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Change without Direction: A Guide to Downtown Kansas City
Item 12 of 17
This is a contributing entry for Change without Direction: A Guide to Downtown Kansas City and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

Keep following this path. When it reaches the circle-driveway, turn left and follow the sidewalk as it curves along the building until you reach the street.

In 1899 the women of the district walked out, demanding better pay, hours, and more humane working conditions. The state of play was so dire that one striker was quoted as saying, “Well, I don’t see as it’s any worse to starve idle than starve working hard all day.”

It was the second strike where things really got interesting though. In 1918, the laundry delivery drivers in the city struck when their employers refused to recognize their newly formed union. The women of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, black and white, went on strike in solidarity with the drivers. Soon enough it sent off a shockwave throughout the whole city, as union after union went on strike in solidarity as well. Barbers, brewers, tradesmen, and porters. The strikers stopped the streetcars. A young delivery worker was gunned down by the police. 


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