Beneath Lee’s Summit Skies, Pat Metheny in Kansas City

In February 1964, an estimated 73 million Americans watched the Beatles perform on “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

An unknown number of young people watching immediately resolved to start their own bands. Among them was a Lee’s Summit nine-year-old named Pat Metheny, who formed a group with friends and began performing garage band hits of the 1960s, such as “Hang On Sloopy.” Over time, while many of his peers eventually put down their guitars, Metheny did not.

Further, his musical tastes evolved as he discovered jazz guitar. Today, more than 50 years later, it’s easy to assume that Metheny’s international reputation and many music industry awards were easily won. But, as detailed by Metheny biographer Carolyn Glenn Brewer, they were instead the result of his personal resolve and determination over many years - and maybe Lee’s Summit unique musical heritage.

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A Century of Speed

This month, the Kansas Speedway was expected to draw thousands of auto racing fans for a series of races.

The Wyandotte County track opened in 2001, but the Kansas City area’s auto racing legacy goes back at least 100 years. In September 1922, big crowds congregated to watch the inaugural race of the Kansas City Speedway, a unique wooden track built on approximately the same site as the former Bannister Federal Complex, just north of Bannister Road and east of Troost Avenue, in Jackson County.

In this month’s E-Journal Steve Hartwich, a member of the Jackson County Historical Society board of directors explains how - even 100 years ago - the cars were fast and their drivers were fearless.

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Katy Trail

In 2022, more Missouri residents likely associate the “Katy” more with a walk than a ride.

That’s because, for more than 30 years hikers – and cyclists, runners, and others - have been able the traverse the former Missouri right-of-way of the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, routinely referred to as the “Katy.”

Today Missouri officials consider Katy Trail State Park the longest continuous recreational trail in the country and, since it opened in 1990, it has gripped the imagination of walkers both veterans and beginners.

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Blevins Davis: In Pursuit of Pageantry

From June 2 through 5 experts in British protocol and ceremony held forth on television, detailing the events in and around Buckingham Palace which included – during the “Platinum Party at the Palace” - the rock group Queen and the actual Elizabeth II sitting down to tea with the animated Paddington Bear.

In 1953 Blevins Davis had been one of those royal watchers.

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James A. Reed: Politician & Statesman

His character, charisma and career once held prominence and dominance on the local, state, national and international stage.

As United States senator from Missouri from 1911 through 1929, he led the fight against President Woodrow Wilson’s goal of American entry into the League of Nations following World War I.

He appeared on the cover of Time Magazine on March 7, 1927, as he considered another presidential run. His opposition to President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal catapulted him from the Democrats to the Party of Lincoln.

Today the name of James A Reed is remembered for a road in Kansas City and a nature preserve in Jackson County. This was not the case during his lifetime, as no one held a more commanding and dominating presence. He was a gladiator in the courtroom and an uncompromising politician. And while his legal and political careers were compelling and domineering, Reed’s personal life was filled with intrigue, scandal, and secrecy.

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Kansas City’s History in Photos

For the past several months Erin Gray, digital archivist for the Jackson County Historical Society, has been tasked with processing the vast Wilborn Collection of archival images. Steve Noll, former Society executive director, with his wife Marianne, donated the collection to the Society in 2017.

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More Space, Extra Room - New Era

The Jackson County Historical Society has been privileged to maintain one of the county’s most accommodating attics.

And, anyone with an attic knows how they tend to fill up.

After more than 60 years of receiving and processing the generous donations of county residents and families, the Society has run out of available nooks and crannies. Accordingly, this winter, Society staff members took unprecedented steps to ensure the longtime health of its one-of-kind archival holdings.

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Alversia Pettigrew

In recognition of Black History Month, this issue of the E-Journal salutes Alversia Pettigrew, the author of a book about 'The Neck,' the Black neighborhood in Independence in which she was raised. The 'Neck' was demolished in the 1960s when the city implemented Urban Renewal. In her book Alversia shares her experiences growing up Black in Independence, and recalls a vanished neighborhood which was once home to generations of African Americans.

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THE KANSAS CITY MUSEUM: RESTORED AND REIMAGINED

The Kansas City Museum, shut down for several years, reopened in October.

The refurbished museum today brands itself as “Home of the Whole Story,” a description that rings true. Since its opening in 1940, generations of Kansas City area students and visitors have found there Kansas City’s complex narrative from frontier outpost to sprawling nine-county community.


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Evan S. Connell

Kansas City was the fount of Connell’s early creativity. His family life, which largely played out in the comforts of Brookside and Mission Hills, can be inferred from the pages of his best-known works of fiction, the companion novels Mrs. Bridge (1959) and Mr. Bridge (1969). Those books present an upper-crust slice of Kansas City’s social fabric as it existed in the 1930s and 1940s. The Bridge novels have—or should have—been required reading in Kansas City for decades, alternately loved for their crisp and intimate vignettes and warily regarded for their aching truths and acid views of middle-American hypocrisy.

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Veterans Oral History

More than 16 million Americans served during World War II.

Over the course of 10 years, Gary Swanson sat down with more than 1,000 of them. “Every one of them had a story to tell,” he said recently.

Evidence of that can be found today in the Truman Courthouse in Independence.

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Building Chanute’s Bridge

As a historian, David Jackson is drawn to Kansas City and Jackson County’s origin stories. And, the building and opening of the Hannibal Bridge may be Kansas City’s ultimate origin story. Officials dedicated the span - the first permanent bridge across the Missouri River - on July 3, 1869.

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THE 1918 KANSAS CITY INFLUENZA EPIDEMIC

Just like today, Jackson Countians roughly 100 years ago were wearing masks and working from home. In this latest edition of the JCHS E-Journal we're featuring an article that originally appeared in the Missouri Historical Review in 1968. Writer Kevin McShane explores how Kansas City coped with the great influenza of 1918. Lessons learned 100 years ago can help guide our way today.

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Old Railroad Depots in Independence

We will periodically republish classic articles pulled from the archives. We hope you will enjoy this article, Old Rail Depots in Independence, which was originally published in the April-May-June issue of 1982.

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Kansas City Black History

Our latest E-Journal article was written by Joe Roberston with the Local Investment Commission and describes a new 44-page digital and print publication Kansas City Black History: The African American story of history and culture in our community. The project shares the stories of over 70 African Americans from the Kansas City region who have passed along with current essays including one from Kansas City, Missouri Mayor Quinton Lucas.

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Alexander Doniphan Goes to Court

This article is reprinted with permission from the new book The Will of Missouri: The Life, Times and Influence of Alexander Doniphan. The book was a community history project organized by the Alexander Doniphan Committee and published by Woodneath Press, an imprint of the Mid-Continent Public Library. The book contains articles and contributions from 18 contributors exploring Doniphan’s life and influence and was endorsed by the State Historical Society of Missouri as one of the many projects to help celebrate Missouri’s 2021 Bicentennial.

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