Troost Avenue: a Study in Community Building
Submitted by: Fr. David Altschul
Faculty Advisor: Musa D. Ilu, Ph.D.
Sociology/Social Work
Central Missouri State University
April 26, 2005
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TROOST AVENUE: A STUDY IN COMMUNITY BUILDING Table of Contents
Acknowledgments iii Introduction 1 Part I: Historical Overview of Troost Avenue 1 Definition of Troost 1 Beginning of Troost Avenue: 1840s to 1920s 2
Le Soldat du Chene and the Osage Nation 2 Dr. Benoist Troost and his times 5 Millionaire’s Row 5 Plantation on Troost 5
The Richest Man in Kansas City 6 Webster Withers and Troost Transition 6
Life on Troost: 1920s and 1930s 7 Businesses on 31st and Troost Avenue 7
Businesses near 31st and Troost 7 The South Central Business Association 8
Walt Disney on Troost 9 Walt Bodine on Troost 11 Jazz on Troost 12 Congregations near Troost in the 1920s and 1930s 14
St. Vincent De Paul Roman Catholic Church 14 The Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation 15 Jewish Congregations 17
Congregation Beth Shalom 17 Congregation B’nai Jehudah & Rabbi Samuel Mayerberg 17
Second Church of Christ, Scientist 20 Paseo Baptist Church & Rev. D. A. Holmes 20
Troost during Jim Crow and the Civil Rights movement 21 Jim Crow in Kansas City 22 Northward Migration for African Americans 23 Troost as a dividing line 24
1. Housing and Welfare reports linking “place, race, and culture” 25 2. Racial restrictive covenants 26 3. J.C. Nichols and homeowner associations 27 4. Real estate blockbusting as a catalyst for neighborhood transition 29 5. Housing disinvestment (“redlining”) by lending institutions 30 6. Segregative school action by the KCMO School District 31
Troost during Civil Rights Movement 32 Troost under Urban Renewal 33
Ghost Town 33 Root Shock 33 Troost Revival: FOCUS: Kansas City; Hands across Troost 34 Where FOCUS has unfinished business 36
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Table of Contents (continued) Part II: Moving from History to a New Community 36 Prejudice, Stereotypes, Racism and Discrimination 36
Definitions 36 How institutional discrimination & white privilege reinforce old divisions 36 Neighborhood Associations 39
Gentrification and community 42 Definition of Gentrification 42 Reflections on Gentry and the Value of Person 43
Community: Raising the Gentrification Consciousness 46 A New Community 47
Troost Avenue Festival: a Catalyst for Community 48 Brief Chronicle of a Community Building Event 49
Hope for the Future 51 Conclusion 51 Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction 53 References 62
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Acknowledgements
Special thanks should be given to my faculty advisor, Musa D. Ilu, PhD, in
Sociology at Central Missouri State University. In addition, all the wonderful professors
there that encouraged me in this process: Dr. Karen Bradley, Honors Dean, Peter Viscusi,
PhD; Professor Regina Tenney, MSW; Professor M. Jenise Comer, MSW, LCSW.
In addition, I want to thank Professor Mike Frisch of the University of Missouri –
Kansas City for pointing me to Kevin Gotham’s excellent research on segregation along
Troost Avenue.
I’m especially grateful to all the wonderful people that have been participating
with me in the Troost Avenue Festival: Fred Culver, Rae Peterson, Harry Reaves, Ada
Shaw, Barbara Courtney, Teresa Bradskey, Sean Branagan, Sr. Delores Kincaide, Sr,
Mary McNellis, Susan Wiegand and Jeff, Nancy Sayed, Rev. Tony Caldwell, Al and his
crew, and all the many people at the Tuesday and Thursday meetings.
I couldn’t have done this without the help of my parishioners and the nuns,
especially Abbess Brigid, Mother Pachomia, Mother Nicole, and all the members of St.
Mary of Egypt Orthodox Parish.
Most of all, I thank my wife Michaila for her patience in the many hours put into
this project.
Finally, I thank God, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, One God!
TROOST AVENUE: A STUDY IN COMMUNITY BUILDING
Introduction
Troost Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri has a rich history. Native American hunting
trails, a huge plantation with slaves, millionaire estates, Jazz, Walt Disney, the Isis Theater, a
commercial center – Troost was once a hub of eclectic, urban life. Yet, for the past 40 years,
Troost has been viewed as the racial dividing line of the city. Local broadcaster Walt Bodine
referred to it as the “Berlin Wall of Kansas City” (Bodine, 1988, p. 137).
In the 1990s new strides at community building were taken with the FOCUS: Kansas
City plan and Hands across Troost initiatives. This study is an overview of community building
in this neighborhood. The researcher provides a look at the past, reflections on recent
developments, and considerations for the future, based on current trends. Participating in the
development of the Troost Avenue Festival provided an insider’s perspective to the process of
positive community mobilization. After assessing the strength of the area’s economic, social and
spiritual resources, the writer comes to positive expectations regarding a revitalized sense of
community in what formerly was called a “ghost town” (H. Reaves, personal communication,
March 16, 2004).
Part I: Historical Overview of Troost Avenue
Definition of Troost
The Dutch word troost has a meaning of “comfort” or “consolation” (Harper, 2001). Its
roots are Indo-European, which provide the etymological foundation for such words as tree, true
and trust (Encarta®, 2005).
In the 1750 version of the Dutch Scriptures, the Staten Vertaling, the Holy Spirit (called
the “Comforter” or “Paraclete” in English) is translated Trooster. The Dutch phrase “Maar de
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Trooster, de Heilige Geest…” is translated “When the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost…” in
St. John 14:26 (Staten Vertaling, 1750; Douay Rheims; KJV).
These very images of tree, trust and comfort create a vision of hope. This hope is
essential for overcoming the negative stereotypes of the mistrust, division, and pain of the past.
Beginning of Troost Avenue: 1840s to 1920s
Le Soldat du Chene and the Osage Nation
The land along present-day Troost Avenue was the site of one of the main trails
commonly used by the Osage Indians during the late 18th century and early 19th century. From
these trails, they would hunt in the forests or carry their canoes to the Missouri River. Their
ancestral village was known as the “Place of Many Swans”, currently near the southwest
Missouri town of Rich Hill (DeAngelo, 1995, pp. 14-15).
In 1808, the Osage Nation surrendered over 52.5 million acres of land to the United
States. This included the majority of Missouri and half of Arkansas. After yielding their ancestral
home, one of the Osage chiefs, called Le Soldat du Chene by the French, (“Soldier of the Oak”,
in English), sadly said,
“I see and admire your way of living, your good warm houses, your extensive
cornfields, your gardens. You whites possess the power of subduing almost every animal
you see. You are surrounded by slaves. Everything about you is in chains and you are
slaves yourself. I fear if I should change my pursuit for yours, I too, should become a
slave” (DeAngelo, 1995, pp. 17-18).
Dr. Benoist Troost and his times
Troost Avenue was named after Dr. Benoist Troost. Born in Bois Le Duc, Holland, on
November 17, 1786, Dr. Troost came to this area during the 1840s (Sandy, 1984, p. 151).
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This was the period of mercantile discovery of Kansas City as an ideal location for trade.
Located at the confluence of the Missouri and Kansas rivers, the early fur traders were afforded
relative easy transport for their business (The History, 1881/1966, p. 375, 377-378).
Inordinate trading with local Native American nations was the original impetus for much
of the attraction to the area (The History, 1881/1966, p. 399). This quality of commerce is
indicated by items obtained for ten cents in St. Louis later being sold for five or six dollars to
traders among the Delaware, Pottawatomie, Kansas, and Shawnee nations (The History,
1881/1966, p. 399). Many Native American nations gathered in Kansas, Nebraska, and
Oklahoma during this period due to the forced migration of Indian nations during the Jackson
era. The Wyandotte nation resided in current Kansas City, Kansas. The Shawnee dwelt in
Mission Hills, Mission and Shawnee, Kansas. The proximity of this market was an enticement
for settlers in Westport and, eventually, the town of Kansas, later to be called Kansas City (The
History, 1881/1966, pp. 386-388, 395-399).
One of the sad chapters of Kansas City history is the wealth taken from the First Nations
through alcohol. Westport became the center for exchanging Indian dollars for alcohol. Federal
Government annuity checks, paid to Native peoples for the forced land sales in the areas east of
the Mississippi, were then taken back by the white traders through alcohol sales. As Dr. William
Unrau (1996) noted, “Federal dollars paid to emigrant Indians easily found their way into the
pockets of Kansas City’s founding fathers, and in the aggregate constituted a firm financial
foundation for urban expansion yet to come” (Unrau, 1996). This “urban expansion” takes us to
the individual whose name is honored by Troost Avenue.
Eventually, these merchants developed other areas of enterprise. The Dutch doctor,
Benoist Troost, is one of the founding fathers of Kansas City, Missouri. He, along with two other
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doctors, seven farmers, three butchers, and other merchants, grocers, traders, and laborers (to
name some of the professions), purchased various portions of the Prudhomme estate in 1846
(The History, 1881/1966, pp. 408-409). This piece of real estate stretched “between Broadway
and Troost Avenue, from the river back to the township line, which runs along Independence
Avenue” (The History, 1881/1966, p. 396). The fact that Dr. Troost, who died on February 8,
1859, already had been honored with an avenue in his name by 1881 shows that he was a
significant member among Kansas City’s early leaders.
The first major hotel in Kansas City was constructed due to the coordination and efforts
of Dr. Troost and his uncle, William Gillis (DeAngelo & Flynn, 1992; p. 183; Sandy, 1984, p.
151). Built in 1849 due to the California gold rush, it could be seen from the river between
Wyandotte and Delaware Streets. A large bell on the roof would call the guests to meals three
times a day. At various times it was known as the Troost Hotel, the Gillis House, and the
American Hotel. In the years 1856-1857, over 27,000 guests signed the register from many
different countries (DeAngelo, 1995, pp. 23-24).
In addition to his real estate investments, he also invested in the city’s first newspaper,
called the Public Ledger in the early1850s (The History, 1881/1966, p. 418). It later became
known as the The Kansas City Journal, which lasted until 1942 (McEniry, 2002). In 1854, Dr.
Troost was elected to the city council (The History, 1881/1966, p. 414). Then, in December,
1855, he along with other city leaders incorporated the Kansas City, Hannibal and St. Joseph
Railroad Company, setting up the road between Kansas City and Cameron, Missouri (The
History, 1881/1966, p. 443).
Dr. Benoist Troost, and his wife, Mary Ann Gilliss Troost, have their portraits on display
in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri. Painted by the local artist,
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George Caleb Bingham in the same year of Troost’s death, 1859, the portraits are another part of
the legacy Dr. Troost leaves behind (Sandy, 1984, p. 151).
Millionaire’s Row
During the late-19th century, the area along Troost Avenue between 26th and 32nd was
known as “Millionaire’s Row” (DeAngelo & Flynn, 1992, DeAngelo, 1995; Hughes, 2000;
Paynter, 2003). Kansas City was said to have 23 millionaires in 1901, with one-fourth of them
living on “Millionaire’s Row” (DeAngelo, 1995).
Plantation on Troost
The area south of 31st and Troost Avenue was originally developed as a plantation by
Rev. James Porter. He and his family came from Tennessee in 1834 with 40 slaves. Rev. Porter,
a Methodist minister, owned 365 acres that stretched between 23rd and 31st Streets, and from
Locust Street to The Paseo. Porter’s mansion was at 28th and Tracy, while the slave quarters
were located on 27th Street. The slaves, whose number increased from 40 to 100, tended Rev.
Porter’s corn fields, worked his orchards, and cared for his livestock. Later 27th Street would be
the southernmost boundary for many African Americans residentially. The Linwood
Improvement Association especially tried to keep it that way (Schirmer, 2002; Gotham, 2002).
After his death in 1851, the plantation was divided into various residences. Steadily for
the next fifty years, this land would be the site of lavish Romanesque and Victorian architecture.
Thomas T. Crittenden, the former Missouri governor and mayor of Kansas City in 1880, lived on
the southeast corner of 26th and Troost. Other notables in this area were William T. Kemper, of
the Commerce Bank; George B. Peck, owner of Peck’s Department Store; William J. Smith,
across the street from the former Wonder Bread Bakery; and William A. Wilson, on the
southwest corner of 27th and Troost.
