TOWN OF KANSAS
2004 OIL ON CANVAS 5 FT X 10 FT
GENERAL ELECTRIC FINANCIAL SOLUTIONS
The name "Town of Kansas" was what old Kansas City was called
before it became a city. Starting out as a trading post at a natural
landing on the Missouri River, the town slowly grew east. With the
California gold rush of 1849 and the migration of settlers to Oregon,
the little trading post boomed into a bustling town.
This mural combines the early elements that not only made the town
successful, but also set the tone for what Kansas City would become
in later years, namely a lively western city with all the legend of
western myth .
On the left side of the mural, above the muck and mud, is a well-dressed
woman suggestive of not only the wealth in the settlement or the upper
class of business, but of the saloon life as well. Below her are the
traders, the frontiersman, the Mexican, signifying the Santa Fe trade,
and the Indians. The Spanish settlers came up from Santa Fe to trade
wool for textiles and fineries from the East. There were many Indian
tribes, which came to trade skins and beads. Behind the traders we
have the drifter type or fortune hunter. In the background are the
carved-out cliffs that existed east of the Westport landing. These
bluffs were excavated by hand. Hills
were removed by pick and shovel and deposited into valleys.
It was the railroad that really made the town take root and soon was
more populated than the rival trading town to the north, St. Joseph,
Mo. The mural moves in time as the images change, ending with the
longhorn cattle drives that came up from Texas to catch the trains
going east. In the distance is the river with a steamboat churning
up the current. In all, this mural creates a collage of images spanning
perhaps 50 years or more that are true to the history and development
of early Kansas City.