18th & Vine District
Kansas City is proud of
its 18th & Vine District, a neighborhood that was
the birthplace of Kansas City jazz, the center of
commerce for the city's African-American community from
the 1920s into the 1960s and a place where racial
diversity was the norm. Federal, state and local grants
and loans have helped the revitalization of this area
become a reality.
Included in the
50,000-square-foot museum complex and performance
facility is The Jazz Museum, showcasing Louis Armstrong,
Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, Count Basie and Billie
Holiday. The Blue Room Jazz Club features local artists.
Also included are The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum and
a Visitors Center, with an indoor theater that puts
visitors on the corner of 18th & Vine in the 1930s.
The Gem Theater was constructed in 1912 as a movie house
for the exclusive use of African-Americans and is now a
500-seat cultural and performing arts center for musical
performances, theater productions, dance theaters and
multimedia events.
The Black Archives of
Mid-America has one of the Midwest's largest displays of
African-American photographs, sculptures and paintings.
Rounding out the District
are soul-food restaurants, African-American art
galleries, gift shops and the 18th & Vine Authority,
(816) 474-8463.
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