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The Richest Man in Kansas City
The Kansas City Star (1951) reported that Lamon Vernon Harkness was the “richest man
ever to live in Kansas City” (“It Happened in Kansas City”, 1951). His estate, located at 3125
Troost Avenue, was valued at $150 million (“It Happened in Kansas City”, 1951). His father,
partner with John D. Rockefeller in the Standard Oil Company, left L.V. his fortune. His home
on Troost, built in 1888, was said to have 12 rooms. Although the Harkness estate was worth
more, his home was actually considered small when compared with that of William Smith
(DeAngelo & Flynn, 1992, p. 135)!
Webster Withers and Troost Transition
A period story of neighborhood transition is that of Webster Withers. He had been
appointed the internal revenue collector under President Grover Cleveland. He relocated his
family to 31st and Troost Avenue in 1885 to be in “the country.” His mansion was on the
southeast corner of 31st and Troost. From that point, the land stretched out for 40 acres. Mrs.
Withers told the Kansas City Star (1912) that “we were tired of town life and desired to get away
out on a farm” (“Shut in” farm, 1912a).
But by 1912, the area was surrounded by businesses. At that time, immediately to the
west of the Withers mansion, were the buildings currently occupied by Reconciliation Ministries,
Jimmy Crack Corn Popcorn, and TYCOR (a youth educational outreach on 31st and Troost). In
1912, the ground floor had “attractive shops and the upstairs… a studio, doctors and dentists
offices” (“Shut in” farm, 1912a).
An area that formerly had been the hunting grounds of the Osage Nation had become a
slave plantation, and later the site of “Millionaire’s Row.” As we will see, its story was far from
over.
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Life on Troost: 1920s and 1930s
Businesses on 31st and Troost Avenue
Webster Withers, and his wife, Carrie Lee, raised eight children. Their eldest son,
Webster Withers, Jr., attended Princeton College and assumed responsibilities for the estate upon
the death of his father. Between 1912 and 1922, both the Withers estate and businesses in the
3100 block of Troost Avenue continued to grow. In a letter sent to the South Central Business
Association (SCBA) at 3105 Troost Avenue, Withers stated, “It seems to us that 31st Street is
already a good retail business street and will widening it improve the street for retail business”
(Withers, 1922)? Although the subject of the letter is the widening of 31st Street, we find implicit
in the letter the verification of a prospering retail economy. Withers, in the same letter, is writing
as the Vice-President of the Withers Estate Company who “have too much at stake on 31st Street
to oppose any improvement for the good of that street” (Withers, 1922).
Businesses near 31st and Troost
What businesses were in the area in the early 1920s? In October, 1923, LeRoy H.
Kelsey, the proprietor of the Rossington Apartments at 3031 Troost compiled a list of “Various
Business Enterprises Within two blocks [sic] of 31st and Troost Avenue” (Kelsey, 1923). The
strength of this community is reflected in the concentration of businesses and organizations
recorded in the following list:
“U.S. Post Office, Western Union Telegraph Office, Newspaper, Justice of the
Peace; Conservatory of Music; Bowling Alley; Knights of Pythias Castle Hall; Business
College; 1 Filling Station, 1 Carpenter, 1 Tinner, 1 Optician, 1 Plumber, 1 Jeweler, 1
Building & Loan Ass’n, 1 Insurance Agency, 1 Furniture Store, 1 Window Shade factory,
1 Victrola [sic] Shop, 1 Electrical store, 1 Hat Cleaning shop, 1 Wall Paper & Paint store;
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White-Way lighted streets; 3 best Street-car lines; 2 large metropolitan Churches; 2 five-
story Office Bldgs; 13 Unfurnished Apartment Bldgs, 3-story or more; 10 Transient or
Apartment Hotels, from three to six stories high; 2 large Picture Shows, and 2 State
Banks; – also – 17 Groceries & Meat Markets, 15 Restaurants & Cafeterias, 9 Cleaners
& Dyers, 8 Public Garages, 7 Drug Stores, 7 Barber Shops, 7 Real Estate firms, 6 Beauty
Parlors, 5 Dry Goods & Ladies Wear, 5 Confectionaries, 5 Millinery stores, 5
Photographers, 5 Shoe Repairers, 4 Bakeries, 3 Art & Gift shops, 3 Fruit Stands, 3 Gents
Furnishings & Clothing, 3 Tailor shops, 2 Shoe stores, 2 Laundries, 2 Undertaking firms,
2 Florist shops, 2 Hardware stores, 2 Transfer & Baggage firms, 2 Auto Supply houses, 2
Upholstering shops, and 2 Shoe-shining Parlors” (Kelsey, 1923).
The extensive list Mr. Kelsey provided for posterity enables one to clearly see that this
was a productive and growing community. He records over 186 business establishments within
two blocks of 31st and Troost Avenue! Reflecting on this neighborhood after twelve more years,
it was written, “In September of 1935, the 3100 block of Troost was a small city in and of itself”
(Wilborn, 1991, p. 52).
The South Central Business Association
An interesting side note is the effect of the South Central Business Association (SCBA)
on the community. Their motto was “Why Go Down Town?” (SCBA Letterhead, 1922). Their
business office, located at 3105 Troost Avenue, served an area from 26th Street to 37th Street and
from Gillham Rd. to Michigan Avenue (SCBA Letterhead, 1922).
It was due to their advocacy, in cooperation with the South Troost Development
Association (STDA), that cable cars, bus lines, and street lights were servicing the area. Indeed,
Troost Avenue is still the longest North-South corridor in Kansas City, not in small part due to
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the detailed eleven-point plan presented to the South Central Business Association by the South
Troost Development Association (STDA, 1924; KC Journal-Post, 1929). Eighty years ago SCBA
was advocating for better bus lines, street lights and a parking lot on the 3100 block of Troost
(SCBA, 1924). This very discussion was a sign of a community gathering to meet its needs. For
many years 31st and Troost was a thriving commercial center with Art Deco architecture, elegant
lighting and accessible transportation.
Walt Disney on Troost
While Webster Withers was commending the business achievements of Troost Avenue, a
20 year-old Walt Disney was around the corner struggling to make a living. Born December 5,
1901 to Elias and Flora Disney in Chicago, Illinois, he was the youngest of four brothers,
followed by a baby sister.
The family moved to a farm in Marceline, Missouri when he was four, and then to
Kansas City when he was nine. After returning in 1919 as an ambulance driver from France in
World War I, he went to work briefly for The Kansas City Star. But just before Christmas, 1919,
he was laid off. So, he and another young animation friend, Ub Iwerks, went into business for
themselves making cartoons (Disney, 2005a).
Eventually, he formed Laugh-O-gram Films in the upstairs offices on the two-story
building at the southwest corner of 31st and Forest Avenue. The building stands today which was
built on the original Withers estate in 1922 (“Shut in” farm, 1912b, Laugh-O-Gram Project,
2005). Walt and his company were one of the very first tenants.
He raised $15,000 to get started. At their peak, they employed 12 animators, including
Rudy Ising and Hugh Harmon, as well as his partner, Ub Iwerks (Laugh-O-Gram Project, 2005).
It could truly be said that 31st and Troost was the cradle of animation for the 21st Century.
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The young company had secured a deal for Fairy tale cartoons for $11,100.
Unfortunately, Walt only received $100 as a down payment and their client, Pictorial Clubs,
went bankrupt. As a result, he had to personally move in to the offices just to live, due to the lack
of money. Things got so difficult that his workers left him and he was sleeping on the canvases
on the office floor (Disney, 2005b; Disney, 2005c). During this period, he described his
experience and lifestyle:
"A couple of Greeks down there [were] running the restaurant right below that gave me
credit. So I finally got up to where I had a $60 restaurant bill. But I could always go
down and if I gave them $10, could whittle it to $50 and they'd let me ride. Well, it got
tougher and tougher" (Disney, 2005d)
During this period of time, Walt would occasionally take a bath for a dime at the Union
Station (Disney, 2005d). When his credit ran out with the coffee house downstairs, he was
reduced to “eating beans from a can and leftover bread” (Disney, 2005c).
In 1923, Walt cut his losses, declared bankruptcy, took some of his unfinished work and
moved to California. The rest is Mickey Mouse. Interesting to note, the idea of Mickey Mouse is
said to have started during this very period of his early struggles. While sleeping in his office, a
little mouse used to share his crumbs (Thank you, Walt Disney, 2005). The mouse on Wither’s
land, during this period of Laugh-O-Gram, was the source of inspiration for the famous Mickey
Mouse. It is the opinion of this researcher that Mickey’s descendants are still running around the
neighborhood!
A non-profit group has emerged, Thank You Walt Disney, Inc., specifically to save this
original building. The motto of their organization is “Save the house where the mouse was born”
(Thank you, Walt Disney, 2005)!
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Walt Bodine on Troost
Kansas City broadcast legend, Walt Bodine, grew up in this very neighborhood. His
father owned “Bodine’s” drugstore on the southwest corner of Linwood and Troost in the ‘20s
and ‘30s. One of his adolescent hubs was the “Isis Theater” on the southwest corner of 31st and
Troost. It was an elegant, 5-story, Art Deco masterpiece showcasing one of the most beautiful
theaters in Kansas City. Bodine remembers that, during the 1920s, “it had everything: action,
thrills, adventure, Betty Boop cartoons, and the weekly meeting on Saturdays of the Brer Fox
Club” (Bodine, 2003, p. 9), where there would be weekly prizes for the young members. In his
teens, the top balcony of the Isis was, as Bodine put it, “where you discovered who you were –
and what you could get away with” (Bodine, 2003, p. 35). Lamentably he mused, “The Isis was a
big part of my life. It marked many passages, and the final one came years later, when one day I
passed the corner of 31st and Troost and saw that the Isis had been torn down” (Bodine, 2003, pp.
35-36).
Bodine’s stories abound regarding the 31st and Troost neighborhood. When the market
crashed in 1929, his family was able to maintain a livelihood due to their corner drugstore.
Linwood and Troost was the cross-section of U.S. Highway 40, going East and West, and U.S.
Highway 71, going North and South, down Troost Avenue. Their drugstore was a popular stop.
Dizzy Dean and other baseball players would drop by when they used to stay at the Linwood
Hotel, formerly at Linwood and Harrison, one block west of Troost, (another tribute to Art Deco
Architectural Style). Comedian Red Skelton did a routine at the El Torreon, on 31st and Gillham,
and then dropped by the drug store at 1 or 2 a.m. Johnny Lazia and his entourage, one of Kansas
City’s crime bosses, was a regular before he was gunned down in front of the Park Central Hotel
on Armour Boulevard in 1934 (Bodine, 2003).
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Jazz on Troost
While Prohibition was in force in most of the nation, it happened to pass by certain
locales in Kansas City. The city was known as a “wide-open” town (Page, 1999, p. 25). In spite
of the infamous career of Tom Pendergast in Kansas City politics, one of his enduring legacies,
undoubtedly, was to enable an environment that allowed Kansas City Jazz to flourish in the
1920s and ‘30s. Porter and Ullman (1993) clearly state that “from 1928 to 1939, the town was
dominated by its flamboyant crime boss, Tom Pendergast, a gangster-politician whose interest in
night life helped make Kansas City the region’s entertainment capital” (Porter, Ullman & Hazell,
1993, p. 134). Kansas City, in those days, was said to have
Three hundred churches and heaven knows how many gambling joints, at least one of
which advertises regularly in the newspapers. You can name your games and stakes in
dozens of wide-open gambling halls, in some cases operated or partially controlled by ex-
election judges, ex-precinct captains and ex-cons (Allhoff, 1938, as cited in Haddix,
1999).
The cover for an anthology album of Kansas City Jazz in the early 1960s advertised it as “KC in
the 30's: Rowdy Music Memories of America's Wildest City” (Dexter, as cited in Haddix, 1999).
The famed news reporter, Edward Morrow, wrote to his readers in Omaha, “If you want to see
some sin, forget about Paris and go to Kansas City” (Morrow, as cited by Russell, 1971/1997, p.
8). Indeed, Kansas City became known as the “Paris of the Plains” (Haddix, 1999).
