Bring Me the Head of Harry Truman

Submitted by Mary Christine

Here a few factoids Cashill leaves out, probably to keep the essay on the short side.

Tom Pendergast controlled Kansas City, Missouri from about 1925 to 1939. Truman would never made it to the Whitehouse without Pendergast backing his rise in politics in Missouri. Brush Creek runs through the south side of the Plaza which made the area a bit swampy with a tendancy to flood. NIchols took a big risk developing this area. Pendergast owned Readymix Concrete and lined the creek with concrete. Rumor has it that some bodies are entombed in that concrete. He also owned several speak easy type clubs that never got raided because Pendergast made sure the Feds were paid enough in bribes to stay away.

JC NIchols grandson recently stated in an editorial in the Kansas City Star that when his grandfather developed the Plaza and surrounding residential area, that the builders he sold the land to would never have bought the lots without the stipulation to exclude blacks, Jews and Italians. Other stringent deed restrictions were included such as lot size and setbacks. The Star has a paywall with 3 free articles a month. So you will have to take my word for it.

How do you know how far you have come if you don’t know where you were when you started? That must be the whole point of erasing history.

For anyone who has never been to Kansas City, here is a link to a photo essay of the Country Club Plaza from 2017.

http://outlaw-urbanist.com/country-club-plaza-kansas-city/

This is a video tour of Mission Hills, Kansas which begins at State Line Road just west of the Plaza. You only need to watch a couple minutes of it to get the idea of what the entire area looks like. No two mansions are alike. There are some “smaller homes” as you get closer to the cities of Fairway and Prairie Village, which includes one of the first post-war suburban developments by the J C Nichols Co.

Guest Post by Jack Cashill

Rarely does an author capture a truth as well as L.P. Hartley did in the immortal opening sentence of his novel, The Go-Between. Said Hartley for the ages: “The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.” This is a message that the nation’s civic leaders, elected officials, and editorialists would do well to absorb.

As I write this, the Kansas City Parks Board has just voted, in the gratuitously brutal words of the Kansas City Star, “ to strip J.C. Nichols’ name from the fountain and street that honor him.” Strip? Really? “Remove” would have done the trick.

Some years back, I made a documentary for the local PBS station, KCPT, titled, “Remember Me, KC.” In it, I explored the history of J.C. Nichols, the man who built much of Kansas City, including the once great Country Club Plaza.

A few years before that I taught for a year at a French university on the Fulbright program. Among the courses I taught was one on urban studies. The textbook for the class explored what the authors considered the four best-designed cities in the world.

One, of course, was Paris.  A second was the city of Bath in England. A third was the City of Nancy in France, the site of my university, which may explain why the department chair chose the book. And the fourth was Kansas City. The man cited as the reason for Kansas City’s inclusion was, you guessed it, J.C. Nichols.

Nichols deserved the honor. When my wife and I moved to Kansas City fresh out of graduate school, we had our first meal at a sidewalk cafe on the justly famed Plaza. After lunch we followed our realtor out to her offices about four miles south along a street called Ward Parkway.

I grew up in Newark, New Jersey. That to me represented the future of urban America, a weary fringe surrounding a decaying and expanding center. The mile after mile drive up Ward Parkway stunned me as did the Plaza itself.  Cities, I discovered, did not have to die. No one was more responsible for Kansas City’s vibrancy than Nichols.

A small-town Kansas boy, Nichols called his first development, built right after the devastating 1903 Missouri flood, “California Heights.” He wanted to assure flood refugees that these homes were high and dry. That development was located in what is now the roughest section of Kansas City, Kansas.

Nichols went upscale starting with the construction of the still fabulous Mission Hills in 1914.  Yes, this development and others had covenants that the Star tells us, restricted “Black people, Jews, Italians and others.” I am not sure about the “Italians and others,” but black people and Jews, yes. Everyone who signed a lease was as guilty as Nichols.

Even by “woke” standards, no state has a nobler history than the Kansas in which Nichols first made his mark. In the 1850s, migrants from the east sacrificed their creature comforts — and many their lives — to settle the Kansas Territory for no reason other than to prevent the expansion of slavery.

