Pages
-
-
Title
-
Simpson House
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Simpson House at 4509 Walnut Street in the early 1980s. The home was built in 1909 for Burnett Simpson and was occupied by the family until 1983, when it was acquired by the neighboring All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church for use as an event space and additional space for church activities.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
4112 Warwick Boulevard
-
Description
-
Photograph of a house at 4112 Warwick Boulevard in the early 1980s. The house immediately to the north had been recently demolished to make way for a parking lot for a neighboring apartment building.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
4108-10 Warwick Boulevard
-
Description
-
Photograph of a duplex residence at 4108-10 Warwick Boulevard in the early 1980s. The building was later demolished to create a parking lot for the neighboring apartment buidling.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Simpson House
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Simpson House at 4509 Walnut Street in the early 1980s, showing a closer view of the arched front door and the approach to the door. The home was built in 1909 for Burnett Simpson and was occupied by the family until 1983, when it was acquired by the neighboring All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church for use as an event space and additional space for church activities.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
4310 Warwick Boulevard Garage
-
Description
-
Photograph of the garage carriage house at the rear of the 4310 Warwick Boulevard property in the early 1980s. The building and driveway appear to be in a state of disrepair. The home was built in 1910 and became known as the Kersey Coates Reed Residence, for the Kansas City attorney and his bride, who were given the home in 1911 as a wedding gift by the bride's father, John G. Shedd, president of Chicago's Marshall Field & Co.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
39th and Main Streets
-
Description
-
Photograph of the northeast corner of 39th and Main Streets, circa 1980, including the Hotel Netherlands apartment building. The Hyde Park building, at right, opened in 1916, and at the time of this photo, the ground floor was occupied by the Adult Literary Guild adult bookstore, which was evicted in 1982 as part of a neighborhood redevelopment effort lead by J. Nelson Happy.
-
Date
-
1980~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
610 East 47th Street
-
Description
-
Photograph of a house at 610 East 47th Street in the early 1980s. The house, known as the "Rockhill Clubhouse," was built by William Rockhill Nelson circa 1902 and stands adjacent to his former Oak Hall property (now the Nelson-Atkins Musuem of Art) at the corner of Rockhill Road and 47th Street/Emanuel Cleaver II Boulevard.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Simpson House
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Simpson House at 4509 Walnut Street in the early 1980s. The home was built in 1909 for Burnett Simpson and was occupied by the family until 1983, when it was acquired by the neighboring All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church for use as an event space and additional space for church activities.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
3921 Warwick Boulevard
-
Description
-
Photograph of a house at 3921 Warwick Boulevard in the early 1980s. The ornamented roofline of Westport High School can be seen in the background of the image, above garage at the rear of the property. The neighboring house to the north, visible at the left edge of the image, and other houses on the north end of the block were razed to make room for an additional parking lot for the high school.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
3923 Warwick Boulevard
-
Description
-
Photograph of a house at 3923 Warwick Boulevard in the early 1980s. Numerous houses on the north end of the block had recently been razed to make room for an additional parking lot for Westport High School, one block to the east.
-
Date
-
1980~/1989~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Seville Plaza Apartments
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Seville Plaza Apartments, at 4545-47 Main Street, circa 1981. While most of the buildings on the block were razed to for parking lots or new hotels and other construction, this building remains as of 2018.
-
Date
-
1981~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
301-21 East 43rd Street
-
Description
-
Photograph of a block of Kansas City sixplex colonnade apartments at 301-21 East 43rd Street, at the corner of 43rd and McGee, circa 1981. These apartments, in a variation on a style common in the city, were built in the early 1920s, and remain standing as of 2018.
-
Date
-
1981~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Clint's Comics
-
Description
-
Photograph of Clint's Comics, at 3943 Main, and neighboring businesses at the intersection of Main Street and westport Road, circa 1982. Signs for Harling's Upstairs bar and Love Records can be seen on the Southwell Building to the north, and Bell's Restaurant is in the adjacent building to the south. Clint's later moved to the Love Records space and operated there for several decades.
-
Date
-
1982~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Mineral Hall
-
Description
-
Photograph of the home known as Mineral Hall, circa 1982. The building was designed in 1903 by Louis Curtiss, and was the residence of Roland Bruner, whose mining wealth inspired the Mineral Hall name. A small 1905 addition to the home was designed to house Bruner's collection of mineral specimens. It was donated to the Kansas City Art Institute in 1968, and at the time of the photo, housed various administrative offices for the school and studio space for faculty. The home was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
-
Date
-
1982~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
90 Minute Dry Cleaners and A1 Sewing Machine Company
-
Description
-
Photograph of 90 Minute Dry Cleaners at 3951 Main Street, and A1 Sewing Machine Company at 3957 Main, circa 1982. The original facade of the building was replaced after a major fire started in the dry cleaning business in 1976.
-
Date
-
1982~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Meyer Building
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Meyer Building at 3923-25 Main Street, circa 1982, which was designed by architect Robert F. Gornall and built in 1916. Midwest Cyclery is the building's current ground-floor tenant. A Christian Science Reading Room, at 3921 Main, stands to its left, and a Salvation Army thrift store, in the former Warwick Theater, is to its right.
-
Date
-
1982~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Meyer Building
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Meyer Building at 3923-25 Main Street, circa 1982, which was designed by architect Robert F. Gornall and built in 1916. A thrift shop is the building's ground-floor tenant at the time of the photo. A Christian Science Reading Room, at 3921 Main, stands to its left, and a Salvation Army thrift store, in the former Warwick Theater, is to its right.
-
Date
-
1982~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Meyer Building
-
Description
-
Photograph of the Meyer Building at 3923-25 Main Street, circa 1982, which was designed by architect Robert F. Gornall and built in 1916. Midwest Cyclery is the building's current ground-floor tenant. A Christian Science Reading Room, at 3921 Main, stands to its left, and a Salvation Army thrift store, in the former Warwick Theater, is to its right.
-
Date
-
1982~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Kansas City Art Institute
-
Description
-
Photograph of Warwick Boulevard just south of its intersection with 45th Street, looking northwest adjacent to the Kansas City Art Institute, circa 1980. KCAI's Student Living Center can be seen at the right of the image, and a brick gateway entrance to the campus at the left edge of the image.
-
Date
-
1980~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
-
-
Title
-
Vanderslice Hall at Kansas City Art Institute
-
Description
-
Photograph of Vanderslice Hall at the Kansas City Art Institute, located at 4415 Warwick Boulevard, looking west from the entry drive off Warwick, circa 1980. The building was constructed as a home for August Meyer, first president of Kansas City's Board of Parks Commissioners, in 1895-6. Designed by Van Brunt and Howe, the family called the home "Marburg" and lived there until in 1927. It was then purchased by local businessman Howard Vanderslice for $140,000 and donated to the Kansas City Art Institute. It housed classrooms and studios initially, and later servedas an administrative building for the college. An auditorium addition was added in 1930, designed by local architecture firm Wight and Wight. A neighborhood homes tour was established in the early 1980s as a fundraiser to support refurbishing Vanderslice Hall and undoing mid-century modernizations. The building was added to the National Registry of Historic Places during the same time period.
-
Date
-
1980~
-
Object Type
-
Photograph
Pages