During Prohibition and the Great Depression, budding Jazz musicians found a niche in
Kansas City, attracted from the Southwest and Midwest (Page, 1999; Russell, 1971/1997). Jazz
immortals like Charlie “the Bird” Parker, Bennie Moten, Jay McShann, Mary Lou Williams,
Count Basie, and Julia Lee all started in Kansas City. Not only on 18th and Vine, but at 4th and
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Cherry, 12th and Cherry, 12th and Troost, 26th and Troost, Armour and Troost, 31st and Gillham
Rd., and Linwood and Main, the unique riffs, ragtime, and swing sound that became KC Jazz
would fill the air like the thick smoke of a juke joynt (Haddix, 1999). One of the interesting club
names was Bar Le Duc at the corner of Independence and Troost Avenues (DeAngelo and Flynn,
1992). It carried a play on words with the birthplace of the avenue’s namesake, Dr. Benoist
Troost, who was born in Bois Le Duc, Holland.
A colorful figure along Troost Avenue was Milton Morris. His first major club was the
“Hey, Hay Club” down at 4th and Cherry, where people would sit on bales of hay, listening to
future greats like Count Basie. Shots of whiskey and joints of marijuana both sold for a quarter
(Haddix, 1999; DeAngelo, 1992). During prohibition, his drugstore at 26th and Troost would sell
liquor for “medicinal purposes” (Haddix, 1999). In 1934, he opened “Milton’s” at Armour and
Troost, later immortalized in the song, “Meet Me at Milton’s” by Pee Wee Hunt (Haddix, 1999).
Count Basie would refer to him as “my main, main man” (Haddix, 1999). In 1950, the club on
Troost moved to 32nd and Main and became “Milton’s Tap Room,” where he advertised they
could “seat 10,000 people, 69 at a time” (Haddix, 1999).
West of Troost, down the street from the Isis Theater, on 31st and Gillham Road, was El
Torreon. Opened in 1927, it continues as a concert hall and dance center to this day. As one of
the larger ballrooms, it regularly featured Jazz Greats like Bennie Moten’s Kansas City
Orchestra, Andy Kirk, and Clarence Love’s band. Holding up to 2,000 dancers at a time, it was
one of the Kansas City sites for the “battle of the bands” (Haddix, 1999). Another ballroom,
West of Troost, was the Pla-Mor at Linwood and Main, with room for 3,000 dancers. Mary Lou
Williams with the Clouds of Joy, Count Basie, and George E. Lee were all regulars. It is said that
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Hoagy Carmichael introduced his famed “Stardust” while working at the Pla-Mor (Haddix,
1999).
With the demise of the Pendergast machine in 1939, most of the musicians and singers
known for Kansas City Jazz migrated to other cities. But the genre they left behind still lingers
and inspires present and future artists. Kansas City Jazz made its imprint on history.
Congregations near Troost in the 1920s and 1930s
A vibrant community is comprised of all the facets within it working together as a
harmonized whole. The spiritual life of the developing Troost community reflected European
diversity, both the long-term Northern Europeans, and the newly arrived Southern and Eastern
Europeans.
What was sadly missing from the sharing of power, influence and nearby residences in
those days were those from Africa, Latin America, Asia, and the Native American displacement.
Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Jewish (Conservative and Reformed), Christian Science,
Baptist, and various other Protestant denominations were among the many congregations
represented near the burgeoning Troost corridor. Here we focus on but a few.
St. Vincent De Paul Roman Catholic Church
St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church was built in 1922 at 31st and Flora, 5 blocks away
from Troost Avenue. It stands as a testimony to English Gothic architecture, with an extant 1913
pipe organ continuing to play. The huge bronze bell can to this day be heard, still calling
worshippers to prayer. For its first 50 years, the parish was served by the Vincentian Fathers,
who provided not only daily liturgies, but a parochial school for the community. Currently the
church is owned by the Society of St. Pius X, an off-shoot of the Roman Catholic Church
(Crown jewel, 1980).
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The Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation
The Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation served the many Greek immigrants in
the community at the southeast corner of Linwood and Paseo, 4 blocks from Troost Avenue,
from 1941 until 1987. Prior to that time, the congregation gathered at 1423 Broadway in the
downtown area of Kansas City (Economy, 1987).
Originally, the Greek community settled in an area known as “Athens” along the Bluff by
the Missouri River, along 5th Street and Wyandotte. Since most immigrants arriving around 1907
were single males, they lived in small rooms over “shops and saloons” (Schirmer, 1976, p. 4). As
their numbers increased they spread out from 14th and Broadway south to 31st and Troost.
Schirmer provides a description of day to day life for the men away from their families. Her
description of the Greek coffee house is not unlike the one young Walt Disney found as a source
of sustenance during his lean days at the Laugh-O-Gram Studios (Disney Online, 2001c).
The [Greek] laborers in Kansas City, who could not work in winter, were bored
and lonely without their families. The traditional Greek coffee house provided them a
place to rest and pass the time exchanging news and playing cards. The police were afraid
that so many lonely, single men would resort to heavy drinking and unvirtous women and
they consequently forbid any women or children to enter a Greek coffee house. By 1913,
however, the police admitted that the Greeks were not heavy drinkers and very rarely
committed a crime (Schirmer, 1976, pp. 13-14).
The employment of the first wave of Greek immigrants came from railroads, or shining
shoes, or construction. Due to language difficulties, most of the early Greek immigrants tended
to work in gangs. But since most had at least a secondary education, their facility for language
enabled them to assimilate fairly quickly into the dominant culture (Schirmer, 1976).
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Members of the Greek community around Troost Avenue included Panagiotis Bellos. He
established restaurants at 2608 E. 31st Street in 1923, and later at 2849 Troost Avenue under the
name, “Bellos Café” (Zaharopoulos, 2005, p. 6). In 1920, at 1016 E. 31st Street, there was
“Victory Lunch,” operated by Efstratios Kapsimalis (Zaharopoulos, 2005, p. 4). In 1918, A.
Panagopoulos bought and maintained a hat shop at 1022 E. 31st Street. At 31st and Main, Alexios
Karygiannis and Antonios Papanikolaou were co-owners of the Apollo Confectionery. They
were both known to be “great contributors” (Zaharopoulos, 2005, p. 9).
After World War I, the Galanis brothers started “Good Eats Lunch” at 4703½ Troost
Avenue. Stavros and Nikolaos Gilanis had come to America from the province of Arcadia. Both
were known for their “gentle nature and their piety” (Zaharopoulos, 2005, p. 36). The famous
Nichols Restaurant on Southwest Trafficway was started by Fotios Nikolopoulos (Nichols) after
he came to America in 1912 (Zaharopoulos, 2005, p. 38).
It was fortunate for Kansas City that, as Walt Disney related it, “a couple of Greeks” had
a restaurant downstairs from his studio at 31st and Forest Avenue (Disney, 2005d). Very
probably, due to their gyros and pita, he was able to sustain a little mouse that would later bring
him such fame.
Tom Vleisides, one of the members of Annunciation and a neighborhood resident during
the 1940s, reminisced with the writer of this study:
Really, next to the Plaza, downtown was large, and then you had 31st and Troost!
It was a big shopping [area]. In that area, there were a lot of Greeks, ‘cause our church
had moved from 14th and Broadway up to Linwood and Flora. There were a lot of
Catholics ‘cause of St. Vincent’s, which was a big church and also a school. And of
course you had the Jewish synagogues. But anyway, the Blacks … well, it was the culture
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in those days, they didn’t walk up Wayne to catch a street car (personal communications,
2004)!
In addition, there is Superior Linen Company to this day at 31st and Holmes. Run by the
Kartsonis family, this is the 4th generation that they have been working in the neighborhood near
Troost Avenue.
Jewish Congregations
Although a few early merchants in Westport Landing (the present-day River Quay area)
were Jewish, most came during the migration at the turn of the 20th century. Those who escaped
the pogroms in Russia between 1900 and 1920, settled at 19th and McGee in the McClure Flats.
These were tenements, supported by Jewish benevolent agencies in Kansas City.
Prior to the First World War, half the Jewish population in Kansas City was first-
generation immigrants. By 1942, of the 20,000 Jewish residents here, one-third were first
generation. Sixty percent lived in a “middle class area between Cleveland and Troost from
Linwood to 47th (Schirmer, 1976, pp. 3, 8).
The Jewish Community Center was housed in its first building at 3123 Troost in 1917
(Smith, 1974, pp. 26-27, 51-53). Herman Passamaneck, Executive Secretary of the Young Men’s
Hebrew Association, at the same address, sent in their quarterly dues of $3.00 to the South
Central Business Association in 1923 (Passamaneck, 1923).
Congregation Beth Shalom
In the 1920s, the 3400 block of the Paseo, the next major street East of Troost, was
graced with the massive domes and inspiring design of Moorish and Byzantine architecture. Beth
Shalom Synagogue was inspired by the Judaic style in Muslim Spain, the Neo-Romanesque style
with its columns and arches, and the Byzantine period with its adornment, common for early 20th
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century synagogues. Architect Samuel Greenebaum and his firm won the 1928 “Kansas City
Architectural League’s gold medal for ‘the most beautiful building, best suited to its purpose’”
(Ford, 2003).
Rabbi Gershon Hadas (1896-1980) began serving the congregation in 1929, and helped to
bring financial stability to the struggling congregation during the Great Depression. With a 1500-
member congregation, the rabbi was said to infuse it with a “family feeling.” Rabbi Hadas was
known for his pastoral work and his work on behalf of children, the poor, the elderly, and
Jewish-Christian relations (KC Star, 2000). The congregation moved to 95th and Wornall Road in
1969. The former temple was converted to Christ Temple Pentecostal Church, which still serves
the community to this day (Ford, 2003).
Congregation B’nai Jehudah & Rabbi Samuel Mayerberg
On the southeast corner of Linwood and Flora, was the Temple B’nai Jehudah. In the
style of an ancient Greek temple with Ionic pillars, it stands today as the Mohart Building and
one of the FOCUS: Kansas City Centers. Today it reads “Linwood Multi-Purpose Center”
covering the stone-etched words above the portal of the former temple that once read, “My
House Shall Be a House of Prayer for All Peoples (Ray, M. K., 1969).”
One of the most fascinating chapters in the story of Troost Avenue and its surrounding
community is that of its rabbi, Samuel Mayerberg (1892-1964). Not only was Rabbi Mayerberg
the spiritual leader of Congregation B’nai Jehudah, but one of the most powerful moral forces
during the Pendergast era (Sandy, 1996).
He gave a series of autobiographical lectures in 1942 at the Hebrew Union College in
Cincinnati, Ohio. Although his title for the talks was The Rabbi as Civic Leader, they were later
published by the college with the title, Chronicle of an American Crusader (Mayerberg, 1944).
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This single rabbi, with the force of conscience and determination, advocated for an end to the
death penalty with the Governor of Missouri, fought for academic freedom at the University of
Columbia, sought to stop a lynching in Maryville, Missouri, while simultaneously developing
deep friendships with those of good will throughout Kansas City. A story regarding him and his
friend, Episcopal Bishop Robert Spencer, reveal the deep mutual respect expressed in inter-faith
dialogue:
It flashed upon me that my friend was using the term Christian in no dogmatic
sense. To him the word connoted all that was good and true. I was much touched by his
affectionate regard and of course felt that I did not deserve such appellation. When I
acknowledged his gracious introduction, I recalled the story of Lessings’ Nathan the
Wise, in which the Baron, grateful for a service Nathan had rendered him, exclaimed, ‘By
God, Nathan, thou art a Christian; never was a better!’ Soberly Nathan replied, ‘That
which makes me to thee a Christian, makes thee to me a Jew!’ (Mayerberg, 1944, pp. 94-
95).
