Kansas City is often seen as a cow town with great barbecue and steaks.
But it is also a city with more boulevards than Paris and more working
fountains than Rome. There are burial mounds that date back more than
two thousand years. The National World War I Museum and Memorial, opened
in 1926, stands more than two hundred feet tall. Leila's Hair Museum has
a collection that brings tourists from all over the nation. The Kansas
City Jazz Museum features a historic district and world-class museum
that document a time when dance halls, cabarets, speakeasies and even
honky-tonks and juke joints fostered the development of a new musical
style. Join author Paul Kirkman as he cuts a trail past the stockyards
into the heart of America--Kansas City.