That said, forty years after Nichols began to build Mission Hills, the Supreme Court had to intervene to force Kansas to integrate its schools. The “Board of Education” in the landmark 1954 decision, Brown v. Board of Education was Topeka’s. The past, kids, is a foreign country. They did do things differently there.

Ten years after Nichols started building Mission Hills, Jackson County Judge Harry Truman, up for re-election, paid his ten-dollar entry fee to join the Ku Klux Klan, a Democratic stronghold. He reportedly withdrew only because his “boss,” Tom Pendergast, objected to the Klan’s anti-Catholic bias.

As a Democratic president, the media protected Truman in ways they would never protect President Trump. Only years after Truman left the White House did the Washington Post’s Marquis Childs report Truman’s take on African Americans: “I get along pretty well with the burr heads… until sooner or later I say n***er.”

Okay, so Truman desegregated the military. Big deal. By the standards set uniquely for Nichols, it may be time to “strip” Harry’s name from Truman Road, rename Truman State University, and deface the presidential library. The Andrew Jackson statue in front of the Jackson County Courthouse is already heading for the dust bin. Can Harry’s statue be far behind?

Nichols and Truman were men of their times. Charles and Valentine McClatchy, who launched the McClatchy media empire of which the Star is a part, were ahead of their time.

A year after the groundbreaking at Mission Hills, Valentine began writing about what he would indelicately call “Our New Racial Problem: Japanese Immigration and Its Menace.”

As leader of the Japanese exclusion movement, Valentine, with the editorial support of Charles, helped convince Congress to call a halt to Japanese immigration. He feared that the Japanese would outbreed Americans of European descent and “drive the white race to the wall.” Time for some stripping here, no?

Planned Parenthood’s eugenicist founder Margaret “Maggie” Sanger sang from the same unholy hymnal. A dozen years after Mission Hills was launched, Sanger spoke to the female auxiliary of the Ku Klux Klan. It was a natural audience for her. “Possibly drastic and Spartan methods may be forced upon American society,” Sanger wrote in her 1922 book Pivot of Civilization, “to prevent the sexual and racial chaos into which the world has drifted.”

In 2006, and again in 2014, the Star proudly accepted Planned Parenthood’s annual “Maggie” award for its editorial contribution to what Planned Parenthood was now calling “reproductive justice.”

Up until about fifteen minutes ago, elected officials from both states were thoughtlessly attending their party’s annual Jefferson-Jackson dinners.  If we are to strip the names of those admitted slaveholders from public memorials, might we also want to demand an apology from the party that gave us slavery, secession, and a century of segregation?

Yes, the past was a foreign country and sometimes a dangerous one. Those editorialists who are sure they would have denounced slavery, defied Jim Crow, or even turned down a home in Mission Hills might start showing a bit of courage by giving Planned Parenthood its damn “Maggie” back.

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16 Comments
overthecliff
overthecliff
July 27, 2020 6:41 pm

In the 1960’s I used to drive through Mission Hills to attend classes at then Rockhurst College. It is a place where the garages and servants quarters are larger than most 4 bedroom 3 bath Mac Mansions. At the time I lived on the wrong side of the tracks on the Kansas side. Enough of the ramblings of an old guy.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  overthecliff
July 27, 2020 7:58 pm

When we lived in town, we used to drive through now and then, too.

I grew up in Roeland Park. Even though it was only a few miles away, it was a million miles away in lifestyle.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mary Christine
July 29, 2020 1:20 am

Give this a look and tell me how many of the names you recognize:

https://www.roelandpark.net/149/History-of-Roeland-Park-Kansas

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
July 27, 2020 8:14 pm

There was an excellent movie named Kansas City starring Harry Belafonte. Excellent music.

Lars
Lars
July 27, 2020 9:08 pm

Mission Hills, Kansas is now populated by jewish doctors, lawyers, bankers, and business owners, whose money dominates local politics. If there are any Blacks there, they are nowhere to be seen. Johnson County voted Trump, but only by a 3% margin.