With his conscience strengthened by the writings of the Prophets and the Talmud, he
prepared to follow the guidance of the righteous Hillel, “In a place where there are no men strive
thou to be a man” (Mayerberg, 1944, p. 103). Describing that era, he wrote, “There were men in
Kansas City in 1932, but they were strangely silent!” (Mayerberg, 1944, p. 103). Although Tom
Pendergast held no elected office, through his Red-D-Mix Concrete Company and in league with
Kansas City’s “Al Capone,” Johnny Lazia, he was the stereotype of a political boss. Rigged
elections, bribed officials, and with the mob to do his dirty work, Kansas City was under his
control. After a hopeful change had been made in the city charter in 1924, people were expecting
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an administration of accountability and integrity. Instead, the new City Manager, a realtor named
H. F. McElroy, was one of Pendergast’s friends and easily followed his dictates.
For the next 15 years, Kansas City would carry the reputation of “America’s wildest city”
(Dexter, as cited in Haddix, 1999). From 1932 to 1939, the thorn in the flesh for Pendergast,
McElroy, and Lazia would turn out to be this persistent rabbi. Although he was shot at,
threatened, had his office ransacked, his phone tapped and his records stolen, Rabbi Mayerberg
remained at the front of a citizen’s coalition to restore justice to the city administration. Initially
members of his congregation tried to dissuade him. But, with the assistance of other ministers,
like Rev. D. A. Holmes, the Kansas City Star, and other businessmen, he finally succeeded. In
April, 1939 Pendergast was indicted by Federal Grand Jury on income tax evasion. A week later,
McElroy resigned (Mayerberg, 1944; Riley, 1999).
Second Church of Christ, Scientist
On the northeast corner of 31st and Troost Avenue, the Second Church of Christ, Scientist
stood for many years. Its cornerstone was laid Christmas Day, 1902. This church, which held
over 1000 people at capacity, held its first services in 1904 (Postcard, 1971), and was dedicated
on April 8, 1917 (Second Church, 1927). As reported in the Kansas City Journal-Post (1923),
“The church edifice has a beautiful approach artistically terraced and planted. The general style
of architecture is Roman Doric” (Second Church, 1927). Its presence added cultivated landscape,
beauty and a sense of spirituality to the community until its demolition in 1955, when it became
a J.C. Penney store (Ray, 1971).
Paseo Baptist Church & Rev. D. A. Holmes
Paseo Baptist Church has always been a moral influence in Kansas City, Missouri.
Originally the church was located at 18th and Vine, known as “Vine Street Baptist Church.” But
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in 1927, the congregation, under the leadership of Reverend D.A. Holmes, moved to its current
location at 25th and Paseo, when it changed its name to “Paseo Baptist Church” (Riley, 1999).
Reverend D.A. Holmes (1876-1972) was known as an early civil rights activist and was
part of the resistance against the Pendergast political machine in the 1930s. He was born the son
of slaves in north central Missouri, near Moberly. Called to preach at the age of 17, he earned
degrees from several colleges and universities, including the Divinity School of the University of
Chicago (Riley, 1999).
Rev. Holmes was influential in the integration of the University of Missouri at Columbia,
in 1939. He advocated for better homes and jobs for African Americans, and strongly spoke out
against police brutality and corruption under Pendergast. He led a successful, but protracted
conflict with the Kansas City School Board over building a new Lincoln High School at 21st and
Woodland Avenue (Riley, 1999).
Dr. James S. Smith, Sr., pastor of Allen Temple Baptist Church in Oakland, California,
grew up under the preaching of Rev. D.A. Holmes. He recalls that Rev. Holmes was a “great
giant of preacher, poet, and scholar … [a] clarion voice, speaking out on behalf of the black
community, pointing his finger at racists.” But he also remembers the sense of community that
existed between African Americans and the Jewish community in those days. He said, “I don’t
understand the hatred between some blacks and the Jewish community because I remember …
the great rabbi who stood with D. A. Holmes way before Martin Luther King, Jr” (Hunter, 1988).
Troost during Jim Crow and the Civil Rights movement
Although the multi-ethnic landscape of Kansas City was one of the richest features of life
along Troost Avenue, the creation of exclusion became its infamous claim to fame. Gotham
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(2002) points out that during the 1990s, scholars found Kansas City to be “one of the nation’s
hypersegregated metropolitan areas” (Gotham, 2002, p. 13).
Jim Crow in Kansas City
The end of the 19th century saw increasing segregation after Reconstruction in 1870.
However, in 1896, the case of the U.S. Supreme Court decision Plessy v. Ferguson, gave legal
backing to the policy. Jim Crow was now the law of the land. “Separate, but equal” became the
justification for racial ideology. Roles and institutions became duplicated along racial lines.
Racial etiquette was enforced by violent, vigilante groups like the Ku Klux Klan. Between 1884
and World War I, lynchings exceeded 3,600 (Marger, 2003, pp. 266 – 267)!
During this period, there were 81 lynchings in Missouri, 51 of whom were African
American. This is more lynchings than occurred in either Virginia or North Carolina during the
same period (Greene, Kremer & Holland, 1980/1993). A virtual caste system, American
“apartheid,” had enmeshed itself into the fiber of the national psyche. Jim Crow had become
such a norm that, even though Missouri didn’t pass a segregation law for public facilities,
African Americans were prohibited, by custom “from joining whites in facilities such as hotels,
restaurants, theaters, and hospitals” (Greene, et al., 1980/1993, p. 107).
The worst examples of stereotypes began to appear in the local press. Demonizing
caricatures were published to create political cleavage. The Klan-like images of oversexed,
beast-like, incarnate evil began to re-emerge. An editorial in the Kansas City Post reveals the
fear-mongering:
Will the ‘better class of white Republicans’ permit ‘this magnificent city [to be]
the stronghold of negro (sic) equality in the whole United States? This city can be turned
over to negroes (sic), who have shown at the workhouse what they will do when clothed
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with a little brief authority, and then such a reign of debauchery and iniquity will take
place here as was never seen in civilized communities (Kansas City Post, 1906, March
30, as cited by Schirmer, 2002, p. 67).
To make things worse, stereotypes were now backed by pseudo-science. This was the era
of social Darwinism, espoused by Herbert Spencer and other social scientists. “Survival of the
fittest” was now applied to social relations, allowing laissez-faire economics to prevail (Coontz,
1992). The “Gilded Age,” stretching from the end of Reconstruction in 1877 to the turn of the
century is exactly when Kansas City’s “Millionaire’s Row” was established, along with the
prevailing racist sentiments. When black soldiers began returning from Cuba at the end of the
Spanish-American War (1902), Chaplain George Prioleau wrote of how they were treated in
Kansas City:
These black boys, heroes of our country, were not allowed to stand at the counters
of restaurants and eat a sandwich and drink a cup of coffee, while the white soldiers were
welcomed and invited to sit down at the tables and eat free of cost (Zinn, 1980/2003, p.
318).
In the southern United States, many thought that an exodus to the North would bring
income and greater freedom. What they would come to find out was that Jim Crow had stretched
its cloak over the entire nation.
Northward Migration for African Americans
With the federal withdrawal of troops in 1877 from the South, pre-Civil War racial
politics simply reframed the old social structures. As a result, over fifty thousand, known as
“Exodusters,” fled to the North and made it to the “promised land” of Kansas. Several thousand
settled in the Kansas City area. Yet tens of thousands were forced back by armed vigilantes
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along the riverfronts and southern roads (Greene, et al., 1980/1993, p. 104; Bennett, Jr., 1984, p.
272). This was the first Great Migration from the South.
The second period of large migration to the Northern cities coincided with the
legitimization of Jim Crow after the Plessy v. Ferguson decision in 1896. By legalizing an
oppressive system of racism, the Supreme Court created a primary push factor that motivated
thousands of African Americans to leave the South. Other push factors during this time included
an infestation of the boll weevil in southern agriculture that wiped out much hope for a
livelihood. Toward the end of World War I, southern unemployment was rising from 13% in
1918 to 20% by 1920.
Meanwhile, the new immigration laws restricting foreigners in the 1920s, created
opportunities for African American workers in Northern urban centers. Other pull factors
included increased industrialization, thereby creating more factory jobs; a better wage structure;
and migration networks, comprised of labor agents, family, friends, and churches. These
networks would often help those coming from the South to get resettled in the North (Mary
Kelly, PhD, personal communications, 2003; Tolnay, 2003).
Troost as a dividing line
Kansas City did not always have identifiable residentially segregated areas. Sherry L.
Schirmer, in her outstanding work on Kansas City segregation, pointed out that “in 1880, blacks
constituted at least 10 percent of the population in sixteen of the twenty-one enumeration
districts in the city” (Schirmer, 2002, p. 32). Neighborhoods like “Hell’s Half Acre” in the West
Bottoms, Church Hill near 10th and Charlotte, Belvedere Hollow centered north of Troost and
Independence Avenue, and the Vine Street Corridor, between Troost and Woodland Avenues,
stretching from 12th to 25th Streets, were integrated at the turn of the 20th century (Schirmer,
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2002). Studies of isolation for ethnic groups revealed that, prior to 1900, African Americans
would have comprised only 13% of an average ward in Kansas City (Gotham, 2002, p. 28). This
was before the “dividing line.”
The previously discussed “Millionaire’s Row” occurred during a real estate boom in the
late 1880s. However, when it collapsed in the 1890s, many spacious homes became available to
the most immediate buyers, regardless of race. Known for the beautiful lawns and impressive
homes, more affluent African Americans began to move into this area. “Within a decade, a
corridor along Vine Street in this eastside black settlement would form the nucleus of the black
ghetto in Kansas City” (Schirmer, 2002, p. 39).
Kevin Gotham (2002), in his study of race and uneven real estate development, uses
Kansas City as his case study. He especially focuses on the use of Troost Avenue as a dividing
line. Utilizing quantitative and qualitative research methods, he arrives at six key causes to
Troost becoming a racial dividing line:
1. Housing and Welfare reports linking “place, race, and culture”
Kansas City is known for establishing the nation’s first welfare agency – the
Board of Public Welfare (Gotham, 2002, p. 36). Unfortunately, the view of its social
workers was diametrically opposed to that of today’s National Association of Social
Workers (NASW). NASW, established in 1955, lists among their core values, social
justice and the dignity and worth of the person. Included among their ethical
standards are cultural competence and social diversity (NASW, 1996). They stand at
the forefront of advocacy for populations at risk.
Yet, in 1913, Asa Martin wrote in Our Negro Population: a Sociological Study of
the Negroes of Kansas City, Missouri,
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Social workers say that no class of people with whom they have to deal is so
shiftless, indolent, and lazy as the Negro; that he has very little self-pride, and
hence will lie and misrepresent the facts in order to get any assistance whatever
(Cited by Gotham, 2002, p. 36).
In addition, two widely read analyses of Kansas City housing were published by
the Board of Public Welfare, Report on Housing (1912), and Social Prospectus of
Kansas City (1913). As Gotham points out,
Failing to distinguish between character and environment, these housing
surveys provided ostensibly objective and scientific evidence to reinforce
emerging prejudices and stereotypes that made it appear that Blacks were
responsible for the social problems found in their neighborhoods (Gotham, 2002,
p. 36).
Typical of studies during this period was the tendency to blame the victims of
poverty, without thought for the systemic or institutional factors involved. Such
studies, emboldened by the Social Darwinism of the era, was one of the factors that
spread the idea of “racializing urban space” (Gotham, 2002, p. 37) and the ideology
behind making Troost Avenue a racial dividing line.
2. Racial restrictive covenants
Of the instruments used by the dominant class of European Americans in Kansas
City, none was as effective in promoting residential segregation as “restrictive
covenants.” A contract entered into between property owners and neighborhood
associations, the covenant stipulated that the sale, lease, or rental of a property could
only be offered to whites. One restriction for Wornall Acres, read,
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None of the lots in the subdivision shall be conveyed, leased or given to and no
building erected thereon shall be used, owned, or occupied by any person not of the
white race (Restriction, filed in Jackson County, 1938; Cited by Thomas, 2005).
Between 1900 and 1947, out of the 221 housing subdivisions in Jackson County,
Missouri, 62% had restrictive covenants (Slingsby, 1980, cited by Gotham, 2002, p.
39).
3. J.C. Nichols and homeowner associations
J.C Nichols has a bigger than life reputation in Kansas City. The founder and
developer of one of the nation’s first shopping districts, the Country Club Plaza,
Nichols is known for bringing a sense of beauty, elegance and taste to the city. Each
Thanksgiving night, one of the major community events is the ceremony of lighting
the Plaza holiday lights. Tens of thousands cram into Nichol’s Country Club Plaza for
the annual beginning of Kansas City’s holiday season. Regrettably, the means by
which such loveliness developed is intimately linked with residential segregation and
the eventual creation of Troost Avenue as a racial dividing line.
