Diane L. Mutti Burke (Professor of History; Co-Director of Center for Digital and Public Humanities, University of Missouri-Kansas City)
May 6, 2025
Kansas City was at the crossroads of the nation in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Located at the nexus of transportation networks, the region played a central role in white Americans’ movement westward and the national conflict over the expansion of slavery. As the city grew in the decades after the Civil War, Kansas City developed into a microcosm of the nation, reflecting the larger cultural and historical forces that shaped the era in US history. City leaders boasted of Kansas City’s economic and civic triumphs and culture flourished, yet these achievements occurred in a political, social, and economic landscape fraught with machine politics, vice, racial inequities, and residents’ enduring fight for their rights and freedoms.
Subjects
Education Studies / History / American Civil War / American History / American Westward Expansion / Racial Inequality / Slavery / Kansas City, MO /
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