Paris of the Plains

Kansas City from Doughboys to Expressways

Nonfiction, Travel, Pictorials, Art & Architecture, Photography, History
Cover of the book Paris of the Plains by John Simonson, Arcadia Publishing Inc.
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Author: John Simonson ISBN: 9781614232766
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc. Publication: October 22, 2010
Imprint: The History Press Language: English
Author: John Simonson
ISBN: 9781614232766
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc.
Publication: October 22, 2010
Imprint: The History Press
Language: English
From the end of the Great War to the final years of the 1950s, Kansas Citians lived in a manner worthy of a place called Paris of the Plains. The title did more than nod to the perfumed ladies who shopped at Harzfeld's Parisian or the one-thousand-foot television antenna nicknamed the "Eye-full Tower." It spoke to the character of a town that worked for Boss Tom and danced for Count Basie but transcended both the Pendergast era and the Jazz Age. Author John Simonson introduces readers to a town of vaudeville shows and screened-in porches, where fleets of cream-and-black streetcars passed beneath a canopy of elms. This is a history that smells equally of lilacs and stockyards and bursts with the clamor of gunshots, radio baseball and the distant whistle of a night train.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
From the end of the Great War to the final years of the 1950s, Kansas Citians lived in a manner worthy of a place called Paris of the Plains. The title did more than nod to the perfumed ladies who shopped at Harzfeld's Parisian or the one-thousand-foot television antenna nicknamed the "Eye-full Tower." It spoke to the character of a town that worked for Boss Tom and danced for Count Basie but transcended both the Pendergast era and the Jazz Age. Author John Simonson introduces readers to a town of vaudeville shows and screened-in porches, where fleets of cream-and-black streetcars passed beneath a canopy of elms. This is a history that smells equally of lilacs and stockyards and bursts with the clamor of gunshots, radio baseball and the distant whistle of a night train.

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