Making extensive use of racially restrictive covenants, the J.C. Nichols Company
assured that these would be enforced by homeowners associations. The members
agreed to bind themselves and future owners from selling or renting to African
Americans. Empowered by legal restrictive covenants, these associations became the
“racial gatekeeper” (Gotham, 2002, p. 43) that were part of promoting a sub-division
with a “feeling of security… a more interested citizenship, and a more home-loving
family” (Nichols, 1914, cited by Gotham, 2002, p. 43).
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J.C. Nichols was part of the creation of the Federal Housing Association (FHA),
the Urban Land Institute (ULI), and the National Association of Home Builders
(NAHB) (Weiss, 1987, cited by Gotham, 2002, p. 41). The influence of Nichols’
policies was transmitted to the nation through these organizations. Indeed, as
McKenzie (1994) made clear, by the 1940s most developers would include
homeowner associations as part of their master-plan for new subdivisions (McKenzie,
1994, as cited by Gotham, 2002, p. 43).
Several housing associations east of Troost followed the Nichols model. Linwood
Improvement Association (LIA) and Southeast Home Protective Association (SHPA)
were two such associations. LIA had its geographic boundary from 28th to 31st Streets
and from Flora to Brooklyn. SHPA lie between 20th and 30th Streets and from Euclid
Avenue to Benton Boulevard. However, due to a pre-existing African American
population in these sub-divisions, they ultimately were unsuccessful in their
segregation attempts. This was in spite of bombings, threats, racial slurs, and LIA’s
manipulation of the Troost and Spring Valley Parks to create a racial boundary
(Schirmer, 2002).
Gotham (2002) makes a key point regarding racializing space. “These stereotypes
did not arise spontaneously but were fostered by elite real estate firms and community
builders to protect their investments from the infiltration of racial minorities”
(Gotham, 2002, p. 45).
Nichols and the homeowners associations had made a fortune off of segregation.
The flow of race money would continue, not only through real estate developers, but
also the agents themselves, by means of “blockbusting.”
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4. Real estate blockbusting as a catalyst for neighborhood transition
Marger (2003) defines blockbusting as real estate agents,
“spreading word through a white neighborhood of an impending black influx,
[to] frighten whites into selling their homes cheaply. These homes were
subsequently sold to blacks at inflated prices. In the process, all-white areas were
transformed quickly into all-black areas” (Marger, 2003, p. 297).
Blockbusting could be phrased in such a way that it sounded very nice. “I’m glad
you want to stay in the neighborhood; so few white people do” (Curls, 1976, cited by
Schirmer, 2002, p. 225). But that was enough to trigger the move response.
In Kansas City, Missouri this process most clearly happened in the southeast
section. Between 1950 and 1970, in an area bounded by 12th Street on the north,
Gregory Boulevard (71st Street) on the south, Cleveland Avenue on the east, and
Troost Avenue on the west, there was a dramatic population shift. White residents fell
from 126,229 to 33, 804. The white presence fell from 74.7% of the population to
24.6%. During that same period, black residents increased from 41,348 to 102,741. In
terms of percentage, it was nearly an exact reversal. The black presence increased
from 24.4% to 74.6% (U.S. Census Bureau, cited by Gotham, 2002, p. 95).
For European Americans, the very sense of status and the value of one’s identity
had become linked to place and homogeneity. By denigrating African Americans with
stereotypes like “immoral,” “criminal,” “dirty,” they thought they could boost their
own sense of status by staying away (Schirmer, 2002; Gotham, 2002). As Gotham
suggests, “Early twentieth-century meanings that people assigned to home,
neighborhood and community were intimately connected to constructions of race and
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racial identity that together racialized space in the emerging segregated metropolis”
(Gotham, 2002, p. 47).
In the discussion of “white flight,” Gotham (2002) elucidates that a neglected
piece of the discussion is the role that real estate actors played in stirring up hostilities
and fears in order to create huge profits for themselves through the rapid turnover of
homes (Gotham, 2002). Yet realtors weren’t the only industry that played off of the
race construction.
5. Housing disinvestment (“redlining”) by lending institutions
When banks and other lending institutions refuse to lend to an area of minority
concentration, we have “redlining.” Gotham summarizes the effect on Kansas City
and the area east of the Troost corridor:
“Once the racial transition of the southeast section of the city was
complete, private lending agencies ceased making home mortgage money
available to residents living east of Troost Avenue, thereby redlining entire
neighborhoods and launching a vicious wave of disinvestment and physical
deterioration that continues to this day (Gotham, 2002, p. 138).
The Civil Rights Act of 1968 made all of the above policies illegal. Title VIII of
the Fair Housing Act of the Civil Rights Act specifically covers such practices as
blockbusting and redlining, under Sections 804 through 806 (Fair Housing Act,
1968). Yet, as we have seen, clever ways of communication could maneuver around
the law with the same discriminatory effect, either for a realtor or a lender.
After the 1968 Fair Housing Act, we would hope that conditions would have
changed. Yet of the $642 million in home mortgages granted to Greater Kansas City
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residents by savings and loans in 1977, less than 1 percent went into the area east of
Troost (Gotham, 2002). Redlining was drawn with a very thick pen down Troost
Avenue.
6. Segregative school action by the Kansas City, Missouri School District
The policy of segregation was not only a disinvestment of economic capital. From
1950 on there was a deliberate attempt to limit the development of social capital as
well. The Kansas City, Missouri School District (KCMSD) school board sought to
keep segregated schools by “using Troost Avenue as a racially identifiable school
attendance boundary from 1955 through 1975, separating White schools to the west
and Black schools to the east” (Gotham, 2002, p. 93). Indeed, the Troost boundary,
created by the school district, was utilized by the realtors and the lenders to provoke
White flight (Gotham, 2002). This was in direct reaction to the 1954 Brown v. Board
of Education U.S. Supreme Court decision. Instead of calling it a “racial attendance
zone”, they now would call it a “neighborhood attendance zone” (Gotham, 2002, p.
99). But the effect was the same. The schools remained segregated.
Kansas City was so attached to the segregation of its schools that it took a 1984
court order to force the district to change (Jenkins v. State of Missouri, 1985). Judge
Russell Clark fortunately saw through the duplicity and mandated the development of
magnet schools that would be racially integrated.
In his court ruling, Judge Clark quoted Robert Kennedy,
“When thousands of our citizens are afforded only inferior educational
opportunities, they suffer a loss which can never be compensated and the whole
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country is subjected to unnecessary social and economic waste” (Kennedy, 1964,
cited in Jenkins v. State of Missouri, 1985).
Troost during Civil Rights Movement
Local Kansas City resident, Thelma Altschul remembers what it was like when she first
moved to the Troost corridor in the early 1960s, living near 24th and Tracy:
They had signs on the water fountain that said black and white. We couldn’t sit at
a counter in a white restaurant and eat, ‘cause we had to come in the back door. They just
wouldn’t let you in! But in the movie [Isis Theater], we’d sit in the balcony [light
chuckle], and they sat down on the first floor, and they got lots of spitballs! Kids will be
kids… (personal communications, 2004).
In 1964, there was a push in Kansas City for residents to sign a petition to end
discrimination in the real estate industry in the area. Sponsored by the Greater Kansas City
Council on Religion and Race, the “Good Neighborhood Campaign” was able to organize 23 fair
housing councils. It met with fierce opposition from the National Real Estate Board (NAREB)
who publicly opposed banning discrimination in housing (Gotham, 2002).
Nevertheless, after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., coupled with an
intensive fair housing lobby, the Fair Housing Act finally passed as part of the Civil Rights Act.
Regretfully, the passage of a law doesn’t take away the frustration, the grief, the pain of injustice
consistently expressed by a subordinate culture. Thelma Altschul again reflects on this period:
In 1968, they put Kansas City under martial law, which means we had tanks,
paratroopers, and servicemen all over the streets. In order to go anywhere, you had to
have a pass to go to work. If you wasn’t (sic) going to work, you was arrested, if you was
out after 6:00 in the evening! The way I felt about the tanks, was that if they was going to
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have martial law and tanks, they should have put everybody off the streets at 6:00, not
just the blacks (personal communications, 2004, April)!
Troost under Urban Renewal
Ghost Town
Harry Reaves worked with the Minority Contractors from 1969 until 1985 on the site of
the old Withers estate on the southeast corner of 31st and Troost. Since then, he has encouraged
young entrepreneurs, while seeking to keep going with a company that manufactures and
distributes popcorn called Jimmy Crack Corn. He personally experienced the disinvestment
along Troost Avenue:
We put a manufacturing plant into the building to produce popcorn, which started
to give life back to the property. We started to bring money back into fruition again.
During that period, Troost was turning, more or less, into a ghost town. It seems as
though people drifted back down toward 18th Street or further out to 63rd Street. It was
very difficult to get any kind of action, from the city or anybody (personal
communications, 2004, April).
Root Shock
Another example of institutional discrimination was the urban renewal plan instituted by
both the federal and civic leaders. In the attempt to rid the area of “blight,” many historic
buildings and landmarks were demolished. Dr. Mindy Fullilove refers to this as “root shock.”
She writes, “Blight, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder, and it happened, more often than
not, that the part of the city the businessmen thought was blighted was the part where black
people lived. By my estimate, 1,600 black neighborhoods were demolished by urban renewal”
(Fullilove, 2004).
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Where she writes of the entire nation, the experience along Troost Avenue mirrored that
of other urban areas. Classic examples of Art Deco architecture were destroyed when the city
tore down the historic Isis theatre and the La Salle apartments near the 3100 block of Troost
Avenue. A previous hub of collective culture was transformed into two empty lots collecting
empty cans, KFC chicken bones, and the fading beauty of dandelion flowers.
Another factor in “root shock” has been the obvious impact the Bruce Watkins Drive (or
Highway 71) has had on the area. On one hand, it contributed to the major destruction of
neighborhood housing. In 1960, there were 11,120 housing units in the area under study on the
east side of Troost Avenue. By 2000, they had dropped to 3,142. This, combined with demolition
of older apartment buildings, has also led to significant displacement. On the other hand, the
presence of the Drive makes easier access for people coming to the community from the wider
region. Yet the problem of the lack of affordable housing remains (City Planning, 2004).
Troost Revival: FOCUS: Kansas City; Hands across Troost
Fresh hope visited the Troost Corridor in 1991 with Rev. Emmanuel Cleaver II,
becoming Kansas City’s first African American mayor. Considered to be one of Kansas City’s
finest mayors, he especially emphasized a systemic, community approach to problem solving.
Guiding the city for two-terms, he was able to see his initiatives begin to bear fruit before being
elected to the United States Congress in 2005 (U.S. House, 2005).
With themes of diversity and inclusiveness, he instituted a sweeping study to launch a
city plan that would guide the city for the next 25 years. The plan, called FOCUS: Kansas City,
was an acronym for “Forging Our Comprehensive Urban Strategy” (FOCUS, 2005). The
planning team, led by the Director of City Planning and Development, Vicki Noteis, especially
emphasized a strong community-based representation (FOCUS, 2005; Collison, 2004; Rouse,
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Noteis, & Arason, 2000). In 1999, the FOCUS plan, with Noteis at the helm, was honored with
the best plan in the country by the American Planning Association (Collison, 2004).
When the planning stages were over in 1997, the first area they focused on was the
Troost Corridor. This new initiative began to stir the east and west sides of Troost toward a new
beginning. Using charrettes and focus groups, the process led to an eventual redevelopment plan
for the Troost Corridor. As a scion of the FOCUS: Kansas City plan it embodied some key
aspects of that design.
The first round of assessments were initiated for Troost Avenue, which has been
described as a significant racial and economic barrier in the community. Neighborhoods
along both sides of Troost conducted individual workshops identifying their own assets
as well as priorities for improvement, and also met together to determine common
priorities and concerns for the corridor. The Troost Community Association continues to
meet nearly two years after completion of the initial assessments. Cooperative successes
include a community market that combines fresh produce, crafts, and activities with
fashion shows and music, all contributing to a festive atmosphere. (Rouse, Noteis, &
Arason, 2000).
