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1940: It's the year Nazis rain bombs on London and goose-step into
Paris, when President Roosevelt wins an unprecedented third term
and Kansas Citians finally run the corrupt Pendergast political
machine out of power. The new reform-minded city government is bent
on cleaning up the sinful "Paris of the Plains" and streamlining
its future with wide, new miles of trafficways. Notorious
nightclubs have closed. The City Market opens. Glenn Miller swings,
Bojangles taps and "Gone with the Wind" premieres. Old buildings
make way for parking lots. A dying meteor lights up the night sky
above a racially segregated city, home to Charlie Parker, Thomas
Hart Benton, Walter Cronkite, Satchel Paige and Thomas J.
Pendergast, ex-con. It's all on display here in photographs snapped
by WPA workers and stories curated by John Simonson.
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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