-
-
Title
-
A KC Landmark Goes Overlooked
-
Description
-
Article marking the 100th year of the Hotel Muehlebach at 12th and Baltimore. First opened in May 1915 on the former site of the old First Baptist Church, the 500-room, 12-story, $2 million hotel quickly became a social epicenter for locals and visitors alike, and remained so through the mid-20th century. The hotel's elegant decor, various restaurants, musical entertainment, and high service standards attracted famous names such as Helen Keller, Bob Hope, The Beatles, Theodore Roosevelt, and Harry Truman. The guest rooms are no longer in use, but the hotel's public spaces are frequently booked for events, and most of the areas have been preserved as they originally appeared.
-
Date
-
2015-04-21
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Coon-Sanders Nighthawks
-
Description
-
Formal group portrait of orchestra at the Hotel Muehlebach.
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Coon-Sanders Nighthawks
-
Description
-
View of the Coon-Sanders Nighthawks posed at the Plantation Grille, Muehlebach Hotel, Kansas City, Missouri. Identified in Edmiston's book, standing: Carleton Coon and Joe Sanders, seated from left Kohlman, Nordberg, Estep, Williams, McLean, and J. Thiell.
-
Date
-
1923~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
SC1-1 Joe Sanders Collection Finding Aid
-
Description
-
Joe Sanders was born in Thayer, Kansas, and spent the majority of his childhood in the Kansas City area. He started his musical performances as a boy soprano in local church choirs and graduated from Westport High School. After World War I he organized an orchestra with Carleton Coon called the Nighthawks which played on the local radio and traveled the country. After Mr. Coon's untimely death in 1932, Sanders continued as a composer, piano player, singer, and conductor of his own band. Sanders died in 1965. This collection of material, such as scrapbooks, travelogues, photos, sheet music, etc., provides information and detail about Sanders, covering his formative musical years and later successful band career. It also contains information on the relationship between Carleton Coon and Joe Sanders and the formation and travels of their band in the 1920s.
-
Date
-
1908~/1950~
-
Object Type
-
Finding Aid