Besides the Troost Community Market, another collaborative effort that has led to a sense
of community for both sides of Troost is the “Hands across Troost” initiative. Connecting the
Beacon Hill neighborhood on the east side of Troost, with the Union Hill and Longfellow
neighborhoods on the west side of Troost, they have an annual block party for strengthening
relational ties. In addition, they have joint neighborhood clean-up days, an abandoned tire
deposit center, and information sharing. Rhonda DewHurst, a local resident, serves as the liaison
for the three groups (personal communications, 2005).
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Where FOCUS has Unfinished Business
Vicki Noteis, the author of the FOCUS – Kansas City plan, shared with the writer of this
paper, what was left undone from the original plan. She explained how the government sector
had done a very good job of fulfilling their commitments to various elements of the plan. But the
portions that were yet to be completed had to do with the private sector – the human investment
plan. She enumerated what is yet needed as work on “health, education, arts, and racial
discrimination” (personal communication, 2005). Part II of this paper will consider the current
manifestations of discrimination and long-term solutions.
Part II: Moving from History to a New Community
In considering the history of Troost Avenue and the surrounding community, its rich and
painful complexities are discovered. From such contradictions emerge human beings and the
communities they create. Certain forms of art are built upon the beauty perceived from
contrasting light and dark, like the chiaroscuro tradition. The challenge now will be to build a
community together from a sense of shared history. For that to become a reality, the ways that
prejudice and discrimination continue to be expressed must be explored more deeply.
Prejudice, Stereotypes, Racism and Discrimination
Definitions
Prejudice has been defined as an arbitrary belief or feeling toward an ethnic group or its
individual members” (Marger, 2003, p.67). Allport, in explaining the difference between
prejudgments and prejudice, writes, “Prejudgments become prejudices only if they are not
reversible when exposed to new knowledge” (Allport, 1958, as cited by Marger, 2003, p. 67).
Rutstein (1993) synthesizes these by the following definition: “racial prejudice: an emotional
commitment to ignorance regarding race” (Rutstein, 1998).
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Stereotypes were described by Lippman (1922) as “pictures in our heads” that don’t come
from personal experience (Lippman, 1922, as cited by Marger, 2003, p. 68).
“These mental images of groups thus serve as supports for the negative beliefs
that constitute prejudice. Once we learn the stereotypes attached to particular groups, we
tend to subsequently perceive individual members according to those generalized
images” (Marger, 2003, p. 68).
When this definition is applied to the images held to support the status of the dominant
culture, as in the residential segregation in Kansas City, Missouri, the purpose served by
enduring stereotypes is made clear.
Racism is defined by Rutstein (1998) as “racial prejudice plus power”. Power, in this case
is seen as “control over the economic and social institutions of a country” (Rutstein, 1998). The
ideology of racism is shown by Marger (2003) to have three separate ideas:
1. Dividing humans according to different physical types.
2. Physical traits that they display are inherently related to their culture, personality, and intelligence.
3. As a result of their genetic inheritance, some groups are naturally superior to
others.
He points out that, in racist thought, the idea of superiority of one group over another is
thus innate, “just the way it is,” and can’t change. Ultimately, this is the ideology that enables the
legitimization of unequal distribution of resources in a society, especially in regards to “wealth,
prestige, and power” (Marger, 2003, p. 25).
Discrimination is expressed in two ways – individual and institutional. If we think of
prejudice as a belief or attitude, then discrimination is linked with behavior or actions. Feagin
and Feagin (1978) supply a clear definition of discrimination as “actions or practices carried out
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by members of dominant groups, or their representatives, which have a differential and negative
impact on members of subordinate groups” (Feagin & Feagin, 1978, as cited by Marger, 2003, p.
78).
Individual discrimination is expressed by intentional actions that tend to be the
manifestation of prejudicial attitudes. Institutional discrimination tends to be more indirect and
expressed in the policies or systems of a society. It does not necessarily reflect the individual
prejudices or intentions, but rather the “normal functioning of the society’s institutions.” Yet,
those policies that become “normal” are generally rooted in previous overt, intentional
discrimination of those that set the previous policies (Marger, 2003, p. 81).
In the change from “racial attendance zones” to “neighborhood attendance zones,”
KCMSD was able to evade desegregation of the school system for thirty years after Brown v.
Board of Education (Gotham, 2002, p. 99). This is an example of intentional discrimination that
eventually becomes the norm. To this day, the lingering effects of those decisions are affecting
the entire school district and the children and families served.
How institutional discrimination & white privilege reinforce old divisions
To be able to overcome these issues, those in the dominant culture must be willing to
“step out of the box”, and look at themselves, and the institutions they participate in, from a
different perspective. A revealing tool is to examine the many hidden forms of privilege
European Americans experience within this society. Peggy McIntosh provides an extensive list
of 26 different aspects of life that reveal this hidden privilege. Consider a few examples:
1. I can go shopping alone most of the time, pretty well assured that I will not be followed or harassed.
2. If I should need to move, I can be pretty sure of renting or purchasing housing
in an area which I can afford and in which I would want to live.
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3. I can be pretty sure that my neighbors in such a location will be neutral or pleasant to me.
4. Whether I use checks, credit cards, or cash, I can count on my skin color not to
work against the appearance of financial reliability.
5. I can arrange to protect my children most of the time from people who might not like them.
6. I am never asked to speak for all the people of my racial group.
7. If a traffic cop pulls me over or if the IRS audits my tax return, I can be sure I
haven’t been singled out because of my race (McIntosh, 1988).
From just a few examples, the point becomes very clear. European Americans live in a
world structured around privilege based on skin color. Access to daily privileges and advantages
are inherent in our system for some, but not for others. Thus, the burden of change falls upon
those with the privilege. To ignore or deny the privilege reinforces the discrimination. The
minority cultures are then subject to further injustices, while being told all is fine or they
shouldn’t complain so much or they should just work harder or study more, etc.
Neighborhood Associations
Although the issue of discrimination affects all aspects of life in one way or another,
more attention needs to be directed towards neighborhood associations. Given the history of
restrictive covenants used by the J.C. Nichols Company and the specific use of homeowner
associations to enforce a segregationist policy, it is not too surprising to find these tendencies yet
remaining (Gotham, 2002). The very nature of systems is to return to homeostasis, the balance of
a previous state (Cannon, 1932, as cited in Hartman & Laird, 1983, p. 65). As in individuals
overcoming prejudice, this is a process and not a single cathartic event (Montleith, 1993). The
same is true of groups or communities. There must be ongoing “self-regulation” to overcome the
tendencies of discrimination in the dominant culture. Otherwise, what will seem natural is to
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return to “the good old days,” which in the context of this paper was the era of “separate, but
equal,” i.e. Jim Crow (Coontz, 1992). One method by which this “self-regulation” could be
accomplished is by neighborhood workshops or groups purposefully dealing with issues of
healing racism (Rutstein, 1993; Kivel, 1996).
Failure in this will inevitably lead to negative aspects of exclusion in policy making and
lack of power sharing that are at the very heart of institutional discrimination. If this continues to
occur, it will greatly limit the opportunities for those in minority cultures.
In attending housing association meetings at the Hyde Park and Longfellow
Neighborhood Associations, this writer heard several members express the intention of having
homeowners primarily in their neighborhoods, rather than renters (personal communication,
2004). This intention unfortunately has serious racial overtones. In the area under consideration,
west of Troost Avenue, 26.8% of all the housing units are owner-occupied; 73.2% are renter-
occupied. In that same area, 50.4% of the residents are white, 40.6% are black. Of those that are
white, 48.3% are in owner-occupied housing, 51.7% are in renter-occupied housing. Of those
that are black, 14.2% are in owner-occupied housing, 85.8% are in renter-occupied housing (City
Planning, 2004). To make derogatory statements against renters, in the area under study, would
generally be a derogatory statement against a black person. Whether this was the intention, such
an intention certainly supports institutional discrimination.
When we consider the problem of discrimination discussed in Part I, we find that directly
or indirectly it affects all of the residents. Of the population divisions mentioned above, we now
consider these more in-depth.
The median age for both sides is 33.3. On the east side of Troost, 42% are between the
ages of 25 and 54; on the west side, 53.3% are in that age range. On the east side of Troost,
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school age children make up 22.9% of the population, 14.3% on the west side. On the east side
of Troost, 26.3% are households with someone elderly living with them; on the west side, only
9.6% have an elderly householder. The sizes of households thus also differ significantly. On the
east side of Troost, 41.4% are single households, compared with 50.7% on the west side. On the
east side, 21.8% have households of 4 or more, but on the west side, only 10.7% have larger
households. The east side then has a much wider spectrum of ages dispersed throughout the
households. In addition, extended family is more likely. 65.1% of those living on the west side
are considered non-family households, compared with 47.4% on the east side.
Gender analysis reveals 48.1% are male, 51.9% are female on the east side of Troost;
while 52.8% are male, and 47.2% are female on the west side. The west side is more likely to
have a single, middle-age male in the household.
Considering the socio-economic factors in the area under consideration, we find that
28.6% are living in poverty on the east side of Troost, compared with 24.1% on the west.
$19,982 is the median income for those east of Troost (i.e. 43.1% of the Metropolitan area
median); whereas, $25,605 is the median income for those west of Troost (i.e. 55.3% of the
Metropolitan area median). For those living east of Troost, 36.1% have no High School diploma,
compared with 20.1% on the west side of Troost. In addition, 8.6% of those living on the east
side have a bachelors degree or higher, whereas 29.9% of those living on the west side have a
higher degree (City Planning, 2004). Considering the residual effects of the historic school
segregation down Troost, combined with the increased earning power connected with education,
this is a significant factor.
Given the segregationist legacy of neighborhood associations in Kansas City, this would
be an excellent place to start the work of undoing institutional discrimination. Several questions
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could be asked to begin reflection and the change process: What is the racial composition of our
neighborhood association board? Is the board representative of the neighborhood in terms of
ethnicity and class? Is there cultural sensitivity training encouraged for board members?
These and other questions could begin the kind of change that could have a
transformative effect on the neighborhoods involved. Out of such dialogue could emerge
friendships that could produce a new and exemplary model of community.
Gentrification and community
Today, much has been written on gentrification. It is viewed as either the redeemer of
urban decay or a voracious monster preying on the poor. I suggest that when, viewed on a
continuum, there is truth found in both perspectives. Each urban community must grapple with
the role gentrification is to play. The question for Kansas City and the Troost Corridor is not if
there will be gentrification or community, but if there will be gentrification and community.
Definition of Gentrification
Gentrification is defined by Princeton University’s WordNet as “the restoration of run-
down urban areas by the middle class (resulting in the displacement of lower-income people)”
(WordNet, 2003), and, by Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary, as “the process of renewal and
rebuilding accompanying the influx of middle-class or affluent people into deteriorating areas
that often displaces earlier usually poorer residents” (Merriam-Webster, 2005).
Gentrification, as a term, was first used by Ruth Glass (1964) to describe the
displacement of local working-class groups by urban redevelopment in London (Glass, 1964,
cited by Atkinson, 2003, p. 2343). After 40 years of research from varying disciplines, Atkinson
(2003) distilled two key processes that occur in gentrification from the literature. “First, the
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class-based colonisation (sic) of cheaper residential neighbourhoods (sic) and, secondly, a
reinvestment in the physical housing stock” (Atkinson, 2003, p. 2344, cf. Lees, 2000).
A typical scenario is that a post-White flight, blighted neighborhood still retains historical
value. Artists discover the area for inexpensive studios, housing and restoring a place of history.
Lawyers, professors, doctors, and some inspired suburban professionals want to live close to
their downtown offices. The idea of pioneering a broken area gives them a sense of well-being
and well-doing. Eventually, other developers catch on. They begin restoring old homes or
building new homes or lofts. Property values start to rise. Property taxes start to rise. Rents start
to rise. However, poor people can no longer afford their homes and displacement occurs.
In research literature, gentrification is often found to express salvific attributes for a
decaying urban core (Freeman & Braconi, 2004; Von Hoffman, 2003; Wyly & Hammel, 1999;
Berry, 1985). Indeed, Berry’s title “Islands of Renewal in Seas of Decay” speaks to this
perspective (Berry, 1985). On the other hand, there is significant research literature to indicate
the very real side effect of displacement for the poor (Atkinson, 2003; Dulchin, 2003; Marcuse,
1999), as the dictionary definition refers to. A brief glance back at the history of gentry sheds
more light on the subject.
