Kansas has a long history dating back to early Spanish exploration in the 16th century. It became a state on January 29, 1861 after a bloody territorial period where pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces battled for control. Kansas played an important role in the Civil War, supplying over 20,000 troops to the Union army. In the late 19th century, the cattle industry and wheat farming boomed as railroads expanded across the state. Kansas continues to be an important agricultural producer while also growing its industry and urban centers. The state capital has been located in Topeka since 1861.
Freemasonry 090 the mounties and freemasonryColinJxxx
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police have been associated with Freemasonry since their inception. Many early Mounties were Freemasons and the first Masonic lodge formed specifically for Mounties was established in 1894 in Regina, Saskatchewan. The lodge provided a way for Mounties, whose duties required frequent movement, to maintain membership in one lodge rather than changing lodges frequently as they moved to different posts.
This document provides background information on the period of American expansion in the 19th century known as Manifest Destiny. It discusses key figures and events related to westward expansion including mountain men like Jedediah Smith, settlers who traveled on the Oregon Trail like the Whitmans, and the movement of Mormons led by Brigham Young who settled in Salt Lake City. The document also provides brief biographies on figures involved in expansion like Joseph Smith, John Jacob Astor, and Brigham Young.
This document provides a summary of early American literature from 1512 to 1734, including important events, publications, and developments. Some key points include: the Spanish conquest of the Aztecs in Mexico from 1519-1521; publications like Bartolome de las Casas advocating for Native American rights in the 1550s and Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca's account of being shipwrecked in Florida in the 1540s; the founding of Jamestown in 1607 and Quebec in 1608; publications from settlers in the early colonies like John Smith and Thomas Harriot in the 1600s; the Salem Witch Trials of 1692; and Benjamin Franklin founding the Junto Club and
The document provides an overview of California history covering its four geographic regions (desert, coast, valley, and mountain), early explorers like Sir Francis Drake and Juan Cabrillo, the establishment of Spanish missions and presidios, the arrival of settlers during the Gold Rush era like Levi Strauss and Sam Brannan, and influential figures such as Helen Hunt Jackson who advocated for Native American rights. It also includes brief biographies of several pioneering individuals and a timeline of key events in California's development.
The African Burial Ground and the History of Slavery in New York CityBob Mayer
At one point, New York City was second only to Charleston in the number of slaves. When Wall Street was actually a defensive wall, half-freed blacks formed a community north of it, outside the wall. They were denied, by law, from burying in the city so had their own burial ground. What happened to it?
1. The document provides a timeline of key events in USA history from 589 BC to 1831 AD, including the arrival of early settlers in North America, the founding of colonies, the establishment of slavery, the American Revolutionary War, and the founding of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
2. Major events include the arrival of the Mayflower in 1620, the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, the American Revolutionary War from 1775-1783, the founding of the United States with the Declaration of Independence in 1776, and the publication of the Book of Mormon in 1830.
3. The timeline traces the development of the USA from early settlements to the founding of
The document provides information about key events leading up to and during the American Civil War, including South Carolina's secession from the Union in 1861 which sparked other southern states to form the Confederate States of America. It also discusses slavery during this period and the Underground Railroad network that helped slaves escape to freedom, describing methods of travel and important figures like Harriet Tubman who led escapes.
- The document discusses the Mexican Revolution of 1910 and the rise of factions vying for power in Mexico, including Pancho Villa and Venustiano Carranza. It then describes Villa's 1916 attack on Columbus, New Mexico which killed 18 Americans and prompted the U.S. deployment of troops along the Mexican border. The Connecticut National Guard was among those deployed, with troops sent to camp in Niantic and then transported to Nogales, Arizona. While stationed in Nogales, the troops conducted patrols and training exercises along the border as part of security efforts in response to the tensions with Mexico.
Freemasonry 090 the mounties and freemasonryColinJxxx
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police have been associated with Freemasonry since their inception. Many early Mounties were Freemasons and the first Masonic lodge formed specifically for Mounties was established in 1894 in Regina, Saskatchewan. The lodge provided a way for Mounties, whose duties required frequent movement, to maintain membership in one lodge rather than changing lodges frequently as they moved to different posts.
This document provides background information on the period of American expansion in the 19th century known as Manifest Destiny. It discusses key figures and events related to westward expansion including mountain men like Jedediah Smith, settlers who traveled on the Oregon Trail like the Whitmans, and the movement of Mormons led by Brigham Young who settled in Salt Lake City. The document also provides brief biographies on figures involved in expansion like Joseph Smith, John Jacob Astor, and Brigham Young.
This document provides a summary of early American literature from 1512 to 1734, including important events, publications, and developments. Some key points include: the Spanish conquest of the Aztecs in Mexico from 1519-1521; publications like Bartolome de las Casas advocating for Native American rights in the 1550s and Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca's account of being shipwrecked in Florida in the 1540s; the founding of Jamestown in 1607 and Quebec in 1608; publications from settlers in the early colonies like John Smith and Thomas Harriot in the 1600s; the Salem Witch Trials of 1692; and Benjamin Franklin founding the Junto Club and
The document provides an overview of California history covering its four geographic regions (desert, coast, valley, and mountain), early explorers like Sir Francis Drake and Juan Cabrillo, the establishment of Spanish missions and presidios, the arrival of settlers during the Gold Rush era like Levi Strauss and Sam Brannan, and influential figures such as Helen Hunt Jackson who advocated for Native American rights. It also includes brief biographies of several pioneering individuals and a timeline of key events in California's development.
The African Burial Ground and the History of Slavery in New York CityBob Mayer
At one point, New York City was second only to Charleston in the number of slaves. When Wall Street was actually a defensive wall, half-freed blacks formed a community north of it, outside the wall. They were denied, by law, from burying in the city so had their own burial ground. What happened to it?
1. The document provides a timeline of key events in USA history from 589 BC to 1831 AD, including the arrival of early settlers in North America, the founding of colonies, the establishment of slavery, the American Revolutionary War, and the founding of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
2. Major events include the arrival of the Mayflower in 1620, the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, the American Revolutionary War from 1775-1783, the founding of the United States with the Declaration of Independence in 1776, and the publication of the Book of Mormon in 1830.
3. The timeline traces the development of the USA from early settlements to the founding of
The document provides information about key events leading up to and during the American Civil War, including South Carolina's secession from the Union in 1861 which sparked other southern states to form the Confederate States of America. It also discusses slavery during this period and the Underground Railroad network that helped slaves escape to freedom, describing methods of travel and important figures like Harriet Tubman who led escapes.
- The document discusses the Mexican Revolution of 1910 and the rise of factions vying for power in Mexico, including Pancho Villa and Venustiano Carranza. It then describes Villa's 1916 attack on Columbus, New Mexico which killed 18 Americans and prompted the U.S. deployment of troops along the Mexican border. The Connecticut National Guard was among those deployed, with troops sent to camp in Niantic and then transported to Nogales, Arizona. While stationed in Nogales, the troops conducted patrols and training exercises along the border as part of security efforts in response to the tensions with Mexico.
1) Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints faced persecution and violence in the 1830s-1840s in Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois, culminating in the death of their leader Joseph Smith in 1844.
2) In 1847, seeking religious refuge, thousands of Mormons embarked on a journey led by Brigham Young to establish a settlement in Salt Lake Valley, Utah.
3) The California Gold Rush beginning in 1848 attracted thousands of prospectors, known as "forty-niners", fueling rapid population growth in California through the discovery of gold and other precious metals in the region.
History 1301 7 9-05 1600's slavery ch 3 introeagleannouncer
This document provides an overview of early American history from the 1600s, covering the original 13 colonies. It discusses the founding and key details about Virginia, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, Connecticut, Maryland, New Hampshire, Delaware, the Carolinas and other colonies. Important figures mentioned include John Smith, the Pilgrims, Puritans like John Winthrop, Roger Williams, the Dutch presence in New York, religious tolerance in Maryland, and the origins of the colonies.
The document provides information on various topics related to European colonization of North America, including the international slave trade to Brazil, the Dutch and Portuguese empires, English and French colonies, and Native Americans. Specifically, it discusses how between 3.6-5 million slaves were transported to Brazil over centuries, how the Dutch supplanted the Portuguese in Asian trade routes, the founding and growth of English colonies in North America, the slow colonization of New France compared to English colonies, and that Native Americans lived in independent nations across North America when Europeans first arrived.
The document summarizes the changes on the Western frontier in the late 19th century. It describes the clash between Native American tribes and settlers as more people moved west, disrupting tribal lands and the buffalo population. It also discusses the hardships of settling the Great Plains and the rise of ranching and farming, including the economic difficulties farmers faced that led to the Populist movement seeking political reforms to aid agricultural interests.
The document discusses the California Gold Rush of 1848-1855. It describes how gold was discovered by James Marshall at Sutter's sawmill, sparking a massive migration. Over 300,000 prospectors immigrated to California using various mining techniques like pans, picks and shovels to excavate gold. Some individuals like Wells and Levi Strauss profited by supplying goods and services to the miners. The Gold Rush had positive impacts like growing California's population and economy but also had negative effects like environmental impacts and violence towards native peoples.
The document summarizes the early exploration and settlement of North America by various European powers including the Dutch, French, and English from the 15th-17th centuries. It discusses early English fishing and trade with Native Americans on the coasts in the 1500s. It then focuses on the English settlements at Roanoke from 1584-1590, Jamestown in 1607, and the leadership of figures like Captain John Smith and Peter Stuyvesant during the Dutch colonization of New York in the 1600s.
The African Burial Ground and the History of Slavery in New York CityBob Mayer
At one point, New York City was second only to Charleston in the number of slaves. When Wall Street was actually a defensive wall, half-freed blacks formed a community north of it, outside the wall. They were denied, by law, from burying in the city so had their own burial ground. What happened to it?
On July 2, 1822, Denmark Vesey and five co-conspirators were hanged outside Charleston, South Carolina. They had been convicted of attempting to carry out the largest slave rebellion in the history of the United States.
Hernando De Soto explored Georgia in 1540 searching for gold but found none. He and his men overwhelmed native peoples with weapons and horses, introducing smallpox that killed thousands. In the late 1600s, England began establishing colonies along the Atlantic coast and wanted a buffer colony between Spanish Florida and their other colonies, leading to the founding of Georgia in the 1730s. James Oglethorpe and others established the colony, founding the city of Savannah along a planned grid. Early colonists struggled but more immigrants arrived, and the colony grew and transitioned to practices like slavery and large plantations.
This document summarizes the immigration histories of Philip Baker and Harriett Ann Thompson Baker to the United States and Utah. Philip Baker departed from Liverpool, England in 1851 aboard the Ellen Maria and arrived in New Orleans, later traveling overland to Salt Lake City. Harriett Ann Thompson departed from Liverpool in 1853 aboard the Golconda with her family and arrived in New Orleans, then continued by steamboat and ox train to Salt Lake City. They married around 1860-1861 in Beaver, Utah and had 10 children.
The document provides information about life for early settlers in colonial Georgia. It describes the founding of the Ebenezer settlement by Salzburger Lutherans in 1734. The Salzburgers experienced hardship and disease as they established their community under the leadership of Minister John Martin Boltzius. They followed strict church regulations. Though conditions were difficult, the Salzburgers became successful farmers and the Ebenezer community grew. The document also discusses the introduction and growth of slavery in Georgia from the 1730s onward and the slave codes passed to control the behavior of enslaved people.
The document discusses the origins and development of slavery in colonial America. It describes how Africans were captured and brought to the colonies through the transatlantic slave trade. Initially, indentured servitude was more common than slavery, but Bacon's Rebellion and the increasing profitability of slave labor led plantation owners to replace indentured servants with enslaved Africans. Laws were passed in Virginia and other colonies in the 1600s-1700s that defined the legal status of slaves as property and restricted their rights. The Royal African Company played a key role in expanding the British slave trade during this period.
Arkansas History Through Music part _one__6-15-10__John Jarboe
Arkansas History Through Music is a musical journey through the past of Arkansas containing detailed information about the state, it's citizens, and it's many musicians.
The document provides information about the political, economic, and social systems of three West African kingdoms - Asante, Benin, and Congo - prior to and during the slave trade. It notes that Asante had an absolute monarch called the Asantehene and centralized power. Benin also had an absolute monarch called the Uzama and independent city-states. Congo was led by an absolute monarch called the ManiKongo who claimed divine right. All three kingdoms engaged in the slave trade to varying degrees in exchange for guns and other goods, which increased their power but ultimately contributed to their decline as the slave trade ended in the 1800s.
This document summarizes the history of the Maharlika (Philippines) prior to Spanish colonization. It describes how the Tagean royal family ruled the Maharlika as Maharajahs and Rajahs after retreating from the Madjapahit Empire. Under Maharajah Luisong Tagean, the Maharlika was a rich kingdom with 720,000 metric tons of gold. It then outlines how the Spanish conquistadors led by Legaspi colonized the islands in 1565, forcibly subjugated the population, imposed taxation and tributes, and systematically extracted the kingdom's gold and other resources over 333 years of colonial rule.
The Lost Colony of Roanoke Island in 1587 consisted of 114 settlers including women and children. Governor John White left the colony to retrieve supplies but was unable to return for three years. When he finally returned, he found the colony abandoned with the word "CROATOAN" carved in a post. It was never determined what happened to the Lost Colony, though theories suggest they integrated with the Croatan Native Americans or were killed in conflicts. Archaeological evidence may provide clues to their ultimate fate.
The document discusses the history of immigration to the United States from different parts of the world. It provides details on when major waves of immigrants arrived from regions like Northern Europe, Eastern Europe, Asia, Latin America and why they came. The challenges immigrants faced in their journey and initial settlement in America are also summarized.
The document discusses the origins of California's name from a 16th century Spanish novel about the mythical island of California ruled by Queen Calafia. In 1533, Spanish explorers led by Hernan Cortes landed in what is now California, believing it to be this island. By 1539, it was officially named California after the fictional island. It wasn't until 1540 that the Spanish realized California was actually a peninsula, not an island. The discovery of gold in 1848 at Sutter's Mill sparked the California Gold Rush, greatly increasing the non-native population and leading to California becoming a state in 1850.
