Historic Photos of Kansas
180 pages
English

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180 pages
English

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Description

Positioned in the geographic center of the contiguous 48 states, Kansas has played a vital role in the nation’s development. From its Native American roots—the state is named for the Kansa tribe—Kansas has been both eyewitness and participant to history. No state, literally or figuratively, has been more in the middle of America’s fascinating story than the Sunflower State. Culled from Library of Congress and Kansas Historical Society collections, the nearly 200 striking black-and-white images in Historic Photos of Kansas trace a progression from “Bleeding Kansas,” a period of violent struggle between free-state abolitionists and pro-slavery sympathizers, to the state’s many contributions to westward expansion, railroads, agriculture, and America at war. Although these photos speak for themselves, when combined with captions and chapter introductions, they will transport curious readers to a close-up view of Kansans helping to write history.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 20 mars 2010
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781618583994
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 9 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1900€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

HISTORIC PHOTOS OF
KANSAS
T EXT AND C APTIONS BY D AVID K NOPF
In this photo of East Main Street in Chanute, awnings protect the windows of many shops, including the law office of J. S. Detwiler. These coverings, generally made of canvas, were used to cool buildings before the days of air-conditioning. A water wagon hoses the dirt street to keep dust at bay. Chanute, located in southeast Kansas, was photographed between 1880 and 1910.
HISTORIC PHOTOS OF
KANSAS
Turner Publishing Company
200 4th Avenue North Suite 950
Nashville, Tennessee 37219
(615) 255-2665
www.turnerpublishing.com
Historic Photos of Kansas
Copyright 2010 Turner Publishing Company
All rights reserved.
This book or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2009939248
ISBN: 978-1-59652-564-1
Printed in China
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17-0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
C ONTENTS
A CKNOWLEDGMENTS
P REFACE
F ROM THE T URBULENCE OF B LEEDING K ANSAS AND THE C IVIL W AR TO THE P LAINS AND B EYOND (1860-1889)
I NDUSTRIAL E XPANSION AND F INANCIAL C ORRUPTION (1890-1909)
W ORLD W AR I, P ROHIBITION, THE S TOCK M ARKET C RASH, AND E NERGY P RODUCTION (1910-1929)
T HE D UST B OWL, THE G REAT D EPRESSION, AND THE A LLIED C AUSE (1930-1969)
N OTES ON THE P HOTOGRAPHS
This photo of Hays City reinforces the popular-though sometimes misleading-image of Kansas having only flat terrain. The photo was taken by Alexander Gardner, who documented the path of the Missouri Pacific Railroad.
A CKNOWLEDGMENTS
This volume, Historic Photos of Kansas , is the result of the cooperation and efforts of many individuals, organizations, and corporations. It is with great thanks that we acknowledge the valuable contribution of the following for their generous support:
Library of Congress
Kansas Historical Society
The writer would also like to thank Reference Librarian Marieta F. Knopf of Maple Woods Community College, Kansas City, Missouri, for her valuable contributions and assistance in making this work possible.
-------
With the exception of touching up imperfections that have accrued over time and cropping where necessary, no changes have been made to the photographs. The focus and clarity of many photographs is limited to the technology and the ability of the photographer at the time they were taken.
P REFACE
Among the things that people tend to notice about Kansas is its location in the middle of the country. What few realize, however, is that the generalization has a factual basis: Geographically, the Great State of Kansas is precisely at the midpoint of the contiguous 48 states. So the next time someone casually refers to Middle America, for accuracy s sake, make sure they tip their hat in the direction of the Sunflower State.
In the greater scheme, being in the middle of the country is more a matter of curiosity than anything of importance. What does matter is Kansas s unique role in the lead-up to the Civil War and the nation s westward push.
The epic struggle between abolitionists and pro-slavery forces may have reached its tragic flashpoint in the years between 1861 and 1865, but as early as the 1850s, it was in Kansas-then a territory-where tinder and spark first came together. One can say that the Civil War was played out in miniature, almost on a trial basis, in Bleeding Kansas years before shots were fired on Fort Sumter.
In Historic Photos of Kansas , almost 200 black-and-white photos document the state s position at the center of important historical events. The images and their captions touch on Kansas s contributions to the abolition of slavery, westward expansion, railroads, cattle drives, agriculture, the oil industry, aviation, and much more. And who can forget Dodge City, Kansas, and its role in the Wild West s colorful lore of outlaws, lawmen, and gunfights?
No discussion of Kansas would be complete without acknowledging the state s roots in Native American culture and, sadly, its role in the forced relocation of Indian tribes. The state s name, in fact, is derived from the Kansa, a tribe that inhabited the land.
As a neighbor of Kansas in Missouri-20 or so miles from the Kansas state line-I found the photos contained here not only visually compelling, but possessing the power to spark both the imagination and the desire to learn more. They drove my curiosity to follow a path of reading and research.
Although I worked in Kansas for a year, I know far more now than I did then. I owe a debt of gratitude to the many professional historians who have written about the state and helped broaden my knowledge and enabled me to inject substance to the captions contained here.
Charles C. Howes, author of This Place Called Kansas , deserves thanks for producing a highly readable introduction to the state s history and development within the pages of his book. Scholarly work by historians such as Kirk H. Beetz, Robert W. Richmond, William D. Baker, Malcolm J. Rohrbough, Craig Miner, Sanford Wexler, Catherine Reef, William H. Coogan, and others not only fleshed out my understanding of the photos, but left me in awe of the historian s commitment to fact-gathering, accuracy, and clear prose.
I can t claim to be smart enough to foresee that marrying a librarian might be a good career move. But dumb luck (and possibly a touch of dead reckoning) apparently was with me when I met my wife, Marieta, now a reference librarian at Maple Woods Community College in Kansas City. Not burdened by the writer s sometimes-cluttered mind, she found source materials on Kansas that I wouldn t have located without her. I m also indebted to her wise guidance and ability to navigate the databases that only a librarian can fathom.
The irony here is that my wife grew up in Roeland Park, Kansas, a suburb of Kansas City. Perhaps the wagon trains that left Independence, Missouri, and followed the trail to Olathe, Kansas, and on to points west rolled past her future home.
Great things always seem to happen when you re in the middle of things.
-David Knopf