Reflections on Gentry and the Value of Person
The concept of gentry in our culture comes from the 16th century English landowners
who were ranked by class below the nobility (Wikipidia, 2005). “During this period, the most
stable and respected form of wealth was landownership. The government of the country was
largely in the hands of the ‘landowners’” (Wikipidia, 2005).
The early American colonists based the right to vote on land ownership. “The
revolutionary constitutions of most states retained colonial freehold (property) qualifications for
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voting” (Murrin, et al, 2002, p. 277). This sense of structural status is tied to owning property.
Thus, African American slaves, Native Americans, women, and the poor did not share in this
socially constructed meaning of value. The sense of who you are was tied to property ownership.
If you owned land, you were a respected member of the community, able to participate in the
decision-making structure of the times.
From our early days as a society, many would embrace a de facto definition of self as “I
own, therefore, I am.” Others, would lean on the construction of race, built on the backs of those
they had kidnapped or conquered, to define themselves as “I’m white, therefore I am.” The
combining of these two concepts has left an infamous legacy, void of true value: “I’m a white
owner, therefore, I am.”
In contrast to this is a different sense of person and value reflected in the Original Nations
on this continent. Consider the sedentary (farming) nations. Not owning land as individuals, their
families protected their “rights of use” granted them by their chiefs (Murrin, et al, 2002).
Knowing that someday they would be gone, few “cared to acquire more personal property than
the women could carry from one place to another, either during the annual hunt or when the
whole community had to move” (Murrin, et al, 2002, p. 19). These values were expressed by Le
Soldat du Chene when he said, “I fear if I should change my pursuit for yours, I too, should
become a slave” (DeAngelo, 1995, p. 18). One can hear the echo of the words of Christ when He
said, “Take heed and beware of the [desire for more], for one’s life does not consist in the
abundance of things which he possesses” (NKJV, 1988; p. 914). The Native American
experience gives just cause for watchfulness regarding unbridled gentrification. The process of
changing a place into what seemed good to the “gentry” was a key part of American genocidal
policies in the past. Much can be learned from the displacement of the Native Americans.
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Scott Pratt (2001) draws upon the teaching of Black Hawk, the great leader of the Sauk
nation almost two centuries ago, to present a conciliatory picture to European Americans. Sauk
tradition has a sacred sense of connection to place, a sense of center. The Europeans were
actually seen as a displaced people since they had left their ancestral homeland or were forced to
leave. Pratt shows that if they could acknowledge their sense of displacement, they could be
embraced and become a new people. He explains:
These were people who had stepped out of the westward migration framed by the
values of progress and had begun to be part of a place. On the other hand, these same
people necessarily affirm an indictment against the European presence in America. If
their given land is somewhere on the other side of the eastern ocean, they must admit to
being a displaced people. Their displacement means that they must see themselves as
strangers in the land, must seek to establish new relations and ways of life, must become
emplaced. The double valence of the mountain people’s beliefs frames the lesson Black
Hawk wants to teach the displaced peoples who had come to Saukenuk. ‘It has always
been our custom,” he says as he closes his story, “to receive all strangers that come to our
village or camps, in time of peace, to share with them the best provisions we have, and
give them all the assistance in our power. If on a journey, or lost, to put them on the right
trail—and if in want of moccasins, to supply them’ (Black Hawk Autobiography,
1833/1990, as cited by Pratt, 2001).
By facing their displacement, other whites, like the “mountain people” of the
Appalachians, can realize their need for alternative ways of thinking about themselves
and the world. By recognizing the principle that explains their displacement, they are on
the brink of taking seriously the process of emplacement (Pratt, 2001).
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In Orthodox Christian spirituality, the human person is seen to be an icon of God
Himself. From this perspective the sense of who we are is linked not to something transient, but
Someone eternal. As Nikolai Berdyaev (1948), the Russian philosopher stated, “Personality is
not self-sufficient, it presupposes the existence of other persons … Human personality can only
realize itself in fellowship” (Berdyaev, 1948, cited by Sakharov, 2002, p. 88). To put it another
way, Archimandrite Sophrony, the English disciple of the 20th century Saint Silouan of Mt.
Athos, wrote, “amo, ergo sum,” or “I love, therefore, I am” (Sakharov, 2002). The person, the
human being, must be valued for simply existing, for being who he or she is. For each to
experience who they are, it behooves all of us to become a real community.
Community: Raising the Gentrification Consciousness
If we are to see displacement and unbridled development as two ends of a continuum in
dealing with gentrification, the residents in a given area can decide how they want to respond. If
these are simply viewed as oppositional poles with no hope of connection, the experience in
Kansas City will lead to further displacement and institutional discrimination. But if those
involved can raise their consciousness to see these poles as forces that can be managed, an
amazing creative opportunity emerges. Kansas City can bring forth one of the rare models for
both – gentrification and community.
Varied expressions of art and music, diversified neighborhoods, beautiful streets, great
restaurants, and unique places to shop are often identified with the positive sides of
gentrification. Resistance is found when, once again, progress is at the expense of those that are
currently unable to own or maintain property or those who do not hold ownership as a primary
value. That being said, there are alternatives that can and should be explored.
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One example is the Displacement Free Zone in Brooklyn, New York (Dulchin, 2003).
When facing an eviction due to gentrification, the local residents and community leaders first
speak with the landlord to provide an alternative. If that is unsuccessful, it is followed by Legal
Aid delay strategies. If the threat of eviction continues, direct action is taken, like picketing the
home of the landlord, in order to keep the resident in the community.
Another example is rent-controls for those in an area undergoing gentrification. A
Harvard proposal provides clear economic basis for such a strategy (Kennedy & Case, 1987).
Tax Increment Financing (TIF) is currently available for restoration and renewal of
blighted areas or areas in need of economic development (EDC, 2004). Why can’t a piece of that
be negotiated that would help maintain existing tax structures not only for the developer, but also
for the poor? This would grant time for skills to be developed or support to be gathered.
These suggestions are practical ways developers and the city could say to those at risk of
displacement, “We want you here.” In collaboration with social service agencies, mental health
organizations, faith-based organizations, neighborhood associations, and local residents, every
member in the area could be given a sense of connection and hope. Building on the African
proverb that it “takes a village to raise a child,” a sense of village and residential renewal could
thus become a reality.
A New Community
When accepting his Nobel Peace award in 1964, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., with a play
upon the words of John Donne, expressed the following:
“In the final analysis, the rich must not ignore the poor because both rich and poor
are tied in a single garment of destiny. All life is interrelated, and all men are
interdependent. The agony of the poor diminishes the rich, and the salvation of the poor
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enlarges the rich. We are inevitably our brothers' keeper because of the interrelated
structure of reality” (King, 1964)
That sense of mutually being diminished is awakening individuals across the city to
realize their need of one another. It is the hope of this writer that this awareness is a step toward
the experience of village, of community.
Troost Avenue Festival: a Catalyst for Community
As part of a McNair Project for Central Missouri State University (CMSU), this writer
conducted a prejudice reduction seminar utilizing an experimental design in 2004 (Addendum 1:
Troost Avenue). Later, several of the participants invited others, including the writer, to join a
Race Action Group. Sponsored by Kansas City Harmony and the Kauffman foundation, the
group had to decide on an intervention for increased racial harmony. They eventually concluded
that they wanted to have a festival on Troost Avenue. Its purpose was to hopefully become a
catalyst for change. The ultimate goal was to change Troost from a dividing line to a gathering
place, a place of community. It was felt that a positive event, to engage residents from both sides
of Troost Avenue, would enable a new perspective to begin to form.
Fred Culver, from the Center for Global Community (CGC) in Kansas City, added an
additional element to the event to create a unique experience. He called it the “Coffee House on
the Street.” It would be ten circles of dialogue seeking to connect people heart to heart, while
sharing about ten areas of common concern: art, community, communications, education,
environment, health, justice, resources, science and spirituality. Each circle would focus on one
area. While reggae, blues, jazz, gospel and folk were being played, others would be sitting face
to face discussing a systemic approach to community along Troost (personal communications,
2005).
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Since the word Troost was used for the Holy Spirit in the Dutch Scriptures, the planners
decided that a good day to have the festival was around the time of Pentecost Sunday. Thus, May
14th, the Saturday before Pentecost, was selected. One aspect of Pentecost was that people from
other cultures and ethnicities came together, due to the influence of the Holy Spirit (NKJV, 1988,
p. 958).
Brief Chronicle of a Community Building Event
Fairly quickly enthusiasm and excitement for the event began to build. People began to
catch the meaning of “changing Troost to a gathering place.” Harry Reaves, who owns Jimmy
Crack Corn Popcorn, opened his office at 3105 Troost for meetings. This is the exact location
that the South Central Business Association gathered for their meetings in 1922! Fairly quickly it
was determined that two meetings per week were needed. On Tuesday afternoons, planning
meetings would be held at 3105 Troost. On Thursday evenings, planning meetings would be held
at 3101 Troost, the site of St. Mary of Egypt Orthodox Church and Desert Wisdom Bookstore.
One of the first items of business was to obtain a permit for the street closure. Each of the
merchants along the 3100 block of Troost Avenue signed it. Things were moving. In meeting
with City Councilman Jim Glover of the 4th District, he quickly gave his support. Coming from
the west side of Troost, he wanted to sponsor it jointly with City Councilperson Rev. Sandra
McFadden-Weaver, of the 3rd District on the east side of Troost.
At every meeting there was a basic format. The participants would introduce themselves
by name and then share what made them interested in Troost. As the meetings grew larger, that
format would often take up to an hour. Many began to comment that “this IS the event!” People
were getting connected. Representatives from Operation Breakthrough, (the largest day care
center in four states), the Heart of America Indian Center, Hands Across Troost, KC Harmony,
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 50
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MOVE-UP, area churches and mosques, local clergy, homeless people, City Hall representatives,
musicians, artists, young poets, students, business leaders, lawyers, teachers, nuns, persons with
disabilities – the neighborhood and friends from both sides of Troost were gathering. After the
meetings people would stay and continue to talk. Heart to heart dialogue was happening.
One day the writer of this study was having coffee at Coffee Girls with Professor Mike
Frisch of the University of Missouri-Kansas City. A local developer, Vince Gautier, just
happened to come in. After a discussion on gentrification, he was asked what he saw as the main
problem in the area. He flatly replied, “The fifty-thousand pound gorilla in the middle of the
room that no one wants to talk about is racism!” Needless to say, he seemed excited to share in
the dialogue circle at the festival (personal communication, 2005).
Coming together with tremendous diversity is always a challenge. Some felt that there
were too many gospel groups and would turn off the artists. At that meeting, one of the disc
jockeys and coordinators for KKFI, a community-based radio station was present. In asking her
to be the Master of Ceremonies, it broke the tension and they were able to walk forward together.
At another meeting, there was some excitement about having a parade with motorcycle
clubs at the beginning of the event. Others felt this might be a distraction. Again there was some
concern that religious people were trying to “run the show.” After discussion, feedback, and
creative insight from the members, it was agreed to have a motorcycle contest for the best
looking motorcycle, best-dressed motorcycle couple, and best-looking motorcycle club. Those
who had felt excluded, now felt they were being heard (personal communication, 2005).
In addition to the “Coffee House on the Street” and the music, there are also plans for
African American cowboys and cowgirls, a clothing show, an art fair, ethnic food, Native
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 51
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American drumming, and a history booth to tell the story of Troost. The community is engaged.
Synergy is occurring. Hope is rising.
Hope for the Future
Due to the pattern of homeostasis and the common tendency for life to return to “business
as usual”, the need for consistent energy moving toward community is needed. The most
important thing emerging from the festival is the formation of friendships with people from both
sides of Troost Avenue. As ongoing dialogue comes from a grassroots level, hope for a real
sense of village is growing. Likewise, while receiving support from the power sector, but not
control, the community is empowering itself. People are starting to find how much they have
indeed been diminished by being separated.
Conclusion
It is one of the circular movements of history and Providence, that in order for us to go
forward we must return to our place of departure. For Kansas City to go forward, we must face
our past. We must face what took place in our city due to discrimination and segregation. We
must face our prosperity that came because of taking advantage of our Native hosts. We must
return to where we departed from the path of community.