This document provides a summary of the history of California from Spanish exploration and colonization in the 16th century through the late 19th century. It discusses key events like Hernan Cortes' early expeditions, the establishment of missions by the Jesuits, Mexican rule in the early 1800s, the influx of American traders and settlers, the Gold Rush, and economic and political developments in late 19th century California including the construction of the transcontinental railroad and labor unrest in San Francisco.
Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1861 and signed the Pacific Railroad Act in 1862, which directed the construction of the first transcontinental railroad across the United States. The railroad was built between 1863 to 1869 by thousands of Irish, Chinese, and black workers and connected the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha, Nebraska to the Central Pacific Railroad in Sacramento, California. The completion of the railroad in 1869 transformed the United States by enabling mass migration westward and the growth of towns and cities along the rail line, including Cheyenne, Wyoming and San Francisco, California.
1) Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints faced persecution and violence in the 1830s-1840s in Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois, culminating in the death of their leader Joseph Smith in 1844.
2) In 1847, seeking religious refuge, thousands of Mormons embarked on a journey led by Brigham Young to establish a settlement in Salt Lake Valley, Utah.
3) The California Gold Rush beginning in 1848 attracted thousands of prospectors, known as "forty-niners", fueling rapid population growth in California through the discovery of gold and other precious metals in the region.
History 1301 7 9-05 1600's slavery ch 3 introeagleannouncer
This document provides an overview of early American history from the 1600s, covering the original 13 colonies. It discusses the founding and key details about Virginia, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, Connecticut, Maryland, New Hampshire, Delaware, the Carolinas and other colonies. Important figures mentioned include John Smith, the Pilgrims, Puritans like John Winthrop, Roger Williams, the Dutch presence in New York, religious tolerance in Maryland, and the origins of the colonies.
The document provides information on various topics related to European colonization of North America, including the international slave trade to Brazil, the Dutch and Portuguese empires, English and French colonies, and Native Americans. Specifically, it discusses how between 3.6-5 million slaves were transported to Brazil over centuries, how the Dutch supplanted the Portuguese in Asian trade routes, the founding and growth of English colonies in North America, the slow colonization of New France compared to English colonies, and that Native Americans lived in independent nations across North America when Europeans first arrived.
The document summarizes the changes on the Western frontier in the late 19th century. It describes the clash between Native American tribes and settlers as more people moved west, disrupting tribal lands and the buffalo population. It also discusses the hardships of settling the Great Plains and the rise of ranching and farming, including the economic difficulties farmers faced that led to the Populist movement seeking political reforms to aid agricultural interests.
The document discusses the California Gold Rush of 1848-1855. It describes how gold was discovered by James Marshall at Sutter's sawmill, sparking a massive migration. Over 300,000 prospectors immigrated to California using various mining techniques like pans, picks and shovels to excavate gold. Some individuals like Wells and Levi Strauss profited by supplying goods and services to the miners. The Gold Rush had positive impacts like growing California's population and economy but also had negative effects like environmental impacts and violence towards native peoples.
The document summarizes the early exploration and settlement of North America by various European powers including the Dutch, French, and English from the 15th-17th centuries. It discusses early English fishing and trade with Native Americans on the coasts in the 1500s. It then focuses on the English settlements at Roanoke from 1584-1590, Jamestown in 1607, and the leadership of figures like Captain John Smith and Peter Stuyvesant during the Dutch colonization of New York in the 1600s.
The African Burial Ground and the History of Slavery in New York CityBob Mayer
At one point, New York City was second only to Charleston in the number of slaves. When Wall Street was actually a defensive wall, half-freed blacks formed a community north of it, outside the wall. They were denied, by law, from burying in the city so had their own burial ground. What happened to it?
On July 2, 1822, Denmark Vesey and five co-conspirators were hanged outside Charleston, South Carolina. They had been convicted of attempting to carry out the largest slave rebellion in the history of the United States.
Hernando De Soto explored Georgia in 1540 searching for gold but found none. He and his men overwhelmed native peoples with weapons and horses, introducing smallpox that killed thousands. In the late 1600s, England began establishing colonies along the Atlantic coast and wanted a buffer colony between Spanish Florida and their other colonies, leading to the founding of Georgia in the 1730s. James Oglethorpe and others established the colony, founding the city of Savannah along a planned grid. Early colonists struggled but more immigrants arrived, and the colony grew and transitioned to practices like slavery and large plantations.
This document summarizes the immigration histories of Philip Baker and Harriett Ann Thompson Baker to the United States and Utah. Philip Baker departed from Liverpool, England in 1851 aboard the Ellen Maria and arrived in New Orleans, later traveling overland to Salt Lake City. Harriett Ann Thompson departed from Liverpool in 1853 aboard the Golconda with her family and arrived in New Orleans, then continued by steamboat and ox train to Salt Lake City. They married around 1860-1861 in Beaver, Utah and had 10 children.
The document provides information about life for early settlers in colonial Georgia. It describes the founding of the Ebenezer settlement by Salzburger Lutherans in 1734. The Salzburgers experienced hardship and disease as they established their community under the leadership of Minister John Martin Boltzius. They followed strict church regulations. Though conditions were difficult, the Salzburgers became successful farmers and the Ebenezer community grew. The document also discusses the introduction and growth of slavery in Georgia from the 1730s onward and the slave codes passed to control the behavior of enslaved people.
The document discusses the origins and development of slavery in colonial America. It describes how Africans were captured and brought to the colonies through the transatlantic slave trade. Initially, indentured servitude was more common than slavery, but Bacon's Rebellion and the increasing profitability of slave labor led plantation owners to replace indentured servants with enslaved Africans. Laws were passed in Virginia and other colonies in the 1600s-1700s that defined the legal status of slaves as property and restricted their rights. The Royal African Company played a key role in expanding the British slave trade during this period.
Arkansas History Through Music part _one__6-15-10__John Jarboe
Arkansas History Through Music is a musical journey through the past of Arkansas containing detailed information about the state, it's citizens, and it's many musicians.
The document provides information about the political, economic, and social systems of three West African kingdoms - Asante, Benin, and Congo - prior to and during the slave trade. It notes that Asante had an absolute monarch called the Asantehene and centralized power. Benin also had an absolute monarch called the Uzama and independent city-states. Congo was led by an absolute monarch called the ManiKongo who claimed divine right. All three kingdoms engaged in the slave trade to varying degrees in exchange for guns and other goods, which increased their power but ultimately contributed to their decline as the slave trade ended in the 1800s.
This document summarizes the history of the Maharlika (Philippines) prior to Spanish colonization. It describes how the Tagean royal family ruled the Maharlika as Maharajahs and Rajahs after retreating from the Madjapahit Empire. Under Maharajah Luisong Tagean, the Maharlika was a rich kingdom with 720,000 metric tons of gold. It then outlines how the Spanish conquistadors led by Legaspi colonized the islands in 1565, forcibly subjugated the population, imposed taxation and tributes, and systematically extracted the kingdom's gold and other resources over 333 years of colonial rule.
The Lost Colony of Roanoke Island in 1587 consisted of 114 settlers including women and children. Governor John White left the colony to retrieve supplies but was unable to return for three years. When he finally returned, he found the colony abandoned with the word "CROATOAN" carved in a post. It was never determined what happened to the Lost Colony, though theories suggest they integrated with the Croatan Native Americans or were killed in conflicts. Archaeological evidence may provide clues to their ultimate fate.
The document discusses the history of immigration to the United States from different parts of the world. It provides details on when major waves of immigrants arrived from regions like Northern Europe, Eastern Europe, Asia, Latin America and why they came. The challenges immigrants faced in their journey and initial settlement in America are also summarized.
The document discusses the origins of California's name from a 16th century Spanish novel about the mythical island of California ruled by Queen Calafia. In 1533, Spanish explorers led by Hernan Cortes landed in what is now California, believing it to be this island. By 1539, it was officially named California after the fictional island. It wasn't until 1540 that the Spanish realized California was actually a peninsula, not an island. The discovery of gold in 1848 at Sutter's Mill sparked the California Gold Rush, greatly increasing the non-native population and leading to California becoming a state in 1850.
This document provides a summary of the history of California from Spanish exploration and colonization in the 16th century through the late 19th century. It discusses key events like Hernan Cortes' early expeditions, the establishment of missions by the Jesuits, Mexican rule in the early 1800s, the influx of American traders and settlers, the Gold Rush, and economic and political developments in late 19th century California including the construction of the transcontinental railroad and labor unrest in San Francisco.
Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1861 and signed the Pacific Railroad Act in 1862, which directed the construction of the first transcontinental railroad across the United States. The railroad was built between 1863 to 1869 by thousands of Irish, Chinese, and black workers and connected the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha, Nebraska to the Central Pacific Railroad in Sacramento, California. The completion of the railroad in 1869 transformed the United States by enabling mass migration westward and the growth of towns and cities along the rail line, including Cheyenne, Wyoming and San Francisco, California.
The document provides an overview of California history covering its four main geographic regions (desert, coast, valley, and mountain), early explorers like Sir Francis Drake and Juan Cabrillo, the establishment of Spanish missions and presidios, the influx of settlers during the Gold Rush era in the 1840s-1850s, and some key figures like Levi Strauss, Biddy Mason, and Helen Hunt Jackson. It also briefly discusses the Mexican-American War and California's transition from Mexican to American control in the mid-1800s.
The document provides an overview of California history covering its four main geographic regions (desert, coast, valley, and mountain), early explorers like Sir Francis Drake and Juan Cabrillo, the establishment of Spanish missions and presidios, the influx of settlers during the Gold Rush era in the 1840s-1850s, and some key figures like Levi Strauss, Biddy Mason, and Helen Hunt Jackson. It also briefly discusses the Mexican-American War and California's transition from Mexican to American control in the mid-1800s.
The document summarizes events in Kansas in the 1850s surrounding the issue of whether Kansas would be a slave state or free state. After the Nebraska-Kansas Act of 1854, many settlers moved to Kansas to influence the vote. Two votes were held but were plagued by allegations of fraud and violence. Kansas was ultimately admitted as a free state in 1861. The document also describes specific violent incidents like attacks on settlers at Fort Scott and killings led by James Montgomery, a leader of the Free-State forces.
The document summarizes the settlement of the American West between 1865 and 1890. It describes how the frontier pushed westward due to the Homestead Act, transcontinental railroad, mining, cattle ranching, and farming. It also discusses the subduing of Native Americans through broken treaties and warfare, which resulted in their confinement to reservations by 1890. The closing of the frontier by 1890 marked the end of an era in American history.
The document summarizes chapters from a history book about California. It discusses how California transitioned from a Mexican territory to an American state in the 1800s. Key events included the secularization of the missions in 1833, the influx of traders and explorers in the late 1700s, John Fremont's capture of California for the US in 1846, and the 1848 California Gold Rush that drew hundreds of thousands of immigrants and made San Francisco a major city. It also discusses the building of the first transcontinental railroad in the 1860s and economic troubles including a bank failure in 1857.
Manifest Destiny was the belief in the 1800s that the United States was destined to expand across North America to the Pacific Ocean. From 1803 to 1853, the U.S. more than doubled in size through various territorial acquisitions like the Louisiana Purchase, annexation of Texas, and war with Mexico, gaining control of land stretching from coast to coast. This westward expansion was driven by both the desire to spread democracy and economic opportunities like the California Gold Rush of 1849.
Manifest Destiny was the belief in the 1800s that the United States was destined to expand across North America to the Pacific Ocean. From 1803 to 1853, the U.S. more than doubled in size through various territorial acquisitions like the Louisiana Purchase, annexation of Texas, and war with Mexico, gaining control of land stretching from coast to coast. This westward expansion was driven by both the desire to spread democracy and economic opportunities like the California Gold Rush of 1849.
The document summarizes Bleeding Kansas and the violence that erupted between pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions in the 1850s over whether Kansas would enter the union as a slave state or free state. It describes two disputed votes on the issue that led to violence. Fort Scott, originally a military fort, was reopened to house 30 pro-slavery settlers in 1856 and was supported by pro-slavery groups that harassed free-state settlers. James Montgomery was a leader of free-state forces who engaged in violent acts like pulling 11 settlers from their homes to shoot them and breaking a man accused of murder out of jail.
1. The document discusses several key figures and events of Westward Expansion in the United States, including Andrew Jackson, Brigham Young, the California Gold Rush, dry farming, Exodusters, John Charles Fremont, James Gadsden, the Homestead Act, the Indian Removal Act, John Fitch, Stephen Kearny, Lewis and Clark, Manifest Destiny, the New Orleans Louisiana Purchase, the Oregon Trail, panning for gold, the Quincy Adams, and Robert Fulton.
2. Major topics covered include Indian removal, Mormon migration, the population boom during the Gold Rush, pioneering agricultural practices, African American migration following the Civil War, western exploration, territorial acquisitions
CHAPTER 9 THE AMERICAN WEST, Expansion and Contraction, 1860-19.docxrusselldayna
CHAPTER 9: THE AMERICAN WEST, Expansion and Contraction, 1860-1920
Contents
Introduction and Pre-Reading Questions: 1
Documents: 5
Document 1, Natives on Westward Expansion (Smithsonian, 1867; 1929) 5
Document 2, The Frontier Guardian on “More Indian Outrage,” 1851 (teachushistory.org, 1851) 5
Document 3, The Rocky Mountain News reports on the Sand Creek Massacre (PBS.org, 1864) 7
Document 4, Representative Grow (PA) explains how the Homestead Act provides, “Free homes for free men” (American Memory, 1860) 10
Document 5, Frances Garside, “The farmers’ wives are not merely ‘helpmeets’” in Kansas (Garside, 1995) 13
Document 6, Narrative of Cathay Williams, a female Buffalo Soldier (sangres.com, 1876) 14
Document 7, Illustration of blacks moving west from Louisiana to Kansas after the Civil War (Library of Congress, 1870) 15
Document 8, Interview of Bones Hooks, a black cowboy (American Memory, 1940) 15
Document 9, Benjamin Singleton testifies about the “Negro Exodus from the Southern States” (PBS.org, 1880) 19
Document 10, George B. Morris on “The Chinaman as he is…” (Library of Congress, c. 1868) 23
Document 11, Anti-Chinese boycott broadside (American Memory, c. 1889) 24
Document 12, Samuel Clemens on Mining Towns from Roughing It (Huntington Library, 1872) 25
Post-Reading Exercises 27
Works Cited 27
Introduction and Pre-Reading Questions: The west was a place that, through the end of the 1830s, was feared by most Americans. People assumed the soil was poor, the climate bad and the Indians terrifying. But by the mid-1840s, farmers, ranchers and miners, among others, took a gamble and tried their luck out west; by the end of the Civil War the romanticized notion of their experience on the “‘frontier’” drew increasingly more people out there in search of “wealth, adventure, opportunity, and untrammeled individualism.”[footnoteRef:1] In particular, it was the frontier thesis of a young man named Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 that propelled greater numbers of Americans to unknown territory. His thesis said that the free lands that lie west, coupled with the drive of Americans to settle on that land, gave Americans the ruggedness, individuality and power they possessed. [1: Alan Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation: A Concise History of the American People (McGraw Hill: New York, 1996), 454.]