Kansas City, Ks and Wyandotte County, just to the north, have been a Democrat stronghold since the early 20th century AFAIK. Wyandotte County and Douglas County, where Lawrence and Kanas University are located about 40 miles west, are solid-blue. The rest of the state is red. Sedgewick County, where Wichita is located, is pink and will soon become blue.

Last I checked, the Country Club Plaza in KC, Mo has lost some of its former charm, beauty, and cleanliness. At times it has been overrun with Black “shoppers” and rioters. Many of the old quality stores like Woolf Brothers Clothing are gone.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Lars
July 27, 2020 9:28 pm

I don’t know who lives there. I don’t travel in those circles, Lars. I just appreciate the architecture and the history. They don’t build homes like that anymore.

I won’t go to the Plaza anymore, either. You know what lies east of it and it’s been invaded periodically by flash mobs. The 2 weekends they rioted after the Floyd incident they chose the Plaza to do all the damage.

If I lived near there now, I would be nervous. Those homes won’t sell easily.

I just thought this was an interesting bit of history.

Lars
Lars
  Mary Christine
July 27, 2020 9:42 pm

“…this was an interesting bit of history.”

Quite so. I’ve always loved Midwest history. The Ozarks where my folks often took us camping is also fascinating.
Same too for the Flint Hills and Leavenworth where both my parents are buried side by side.

It’s also noteworthy that KC was a popular center for jazz musicians, rivaling New Orleans and Chicago in prominence,

overthecliff
overthecliff
  Lars
July 28, 2020 9:58 am

This is like old home time. Ozarks? love them. Flint Hills? lived there for 15 years.
Johnson County,KS once solid red is turning blue because of blue whites moving out of Wyandotte County shit hole and bringing their blue politics with them.

Negros are right about one thing. Race trumps all.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mary Christine
July 30, 2020 5:47 am

MC, try this one on for architecture:

The man who covered up the most beautiful home in Kansas City is about to be exposed

22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
22winmag - TBP's Latter Day Shit-poster
July 27, 2020 11:15 pm

Would the USA have been over-run by Asian hordes in the early 1900s if not for the Asian exclusion acts of 1882 and 1924.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnuson_Act
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comment image

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
July 28, 2020 7:02 am

Seems like we need to get back to segregation.

Anonymous
Anonymous
July 28, 2020 8:59 am

Imagine, you spend millions building a city or a neighborhood and you decided long ago alligators cannot ever be tamed to make a household pet. So you make sure any renter or homeowner association does not allow alligators. All is well for decades. Then, one day, someone gets woke, usually a politician and forces areas banning alligators to allow alligators. And immediately after the first alligator arrives things fo missing. First its the natural wildlife. Things seem not as nice as they used to when you stroll. There is litter and cars parked on the grass. Next pets start missing and people find their kids listening to dangerous ludicrous rap music Encouraging drugs, prostitution and murder. Next your own kids want alligators. And your daughter who was recently valedictorian accepted to Harvard is carrying a black baby from a dude 4 years older with a rap sheet.

This is exactly what occurred in my area over the last ten years to many neighbors. Obama’s AFFH (Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing Act). He forced local municipalities and County govt to either build section 8 or wreck havoc on local apartment complex owners forcing them into the section 8 sector Three apartments here went section 8 over a year period back in 2012. Today the local public school that was 94% white with 98% graduation rates and 96% college graduation rates, zero crime or police called to the school since it opened in 1999. Today it is 60% white, known as a a cocaine haven, and more girls, white girls, getting knocked up by thugs blacks with zero future. The real estate here that was $300 sqft is now down tom$150 sqft and declining. No new building going on. Strip malls closing up, and business moving farther out. Seen this countless times. You can take the black man out of the jungle but the jungle never leaves them.

The article speaks of Nichols as some kind of racist for banning certain people. We see today blacks are wanting segregation. We see videos on college campus where blacks want their own space free of white people and are getting it. Yet this is not racist. But when whites want to have nice things and collectively keep them nice and want to exclude alligators or blacks because both are known to not commingle or assimilate well into defined culture it becomes racist.