In Kansas City, there are several pockets of pain. One of these is Troost Avenue. As
European Americans acknowledge that they have been displaced and then displaced others, the
process leading to being embraced begins. For Troost Avenue to go forward, we too must face
our past. If we will, once again the Native Americans will be able to say, “This is our place.” The
entire Troost Corridor will be able to say, “This is our village. This is our place. Welcome to our
hearts.” It takes time. It’s a process. But the event has started. Community has started. People
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 52
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from both sides of Troost Avenue are already finding one another, and as a result, finding
themselves.
The word “Troost” has deep meaning. The longing to be “troost” is very powerful. The
hope of this community is to become a tree once again that is rooted in being true to one another,
restoring deep trust, and making room for the tremendous varieties of life in our midst. The wind
is blowing. Comfort is coming. Troost is becoming a gathering place once again.
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 53
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Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction.
Submitted by Fr. David Altschul and Musa D. Ilu, PhD, Sociology and Social Work
Abstract
Over the past 30 years, awareness has grown throughout Kansas City, Missouri that Troost
Avenue has been a racial dividing line. In other parts of the country, attempts at prejudice
prevention have proved effective. A key aspect in reducing prejudice has been continued self-
monitoring of one’s own prejudicial thinking and reactions. Furthermore, attempts to achieve
quick results in prejudice reduction have led to deeper levels of stereotypical responses and more
institutional discrimination. As a step in reducing prejudice, the researchers of the current project
studied the effects of a prejudice reduction seminar for residents in this area of Kansas City,
Missouri. Participants were drawn from various housing associations along Troost Avenue. Out
of 41 registrants, 16 responded. Using a classic experimental design, they were randomly
assigned to either a control group or an experimental group. Each group completed a pretest, and
then a posttest, after watching a film. The control group watched a film not based on racism,
while the experimental group watched The Color of Fear, a film on overcoming racism, with
intermittent discussion and group activities. There emerged significant differences between the
two groups in the open-ended questions. The control group responses to the posttest were mainly
repetitious of the pretest. For the experimental group, previous feelings were changed to hope
and determination. Recommendations from the experimental group included future Focus
Groups and Prejudice Reduction workshops to facilitate greater change. Although only a step
along the journey, most felt the seminar was an important part of this process.
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 54
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Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction
Introduction
In Kansas City, Missouri, Troost Avenue is known as the “racial and dividing line since
the early part of this century” (Sixth Council District, 2004). A recent journal article by Stanley
Gaines, Color Line as Fault Line (Gaines, 2004), compares and contrasts the works on prejudice
from the renowned social scientists, Gordon Allport (1954/1979) and W.E.B. DuBois
(1903/1969). The implication of his title and the ensuing article is that eruptions in the earth and
in social relations can be anticipated along certain stress points.
Prejudice prevention interventions have been shown to be effective in working with
culturally diverse groups. In Hawaii, a controlled experiment was conducted with students that
indicated “students in the treatment group benefited from participating in the prejudice reduction
intervention as demonstrated by their improved cooperation scores” (Salzman & D’Anrea, 2001,
p. 345).
A key factor in reducing prejudiced responses has been found to be purposeful self-
monitoring. Research involving those that were considered low prejudiced subjects found that
significant changes were brought about when the participants saw this as part of a process and
began a routine of self-regulation (Montleith, 1993).
Attempts to circumvent this process and seek to achieve quick results have led some to
assume that we are near a “color-blind” society. Unfortunately, this has tended to reinforce white
privilege and deepen stereotypes and class differences between ethnic groups (Sue, 2003). This
research project sought to ease some of that stress by exploring the effects of a prejudice
reduction workshop on urban residents who live or work in neighborhoods adjacent to Troost
Avenue.
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 55
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[Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction (cont.)]
Methods
Participants: The current research project intended to show that even one prejudice
reduction workshop can help lower the level of prejudice reflected in institutional discrimination
and raise cultural sensitivity among the participants. From the verbal and written responses of
most that participated, this objective seemed to have been met. Yet, as will be seen, due to the
small number of participants, generalizing the results to the larger community would not be
warranted.
The researchers conducted a classic experimental design study on the effects of a
prejudice reduction workshop for residents living near the Troost Corridor from 23rd to 47th
Streets. From the 41 respondents who had signed up, 16 actually participated. They were
selected from among members of neighborhood housing associations who lived on the east and
west sides of Troost Avenue. A brief presentation was made at each housing meeting regarding
participation in a research project on prejudice reduction along Troost Avenue. All present were
given an introductory brochure. Those interested then completed a sign-up sheet providing basic
data and were given a voluntary informed consent form. Furthermore, each was reminded of the
seminar, several days in advance.
Materials: The site of the seminar was in the Reconciliation Ministries building at 3101
Troost Avenue. Upon arrival, these 16 were checked off the list to verify that they had come
from the area under study. Then name tags were randomly taken from a basket and given to each
one. Random assignment gave an equal chance among the participants to be placed in either the
control or experimental group. There were eight with a red tag and eight with a blue tag. On each
name tag was listed a code name based on the name of a tree or precious gem. For example,
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[Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction (cont.)]
“Ash” or “Jade.” In this way, the researchers could study the effects of each individual
response, while preserving each one’s anonymity.
Procedure: Those with a red tag were led into a meeting room set up for the red or
control group. Once seated, they were asked to fill out a questionnaire. This served as a pre-test
to provide some insight to each one’s awareness of cultural sensitivity and institutional
discrimination. Other factors included demographic information concerning ethnicity, income
level, and whether they lived on the east or west side of Troost Avenue. After completion of the
pre-test, they watched the film, Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring.
Although having no overt references to racial prejudice, two of the participants surmised
that the researchers had a deeper meaning in choosing the film to illustrate stereotypes. For
instance, they reflected on the correlation between the color white with good and black with evil
in the character portrayals. However, it was actually chosen because it was not dealing with the
subject of racial prejudice, in particular.
Those with a blue tag were taken to the third floor meeting room for the blue or
experimental group. They were seated at two tables where each filled out the same questionnaire
as the control group. After this, the participants watched a film entitled The Color of Fear,
dealing with racism, white privilege and cultural sensitivity. Every half-hour the film was
stopped so the participants could reflect, share feelings and exchange insights from guided
questions. Care was taken to insure that the discussion focused on each participant expressing his
or her feelings and insights rather than attempting to change or blame another. At the end of the
film, group conclusions were discussed with a representative reporting insights from each small
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[Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction (cont.)]
group to the entire experimental group. After completing this exercise, each participant was
given the post-test, with the same questions as the pre-test.
When the film was over, one of the research volunteers notified the red (control) group’s
volunteer monitor that it was time to administer the post-test. Again, this was the same test that
had previously been taken to compare the results of the control group with the experimental
group. So as to avoid diffusion of results, the evaluations were administered in the two different
rooms. In addition, each of the tests had previously been marked with a (1) or (2) to designate
pre-test (1) or post-test (2). Thus, the film when combined with the discussion (the independent
variable) was expected to help lower institutional discrimination and raise cultural sensitivity
(the dependent variables) among the participants in the blue group.
As an added incentive for participation, both groups were treated to a catered meal from
Addis Ababa Ethiopian restaurant. The discussion during the meal, where all 16 sat together, was
in itself a productive ending. It provided a chance for those in the blue group to share what they
had learned with the others. Local networking also emerged with plans to continue to work
against racism and prejudice in the area.
Results
The 16 participants came from both sides of Troost, 6 from the East side, and 10 from the
West side, 8 male and 8 female, 4 African-Americans (AA), 11 European-Americans (EA), and
one preferred not to be ethnically identified. Whereas in the red (control) group there was only
one African-American among the 7 others, in the blue (experimental) group there were three
African-Americans among the 5 European-Americans.
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[Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction (cont.)]
Of the 16, one made over $75,000 and lived on the East side of Troost, six made between
$40,001 and $75,000, one made between $18,000 and $40,000, four made between $10,000 and
$18,000, and four made under $10,000. Of the six in the $40,001 to $75,000 range, they were
split evenly between AA and EA, as well as equally coming from both sides of Troost.
Each test was comprised of 10 questions. 3 questions dealt with cultural sensitivity, 3
with institutional discrimination, 3 with demographic information, and concluded with one open-
ended question. Cultural sensitivity was measured by issues such as labeling, feelings about past
racial injustices, and how they saw racism in general. Institutional discrimination was measured
by attitudes on neighborhood segregation, inter-racial intimate relationships, and trust of other
races in responsible positions.
After the post-tests, it was noted that there was no measurable change for the control or
the experimental group in regards to cultural sensitivity. In regards to institutional
discrimination, for both groups as well, there was a very small increase in the number of those
that answered with more discrimination and a very small decrease in the number of those that
answered with less discrimination.
The most significant differences were reflected in the open-ended questions about how
they felt about racial prejudice. Common feelings in both the control and experimental groups
during the pre-test were sad, angry, frustrated, concerned, and determined. In the post-test,
although most of the control group, expressed the same feelings as before, one had changed to
sad and another changed to frustrated.
However, in the experimental group, after the post-test, three expressed being hopeful
about real change being made. One, whose answers reflected more discrimination afterwards,
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[Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction (cont.)]
said, “I didn’t realize that I’m still so prejudiced.” Another participant, who previously had felt
“frustrated and angry,” afterwards still felt frustrated, but now, “also hopeful that it can be
discussed, is being discussed and by diverse collections of people. This is a step in a good
direction.” One participant had previously seen the film The Color of Fear nine times. This same
person afterwards felt “very frustrated.”
The concluding comments of all the participants in the group discussion of the
experimental group are important to note: All could identify with the minority culture’s
experience of powerlessness. There was an acknowledgement that “we are still fighting the
racism that has been here from the beginning of the United States of America.” Afterwards, all
were aware of white privilege, especially how the desirability of being white has ingrained itself
in the institutions of this nation. It was stated that the way we are socialized teaches white
supremacy.
The film was about the experience of eight men from various ethnic groups struggling
with racism. It was noted that no female perspective was portrayed in the film and that the
oppression of women and their experience of fear is also constant.
The group concluded by saying that what needs to be done is more education on racial
and ethnic issues. There also need to be increased efforts made to teach how to communicate
across cultural lines. With persistence and patience, all need to work on getting to know
ourselves and how we respond to a culture of whiteness and the experience of others when they
are different than our own. Finally, there needs to be persistence and patience in dismantling
institutional racism, power, and privilege along racial and ethnic lines.
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 60
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[Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction (cont.)]
Discussion
The researchers anticipated the results from the blue (experimental) group to show a
greater cultural sensitivity and indication of lower levels of prejudicial attitudes than the red
(control) group. While significant changes were not expected to be produced from one
experience, the seminar was intended to be a step in the process of greater cultural sensitivity. If
this proved true, similar seminars could become a part of other organized interventions to help
build harmony in previously divided neighborhoods.
Although the number participating wasn’t large enough to show this in a quantitative
way, this certainly was borne out by the ensuing discussion in a qualitative way. Whereas there
was very little change in the open-ended questions of the control group, the experimental group
indicated a greater hope for cultural sensitivity and overcoming racial prejudice in the future.
All present acknowledged, as Montleith (1993) did with her earlier research, that this is
part of a process. Much more needs to be done. One of the group members stated that, in a way,
the seminar was “preaching to the choir.” In other words, most of the participants who took the
pre-test had previously scored high in cultural sensitivity. Yet all acknowledged the need for
more seminars and workshops.
Most of change due to the seminar was reflected in the open-ended responses and the
exchange of the ideas in the groups. As a result, the researchers of this project recommend a
different format along Troost in the future. It would be ideal if all of the neighborhood housing
associations could sponsor Focus Groups and Prejudice Workshops with their adjacent
neighborhood housing group on the opposite side of Troost. These Focus Groups would be able
to gather the collective wisdom, experience, and frustrations of residents in the area. Then, by
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[Addendum 1: Troost Avenue: a Study in Prejudice Reduction (cont.)]
following up with the Prejudice Workshops applicable solutions could be provided on how to
work through the points of frustration. As Dr. Martin Luther King said, “No social advance rolls
in on the wheels of inevitability. Every step toward the goal of justice requires sacrifice,
suffering, and struggle” (King, 1983, p. 59).
Altschul; Community on Troost: Page 62
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