What these new settlers found in their quest for excitement, however, was often extreme hardship in the new western lands. The image of the frontier was one of uncharted territory, virgin land, an unconquered and untamed environment, an empty plot of land ripe for settlement. But what these western-bound settlers usually found was a territory with diverse groups of Indians, Mexicans, French, Asians and others, all with different cultures, languages and ideas about “ ‘America.’”
Prior to massive white expansion to the Far West, various societies flourished in the Far West—the region beyond the Mississippi River—places like New Mexico, California, ...
CHAPTER 9 THE AMERICAN WEST, Expansion and Contraction, 1860-19.docxspoonerneddy
CHAPTER 9: THE AMERICAN WEST, Expansion and Contraction, 1860-1920
Contents
Introduction and Pre-Reading Questions: 1
Documents: 5
Document 1, Natives on Westward Expansion (Smithsonian, 1867; 1929) 5
Document 2, The Frontier Guardian on “More Indian Outrage,” 1851 (teachushistory.org, 1851) 5
Document 3, The Rocky Mountain News reports on the Sand Creek Massacre (PBS.org, 1864) 7
Document 4, Representative Grow (PA) explains how the Homestead Act provides, “Free homes for free men” (American Memory, 1860) 10
Document 5, Frances Garside, “The farmers’ wives are not merely ‘helpmeets’” in Kansas (Garside, 1995) 13
Document 6, Narrative of Cathay Williams, a female Buffalo Soldier (sangres.com, 1876) 14
Document 7, Illustration of blacks moving west from Louisiana to Kansas after the Civil War (Library of Congress, 1870) 15
Document 8, Interview of Bones Hooks, a black cowboy (American Memory, 1940) 15
Document 9, Benjamin Singleton testifies about the “Negro Exodus from the Southern States” (PBS.org, 1880) 19
Document 10, George B. Morris on “The Chinaman as he is…” (Library of Congress, c. 1868) 23
Document 11, Anti-Chinese boycott broadside (American Memory, c. 1889) 24
Document 12, Samuel Clemens on Mining Towns from Roughing It (Huntington Library, 1872) 25
Post-Reading Exercises 27
Works Cited 27
Introduction and Pre-Reading Questions: The west was a place that, through the end of the 1830s, was feared by most Americans. People assumed the soil was poor, the climate bad and the Indians terrifying. But by the mid-1840s, farmers, ranchers and miners, among others, took a gamble and tried their luck out west; by the end of the Civil War the romanticized notion of their experience on the “‘frontier’” drew increasingly more people out there in search of “wealth, adventure, opportunity, and untrammeled individualism.”[footnoteRef:1] In particular, it was the frontier thesis of a young man named Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 that propelled greater numbers of Americans to unknown territory. His thesis said that the free lands that lie west, coupled with the drive of Americans to settle on that land, gave Americans the ruggedness, individuality and power they possessed. [1: Alan Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation: A Concise History of the American People (McGraw Hill: New York, 1996), 454.]
What these new settlers found in their quest for excitement, however, was often extreme hardship in the new western lands. The image of the frontier was one of uncharted territory, virgin land, an unconquered and untamed environment, an empty plot of land ripe for settlement. But what these western-bound settlers usually found was a territory with diverse groups of Indians, Mexicans, French, Asians and others, all with different cultures, languages and ideas about “ ‘America.’”
Prior to massive white expansion to the Far West, various societies flourished in the Far West—the region beyond the Mississippi River—places like New Mexico, California,.
CHAPTER 9 THE AMERICAN WEST, Expansion and Contraction, 1860-19.docxchristinemaritza
CHAPTER 9: THE AMERICAN WEST, Expansion and Contraction, 1860-1920
Contents
Introduction and Pre-Reading Questions: 1
Documents: 5
Document 1, Natives on Westward Expansion (Smithsonian, 1867; 1929) 5
Document 2, The Frontier Guardian on “More Indian Outrage,” 1851 (teachushistory.org, 1851) 5
Document 3, The Rocky Mountain News reports on the Sand Creek Massacre (PBS.org, 1864) 7
Document 4, Representative Grow (PA) explains how the Homestead Act provides, “Free homes for free men” (American Memory, 1860) 10
Document 5, Frances Garside, “The farmers’ wives are not merely ‘helpmeets’” in Kansas (Garside, 1995) 13
Document 6, Narrative of Cathay Williams, a female Buffalo Soldier (sangres.com, 1876) 14
Document 7, Illustration of blacks moving west from Louisiana to Kansas after the Civil War (Library of Congress, 1870) 15
Document 8, Interview of Bones Hooks, a black cowboy (American Memory, 1940) 15
Document 9, Benjamin Singleton testifies about the “Negro Exodus from the Southern States” (PBS.org, 1880) 19
Document 10, George B. Morris on “The Chinaman as he is…” (Library of Congress, c. 1868) 23
Document 11, Anti-Chinese boycott broadside (American Memory, c. 1889) 24
Document 12, Samuel Clemens on Mining Towns from Roughing It (Huntington Library, 1872) 25
Post-Reading Exercises 27
Works Cited 27
Introduction and Pre-Reading Questions: The west was a place that, through the end of the 1830s, was feared by most Americans. People assumed the soil was poor, the climate bad and the Indians terrifying. But by the mid-1840s, farmers, ranchers and miners, among others, took a gamble and tried their luck out west; by the end of the Civil War the romanticized notion of their experience on the “‘frontier’” drew increasingly more people out there in search of “wealth, adventure, opportunity, and untrammeled individualism.”[footnoteRef:1] In particular, it was the frontier thesis of a young man named Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 that propelled greater numbers of Americans to unknown territory. His thesis said that the free lands that lie west, coupled with the drive of Americans to settle on that land, gave Americans the ruggedness, individuality and power they possessed. [1: Alan Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation: A Concise History of the American People (McGraw Hill: New York, 1996), 454.]
What these new settlers found in their quest for excitement, however, was often extreme hardship in the new western lands. The image of the frontier was one of uncharted territory, virgin land, an unconquered and untamed environment, an empty plot of land ripe for settlement. But what these western-bound settlers usually found was a territory with diverse groups of Indians, Mexicans, French, Asians and others, all with different cultures, languages and ideas about “ ‘America.’”
Prior to massive white expansion to the Far West, various societies flourished in the Far West—the region beyond the Mississippi River—places like New Mexico, California, ...
The document discusses the Exoduster Movement which occurred between 1879-1880, when thousands of African Americans migrated from the American South to Kansas after the Civil War. It describes the difficult conditions blacks faced in the South after the war, with the loss of federal protections and rise of groups like the Ku Klux Klan. It also summarizes information about Benjamin "Pap" Singleton, known as the "Father of the Exodus," who organized colonies for black migrants in Kansas. While many migrants struggled at first, some were able to establish farms and communities, making the migration a partial success overall.
The document discusses Bleeding Kansas, which was a series of violent conflicts in the 1850s between anti-slavery and pro-slavery groups in Kansas Territory over whether it would enter the Union as a slave state or free state. The term "Bleeding Kansas" was coined by newspaper editor Horace Greeley to describe the violent events. Anti-slavery forces were collectively known as Free-Staters, while pro-slavery forces were called Border Ruffians. The violence continued until 1861 when Kansas joined the Union as a free state.
The document summarizes key events in the westward expansion of the United States in the early to mid-19th century. It discusses the rapid population growth in the new nation between 1780-1830, the rise of Manifest Destiny and belief in American exceptionalism. It also describes the Oregon Treaty of 1818, settlement of the Oregon Territory by Mountain Men, and the thousands of pioneers who made the overland journey along the Oregon Trail between 1840-1860. The document outlines the Mexican Cession following the Mexican-American War and Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, as well as the Gadsden Purchase of 1853 which completed US control of the western territories.
Film Transcript[ Narrator ] The year was 1864. Events took .docxlmelaine
Film Transcript
[ Narrator: ] The year was 1864. Events took place in the American West that would change the world
of Navajos. Navajos call it, "the fearing time". Navajos saw soldiers and settlers coming to the
Southwest. Conflict led to one of the most tragic, yet triumphant chapters in American history. It's still
very difficult for us to talk about-- these stories.
[ Narrator: ] The aftermath shook their identity. Any time you say the word "Navajo" or something,
they will shave a bar of soap and they put it in your mouth and they tell you to wash it out.
[ Announcer: ] This program was made possible in part by:
[ Narrator: ] Navajos saw threatening omens. Landslides may have predicted "the fearing time".
January 1864--Canyon de Chelly seemed invincible to Navajos. The Redrock Canyon had spiritual and
strategic meaning. Sheer vertical walls protect the canyon floor. It was a cold winter day. Snow
blanketed the canyon. Orchards covered the canyon floor. There may have been as many as 3,000
peach trees. Red water flowed through Canyon de Chelly. Navajos knew soldiers were coming. Crops
were destroyed in the summer and fall. Their sheep were killed or taken. This scorched earth policy
was planned to make Navajos surrender. The war of starvation was effective. Few shots were fired. The
United States' military campaign against Navajos had origins in earlier events. European explorers
reached North America in the late 1400s. There were consequences for millions of Native people who
lived there. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark made their voyage of discovery to the American West
in 1804 through 1806. When Lewis and Clark first came up this river behind me, it meant actually
many different things to many different tribes. Some embraced them, but truly it meant the beginning
of the end of our life as we knew it.
[ Narrator: ] Conflict threw the West into decades of turmoil. The Spanish explorer Cortes conquered
Mexico in 1519. Spain occupied the Southwest. The Spanish were the first Europeans Navajos
encountered. The Mexican War of Independence separated Mexico from Spain in 1821. Mexico
controlled the province of New Mexico until 1846. Navajos experienced slave raids throughout the
Spanish-Mexican period. Slave raids were cause for much of the violence in the Southwest. Historian
Peter Iverson quotes Navajo leader Armijo-- "More than 200 of our children have been carried off "and
we know not where they are. "My people are crying for the children they have lost." Navajos resisted
domination. Navajos rarely, if ever, receive back their own family members who have been taken
captives.
[ Narrator: ] Navajos call themselves Dine or "The People". Their religion tells of five worlds from
which they came. The creation of Navajos took place within four sacred mountains-- White Shell
Mountain, Bluebead Mountain, Abalone Shell Mountain and Big Sheep Mountain. Chaco Canyon is
located in the four corners region of the So ...
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Office of the Secretary of State
Kansas History
Kansas takes its name from the Kansa Indians. Kansa means “People of the South Wind.” Kan-
sas entered the Union on January 29, 1861, marking the end of a long period of exploration and settle-
ment, and following a brief but bloody and bitter struggle between early settlers over the extension of
slavery. Ahead were days of growth and development that contributed to the strength and prosperity of our
American nation.
Early Exploration of Kansas
The region that is now Kansas had been inhabited by Indians for thousands of years before the
first white man appeared. In 1540, the Spanish conquistador Francisco Vasquez de Coronado marched
north from Mexico in search of the Seven Golden Cities of Cibola. In New Mexico he was told of the land of
Quivira, and in 1541 he turned east and north in search of this fabled place of wealth. Coronado found no
gold in Quivira but he called the country, which is now a part of Kansas, “the best I have ever seen for
producing all the products of Spain.” This was 80 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock.
Coronado returned to New Mexico, but the next year a priest who had accompanied him was back
in Kansas. Father Juan de Padilla hoped to bring Christianity to the Indians. He was killed, however, by
those he tried to help. The exact place of his death is unknown, but it is presumed to have been in present
central Kansas. Father Padilla is said to be the first Christian martyr in the United States.
By the late 17th century, France claimed all the land drained by the Mississippi River. This vast
territory was named Louisiana by the French explorer LaSalle in honor of his king, Louis XIV. French fur-
traders reached present northeastern Kansas in 1702, and in following years the explorers Claude Charles
du Tisne, Etienne de Bourgmont, and Paul and Pierre Mallet traversed the area. In 1744, a French military
post and trading center, Fort Cavagnolle, was constructed near present Leavenworth. French claims were
ceded to Spain in 1763, but in 1800 title was returned to France, from whom the United States purchased
the entire Louisiana territory in 1803. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, exploring the new purchase,
made camp at several points on the Kansas side of the Missouri River in late June and early July 1804.
Two years later Lieutenant Zebulon Pike, of the U.S. Army, crossed the Kansas area on an exploring
expedition during which he met with the Indians and treatied with them as the representative of the new
“White Father.” He continued westward on this journey to discover the high mountain, which is called
Pike’s Peak.
The Santa Fe and Oregon Trails
As the exploration of Kansas continued, trails were established by traders and immigrants. Many
followed earlier routes used by the Indians. William Becknell, a Missouri trader, opened the Santa Fe Trail
to trade with the Spanish in what is now New Mexico. Early in the 1820s, wagon trains were being sent
over this route from the Missouri River to Santa Fe. The trail was about 800 miles long.
