Audio-Reader Book Club Hosts Local Author


Most book clubs just talk about books and authors, but the Audio-Reader Book Club enjoyed a rare opportunity to invite this month's book author to their meeting!

Margie Carr, author of "Kansas City's Montgall Avenue: Black Leaders and the Street They Called Home," was a guest speaker on Monday, March 11 discussing her book which was published in 2023. The book came as a result of over ten years of extensive researching and writing.

According to the book club member Linda Thompson, "The book was a fascinating read because Margie not only writes about all the people who lived on the street and their histories, but the environments in which they all lived. As a black community, the people had to deal with all the segregationist’s views as well as governmental actions that restricted their abilities to live a full life. It is a very well-written book which draws you into all the stories from the first page."

Margie Carr is an author, a volunteer supervisor for CASA of Douglas County, and a freelance writer from Lawrence, Kansas.

Book Summary:
A few blocks southeast of the famed intersection of 18th and Vine in Kansas City, Missouri, just a stone’s throw from Charlie Parker’s old stomping grounds and the current home of the vaunted American Jazz Museum and Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, sits Montgall Avenue. This single block was home to some of the most important and influential leaders the city has ever known.

Margie Carr’s Kansas City’s Montgall Avenue: Black Leaders and the Street They Called Home is the extraordinary, century-old history of one city block whose residents shaped the changing status of Black people in Kansas City and built the social and economic institutions that supported the city’s Black community during the first half of the twentieth century. The community included, among others, Chester Franklin, founder of the city’s Black newspaper, The Call; Lucile Bluford, a University of Kansas alumna who worked at The Call for sixty-nine years; and Dr. John Edward Perry, founder of Wheatley-Provident Hospital, Kansas City’s first hospital for Black people. The principal and four teachers from Lincoln High School, Kanas City’s only high school for African American students, also lived on the block.

While introducing the reader to the remarkable individuals who lived on Montgall Avenue, Carr also uses this neighborhood as a microcosm of the changing nature of discrimination in twentieth-century America. The city’s white leadership had little interest in supporting the Black community and instead used its resources to separate and isolate them. The state of Missouri enforced segregation statues until the 1960s and the federal government created housing policies that erased any assets Black homeowners accumulated, robbing them of their ability to transfer that wealth to the next generation.

Today, the 2400 block of Montgall Avenue is situated in one of the poorest neighborhoods in Kansas City. The attitudes and policies that contributed to the neighborhood’s changing environment paint a more complete—and disturbing—picture of the role that race continues to play in America’s story.

Find a link to purchase this book on the University of Kansas Press Page: https://kansaspress.ku.edu/9780700634675/ 

Audio-Reader Book Club Members pictured with Margie Carr (March 11, 2024)