Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1883 - Bobby Bell of the Kansas City Chiefs inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. 1985 World Series won by Kansas City Royals with Manager Dick Howser; Harris-Kearney House opens as a museum. 1986 - Town Pavilion hi-rise built. 1987 - Len Dawson of the Kansas City Chiefs inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. 1988 ACT UP chapter ...
The History of Kansas City: Together with a Sketch of the Commercial Resources of the Country with which it is Surrounded (Birdsall & Miller, 1881) online. Whitney, Carrie Westlake. Kansas City, Missouri: Its History and Its People 1808-1908. Vol. 3 (SJ Clarke publishing Company, 1908) biographies of prominent figures. online. Shirley ...
The list of people from Kansas City, ... Charlie Parker (1920-1955), jazz saxophonist and composer [48] James Scott (1885-1938), ragtime composer [49]
The Indiana University East campus included 225 acres (0.911 km 2) of land, purchased with community donations, on the northern edge of Richmond, Indiana. Of those 225 acres (0.91 km 2), 174 acres (0.70 km 2) are for IU East and 51 acres (0.21 km 2) are for other non-IU East post-secondary educational uses, such as Ivy Tech Community College.
Joy Bang – actress, born in Kansas City [8] Kay Barnes – mayor of Kansas City 1999–2007; Hector Barreto Sr. – activist and entrepreneur; H. Roe Bartle – mayor of Kansas City and namesake of Kansas City Chiefs; Lucas Bartlett – soccer player [9] Count Basie – jazz musician and bandleader; Noah Beery – actor; Wallace Beery ...
Paul and Jack’s Tavern in North Kansas City includes the Hornets Nest, a room paying tribute to North Kansas City High School. Paul & Jack’s Tavern Location : 1808 Clay St., North Kansas City
The four-story Tudor-Gothic structure contained 54 rooms, including six bathrooms, elevators, swimming pool, billiard room, barbershop, a custom organ, and a tunnel linking the east and west wings. [1] [2] Uriah Epperson was born in Indiana on December 22, 1861, and he came to Kansas City at the age of six.
Troost Avenue was continuously developed from 1834 into the 1990s. From the 1880s to 1920s, many prominent white Kansas Citians (including ophthalmologist Flavel Tiffany, Governor Thomas Crittenden, banker William T. Kemper, and MEC, S pastor James Porter) resided in mansions along what had been a farm-to-market road.