History

Governor Andrew H. ReederEarly in the summer of 1855 members of the Kansas territorial legislature journeyed to the town of Pawnee, adjacent to the Fort Riley military reservation, to attend the first session on July 2 called by Governor Andrew H. Reeder. When they arrived, however, they were dismayed to find that despite the building boom that had been underway in Pawnee since the governor's plans for the session had become known, the stone structure that was to serve as the first territorial capitol was far from ready.

First Territorial CapitolThe two-story structure, that some believe was built as a capitol and others as a warehouse, is approximately 40 x 80 feet and built of native stone. "It had neither floor nor roof," complained one member who arrived on Saturday, June 30. However, he continued in a letter to the Atchison Squatter Sovereign, "by working all day Sunday and Sunday night, the roof and floor was finished, but the floors were not completed while we stayed--so we had to legislate with open doors." The lower floor was used as the house chamber, while the council or senate occupied the second floor.

First Territorial CapitolMost of the legislators who came to Pawnee were sympathetic to the proslavery cause. They had been elected on March 30, 1855, with the aid of Missourians who had crossed the border to vote. The election had been contested by the free-state partisans, but the fraudulent votes helped to overwhelm them. Because of this illegal selection of representatives, the legislature became known to antislavery Kansans as the "bogus legislature," and the laws it passed were called the "bogus laws."

Members of this first territorial legislature were young men. Only five of the 39 were over 50, while 11 were under 30. One, Alexander Johnson, was a real rarity--a Kansas native, born in 1832 at the Shawnee Methodist Mission in present-day Johnson County.

Since most of the legislators were from the border towns with interest in Missouri, they wanted the administrative center located in the eastern part of the territory where their strengths lay. On July 4 the legislature passed a bill providing for the temporary establishment of the capital at the Shawnee Methodist Mission. Two days later the governor vetoed it on the grounds that the legislature had overstepped the authority conferred upon it by Congress. Both houses, however, promptly passed the bill over his veto and then adjourned to meet at Shawnee Mission on July 16.

First Territorial Capitol

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Kansas State Historical Society
Kansas State Historical Society