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Westport, Missouri's Port of Many Returns

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This first popular history of Westport, recreates Westport's noisy story from its birth as a tiny trading post in the Missouri wilderness to its vigorous present as four and one-half square miles in the middle of Kansas City, Missouri. Author Patricia Miller shows how the little trading center exploded into life when hundreds and then thousands of people going to Santa Fe, California, and Oregon made it their port to the west. The Civil War stopped this frontier prosperity and for ten years, Westport and the farms and villages along the Kansas - Missouri border were terrorized by guerrilla bands led by the likes of John Brown and William Quantrill. After the war, Westport was economically shattered but over time it transformed itself from a broken farm village to a lovely suburb so enticing to its big new neighbor Kansas City that the city swallowed Westport up, annexing it in 1897. But Westport's history was far from over. It took on new life as a fashionable residential area and the city's cultural center.

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Westport, Missouri's Port of Many Returns, Patricia Cleary Miller

Jazyk
Rok vydania
1983
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3,2
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5 Hodnotenie

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Titul
Westport, Missouri's Port of Many Returns
Jazyk
anglicky
Vydavateľ
Lowell Press
Rok vydania
1983
Väzba
pevná
ISBN10
0913504823
ISBN13
9780913504826
Série
Hodnotenie
3,2 z 5
Anotácia
This first popular history of Westport, recreates Westport's noisy story from its birth as a tiny trading post in the Missouri wilderness to its vigorous present as four and one-half square miles in the middle of Kansas City, Missouri. Author Patricia Miller shows how the little trading center exploded into life when hundreds and then thousands of people going to Santa Fe, California, and Oregon made it their port to the west. The Civil War stopped this frontier prosperity and for ten years, Westport and the farms and villages along the Kansas - Missouri border were terrorized by guerrilla bands led by the likes of John Brown and William Quantrill. After the war, Westport was economically shattered but over time it transformed itself from a broken farm village to a lovely suburb so enticing to its big new neighbor Kansas City that the city swallowed Westport up, annexing it in 1897. But Westport's history was far from over. It took on new life as a fashionable residential area and the city's cultural center.