On Saturday, October 11, the Central Library is open to registered Heartland Book Festival attendees only. Regular services, such as hold pickups, public computers and phones, and public meeting rooms, will not be available.

Making Meat: Race, Labor, and the Kansas City Stockyards
Series:
Missouri Valley Sundays
Presented By
John Herron
In many ways, Kansas City’s early history is that of a stereotypical frontier town. Native Americans, pioneers, and cowboys are indelibly linked to the settlement of the area and the city’s heritage. Cattle and other livestock are crucial. But contrary to popular mythology, the Kansas City Stockyards did not fit the spurs-and-rawhide image of the American West as much as it reflected American industrialization.
In a discussion of his essay in the new book Wide-Open Town: Kansas City in the Pendergast Era, UMKC historian John Herron examines the city’s stockyards industry in the opening decades of the 20th century and explores how the multi-ethnic stockyards workforce gave a young KC a distinctive flavor.
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This event is co-sponsored by: Historic West Bottoms
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Making Meat: Race, Labor, and the Kansas City Stockyards
Series:
Missouri Valley Sundays