Belvidere Hollow: KCQ unearths Kansas City’s Lost Black neighborhood

In the Historic Northeast, east of downtown and just beyond Interstate 29, lies Belvidere Park — what now may appear to be an empty space. But at the turn of the 20th century, the area was a burgeoning Black neighborhood. A local reader reached out to What’s Your KCQ? — a partnership between the Kansas City Public Library and The Kansas City Star — to see if Belvidere Hollow still exists. The short answer is no, but that comes with a story.

A pool? A skate park? The real story behind this KC neighborhood’s unique sculptures

A reader was intrigued by a handful of concrete structures resembling skateboard ramps on a grassy area off The Paseo, near 58th Street and Lydia Avenue — and reached out to What’s Your KCQ?, a collaboration between The Kansas City Public Library and The Kansas City Star, for an explanation. From a distance, these curved concrete surfaces bear a resemblance to ramps at a skatepark. But a closer look reveals gentle slopes interspersed with grassy patches, which would make skateboarding impractical. Instead, this is the site of the 49/63 Neighborhood Fountain, owned and maintained by Kansas City Parks and Recreation. Unfortunately, the fountain is not currently operational.

Railroad tycoon envisioned a grand Belgian settlement in Kansas City. Then came cholera

Today, Guinotte Avenue is a rather unassuming stretch of road running through Kansas City’s predominantly industrial East Bottoms. One hundred seventy years ago, however, the thoroughfare was the embodiment of one man’s dream to make Kansas City a global city and a center of Belgian immigrant culture in North America. Its history intrigued a local reader who asked What’s Your KCQ?, a partnership between the Kansas City Public Library and The Kansas City Star, for insight. Joseph Guinotte, the namesake of Guinotte Avenue, was born in the French-speaking Belgian city of Liège in 1815. A well-respected engineer by the early 1840s, he was appointed by Belgium’s king, Leopold I, to oversee construction of a railroad from Mexico City to Veracruz — under a government agreement to send engineers to construct railways in Mexico with Belgian materials. Before departing, Guinotte proposed to his sweetheart, Aimée Brichaut, and left with her promise that she would join him once he had settled in North America.

Searching for Vincent O. Carter

In June 2023, I travelled to Kansas City to research the early life of Vincent O. Carter, an African American writer who was born there in the North End in 1924. He was drafted into the Army at age 19 and sent to France. His unit arrived in Normandy shortly after the D-Day invasion at a time when all American troops, regardless of skin colour, were greeted as heroes. When Carter returned to the U.S., the G.I. bill enabled him to study English at Lincoln University. After graduating in 1950, he worked in an automobile plant in Detroit and saved money to return to Europe.

The strange case of Mr. Swope and Dr. Hyde

For more than a century, Kansas City has been haunted by the mysterious death of philanthropist Thomas Swope. Suspect number one is his nephew-in-law, Dr. Bennett Hyde, who stood to inherit a sizable portion of the Swope family fortune. But did Hyde really murder Thomas Swope, or was the physician actually the victim of a longstanding family grudge? This question was at the center of one of the most publicized murder trials of the early 20th century. Producer Mackenzie Martin walks host Suzanne Hogan through the evidence of this still-unsolved mystery.

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