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Kansas City
Our City
Kansas City is a town with a colorful past and a promising future; it is
big and sprawling, diverse and dynamic, sophisticated and down-home.
We are big in miles, straddling a state line and
encompassing (depending on which government agency is doing the
counting) from eight to 13 counties. In the 11 most close-in counties,
we encompass more than 4,000 square miles and number more than 2 million
people in more than 100 cities. There is a Kansas
City, MO., and a Kansas
City, KS., and the larger of the two and the urban center of the
metro area is on the Missouri side. Many locals, even those who live 50
miles away from the Kansas City, Mo., city limits on either side of the
state line, are apt to reply when asked where they're from -
"Kansas City." It's a big nam e
for a big place.
We could have been Possum Trot. That was one of the
names suggested for the town that grew up on banks of the Missouri River
in the mid-19th century. The Town Company, which purchased the original
271 acres in 1838, finally settled on the Town of Kansas, naming the new
town for the Kansa Indians who had long inhabited the area.
We are a pretty city, not the flat prairie or arid wasteland some
picture. The Missouri and Kansas rivers meet just north of downtown
Kansas City. They - and their tributaries - have carved valleys and
bluffs over the landscape. In the late 19th century some far-sighted
city fathers committed to a program of interconnecting boulevards and
parks that placed this town in the forefront of the nationwide
"City Beautiful" movement. We have as many - probably more by
now - boulevards as Paris, and, with more than 200 fountains, we're
second only to Rome. (In 1973 a City
of Fountains Foundation was established to ensure the construction
of new and upkeep of the older fountains; from them, you can obtain a
map for a driving/walking tour of some of the city's prettiest.) We do
not have an ocean or a mountain, but we have limestone bluffs and
thousands of acres of lakes, rivers and streams.
Almost smack-dab in the middle of the United States, we
have always been an important trade/transportation center. The same year
Missouri came into the Union, a French trader, Francois Chouteau, came
upriver from St. Louis and established a trading post at a bend in the
river. A few miles and a few years later, another entrepreneur, John
McCoy, set up an inland store on the Santa Fe Trail that became Westport
and an important outfitting spot for wagons headed west. We have been an
important rail center (today second in size nationally only to Chicago)
since we opened a railroad bridge across the Missouri in 1869. Today,
too, we have what many call the nation's most user-friendly airport: Kansas
City International sees about 400 flights a day, and the distance
from curb to aircraft is less than 75 feet.
We are a cowtown and an art center. The stockyards made
us one of the world's major cattle markets in the late 19th and early
20th centuries. At its peak in the early 1900s, the Kansas City
Livestock Exchange was the largest building in the world devoted
exclusively to livestock interests. We still commemorate that heritage
every year during the American
Royal Livestock, Horse Show and Rodeo, more than 100 years old and
one of the nation's largest.
Since its 1933 opening, the Nelson-Atkins
Museum of Art has established itself as one of the most important
art museums in the world, home to an acclaimed Asian collection and in
the middle of a major renovation and expansion. The
Kansas City Art Institute is near the museum, and in 1994 the Kemper
Museum of Contemporary Art opened its doors. Across the city are dozens
of smaller galleries and art spaces. Not to mention a growing collection
of outdoor, public art that includes dancing bulls on the west approach
to town, giant shuttlecocks on the Nelson-Atkins south lawn and the four
art deco "Sky
Stations" stretching 200 feet above the downtown Kansas City
Convention Center.
We are a diverse population with many ethnic groups
whose roots go deep. The Hispanic community traces its to the opening of
the Santa Fe Trail; the huge meat-packing industry of the late 1800s
brought Croatians, Serbs, Russians, Slovakians and Greeks. Our religious
preferences are varied. The more than 2,000 congregations here represent
more than a dozen faiths: Protestant, Roman Catholic, Jewish, Eastern
Orthodox, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, Sufi, Baha'i, Native American, Sikh,
Jain, pagan, Unitarian Universalist and New Age groups. The 2000 census
revealed that we are 51.5 percent female and 48.5 percent male; that 42
percent of us have at least two vehicles; that we are 84.5 percent
white, 13.4 percent African-American and 1.7 percent Asian.
We are good workers. We miss fewer days of work and
drive shorter commutes than most major metropolitan centers. The
Midwestern work ethic is alive and well here. According to the U.S.
Bureau of the Census, production workers in Kansas City contribute 50
percent more value added per hour than the national average, and the
National Center for Health Statistics reports that Kansas City area
workers take the fewest sick days of 33 major metropolitan areas
surveyed.
Our business environment is healthy. Year after year,
through good times and bad, the metro unemployment rate and the
cost-of-living rank well below national averages. Much of that is due to
the area's diverse economic base. We are a key production, distribution
and service center for the Midwest. We are home base to major companies
including Hallmark Cards, Yellow Freight, Farmland Industries, Sprint
and Interstate Bakers. Our homegrown businesses include American
Century, H & R Block and Russell Stover. We are a regional office
town with outstanding office spaces in the heart of the city and spread
in office parks around the edges. Agriculture is still important to us,
but so are the Harley-Davidson and automobile plants, the technology
companies, the big banks and all the various kinds of service
businesses. We consistently rank among the top U.S. cities for
supporting small businesses, and Fortune magazine ranked us among the 20
best U.S. cities for international business. We lead the world in
underground storage space and are home to the world's largest subsurface
business complex. In 2000, plans for the Kansas City Area Life Sciences
Institute were announced, launching an area-wide partnership of business
and science committed to transforming this city into a national life
sciences center.
We are big fans. We are hard-core supporters of our
teams: We paint the town blue on opening day for our Kansas City Royals
baseball team and we go all red for the Kansas City Chiefs, our football
team. Both franchises play their home games at the Truman Sports Complex
(Kauffman and Arrowhead stadiums, respectively), one of the nation's
best and most beautiful outdoor venues. The Kansas
City Wizards play outdoor soccer at Community America Ballpark, and
the Kansas City Comets play indoors at Kemper Arena, which they share
with the Kansas City Blades of the International Hockey League and the
Kansas City Knights of the American Basketball Association. In 2001 we
opened the state-of-the-art Kansas
Speedway, bringing national-level auto racing to town. And we are
divided on the college sports scene, splitting our loyalties among the
nearby Big 12 schools (Missouri, Kansas and Kansas State) and the local
college teams.
We have very interesting weather (we average 38.1 inches
of precipitation every year, including 21 inches of snow, and we have 51
days with thunderstorms, 39 days above 90 degrees and 22 below 10
degrees - on our hottest day ever, Aug. 14, 1936, we hit 113 degrees,
and we bottomed out at minus 23 degrees on Dec. 22 and 23, 1989); five
entertainment districts; great shopping all over town; 74 public school
districts; and big plans for the future.
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