Kansas Region Map

Region map Kansas History Center Kansas State Capitol William Allen White House Marais des Cygnes Massacre Mine Creek Battlefield John Brown Museum Pawnee Rock Fort Hays Cottonwood Ranch Kaw Mission Shawnee Indian Mission Grinter Place Constitution Hall Goodnow House First Territorial Capitol Pawnee Indian Village Hollenberg Station Native American Heritage Museum

Constitution Hall - where proslavery delegates to the Constitutional Convention hotly debated the issue of slavery in Kansas, while the nation watched, in Lecompton.

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Cottonwood Ranch - this relatively unchanged English-style home was once a successful sheep ranch, in Studley.

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First Territorial Capitol - proslavery forces tried to guide the fate of Kansas Territory when the first territorial legislature convened in July 1855, in Fort Riley.

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Fort Hays - General George A. Custer, William "Buffalo Bill" Cody and James B. "Wild Bill" Hickok are just a few of the well-known people who made history at this frontier fort, in Hays.

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Goodnow House - Isaac Goodnow was a leader in the free-state movement and founder of the college which became Kansas State University. Isaac and Ellen Goodnow's interest in education and nature is reflected in the collections, in Manhattan.

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Grinter Place - Moses Grinter traded with the Delaware before building this brick farmhouse in 1862. Moses and Annie Grinter, a Delaware, farmed, raised poultry and livestock, in Kansas City.

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Hollenberg Station - established in 1858 by Gerat H. and Sofia Hollenberg, Pony Express riders and hundreds of pioneers on the Oregon-California Trail stopped here, near Hanover.

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John Brown Museum - Reverend Samuel and Florella Adair struggled to survive on the Kansas frontier while sharing Abolitionist principles with Florella's legendary half brother, John Brown, in Osawatomie.

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Kansas History Center, includes Kansas Museum of History, Discovery Place, Center for Historical Research, Koch Industries Education Center in the Potawatomi Mission, Stach School, and Nature Trail, in Topeka.

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Kansas State Capitol - Completed in 1903 after 37 years of construction, highlights include the dramatic dome, the John Steuart Curry murals, and spectacular chambers of the Senate and the House of Representatives, in Topeka.

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Kaw Mission - this historic stone mission on the Santa Fe Trail was once home to 50 Kaw (or Kansa) boys from 1851 - 1854, in Council Grove.

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Marais des Cygnes Massacre - The nation was shocked when proslavery men gunned down 11 free-state men in May 1858 at this now National Historic Landmark, near Pleasanton.

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Mine Creek Battlefield - One of the largest cavalry engagements of the Civil War was fought on this battlefield, the only Civil War battle fought in Kansas, near Pleasanton.

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Native American Heritage Museum - Once a Presbyterian Mission built in 1845 to educate Iowa and Sac and Fox children, this museum showcases quillwork, baskets, and other artwork of present day descendants of emigrant tribes, in Highland.

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Pawnee Indian Village - As many as two thousand Pawnee lived in this village of more than 40 lodges. The museum encloses the excavated floor of one of the largest lodges, near Republic.

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Pawnee Rock - Stand atop this sandstone citadel and contemplate the rich history of the Santa Fe Trail and take in the commanding view of the Arkansas River Valley, in Pawnee Rock.

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Shawnee Indian Mission - This 13-acre National Historic Landmark features three historic buildings, period rooms and exhibits. Shawnee, Delaware and other Indian nations attended this manual training school from 1839 - 1862, in Fairway, part of Kansas City Metro.

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William Allen White House - Pulitzer-Prize winning author and nationally known newspaperman, William Allen White, built this home often called "Red Rocks," in Emporia.

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Kansas Historical Society
 
Presentation Graphic
Kansas Historical Society
Kansas Historical Society