The Oregon Trail, used by emigrants to California and the Northwest during the middle decades of
the 1800s, crossed the northeastern section of the state. Some who traveled this route were so impressed
by the possibilities in Kansas they stopped and made their homes here, while others returned later to
settle on the rich farm lands. Still others came after hearing of the new lands from those who had crossed
the area while on the trail.
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2010 Kansas Directory
The Territorial Period
Passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act by Congress in 1854 opened the territories to white
settlement. It also gave rise to the historic struggle between Proslavery and Free-State forces that made
“Bleeding Kansas” known across the nation as a battleground for freedom. Settlers representing both
groups flocked into Kansas: Proslavery men from the Southern states and from Missouri, and Free-State
people from the Eastern and Northcentral states. As they came into conflict, acts of terrorism were
committed by both sides. For the next few years Kansas was the scene of many violent encounters.
Among them were the Pottawatomie Massacre, in which John Brown and his men killed five Proslavery
partisans in Franklin County; the battles of Black Jack, Franklin and Hickory Point; the burning of
Osawatomie; and the Marais des Cygnes Massacre in Linn County.
In 1857, word began to circulate of rich gold discoveries in the western part of the territory, “near
Pike’s Peak, Kansas.” For the next year, gold was a principal subject of conversation and a leading topic
in Kansas newspapers. Hundreds of Kansas settlers left for the mountains, and many more from Eastern
states crossed Kansas on their way to the gold fields. Stage lines were started and travel became faster.
Soon it became important to inaugurate a better system of communication with the West Coast.
Members of the Leavenworth firm of Russell, Majors and Waddell, a large freighting concern, established
the Pony Express in 1860. Speedy horses and hardy riders carried the mail from St. Joseph, Missouri, to
Sacramento, California, in the amazingly short time of seven to ten days. The route led across the
northeastern corner of Kansas, through Elwood, Troy, Kickapoo, Seneca and Marysville. The last relay
point in Kansas was at Hollenberg Station, where the only unaltered Pony Express building in the country
still stands in its original location near Hanover, Kansas, as a state museum. From there, the route led
into Nebraska and west across the mountains. The Pony Express made its last run in October 1861, when
it was made obsolete by the completion of the transcontinental telegraph.
Statehood Begins
Several attempts were made during the territorial period to draw up a constitution under which
Kansas might be admitted to statehood. The first attempt took place in 1855, when a Free-State
Constitution was framed in Topeka. However, it was never given serious consideration by Congress. In
1857, a second constitution, written at Lecompton, provided for a vote on the admission of Kansas with
slavery. The constitution was adopted in an election in which Free-State men refused to vote, and later
was rejected at a second election in which the Proslavery men took no part. This constitution was sent to
Washington, but while it was being debated by Congress a third constitutional convention convened at
Leavenworth. The constitution drafted there was adopted by the people in 1858. But this, too, failed to gain
congressional acceptance.
The fourth and last convention assembled at Wyandotte (now part of Kansas City) in July 1859.
This time the Free-State advocates were solidly in control, and the document they drafted barred slavery
and fixed the present boundaries of the state. This constitution was accepted by a vote of the people in
October, and in December a provisional state government was elected. In April 1860, the U.S. House of
Representatives voted to admit Kansas, but the Senate, under Proslavery domination, refused. Statehood
for Kansas thus became a national issue, and the Republican platform of 1860 included a plank for
immediate admittance. The victory of Abraham Lincoln in November was followed by secession of
Southern states. The withdrawal of their senators and representatives gave control of Congress to the
Republicans even before the change of administrations. The Kansas bill was passed by both houses on
January 29, 1861. Kansas thus became the 34th state of what at the time was a rapidly disintegrating
union.
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Office of the Secretary of State
The Civil War
Kansans had known civil war since the territory was organized in 1854. Now large-scale rebellion
faced the entire nation.
In answer to President Lincoln’s first call for troops in April 1861, Kansas supplied 650 men.
Before the war ended in 1865 the state had furnished more than 20,000 men, a remarkable record in view
of the fact that the population included less than 30,000 men of military age. Kansas also suffered the
highest mortality rate of any of the Union states. Of the African-American troops in the Union Army, 2,080
were credited to Kansas though the 1860 census listed fewer than 300 of military age in the state; most
actually came from Arkansas and Missouri.
Although Kansas soldiers saw action in many of the important engagements of the war, only one
major battle was fought within the state. This was the Battle of Mine Creek, which took place in Linn
County October 25, 1864. Some 25,000 men were involved. The Confederate Army under Major General
Sterling Price was defeated, and the threat of a Southern invasion of Kansas was ended. Civil War action
within the state consisted primarily of guerrilla skirmishes and raids. Of these, the most notorious was
William C. Quantrill’s surprise attack on Lawrence August 21, 1863, in which 150 residents were slaugh-
tered and most of the city was looted and burned.
Late 19th Century Development
After the Civil War, a series of Native American attacks threatened the Western frontier. The tribes
were alarmed by the steady encroachment of white settlers, and although undermanned military outposts
did their best to protect settlers and travelers, and federal commissioners held peace talks with the chiefs,
no permanent peace was obtained. The attacks reached their height in Kansas in 1867, when nearly 130
settlers were killed. By the end of 1869, most of these troubles had shifted to other areas. However,
western Kansas continued to have conflict until the last Native American raid, which took place in Decatur
County in 1878.
Meanwhile, rapid settlement was being made. Towns were founded, schools established, busi-
nesses and small industries started, and railroads were pushing westward across the state. In 1869 the
Kansas (now Union) Pacific reached the Colorado line, and by the end of 1872 the Santa Fe had done the
same.
The era of the great cattle drives, which focused national attention on several Kansas towns, came
in with the railroads. Abilene became a shipping center for Texas cattle in 1867 when Joseph McCoy
persuaded Texas drovers to use the extended Chisholm trail to bring their herds to the just-arrived Union
Pacific, Eastern Division (later the Kansas Pacific). Newton, Ellsworth, Caldwell, Wichita and Dodge City
were other towns that became prominent as tracks were built south and west.
The introduction of Turkey Red wheat by Mennonites from Russia in 1874 was a milestone in
Kansas agriculture. This hardy winter wheat was ideally suited to crop-growing conditions in the state and
provided the early basis for the pre-eminence of Kansas as a producer of wheat.
A prohibition amendment to the Kansas Constitution was adopted in 1880. It remained in effect
until 1948 when a system of licensed liquor sales was established. At the turn of the century Carry Nation
became a national figure, symbolizing the strong temperance sentiment among church and other groups
as she traveled about smashing illegal saloons with her famous hatchets.
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2010 Kansas Directory
Kansas in the 20th Century and Beyond
Significant changes occurred in agriculture, industry, transportation and communication in the
years after 1900. Mechanization became almost universal in farming; heavy industry began replacing
individual shops and mills; transportation entered a new era that was to be characterized by diesel-
powered trains, commercial air travel and multi-lane highways; and communication was revolutionized by
radio and television that augmented the state’s large publishing industry. World War I brought an unprec-
edented boom in agriculture because of the demand for food from the warring nations of Europe. Thou-
sands of previously uncultivated acres were planted in wheat, and this land, allowed to lie fallow during the
recession of the 1920s, became part of the “dust bowl” of the 1930s. Conditions improved in the 1940s.
New industries came to Kansas, and by the early 1950s industry for the first time surpassed agriculture as
the state’s largest source of income. Kansas became steadily more urbanized as industry concentrated
more and more in the population centers around Kansas City, Wichita, Topeka and other major Kansas
communities.
A number of Kansans have gained national prominence during the 20th century. William Allen
White, famed editor and publisher of the Emporia Gazette, was the confidant of U.S. Presidents. Charles
Curtis of Topeka, for many years a U.S. Senator from Kansas, served as Vice President of the United
States under Herbert Hoover. Alfred M. Landon, governor of the state from 1933 to 1937, was the unsuc-
cessful Republican presidential nominee in 1936.
Mrs. Georgia Neese (Clark) Gray, Topeka banker and business woman, became the first woman
appointed Treasurer of the United States in 1949 and served in that capacity until January 1953.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Abilene, commander-in-chief of the Allied armies in Europe during World
War II, was President of the United States from 1953 to 1961.
Nancy Kassebaum Baker, Burdick, became the first woman elected to the United States Senate
in her own right in 1978. She served as a U.S. Senator until 1996.
Former U.S. Senator Bob Dole, Russell, was the Republican nominee for Vice President of the
United States in 1976 and for President in 1996.
In the field of athletics, Jim Ryun, of Wichita and the University of Kansas, held the world record
for the mile run. William Inge, a native of Independence, was a Pultizer prize-winning playwright, and
Gordon Parks, born at Fort Scott, is a world famous photographer, writer and motion picture producer.
Kansas also is home to three astronauts. Ron Evans, command ship pilot during the flight of
Apollo 17 to the moon, was born in St. Francis, and graduated from Topeka public schools and the Univer-
sity of Kansas. Chapman native Joe Engel, who commanded two space shuttle missions, graduated from
Chapman High School and the University of Kansas. A graduate of Salina Central High School and the
University of Kansas, Steve Hawley was a mission specialist on four space shuttle flights.
To the Stars
Kansas, now in its second hundred years, takes pride in its fine schools, its leadership in the field
of agriculture, and its rapid economic development. A financially solvent state government, low taxes, low
unemployment and good highways and recreation areas are additional achievements.
With solid achievement in the past and bright promise for the future, Kansas is fulfilling its motto:
“Ad astra per aspera” (“To the stars through difficulties”).
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Office of the Secretary of State
Kansas Government
The state government of Kansas is based in Topeka, which has served as the state capital
since 1861. Topeka was named the permanent capital only after considerable disagreement.
The first capital of Kansas was Fort Leavenworth, where territorial Governor Andrew Reeder had
his headquarters. Other state capitals during the territorial period were Shawnee Mission, Pawnee,
Lecompton, Minneola, Leavenworth and Lawrence. Some of those towns served as the capital several
times—the capital changed whenever the territorial leaders decided to move it.
Kansas became a state January 29, 1861. In November of that year an election was held to
decide on a capital, and Topeka was selected over Lawrence and several other cities. In later years
there were several attempts to move the capital to a more central location, but none came close to
succeeding.
A progressive yet cautious spirit has always characterized the government of Kansas. The state
has led the country in many important areas. Kansas government has changed to meet contemporary
needs; yet it has retained those things that are “tried and true” and that continue to be necessary,
effective and efficient.
Kansas is one of the few states in the nation that does not issue revenue bonds to finance
general government activities. A “cash-basis law” requires that the state operate strictly on the money
available. Bond issues are allowed for capital improvements, such as major roads and buildings.
Kansas leaders have never been afraid to try new ways of doing things. The state pioneered in
the use of the direct primary election. It was Senator Bristow, the first United States Senator nominated
in Kansas under that system, who introduced in Congress the resolution that put direct election of U.S.
Senators into the U.S. Constitution. Prior to that time Senators were not elected by the people, but
were chosen by the state legislators.
State government officials are constantly working for economic development in Kansas. Great
strides have been made in the last few years, many businesses have expanded, new businesses have
located in the state, and numerous new jobs have been created.
Elected officials from Kansas (both state and federal officeholders) have often served in recent
years as spokesmen on behalf of farmers. Agriculture is of great importance to the state’s economy,
and there has been great concern in Kansas over the problems plaguing farmers.
Kansas led the nation in granting suffrage to women. The first legislature in 1861 gave women
the right to vote in school elections. Suffrage was extended in 1887 to city and bond elections, and in
that year a Kansas town elected the first woman mayor in the country—Mrs. Medora Salter of Argonia.
The rights of women were recognized in the original state constitution, which guarantees
women equal privileges with men in the ownership of property and control of children. This was a
tremendous advance over the rights allowed women in the Eastern states at that time. Universal suf-
frage was granted in Kansas in 1912 by constitutional amendment.
Kansas was one of the first states to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment to the United States
Constitution, making ratification March 28, 1972.
Kansas has the traditional three branches of government: executive, legislative and judicial.
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2010 Kansas Directory
Executive Branch
The Executive Branch includes the elected state officers provided for in the Kansas Constitution:
Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General and members of the State Board of
Education. Other elected state officers are the Commissioner of Insurance and State Treasurer. All serve
four-year terms.
All offices in the Executive Branch are either directly or indirectly controlled by one of the
elective officers, or are special agencies created by the Legislature to function independently within
state government.
The Executive Branch offices exist to enforce or carry out the laws enacted by the Legislative
Branch. The structure of the Executive Branch has evolved over the years to its present form. Governors
and legislators have made changes as necessary through executive re-organization orders, constitu-
tional amendments and legislation.
Major state agencies are now headed by cabinet-level secretaries. In recent years, the efficiency
of state government has been increased by combining similar agencies and abolishing antiquated,
unnecessary ones.
In 1978, the Legislature adopted a “Sunset Law,” which automatically abolishes specified state
agencies at certain times. When an agency is due to be abolished, it may only be continued by receiv-
ing renewed statutory authority. The Legislature has the power to abolish any state agency (except
constitutional offices) at any time.
Legislative Branch
The State Senate and the House of Representatives make up the Legislative Branch. There are
40 senators and 125 representatives, all elected by the voters of Kansas. Each senator represents
approximately 66,806 people and each house member represents about 21,378 Kansans. Senators
serve four-year terms and representatives serve two-year terms.
The Legislature, which meets annually, has the responsibility to create, amend or repeal state
laws; appropriate money to be spent by state government; review rules and regulations of state agencies
and departments; propose amendments to the Kansas Constitution; and approve or disapprove proposed
amendments to the federal constitution.
Since the late 1960s, the Legislature has made great progress towards becoming a truly efficient
and effective lawmaking body. A “Legislative Improvement Award” was presented to the Kansas Legisla-
ture in 1976. The award was given by Legis 50/The Center for Legislative Improvement “. . . to recognize
the progress made in strengthening the legislative institution in order to provide better representation for
the people of the state of Kansas.”
One major reform enacted in recent years is the lengthening and expanding of legislative ses-
sions to allow more time and flexibility. Sessions are now limited to 90 days in even-numbered years
and are unlimited in odd-numbered years, although generally they are held to 90 days.
