Uniontown
In
March 1848, two government Indian agents, Richard Cummins and Alfred
Vaughan, chose a new site for a Potawatomi Indian trading post. It was
located where the Oregon Trail crossed the Kansas River near the present
town of Willard.
Proclaiming the site of their new village, Uniontown, Cummins and Vaughan
went to work building a community that held several promising advantages.
These included a high, level elevation, plenty of water, and an immense
trading business. Uniontown quickly became a last chance stop for emigrants
on the Oregon Trail and a trading center for the local Potawatomi Indians,
who received their government payments here and whose reservation was
only a short distance away.
Uniontown grew rapidly in the spring and summer of 1848. It had a population
estimated at around 300 and 60 buildings were constructed, many of them
last chance trading stores for the pioneers heading west. Soon, many
emigrants were bypassing the famous Pappan ferry crossing location at
present Topeka in order to cross the river at Uniontown. The community
offered the emigrants a much better crossing point because the current
near Uniontown was slower and the water much more shallow than the Pappan
crossing.
Though
the trading business at Uniontown was good for several seasons, the
town was beset by major disaster within a year. In the spring and summer
of 1849 and 1850, a cholera epidemic ravaged the community, changing
the town's future forever. Many of the settlers abandoned the village,
and those who stayed died. The Potawatomi Indians were not immune from
the epidemic. Hundreds died, 22 of them were buried in a mass grave
in the Uniontown cemetery. The town was then burned in order to insure
that the cholera epidemic would not spread again.
This, however, was not the last chapter in the history of Uniontown.
Traders returned and the town was reestablished in 1851. Once again,
it played a dominant role as a trading point for western travelers.
It became a designated stop for almost every trail in northeast Kansas
during the four years preceding the opening of Kansas Territory.
When Kansas Territory was established in 1854, it was the beginning
of the end for Uniontown. New towns sprang up nearby in the Kansas River
valley; towns such as Topeka and Tecumseh. While at its peak, Uniontown
was the only community for miles; now competition for trade became stiff.
Topeka attracted more settlers and businesses and soon the traders of
Uniontown abandoned their homes to make their fortunes elsewhere. By
1858, no one was left, and Uniontown became a ghost town.
Today, little remains except a country cemetery, a. few charred and
broken pieces of glass, and old steps in the prairie that lead nowhere.
The heritage of one of the oldest communities in the state contains
few reminders of the unlucky times in the settlement of Shawnee County
and the state of Kansas.
|