Kansas s agriculture-based economy produced a need for processing, storage, and transportation. A significant structure involved in production and distribution is the Manhattan Milling Company, pictured in this photo dated between 1870 and 1900.
F ROM THE T URBULENCE OF B LEEDING K ANSAS AND THE C IVIL W AR TO THE P LAINS AND B EYOND
(1860-1889)
It has been said that Kansas was in the path of history being made. But the mere coincidence of its location doesn t do justice to its role in deciding how history would be written.
Kansas Territory was acquired in 1803 as part of the Louisiana Purchase, and a year later, Lewis and Clark passed through. They found a territory that was home to Indian tribes, including the Kansa for whom the state was named. Then, in 1821, the Santa Fe Trail began crossing the future state, bringing settlers to the promise of a new life in the West. In 1860, the Pony Express began carrying mail over Kansas terrain.
Even as westward migration made Kansas its primary thoroughfare, the territory served to foreshadow the Civil War. Bleeding Kansas -a battleground for free-state abolitionists and pro-slavery advocates-has come to describe a period that determined the territory s future alignment. Would Kansas become a slave state like Missouri, its next-door neighbor, or a free state like Iowa, to the northeast?
When the Kansas-Nebraska Act opened the territory in 1854, it was decided that settlers would determine its position on slavery. Advocates for both sides immigrated and the result was violence, including an 1856 sack of the abolitionist town of Lawrence and subsequent reprisals that left five dead on both sides. The border war continued up to and during the Civil War with William Clarke Quantrill s pro-Confederate raiders devastating Lawrence in August of 1863.
Free-state sentiment prevailed, and Kansas became the 34th state on January 29, 1861. Although most of the Civil War was fought outside its borders, Kansas sent a larger percentage of its citizenry to fight for the Union than any other state.
With the war s conclusion in 1865, the state settled into its role as a nexus for westward migration. Railroads bought land and laid tracks; communities developed, serving those who stayed and those who passed through; settlers and the indigenous peoples clashed, pushing entire tribes farther west or south; Texas cattle drove across the state to railheads for the trip to stockyards in Chicago and the East; freed slaves, so-called Exodusters, migrated north and west to make their home in Kansas. It was a period of passion and exploration, one in which Kansas was never merely a conduit or passive observer.


Founded in 1842, Fort Scott was one of several army posts built to provide frontier defense and to protect travelers on the Santa Fe Trail. Pictured in this early photo is the east side of Market Square, a triangular area bounded by Market, Oak, and National avenues. Market Square is at the heart of Fort Scott s historic business area.


Fort Scott s early Main Street, pictured here, was located adjacent to the fort and parade grounds. It was also the site of the nearby Wilder Hotel, which served as the center of Fort Scott nightlife in the 1860s. Local lore has it that when asked by a traveler if the structure was the Wilder House, the innkeeper would reply, You stay here awhile and you ll find there ain t a wilder house in the country.


Rocky Ford Dam, which spans the Big Blue River north of Manhattan, helped create what is known today as the Rocky Ford State Fishing Area. In this 1866 photo, adults and children are seen fishing in the river.


The site of the Old Fort Well in Fort Scott is marked with a stone canopy near a bandsta

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