Organizational meetings are now held every other year, following election of new legislators,
before the session begins. Legislative officers are chosen at that time, and the meetings give freshman
lawmakers a chance to get oriented.
Pre-filing of legislative bills between sessions, carry-over of bills from one session to the next in
nonelection years, and committee meetings between sessions are reforms that have helped to increase
flexibility and provide better workload distribution.
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Office of the Secretary of State
Reconstructing and improvement of support services have been vital elements in the legislative
revamping. All legislators now have offices in the Capitol available throughout the year, and clerical
services are provided during sessions. The legislative leaders have full-time administrative and clerical
staffs. The Revisor of Statutes’ Office, the Division of Legislative Administrative Services and other
support offices have been strengthened.
Increased pay for legislators has made service in the lawmaking body more attractive to and
possible for qualified citizens.
Strong ethics legislation has been adopted to regulate legislative lobbying by special interest
groups.
Judicial Branch
The state’s judicial system is headed by the Supreme Court with a Chief Justice and six jus-
tices. The other courts are the Court of Appeals, with a Chief Judge and 12 judges, and 31 district
courts. Each judicial district has district judges and district magistrate judges, as prescribed by law.
A major overhaul of the judicial system has taken place in recent years. In 1973 the Judiciary
Study Advisory Committee was appointed by the Chief Justice pursuant to legislative authority. The
committee made several recommendations for improvement of the court system, and most of the
suggestions were eventually implemented by the Legislature.
The state courts and the district courts have been joined to form the Unified Judicial Depart-
ment. To ease the workload on the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals was created in 1977 and made
a part of the department.
Part of the court system overhaul was establishment of a nonpartisan method for selection of
district court judges. The majority of districts now use this method. However, it was adopted on a local
option basis, and several districts have chosen, by popular vote, to elect their judges by a partisan
election process.
A major aspect of the court system overhaul is state financing of the entire personnel cost for
the judicial system. These costs have traditionally been borne by the counties, but have now been
assumed by the state.
Other court system reforms enacted recently are adoption of a Code of Judicial Conduct and
establishment of uniform procedures for district courts.
The Supreme Court maintains a regular program of education, sponsoring a variety of seminars
on a continuing basis for judges and support personnel in the judicial system.
Local Government
Kansas has 105 counties and 627 incorporated cities.
Kansas cities operate under various forms of government, including the commission form, the
mayor-council-manager system, the commission-manager system, the mayor-council plan, the modified
mayor-council plan, and the consolidated city/county system.
Local government in Kansas has some colorful history. In the early days of statehood, “county
seat wars” took place. Being named the county seat could help to insure the future of a town, so there
was a great deal of competition for that designation. During the county seat wars, records were stolen,
ballot boxes were tampered with and shooting and bloodshed took place. In Stevens County six men
were killed and the militia was sent in to restore order.
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2010 Kansas Directory
History of Kansas Officials
Officers of Kansas Territories
(1854-1861)
Governors
Reeder, Andrew H., Shawnee Manual Labor School, commissioned June 29, 1854;
oath taken July 7, 1854; arrived in Kansas, Oct. 7, 1854; served until April 17, 1855;
June 23 to Aug. 16, 1855.
Woodson, Daniel, Shawnee Manual Labor School, acting governor April 17 to June 23, 1855;
Aug. 16 to Sept. 7, 1855; June 24 to July 7, 1856; Aug. 18 to Sept. 9, 1856;
March 12 to April 16, 1857.
Shannon, Wilson, Shawnee Manual Labor School and Lecompton, commissioned Aug. 10, 1855;
oath taken Sept. 7, 1855; served until June 24, 1856; July 7 to Aug. 18, 1856; sworn in the
second time June 13, 1856.
Geary, John White, Lecompton, Sept. 9, 1856 to Mar. 12, 1857; resigned March 4, 1857; resignation
effective March 20, 1857.
Stanton, Frederick P., Lecompton, acting governor April to May 27, 1857; Nov. 16 to Dec. 21, 1857.
Walker, Robert John, Lecompton, oath taken May 9, 1857; served May 27 to Nov. 16, 1857.
Denver, James W., Lecompton, acting governor Dec. 21, 1857 to May 12, 1858; appointed governor;
served May 12 to July 3, 1858; July 30 to Oct. 10, 1858.
Walsh, Hugh Sleight, Lecompton, acting governor July 3 to 30, 1858; Oct. 10 to Dec. 18, 1858;
Aug. 1 to Sept. 15, 1859; April 15 to June 16, 1860.
Medary, Samuel, Lecompton, oath taken Dec. 1, 1858; commission dated Dec. 22, 1858;
served Dec. 18, 1858 to Aug. 1, 1859; Sept. 15, 1859 to April 15, 1860; June 16 to
Sept. 11, 1860; Nov. 26 to Dec. 17, 1860.
Beebe, George M., Lecompton, acting governor Sept. 11 to Nov. 26, 1860; Dec. 17, 1860
to Feb. 9, 1861.
Secretaries
Woodson, Daniel, Shawnee Manual Labor School, commissioned June 29, 1854; oath taken
Sept. 28, 1954; served June 29, 1854 to April 16, 1857.
Stanton, Frederick P., Lecompton, commissioned March 13, 1857; oath taken April 2, 1857;
served April 16 to Dec. 21, 1857.
Denver, James W., Lecompton, commissioned Dec. 11, 1857; oath taken Dec. 21, 1857;
served Dec. 21, 1857 to May 12, 1858.
Walsh, Hugh Sleight, Lecompton; served May 12, 1858 to June 28, 1860.
Beebe, George M., Lecompton; served July 1, 1860 to Feb. 9, 1861.
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Office of the Secretary of State
Auditors
Donaldson, John, Shawnee Manual Labor School and Lecompton, commissioned Sept. 6, 1855
for a four-year term, beginning Aug. 30, 1855; served Aug. 30, 1855 to Feb. 20, 1857.
Strickler, Hiram Jackson, Lecompton, Legislature confirmed appointment Feb. 20, 1857;
served until Feb. 9, 1861.
Treasurers
Cramer, Thomas J.B., Shawnee Manual Labor School and Lecompton, appointed
Aug. 29, 1855; commissioned Oct. 20; served Aug. 30, 1855 to Feb. 11, 1859.
Mitchell, Robert Byington, commissioned Feb. 11, 1859; oath taken March 4, 1859; served
Feb. 1, 1859 to Feb. 9, 1861.
Attorneys General
Isacks, Andrew Jackson, Louisiana, commissioned June 29, 1854; oath taken Nov. 29;
served June 30, 1854 to March 1857, when he resigned.
Weer, William, Lecompton, confirmed March 13, 1857; served until June 5, 1858.
Davis, Alson C., Wyandotte, served June 5, 1858 to Feb. 9, 1861.
Superintendents of Schools
Noteware, James H., commissioned Feb. 13, 1858; oath taken March 5; served
March 1 to Dec. 2, 1858.
Greer, Samuel Wiley, Leavenworth, commissioned Dec. 2, 1858; served to Jan. 2, 1861.
Douglas, John C., Leavenworth, served Jan. 2 to Feb. 9, 1861.
Chief Justices
Brown, Madison, Maryland, commissioned June 29, 1854, refused the appointment.
Lecompte, Samuel Dexter, Shawnee Manual Labor School and Leavenworth,
commissioned Oct. 3, 1854; oath taken Dec. 5, 1854; served until March 9, 1859;
on Dec. 17, 1856, the President appointed James O. Harrison of Kentucky to supersede
Lecompte, but Congress declined to confirm the appointment.
Petit, John, Leavenworth, oath taken April 2, 1859; served Mar. 9, 1859 to Feb. 9, 1861.
Associate Judges
Johnston, Saunders W., commissioned June 29, 1854; served until Sept. 13, 1855.
Burrill, Jeremiah Murry, appointed Sept. 13, 1855; oath taken Dec. 2, 1855; sworn in again
June 13, 1856.
Cunningham, Thomas, commissioned Nov. 19, 1856; oath taken Jan. 10, 1857;
served until June 3, 1857.
Williams, Joseph, commissioned June 3, 1857; oath taken July 10, 1857; served until Feb. 9, 1861.
Elmore, Rush, Lecompton, commissioned June 29, 1854; oath taken Oct. 15, 1854; served
until Sept. 13, 1855.
Cato, Sterling G., commissioned Sept. 13, 1855; oath taken Oct. 31, 1855; served to Aug. 13, 1858.
Elmore, Rush, Tecumseh, oath taken Aug. 13, 1858; served until Feb. 9, 1861.
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2010 Kansas Directory
United States Senators
(since statehood on January 29, 1861)
Political affiliation has been indicated by Republican, (R); Democrat, (D); Independent, (I);
and People’s party, (P). In 1890 the People’s party was commonly known as the Alliance;
later it was better known as the Populist Party.
Lane, James Henry, Lawrence (R), April 4, 1861 to July 11, 1866.
Ross, Edmund Gibson, Lawrence (R), July 19, 1866 to March 3, 1871.
Caldwell, Alexander, Leavenworth (R), March 4, 1871 to March 24, 1873.
Crozier, Robert, Leavenworth (R), Nov. 22, 1873 to Feb. 2, 1874.
Harvey, James Madison, Vinton (R), Feb. 2, 1874 to March 3, 1877.
Plumb, Preston Bierce, Emporia (R), March 4, 1877 to Dec. 20, 1891.
Perkins, Bishop Walden, Oswego (R), Jan. 1, 1892 to March 3, 1893.
Martin, John, Topeka (D), March 4, 1893 to March 3, 1895.
Baker, Lucien, Leavenworth (R), March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1901.
Burton, Joseph Ralph, Abilene (R), March 4, 1901 to June 4, 1906.
Benson, Alfred Washburn, Emporia (R), June 11, 1906 to Jan. 29, 1907.
Curtis, Charles, Topeka (R), Jan. 29, 1907 to March 3, 1913.
Thompson, William Howard, Garden City (D), March 4, 1913 to March 3, 1919.
Capper, Arthur, Topeka (R), March 4, 1919 to Jan. 3, 1949.
Schoeppel, Andrew F., Ness City (R), Jan. 3, 1949 to Jan. 21, 1962.
Pearson, James B., Prairie Village (R), Jan. 31, 1962 to Dec. 23, 1978 (resigned).
Kassebaum, Nancy Landon, Wichita (R), appointed vice Pearson, Dec. 23, 1978 to Jan. 7, 1997.
Roberts, Pat, Dodge City (R), Jan. 7, 1997—.
Pomeroy, Samuel Clark, Atchison (R), April 4, 1861 to March 3, 1873.
Ingalls, John James, Atchison (R), March 4, 1873 to March 3, 1891.
Peffer, William Alfred, Topeka (P), March 4, 1891 to March 3, 1897.
Harris, William Alexander, Linwood (D), March 4, 1897 to March 3, 1903.
Long, Chester Isaiah, Medicine Lodge (R), March 4, 1903 to March 3, 1909.
Bristow, Joseph Little, Salina (R), March 4, 1909 to March 3, 1915.
Curtis, Charles, Topeka (R), March 4, 1915 to March 3, 1929.
Allen, Henry, Wichita (R), April 1, 1929 to Nov. 30, 1930.
McGill, George, Wichita (D), Dec. 1, 1930 to Jan. 3, 1939.
Reed, Clyde, Parsons (R), Jan. 3, 1939, to Nov. 8, 1949.
Darby, Harry, Kansas City (R), Dec. 2, 1949 to Nov. 28, 1950.
Carlson, Frank, Concordia (R), Nov. 29, 1950 to Jan. 3, 1969.
Dole, Bob, Russell (R), Jan. 3, 1969 to June 11, 1996 (resigned).
Frahm, Sheila, Colby (R), appointed vice Dole, June 11, 1996 to Nov. 27, 1996 (resigned).
Brownback, Sam, Topeka (R), appointed vice Frahm, Nov. 27, 1996—.
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Office of the Secretary of State
United States Representatives
(since statehood on January 29, 1861)
Political affiliation has been indicated by Republican, (R); Democrat, (D); Independent, (I);
and People’s party, (P). In 1890 the People’s party was commonly known as the Alliance;
later it was better known as the Populist Party.
At Large
Conway, Martin Franklin, Lawrence (R), Jan. 30, 1861 to March 3, 1863.
Wilder, Abel Carter, Leavenworth (R), March 4, 1863 to March 3, 1865.
Clarke, Sidney, Lawrence (R), March 4, 1865 to March 3, 1871.
Lowe, David Perley, Fort Scott (R), March 4, 1871 to March 3, 1875.
Cobb, Stephen Alonzo, Wyandotte (R), March 4, 1873 to March 3, 1875.
Phillips, William Addison, Salina (R), March 4, 1873 to March 3, 1875 (also 1st dist.).
Hallowell, James Reed, Columbus (R), elected Nov. 5, 1878; refused a seat in the House,
March 18, 1879, since Kansas was entitled to only 3 members.
Peters, Samuel Ritter, Newton (R), March 4, 1883 to March 3, 1885; election unsuccessfully
contested by Samuel N. Wood (also 7th dist.).
Morrill, Edmund Needham, Hiawatha (R), March 4, 1883 to March 3, 1885 (also 1st dist.).
Hanback, Lewis, Salina (R), March 4, 1883 to March 3, 1885 (also 6th dist.).
Perkins, Bishop Walden, Oswego (R), March 4, 1883 to March 3, 1885 (also 3rd dist.).
Harris, William Alexander, Linwood (P), March 4, 1893 to March 3, 1895.
Blue, Richard Whiting, Pleasanton (R), March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1897.
Botkin, Jeremiah Dunham, Winfield (P), March 4, 1897 to March 3, 1899.
Bailey, Willis Joshua, Baileyville (R), March 4, 1899 to March 3, 1901.
Scott, Charles Frederick, Iola (R), March 4, 1901 to March 3, 1907 (also 2nd dist.).
First District
Phillips, William Addison, Salina (R), March 4, 1875 to March 3, 1879 (also at large).
Anderson, John Alexander, Manhattan (R), March 4, 1879 to March 3, 1885 (also 5th dist.).
Morrill, Edmund Needham, Hiawatha (R), March 4, 1885 to March 3, 1891 (also at large).