Find me a rich well run white city that blacks took over and remained functioning and I will eat my left arm on live television. Find me a county, city, State, nation. Hell, find me just a simple 100 home neighborhood that is all black that looks even similar to an all white neighborhood. I would eat my left arm just to see the reality of such an anomaly. Is it racist to want and have nice things and keep them nice by keeping out the very things that would destroy such nice things?

What do you call it when democrat run cities destroy the lives, livelihood, assets and culture of the hard working patriotic citizenry That built the city so BLM can run around like wild animals destroying what they have not built, nor respect, nor have any title to. They are not even labeled as mobs, thugs, but instead “peaceful” fucking “protestors”. What a crock of shit and slap in the fucking face. When are the citizen sheep going to start slapping some fucking faces and waking up to these alligators destroying what they built and continue to pay for with massive taxation. Taxation without fucking representation. Because the cucked mayors and governors are marching with the fucking looters. Will they sue their mortgage companies for mailing the real estate taxes in? Will they stop paying those real estate taxes? Will they no longer fund their own cuckery and slavery to BLM and crooked thieving communist politicians? Will they do any fucking thing?

If they do nothing then I truly hope their pain and suffering is horribly unimaginable and lasts a long time. Long enough so their pain and misery is felt by people far and away to teach them a lesson from afar. Maybe thats is the tuition that must be paid by some for the sake of others. However, rightfully paid by the people most deserving to be forced to pay for sure. Reap what you sew dumbasses.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  Anonymous
July 28, 2020 10:02 am

You just wrote the story of Johnson County,KS over the last 30 years.

Steve
Steve
July 28, 2020 5:37 pm

In that other post today about “fair housing” I talked about KC (I was there from 82-88 at UMKC) and how the Plaza went down hill after a section 8 project arrived.
I loved KC and I’m surprised at how many folks here know of it-small world. That’s all…

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Steve
July 29, 2020 2:06 am

Point of clarification: there are 2 KC’s-one in Mizzou and the other in Kansas and sometimes they are as different as night and day. KCMO (remember Harry Truman) has become nothing more than a black run hell hole. KCK (mentioned here as Wyandotte County) really doesn’t count, as it is mostly a blue collar (nothing wrong with that) industrial district. Johnson County-JOCO-used to be called the bedroom community in the Greater KC area-it was a desirable destination for growing families.

JOCO has pushed far south into rich agricultural areas in recent decades due to what one police detective friend characterized a few years ago as white flight. KCMO has had more pronounced white flight for a lot longer because they have a lot larger non-white demographic. A federal judge forced court ordered school desegration and busing in KCMO that lasted for over 25 years, and today their schools are significant underperformers. Can anyone figure that one out?

Both sides of the state line area have nice to very upscale neighborhoods where many of the old notable families used to live-many are due to JC Nichols’s influence. Even some of the more moderate neighborhoods were developed by Nichols.

Mission Hills is one of several JOCO suburbs having “Mission” in their name-that is derived from the latter part of the Indian era when the Shawnee Indian Mission buildings were built and operated to “civilize” the Native Americans. In fact, Indian names and heritage are found all over the region. One thing for sure, it doesn’t matter which side of the state line one lives: most everyone loves their Chiefs.

Trivia: while there are several suburb towns with Mission in their name and there is one named Shawnee, there is not one named Shawnee Mission. While that is a well known name in reality it is the creation of the US Postal Service when they consolidated and moved from individual town names for addressing to a name that reflects a larger area. While Shawnee Mission might be nice, you can’t get there from here.

Steve
Steve
  Anonymous
July 30, 2020 12:23 pm

Anon,
Yeah, I’m sure it’s taken a dump. I remember Troost was the demarcation line. Ya didn’t want to go east of Troost.
I lived on 37 and Walnut during my 6 school years there, one block east of Main. Coming home from a night on the town and especially on weekends there were always a couple of trannies looking for “dates” on 36th and Main.
KCMO was one of the best kept secrets, I guess years ago. And that’s been ruined too.
Thanks for the update