steptoe' Neighborhood Stepping into History
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Description
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Article about Steptoe, "pre Civil War-era enclave" just south of Westport bounded by Broadway, Summit and 43rd Terrace. The small community, officially Pate's Addition to the Town of Westport, included Penn School, St. Luke African-American Episcopal Church and St. James Baptist Church.
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Date
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2006-10-25
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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Westport to Lose Oldest Church Building
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Description
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St. Luke's AME Church, at the corner of 43rd and Roanoke, will be demolished because of the widening of 43rd Street and the "general deterioration of the building". Organized soon after the Civil War to serve the surrounding area of ex-slaves, the congregation's current building was constructed in 1891.
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Date
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2003
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Object Type
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Newsletter Article
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Title
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Penn School: Westport's Historic School for Black Children
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Description
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Article tells the story of Penn School on Pennsylvania Avenue between 42nd and 43rd Streets. Penn School is less well-known than other African American schools because it was small and served a neighborhood (Westport) not generally associated with the African American community. The school closed in 1955 and was demolished in 1969 following a fire. A plaque commemorates the site.
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Date
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2006-01
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Object Type
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Newsletter Article
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Title
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The Penn School
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Description
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History of Penn School in Westport, started after the Civil War for African American children with its own structure built in 1880, closed in 1955, and burned in 1967.
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Date
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1961
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Object Type
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Manuscript
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Title
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African American School
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Description
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The first public school for black people in the city, located in Westport, is mentioned in the abstract under SEMINARY LANDS: 2.71 acres between colored schoolhouse and Main Cross Street in Westport (SW ¼ of Sec. 20, T 49, Range 33) - Jackson County, Mo. - Significant parties involved: James Jennings, John Campbell, Christina McCoy.
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Object Type
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Archival Material
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Title
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Schools Return to Normal after Kansas City Disturbance
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Description
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News of schools being damaged after four days of rioting, including cherry bombing at Westport High School, some sources citing schools as the spark for city-wide riots.
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Date
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1968-04-19
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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Bill Craig Named Student Assistant to Chancellor
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Description
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File containing a biographical article about Bill Craig, a 27-year-old "Penn Valley Community College student" named "the new student assistant to the Chancellor of the Junio College District of Metropolitan Kansas City," with office at 560 Westport Road and rresidence at 910 East 47th Street.
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Date
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1975-01-10
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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SC69-4 Steptoe Oral History Collection
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Description
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This collection contains the planning documents and footage related to an oral history project to record experiences of people living and working in the Steptoe neighborhood. The collection also includes a film produced by Thompson Productions of Kansas City in conjunction with the oral history project, “A Step above the Plaza: Celebrating Westport’s African-American Community”.
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Date
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2006/2007
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Object Type
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Finding Aid
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Title
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SC29 Olive L. Hoggins Papers (Centenary History of the Churches) Finding Aid
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Description
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This collection of the personal files of Olive Hoggins contains correspondence, photographs, newspaper clippings, edited versions of congregational histories, ephemera, etc. Most of the denominational history pertains to Kansas City, although some Independence and other area churches are included. Research materials consist primarily of photocopies of newspaper articles; publications from individual churches; as well as programs and other documents. The photos consist of pictures of church buildings, as well as over 100 portraits of clergymen. It appears that the Missouri Valley Historical Society sponsored this work, starting in the early 1920s. Olive Hoggins was the compiler and writer, probably intending to publish a book, but the material seems never to have been issued in book form and was only published in the Saturday church page of the Kansas City Post, appearing between 1927 and 1930.
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Date
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1923/1930
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Object Type
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Finding Aid
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Title
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Mill Creek Boulevard from 42nd Street
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Description
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View looking north along the Mill Creek Boulevard path from 42nd Street. Houses can be seen in the background. Two individuals standing together and a child can be seen.
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Date
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1910-04-26
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Object Type
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Photograph
Pages