Broderick, Case, Holton (R), March 4, 1891 to March 3, 1899.
Curtis, Charles, Topeka (R), March 4, 1899 to Jan. 28, 1907 (U.S. Senate) (also 4th dist.).
Anthony, Daniel Read, Jr., Leavenworth (R), vice Curtis; Dec. 2, 1907 to March 3, 1929.
Lambertson, William Purnell, Fairview (R), March 4, 1929 to Jan. 3, 1945.
Cole, Albert McDonald, Holton (R), Jan. 3, 1945 to Jan. 3, 1953.
Miller, Howard S., Morrill (D), Jan. 3, 1953 to Jan. 3, 1955.
Avery, William H., Wakefield (R), Jan. 3, 1955 to Jan. 3, 1963 (also 2nd dist.).
Dole, Robert J., Russell (R), Jan. 3, 1963 to Jan. 3, 1969 (also 6th dist.).
Sebelius, Keith G., Norton (R), Jan. 3, 1969 to Jan. 3, 1981.
Roberts, Pat, Dodge City (R), Jan. 3, 1981 to Jan. 7, 1997.
Moran, Jerry, Hays (R), Jan. 7, 1997—.
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2010 Kansas Directory
Second District
Goodin, John Randolph, Humboldt (I), March 4, 1875 to March 3, 1877.
Haskell, Dudley Chase, Lawrence (R), March 4, 1877 to Dec. 16, 1883.
Funston, Edward Hogue, Iola (R), elected March 1, 1884, vice Haskell; served March 21, 1884
to Aug. 2, 1894, when contested 1892 election was decided in favor of H.L. Moore.
Moore, Horace Ladd, Lawrence (D), Aug. 2, 1894 to March 3, 1895.
Miller, Orrin Larabee, Kansas City (R), March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1897.
Peters, Mason Summers, Kansas City (P), March 4, 1897 to March 3, 1899.
Bowersock, Justin De Witt, Lawrence (R), March 4, 1899 to March 3, 1907.
Scott, Charles Frederick, Iola (R), March 4, 1907 to March 3, 1911 (also at large).
Mitchell, Alexander Clark, Lawrence (R), March 4, 1911 to July 7, 1911.
Taggart, Joseph, Kansas City, (D), elected Nov. 7, 1911 vice Mitchell; Dec. 4, 1911 to March 3, 1917.
Little, Edward Campbell, Kansas City (R), March 4, 1917 to June 27, 1924.
Guyer, Ulysses Samuel, Kansas City (R), vice Little; Dec. 1, 1924 to March 3, 1925.
Little, Chauncey Bundy, Olathe (D), March 4, 1925 to March 3, 1927.
Guyer, Ulysses Samuel, Kansas City (R), March 4, 1927 to June 5, 1943.
Scrivner, Errett Power, Kansas City (R), Sept. 28, 1943 to Jan. 3, 1959.
George, Newell A., Kansas City (D), Jan. 3, 1959 to Jan. 3, 1961.
Ellsworth, Robert F., Lawrence (R), Jan. 3, 1961 to Jan. 3, 1963 (also 3rd dist.).
Avery, William H., Wakefield (R), Jan. 3, 1963 to Jan. 4, 1965 (also 1st dist.).
Mize, Chester L., Atchison (R), Jan. 4, 1965 to Jan. 3, 1971.
Roy, Dr. William R., Topeka (D), Jan. 3, 1971 to Jan. 3, 1975.
Keys, Martha, Manhattan (D), Jan. 3, 1975 to Jan. 3, 1979.
Jeffries, Jim, Atchison (R), Jan. 3, 1979 to Jan. 3, 1983.
Slattery, Jim, Topeka (D), Jan. 3, 1983 to Jan. 3, 1995.
Brownback, Sam, Topeka (R), Jan. 3, 1995 to Nov. 27, 1996 (U.S. Senate).
Ryun, Jim, Topeka (R), Jan. 7, 1997 to Jan. 3, 2007.
Boyda, Nancy, Topeka (D), Jan. 3, 2007 to Jan. 3, 2009.
Jenkins, Lynn, Topeka (R), Jan. 5, 2009 —.
Third District
Brown, William Ripley, Hutchinson (R), March 4, 1875 to March 3, 1877.
Ryan, Thomas, Topeka (R), March 4, 1877 to March 3, 1885 (also 4th dist.).
Perkins, Bishop Walden, Oswego (R), March 4, 1885 to March 3, 1891 (also at large).
Clover, Benjamin Hutchinson, Cambridge (P), March 4, 1891 to March 3, 1893.
Hudson, Thomas Jefferson, Fredonia (P), March 4, 1893 to March 3, 1895.
Kirkpatrick, Snyder Solomon, Fredonia (R), March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1897.
Ridgely, Edwin Reed, Pittsburg (P), March 4, 1897 to March 3, 1901.
Jackson, Alfred Metcalf, Winfield (D), March 4, 1901 to March 3, 1903.
Campbell, Philip Pitt, Pittsburg (R), March 4, 1903 to March 3, 1923.
Sproul, William Henry, Sedan (R), March 4, 1923 to March 3, 1931.
McGugin, Harold Clement, Coffeyville (R), March 4, 1931 to Jan. 3, 1935.
Patterson, Edward White, Pittsburg (D), Jan. 3, 1935 to Jan. 3, 1939.
Winter, Thomas Daniel, Girard (R), Jan. 3, 1939 to Oct. 2, 1950.
Meyer, Herbert Alton, Independence (R), Jan. 3, 1947 to Oct. 2, 1950.
George, Myron Virgil, Altamont (R), vice Meyer; Nov. 27, 1950 to Jan. 3, 1959.
Hargis, Denver D., Coffeyville (D), Jan. 3, 1959 to Jan. 3, 1961.
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Office of the Secretary of State
McVey, Walter L., Independence (R), Jan. 3, 1961 to Jan. 3, 1963.
Ellsworth, Robert F., Lawrence (R), Jan. 3, 1963 to Jan. 3, 1967 (also 2nd dist.).
Winn, Larry Jr., Overland Park (R), Jan. 3, 1967 to Jan. 3, 1985.
Meyers, Jan, Overland Park (R), Jan. 3, 1985 to Jan. 7, 1997.
Snowbarger, Vince, Olathe (R), Jan. 7, 1997 to Jan. 3, 1999.
Moore, Dennis, Lenexa (D), Jan. 3, 1999—.
Fourth District
Ryan, Thomas, Topeka (R), March 4, 1885 to April 3, 1889; announced his resignation to
become minister to Mexico (also 3rd dist.).
Kelley, Harrison, Burlington (R), vice Ryan; Dec. 2, 1889 to March 3, 1891.
Otis, John Grant, Topeka (P), March 4, 1891 to March 3, 1893.
Curtis, Charles, Topeka (R), March 4, 1893 to March 3, 1899 (also 1st dist.).
Miller, James Monroe, Council Grove (R), March 4, 1899, to March 3, 1911.
Jackson, Fred Schuyler, Eureka (R), March 4, 1911 to March 3, 1913.
Doolittle, Dudley, Strong City (D), March 4, 1913 to March 3, 1919.
Hoch, Homer, Marion (R), March 4, 1919 to March 3, 1933.
Carpenter, Randolph, Marion (D), March 4, 1933 to Jan. 3, 1937.
Rees, Edward H., Emporia (R), Jan. 3, 1937 to Jan. 3, 1961.
Shriver, Garner E., Wichita (R), Jan. 3, 1961 to Jan. 3, 1977.
Glickman, Dan, Wichita (D), Jan. 3, 1977 to Jan. 3, 1995.
Tiahrt, Todd, Goddard (R), Jan. 3, 1995—.
Fifth District
Anderson, John Alexander, Manhattan (R), March 4, 1885 to March 3, 1891 (also 1st dist.).
Davis, John, Junction City (P), March 4, 1891 to March 3, 1895.
Calderhead, William Alexander, Marysville (R), March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1897.
Vincent, William Davis, Clay Center (P), March 4, 1897 to March 3, 1899.
Calderhead, William Alexander, Marysville (R), March 4, 1899 to March 3, 1911.
Rees, Rolin Raymond, Minneapolis (R), March 4, 1911 to March 3, 1913.
Helvering, Guy Tresillian, Marysville (D), March 4, 1913 to March 3, 1919.
Strong, James George, Blue Rapids (R), March 4, 1919 to March 3, 1933.
Ayres, William Augustus, Wichita (D), March 4, 1933 to Aug. 21, 1934; announced his
resignation to accept appointment on Federal Trade Commission (also 8th dist.).
Houston, John Mills, Newton (D), Jan. 3, 1935 to Jan. 3, 1943.
Hope, Clifford Ragsdale, Garden City (R), Jan. 3, 1943 to Jan. 3, 1957 (also 7th dist.).
Breeding, J. Floyd, Rolla (D), Jan. 3, 1957 to Jan. 3, 1963.
Skubitz, Joe, Pittsburg (R), Jan. 3, 1963 to Jan. 3, 1979.
Whittaker, Bob, Augusta (R), Jan. 3, 1979 to Jan. 3, 1991.
Nichols, Dick, McPherson (R), Jan. 3, 1991 to Jan. 3, 1995 (district abolished after 1990
federal census and subsequent reapportionment in 1992).
Sixth District
Hanback, Lewis, Salina (R), March 4, 1885 to March 3, 1887 (also at large).
Turner, Erastus Johnson, Hoxie (R), March 4, 1887 to March 3, 1891.
Baker, William, Lincoln (P), March 4, 1891 to March 3, 1897.
McCormick, Nelson B., Phillipsburg (P), March 4, 1897 to March 3, 1899.
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2010 Kansas Directory
Reeder, William Augustus, Logan (R), March 4, 1899 to March 3, 1911.
Young, Isaac Daniel, Beloit (R), March 4, 1911 to March 3, 1913.
Connelly, John Robert, Colby (D), March 4, 1913 to March 3, 1919.
White, Hayes Baxter, Mankato (R), March 4, 1919 to March 3, 1929; 1926 election
unsuccessfully contested by W.H. Clark.
Sparks, Charles Isaac, Goodland (R), March 4, 1929 to March 3, 1933.
McCarthy, Kathryn (O’Loughlin), Hays (D), March 4, 1933 to Jan. 3, 1935; elected as
Kathryn O’Loughlin, she married Daniel M. McCarthy, Feb. 4, 1933.
Carlson, Frank, Concordia (R), Jan. 3, 1935 to Jan. 3, 1947.
Smith, Wint, Mankato (R), Jan. 3, 1947 to Jan. 3, 1961; 1958 election unsuccessfully
contested by Elmo J. Mahoney.
Dole, Robert, Russell (R), Jan. 3, 1961 to Jan. 3, 1963 (also 1st dist.).
Seventh District
Peters, Samuel Ritter, Newton (R), March 4, 1885 to March 3, 1891 (also at large).
Simpson, Jeremiah (Jerry), Medicine Lodge (P), March 4, 1891 to March 3, 1895.
Long, Chester Isaiah, Medicine Lodge (R), March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1897.
Simpson, Jeremiah (Jerry), Medicine Lodge (P), March 4, 1897 to March 3, 1899.
Long, Chester Isaiah, Medicine Lodge (R), March 4, 1899 to March 4, 1903 (U.S. Senate).
Murdock, Victor, Wichita (R), elected May 26, 1903, vice Long; Nov. 9, 1903 to March 3, 1907
(also 8th dist.).
Madison, Edmond Haggard, Dodge City (R), March 4, 1907 to Sept. 18, 1911.
Neeley, George Arthur, Hutchinson (D), elected Jan. 9, 1912 vice Madison; Jan. 29, 1912
to March 3, 1915.
Shouse, Jouett, Kinsley (D), March 4, 1915 to March 3, 1919.
Tincher, Jasper Napoleon, Medicine Lodge (R), March 4, 1919 to March 3, 1927.
Hope, Clifford Ragsdale, Garden City (R), March 4, 1927 to Jan. 3, 1943 (also 5th dist.).
Eighth District
Murdock, Victor, Wichita (R), March 4, 1907 to March 3, 1915 (also 7th dist.).
Ayres, William Augustus, Wichita (D), March 4, 1915 to March 3, 1921 (also 5th dist.).
Bird, Richard Ely, Wichita (R), March 4, 1921 to March 3, 1923.
Ayres, William Augustus, Wichita (D), March 4, 1923 to March 3, 1933 (also 5th dist.).
Kansas State Officers
(since statehood on January 29, 1861)
Political affiliation has been indicated by Republican, (R); Democrat, (D); Independent, (I);
and People’s party, (P). In 1890 the People’s party was commonly known as the Alliance;
later it was better known as the Populist Party.
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Office of the Secretary of State
Governors
Robinson, Charles, Lawrence (R), Feb. 9, 1861 to Jan. 12, 1863.
Carney, Thomas, Leavenworth (R), Jan. 12, 1863 to Jan. 9, 1865.
Crawford, Samuel Johnson, Garnett (R), Jan. 9, 1865 to Nov. 4, 1868 (resigned to take
command of the 19th regiment).
Green, Nehemiah, Manhattan (R), Nov. 4, 1868 to Jan. 11, 1869.
Harvey, James Madison, Fort Riley (R), Jan. 11, 1869 to Jan. 13, 1873.
Osborn, Thomas Andrew, Leavenworth (R), Jan. 13, 1873 to Jan. 8, 1877.
Anthony, George Tobey, Leavenworth (R), Jan. 8, 1877 to Jan. 13, 1879.
St. John, John Pierce, Olathe (R), Jan. 13, 1879 to Jan. 8, 1883.
Glick, George Washington, Atchison (D), Jan. 8, 1883 to Jan. 13, 1885.
Martin, John Alexander, Atchison (R), Jan. 12, 1885 to Jan. 14, 1889.
Humphrey, Lyman Underwood, Independence (R), Jan. 14, 1889 to Jan. 9, 1893.
Lewelling, Lorenzo Dow, Wichita (P), Jan. 9, 1893 to Jan. 14, 1895.
Morrill, Edmund Needham, Hiawatha (R), Jan. 14, 1895 to Jan. 11, 1897.
Leedy, John Whitnah, Le Roy (P), Jan. 11, 1897 to Jan. 9, 1899.
Stanley, William Eugene, Wichita (R), Jan. 9, 1899 to Jan. 12, 1903.
Bailey, Willis Joshua, Baileyville (R), Jan. 12, 1903 to Jan. 9, 1905.
Hoch, Edward Wallis, Marion (R), Jan. 9, 1905 to Jan. 11, 1909.
Stubbs, Walter Roscoe, Lawrence (R), Jan. 11, 1909 to Jan. 13, 1913.
Hodges, George Hartshorn, Olathe (D), Jan. 13, 1913 to Jan. 11, 1915.
Capper, Arthur, Topeka (R), Jan. 11, 1915 to Jan. 13, 1919.
Allen, Henry Justin, Wichita (R), Jan. 13, 1919 to Jan. 8, 1923.
Davis, Jonathan McMillan, Bronson (D), Jan. 8, 1923 to Jan. 12, 1925.
Paulen, Ben Sanford, Fredonia (R), Jan. 12, 1925 to Jan. 14, 1929.
Reed, Clyde Martin, Parsons (R), Jan. 14, 1929 to Jan. 12, 1931.
Woodring, Harry Hines, Neodesha (D), Jan. 12, 1931 to Jan. 9, 1933.
Landon, Alf Mossman, Independence (R), Jan. 9, 1933 to Jan. 11, 1937.
Huxman, Walter August, Hutchinson (D), Jan. 11, 1937 to Jan. 9, 1939.
Ratner, Payne, Parsons (R), Jan. 9, 1939 to Jan. 11, 1943.
Schoeppel, Andrew Frank, Ness City (R), Jan. 11, 1943 to Jan. 13, 1947.
Carlson, Frank, Concordia (R), Jan. 13, 1947 to Nov. 28, 1950, resigned; elected U.S. Senator.
Hagaman, Frank Lester, Fairway (R), appointed vice Carlson; Nov. 28, 1950 to Jan. 8, 1951.
Arn, Edward Ferdinand, Wichita (R), Jan. 8, 1951 to Jan. 10, 1955.
Hall, Fred, Dodge City (R), Jan. 10, 1955 to Jan. 3, 1957, resigned; appointed
Justice of Supreme Court.
McCuish, John, Newton (R), Jan. 3, 1957 to Jan. 14, 1957, succeeding Fred Hall.
Docking, George, Lawrence (D), Jan. 14, 1957 to Jan. 9, 1961.
Anderson, John, Jr., Olathe (R), Jan. 9, 1961 to Jan. 11, 1965.
Avery, Wm. H., Wakefield (R), Jan. 11, 1965 to Jan. 9, 1967.
Docking, Robert B., Arkansas City (D), Jan. 9, 1967 to Jan. 13, 1975.
Bennett, Robert F., Prairie Village (R), Jan. 13, 1975 to Jan. 8, 1979.
Carlin, John, Smolan (D), Jan. 8, 1979 to Jan. 12, 1987.
Hayden, Mike, Atwood (R), Jan. 12, 1987 to Jan. 14, 1991.
Finney, Joan, Topeka (D), Jan. 14, 1991 to Jan. 9, 1995.
Graves, Bill, Salina (R), Jan. 9, 1995 to Jan. 13, 2003.
Sebelius, Kathleen, Topeka (D), Jan. 13, 2003 to April 28, 2009 (resigned; appointed as
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services).
Parkinson, Mark, Olathe (D), appointed vice Sebelius, April 28, 2009—.
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2010 Kansas Directory
Lieutenant Governors
Root, Joseph Pomeroy, Wyandotte (R), Feb. 1861 to Jan. 1863.
Osborn, Thomas A., Elwood (R), Jan. 1863 to Jan. 1865.
McGrew, James, Wyandotte (R), Jan. 1865 to Jan. 1867.
Green, Nehemiah, Manhattan (R), Jan. 1867 to Nov. 4, 1868.
Eskridge, Charles V., Emporia (R), Jan. 1869 to Jan. 1871.
Elder, Peter Percival, Ottawa (R), Jan. 1871 to Jan. 1873.
Stover, Elias Sleeper, Council Grove (R), Jan. 1873 to Jan. 1875.
Salter, Melville J., Thayer (R), Jan. 1875, to July 10, 1877 (resigned).
Humphrey, Lyman Underwood, Independence (R), elected vice Salter, Nov. 6, 1877;
served until Jan. 1881.
Finney, David W., Neosho Falls (R), Jan. 1881 to Jan. 1885.
Riddle, Alexander Pancoast, Girard (R), Jan. 1885 to Jan. 1889.
Felt, Andrew J., Seneca (R), Jan. 1889 to Jan. 1893.
Daniels, Percy, Girard (P), Jan. 1893 to Jan. 1895.
Troutman, James A., Topeka (R), Jan. 1895 to Jan. 1897.
Harvey, Alexander Miller, Topeka (P), Jan. 1897 to Jan. 1899.
Richter, Harry E., Council Grove (R), Jan. 1899 to Jan. 1903.
Hanna, David J., Hill City (R), Jan. 1903 to Jan. 1907.
Fitzgerald, Wm. J., Dodge City (R), Jan. 1907 to Jan. 1911.
Hopkins, Richard J., Garden City (R), Jan. 1911 to Jan. 1913.
Ingalls, Sheffield, Atchison (R), Jan. 1913 to Jan. 1915.
Morgan, William Yost, Hutchinson (R), Jan. 1915 to Jan. 1919.
Huffman, Chas. H., Columbus (R), Jan. 1919 to Jan. 1923.
Paulen, Ben S., Fredonia (R), Jan. 1923 to Jan. 1925.
Chase, D.A.N., Pleasanton (R), Jan. 1925 to Jan. 1929.
Graybill, J.W., Newton (R), Jan. 1929 to Jan. 1933.
Thompson, Chas. W., Topeka (R), Jan. 1933 to Jan. 1937.
Lindsay, W.M., Pittsburg (D), Jan. 1937 to Jan. 1939.
Friend, Carl E., Lawrence (R), Jan. 1939 to Jan. 1943.
Denious, Jess C., Dodge City (R), Jan. 1943 to Jan. 1947.
Hagaman, Frank L., Fairway (R), Jan. 1947 to Nov. 28, 1950 (assumed duties of Governor
succeeding Frank Carlson, resigned).
Hall, Fred, Dodge City (R), Jan. 1951 to Jan. 1955.
McCuish, John, Newton (R), Jan. 1955 to Jan. 3, 1957 (assumed duties of Governor
succeeding Fred Hall, resigned).
Henkle, Joseph W., Sr., Great Bend (D), Jan. 1957 to Jan. 1961.
Chase, Harold H., Salina (R), Jan. 1961 to Jan. 1965.
Crutcher, John, Hutchinson (R), Jan. 1965 to Jan. 1969.
De Coursey, James H., Jr., Mission (D), Jan. 1969 to Jan. 1971.
Shultz, Reynolds "Ren," Lawrence (R), Jan. 1971 to Jan. 1973.
Owen, Dave, Overland Park (R), Jan. 1973 to Jan. 1975.
Smith, Shelby, Wichita (R), Jan. 1975 to Jan. 1979.
Dugan, Paul V., Wichita (D), Jan. 1979 to Jan. 1983.
Docking, Thomas R., Wichita (D), Jan. 1983 to Jan. 1987.
Walker, Jack D., M.D., Overland Park (R), Jan. 1987 to Jan. 1991.
Francisco, James, Mulvane (D), Jan. 1991 to Jan. 9, 1995.
Frahm, Sheila, Colby (R), Jan. 9, 1995 to June 11, 1996 (U.S. Senate).
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Office of the Secretary of State
Sherrer, Gary, Topeka (R), appointed vice Frahm, July 18, 1996 to Jan. 13, 2003.
Moore, John, Wichita (D), Jan. 13, 2003 to Jan. 8, 2007.
Parkinson, Mark, Olathe (D), Jan. 8, 2007 to April 28, 2009 (succeeding Governor
Kathleen Sebelius, resigned).
Findley, Troy, Lawrence (D), appointed vice Parkinson, May 15, 2009—.
Presidents of the Senate
Ingalls, John J., Secretary, Atchison (R), 1861.
Banks, A.R., Secretary, 1862.
Francis, John, Secretary, Colony (R), 1863.
Sherry, Byron, Secretary Pro-Tem, Leavenworth, 1864.
Devenney, A. Smith, Secretary, 1865.
Eskridge, C.V., Secretary Pro-Tem, Emporia (R), 1866.
Emmert, D.B., Secretary Pro-Tem, Fort Scott (R), 1867.
Green, N., President, 1868.
Crowther, George C., Secretary, 1869 to 1872.
Murdock, M.M., Secretary Pro-Tem, 1873.
Cavanaugh, T.H., Secretary, 1874.
Folks, John H., Secretary, Wellington, 1875 to 1876.
Brandley, Henry, Secretary, Matfield Green (R), 1877, 1879, 1881 and 1883.
Riddle, A.P., President Pro-Tem, 1884.
Humphrey, L.U., President Pro-Tem, Independence (R), 1885 to 1887.
Harkness, F.P., President Pro-Tem, Clay Center (R), 1889 to 1891.
King, L.P., President Pro-Tem, 1893 to 1895.
Householder, M.A., President Pro-Tem, Columbus (P), 1897 to 1899.
Morrow, J.C., President Pro-Tem, Haddam (R), 1901.
Fitzpatrick, W.S., President Pro-Tem, Sedan (R), 1903, 1905, 1907 and 1908.
Porter, E.F., President Pro-Tem, Pittsburg, 1909 to 1911.
King, L.P., President Pro-Tem, Winfield (D), 1913 to 1915.
Huffman, C.S., President Pro-Tem, Columbus (R), 1917.
Price, Francis, C., President Pro-Tem, Ashland (R), 1919 to 1921 and 1923.
Laing, Henry M., President Pro-Tem, Russell (R), 1925, 1927 and 1928.
Geddes, K.M., President Pro-Tem, El Dorado (R), 1929 to 1931.
Knapp, Dallas W., President Pro-Tem, Coffeyville (R), 1933, 1935 and 1936.
Bradney, Claude C., President Pro-Tem, Columbus (R), 1937 to 1939.
Dale, Kirke W., President Pro-Tem, Arkansas City (R), 1941 to 1943.
Briles, E.A., President Pro-Tem, Stafford (R), 1945 to 1947.
Wunsch, Paul R., President Pro-Tem, Kingman (R), 1949, 1951, 1953 and 1955 to 1964.
Smith, Glee S., President Pro-Tem, Larned (R), 1965 to 1972.
Bennett, Robert F., President, Overland Park (R), 1973 to 1974.
Rogers, Richard D., President, Manhattan (R), 1975.
Doyen, Ross O., President, Concordia (R), 1976 to 1984.
Talkington, Robert V., President, Iola (R), 1985 to 1990.
Burke, Paul Bud, President, Leawood (R), 1991 to 1996.
Bond, Dick, President, Overland Park (R), 1997 to 2000.
Kerr, Dave, President, Hutchinson (R), 2001 to 2004.
Stephen R. Morris, President, Hugoton (R), 2005—.
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Speakers of the House
(SS) Special Session; (BS) Budget Session
Barker, George J., Lawrence (R), 1901.
Pringle, J.T., Burlingame (R), 1903, 1903 (SS).
Stubbs, W.R., Lawrence (R), 1905.
Simmons, J.S., Dighton (R), 1907, 1908 (SS).
Dolley, J.N., Maple Hill (R), 1909.
Buckman, G.H., Winfield (R), 1911.
Brown, W.L., Kingman (D), 1913.
Stone, Robert, Topeka (R), 1915.
Keene, A.M., Fort Scott (R), 1917.
Lambertson, W.P., Fairview (R), 1919, 1919 (SS) and 1920 (SS).
Harvey, W.W., Ashland (R), 1921.
Mann, Charles E., Osborne (R), 1923.
Hope, C.R., Garden City (R), 1925.
Hamilton, J.D.M., Topeka (R), 1927, 1928 (SS).
Myers, John H., Merriam (R), 1929, 1930 (SS).
Harlan, Hal E., Manhattan (R), 1931.
Vernon, W.H., Larned (R), 1933, 1933 (SS) and 1934.
Bloss, S.C., Winfield (R), 1935, 1936 (SS).
Buzick, H.S., Jr., Sylvan Grove (R), 1937, 1938 (SS).
Briles, E. A., Stafford (R), 1939.
Carper, Clay C., Eureka (R), 1941.
Wunsch, Paul R., Kingman (R), 1943.
Hagaman, Frank L., Kansas City (R), 1945.
Miller, Frank B., Langdon (R), 1947.
Bryant, Dale M., Wichita (R), 1949.
Gibson, Lawrence M., Pittsburg (R), 1951.
Stough, Charles D., Lawrence (R), 1953.
Jennison, Robert H., Healy (R), 1955, 1956 (BS).
Taylor, Jess, Tribune (R), 1957, 1958 (BS), 1958 (SS), 1959 and 1960.
Mitchell, William L., Hutchinson (R), 1961, 1962 (BS).
Arthur, Charles, Manhattan (R), 1963, 1964 (BS) and 1964 (SS).
Hill, Clyde, Yates Center (R), 1965, 1966 (BS) and 1966 (SS).
Conard, John J., Greensburg (R), 1967, 1968.
Strowig, Calvin, Abilene (R), 1969 to 1972.
McGill, Duane S. "Pete," Winfield (R), 1973 to 1976.
Carlin, John W., Smolan (D), 1977 and 1978.
Lady, Wendell E., Overland Park (R), 1979 to 1982.
Hayden, John Michael, Atwood (R), 1983 to 1986.
Braden, James. D., Clay Center (R), 1987 to 1990.
Barkis, Marvin Wm., Louisburg (D), 1991 to 1992.
Miller, Robert H., Wellington (R), 1993 to 1994.
Shallenburger, Tim, Baxter Springs (R), 1995 to 1998.
Jennison, Robin, Healy (R), 1999 to 2000.
Glasscock, Kent, Manhattan (R), 2001 to 2002.
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Office of the Secretary of State
Mays, Doug, Topeka (R), 2003 to 2006.
Neufeld, Melvin, Ingalls (R), 2007 to 2008.
O'Neal, Michael, Hutchinson (R), 2009—.
Secretaries of State
Robinson, John Winter, Manhattan (R), Feb. 1861 to July 28, 1862 (resigned).
Shepherd, Saunders R., Topeka (R), appointed vice Robinson, Aug. 28, 1862 to Jan. 1863.
Lawrence, Warren Wirt Henry, Peoria City (R), Jan. 1863 to Jan. 1865.
Barker, Rinaldo Allen, Atchison (R), Jan. 1865 to Jan. 1869.
Moonlight, Thomas, Leavenworth (R), Jan. 1869 to Jan. 1871.
Smallwood, William Hillary, Wathena (R), Jan. 1871 to Jan. 1875.
Cavanaugh, Thomas Horne, Salina (R), Jan. 1875 to Jan. 1879.
Smith, James, Marysville (R), Jan. 1879 to Jan. 1885.
Allen, Edwin Bird, Wichita (R), Jan. 1885 to Jan. 1889.
Higgins, William, Topeka (R), Jan. 1889 to Jan. 1893.
Osborn, Russell Scott, Stockton (P), Jan. 1893 to Jan. 1895.
Edwards, William Congdon, Larned (R), Jan. 1895 to Jan. 1897.
Bush, William Eben, Mankato (P), Jan. 1897 to Jan. 1899.
Clark, George Alfred, Junction City (R), Jan. 1899 to Jan. 1903.
Burrow, Joel Randall, Smith Center (R), Jan. 1903 to Jan. 1907.
Denton, Charles Eugene, Attica (R), Jan. 1907 to Jan. 1911.
Sessions, Charles Harrison, Topeka (R), Jan. 1911 to Jan. 1915.
Botkin, J.T., Galena (R), Jan. 1915 to Jan. 1919.
Pettijohn, L.J., Dodge City (R), Jan. 1919 to Nov. 11, 1922 (resigned).
McCray, D.O., Topeka (R), appointed vice Pettijohn, Nov. 14, 1922 to Jan. 1923.
Ryan, Frank J., Leavenworth (R), Jan. 1923 to Jan. 1929.
Cornell, E.A., Topeka (R), Jan. 1929 to Jan. 1933.
Ryan, Frank J., Kansas City (R), Jan. 1933 to Jan. 1949.
Ryan, Larry, Manhattan (D), Jan. 1949 to Jan. 1951.
Shanahan, Paul R., Salina (R), Jan. 1951 to April 14, 1966 (deceased).
Shanahan, Elwill M., Salina (R), appointed vice P. Shanahan, April 28, 1966 to
May 10, 1978 (retired).
Brier, Jack H., Overland Park (R), appointed vice E. Shanahan, May 10, 1978 to Jan. 1987.
Graves, Bill, Salina (R), Jan. 1987 to Jan. 9, 1995.
Thornburgh, Ron, Topeka (R), Jan. 9, 1995 to Feb. 15, 2010 (resigned).
Biggs, Chris, Manhattan (D), appointed vice Thornburgh, March 16, 2010—.
State Auditors
Hillyer, George Shaller, Grasshopper Falls (R), Feb. 1861 to July 28, 1862 (removed).
Lakin, David Long, Grasshopper Falls (Unknown), appointed vice Hillyer,
Aug. 6, 1862 to Jan. 1863.
Hairgrove, Asa, Mound City (R), Jan. 1863 to Jan. 1865.
Swallow, John R., Emporia (R), Jan. 1865 to Jan. 1869.
Thoman, Alois, Lawrence (R), Jan. 1869 to Jan. 1873.
Wilder, Daniel Webster, Fort Scott (R), Jan. 1873 to Sept. 20, 1876 (resigned).
Bonebrake, Parkinson Isaiah, Topeka (R), appointed vice Wilder, Oct. 2, 1876;
twice elected, Oct. 2, 1876 to Jan. 1883.
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2010 Kansas Directory
McCabe, Edward P., Millbrook (R), Jan. 1883 to Jan. 1887.
McCarthy, Timothy, Larned (R), Jan. 1887 to Jan. 1891.
Hovey, Charles Merrill, Colby (R), Jan. 1891 to Jan. 1893.
Prather, Van B., Columbus (P), Jan. 1893 to Jan. 1895.
Cole, George Ezekiel, Girard (R), Jan. 1895 to Jan. 1897.
Morris, William H., Pittsburg (P), Jan. 1897 to Jan. 1899.
Cole, George Ezekiel, Girard (R), Jan. 1899 to Jan. 1903.
Wells, Seth Grant, Erie (R), Jan. 1903 to Jan. 1907.
Nation, James M., Erie (R), Jan. 1907 to Jan. 1911.
Davis, William E., Dodge City (R), Jan. 1911 to Jan. 1917.
Knapp, Fred W., Beloit (R), Jan. 1917 to Jan. 1921.
Turner, N.A., Russell (R), Jan. 1921 to June 30, 1925 (resigned).
Davis, W.E., Topeka (R), appointed vice Turner, July 1, 1925 to Jan. 1927.
French, Will J., St. John (R), Jan. 1927 to Jan. 1935.
Powers, Ed. J., Salina (D), Jan. 1935 to Nov. 2, 1935 (deceased).
Robb, George, Salina (R), Nov. 12, 1935; appointed vice Powers; elected to office 12
succeeding terms; served Jan. 1936 to Jan. 1961.
Hedrick, Clay E., Newton (R), Jan. 1961 to Jan. 1975 (office abolished).
State Treasurers
Tholen, William, Leavenworth (R), elected Dec. 6, 1859 (entered the army before
qualifying for office).
Dutton, Hartwin Rush, Hiawatha (R), appointed vice Tholen, March 26, 1861; elected for remainder
of term, Nov. 5, 1861; served to Jan. 1863.
Spriggs, William, Garnett (R), Jan. 1863 to Jan. 1867.
Anderson, Martin, Circleville (R), Jan. 1867 to Jan. 1869.
Graham, George, Seneca (R), Jan. 1869 to Jan. 1871.
Hayes, Josiah E., Olathe (R), Jan. 1871 to April 30, 1874 (resigned).
Francis, John, Iola (R), appointed vice Hayes; served May 1, 1874 to Jan. 1875.
Lappin, Samuel, Seneca (R), Jan. 1875 to Dec. 20, 1875 (resigned).
Francis, John, Iola (R), appointed vice Lappin; elected to office three succeeding
terms; served Dec. 21, 1875 to Jan. 1883.
Howe, Samuel T., Marion (R), Jan. 1883 to Jan. 1887.
Hamilton, James William, Wellington (R), Jan. 1887 to March 1, 1890 (resigned).
Sims, William, Topeka (R), appointed vice Hamilton; served March 1, 1890 to Dec. 30, 1890.
Stover, Solomon G., Belleville (R), Jan. 1891 to Jan. 1893.
Biddle, William Henry, Augusta (P), Jan. 1893 to Jan. 1895.
Atherton, Otis L., Russell (R), Jan. 1895 to Jan. 1897.
Heflebower, David H., Bucyrus (P), Jan. 1897 to Jan. 1899.
Grimes, Frank E., Leoti (R), Jan. 1899 to Jan. 1903.
Kelly, Thomas T., Paola (R), Jan. 1903 to Jan. 1907.
Tulley, Mark, Independence (R), Jan. 1907 to Jan. 1913.
Akers, Earl, Stafford (R), Jan. 1913 to Jan. 1917.
Payne, Walter L., Burlingame (R), Jan. 1917 to Jan. 1921.
Thompson, E.T., Bellaire (R), Jan. 1921 to Jan. 1925.
White, Carl R., Topeka (R), Jan. 1925 to Jan. 1929.
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Office of the Secretary of State
Boyd, Tom B., Topeka (R), Jan. 1929 to Oct. 1, 1933 (resigned).
Jardine, Wm., Manhattan (R), appointed vice Boyd, Oct. 2, 1933; served to
April 1, 1934 (resigned).
Rhodes, J.J., Council Grove (R), appointed vice Jardine, April 2, 1934; elected 1934, 1936; served
to Oct. 14, 1938 (resigned).
Hewitt, Jibo, Medicine Lodge (D), appointed vice Rhodes, Oct. 14, 1938; served to Jan. 1939.
Wilson, Walter E., Topeka (R), Jan. 1939 to April 7, 1945 (deceased).
Beck, Elmer T., Dwight (R), appointed vice Wilson, May 7, 1945; served to Jan. 1947.
Fadely, Richard T., Topeka (R), Jan. 1947 to Jan. 1959.
Hart, George, Wichita (D), Jan. 1959 to Jan. 1961.
Peery, Walter H., Topeka (R), Jan. 1961 to Jan. 1973.
Van Sickle, Tom R., Fort Scott (R), Jan. 1973 to Jan. 1975.
Finney, Joan, Topeka (D), Jan. 1975 to Jan. 1991.
Thompson, Sally, Topeka (D), Jan. 1991 to Feb. 27, 1998 (resigned).
Graeber, Clyde, Leavenworth (R), appointed vice Thompson, Feb. 27, 1998; served
to Jan. 11, 1999.
Shallenburger, Tim, Baxter Springs (R), Jan. 11, 1999 to Jan. 13, 2003.
Jenkins, Lynn, Topeka (R), Jan. 13, 2003 to Jan. 5, 2009 (elected to 2nd District U.S. Representative).
McKinney, Dennis, Greensburg (D), appointed vice Jenkins, Jan. 5, 2009—.
Attorneys General
Simpson, Benjamin Franklin, Paola (R), Feb. to July 1861 (resigned).
Chadwick, Charles, Lawrence (Unknown), appointed vice Simpson; served July 30, 1861 to Dec. 1861.
Stinson, Samuel A., Leavenworth (D), oath taken Dec. 20, 1861; served to Jan. 1863.
Guthrie, Warren William, Carson (R), Jan. 1863 to Jan. 1865.
Brumbaugh, Jerome D., Marysville (R), Jan. 1865 to Jan. 1867.
Hoyt, George H., Leavenworth (R), Jan. 1867 to Jan. 1869.
Danford, Addison, Fort Scott (R), Jan. 1869 to Jan. 1871.
Williams, Archibald L., Topeka (R), Jan. 1871 to Jan. 1875.
Randolph, Asa Maxson Fitz, Burlington (R), Jan. 1875 to Jan. 1877.
Davis, Willard, Oswego (R), Jan. 1877 to Jan. 1881.
Johnston, William Agnew, Minneapolis (R), Jan. 1881 to Dec. 1, 1884
(resigned to become associate justice).
Smith, George P., Humboldt (D), appointed vice Johnston; served Dec. 1, 1884 to Jan. 1885.
Bradford, Simeon Briggs, Carbondale (R), Jan. 1885 to Jan. 1889.
Kellogg, Lyman Beecher, Emporia (R), Jan. 1889 to Jan. 1891.
Ives, John Nutt, Sterling (D), Jan. 1891 to Jan. 1893.
Little, John Thomas, Olathe (P), Jan. 1893 to Jan. 1895.
Dawes, Fernanda B., Clay Center (R), Jan. 1895 to Jan. 1897.
Boyle, Louis C., Fort Scott (P), Jan. 1897 to Jan. 1899.
Godard, Aretas A., Topeka (R), Jan. 1899 to Jan. 1903.
Coleman, Chiles Crittendon, Clay Center (R), Jan. 1903 to Jan. 1907.
Jackson, Fred Schuyler, Eureka (R), Jan. 1907 to Jan. 1911.
Dawson, John Shaw, Hill City (R), Jan. 1911 to Jan. 1915.
Brewster, S.M., Troy (R), Jan. 1915 to Jan. 1919.
Hopkins, Richard J., Garden City (R), Jan. 1919 to Jan. 1923.
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Griffith, Charles B., Fort Scott (R), Jan. 1923 to Jan. 1927.
Smith, William A., Valley Falls (R), Jan. 1927 to Dec. 1, 1930; resigned, elected Justice of
Supreme Court.
Boynton, Roland, Emporia (R), appointed vice Smith, Dec. 1, 1930; elected 1930, 1932;
served to Jan. 1935.
Beck, Clarence V., Emporia (R), Jan. 1935 to Jan. 1939.
Parker, Jay S., Hill City (R), Jan. 1939 to Jan. 1943.
Mitchell, A.B., Lawrence (R), Jan. 1943 to Jan. 1947.
Arn, Edward F., Wichita (R), Jan. 1947 to Feb. 21, 1949; resigned, appointed Justice of
Supreme Court.
Fatzer, Harold R., Kinsley (R), appointed vice Arn, Feb 21, 1949; elected Nov. 1950; served to
March 1, 1956; resigned, appointed Justice of Supreme Court.
Anderson, John, Jr., Olathe (R), appointed vice Fatzer, March 1, 1956; elected to office
two succeeding terms; served Jan. 1957 to Jan. 1961.
Ferguson, William M., Wellington (R), Jan. 1961 to Jan. 1965.
Londerholm, Robert C., Prairie Village (R), Jan. 1965 to Jan. 1969.
Frizzell, Kent, Wichita (R), Jan. 1969 to Jan. 1971.
Miller, Vern, Wichita (D), Jan. 1971 to Jan. 1975.
Schneider, Curt T., Coffeyville (D), Jan. 1975 to Jan. 1979.
Stephan, Robert T., Wichita (R), Jan. 1979 to Jan. 1995.
Stovall, Carla J., Marion (R), Jan. 1995 to Jan. 2003.
Kline, Phill, Overland Park (R), Jan. 2003 to Jan. 2007.
Morrison, Paul, Lenexa (D), Jan. 2007 to Jan.31, 2008 (resigned).
Six, Stephen N., Lawrence (D), appointed vice Morrison, Feb. 1, 2008—.
State Superintendents of Public Instruction
Griffith, William Riley, Marmaton (R), Feb. 1861 to Feb. 12, 1862.
Thorp, Simeon Montgomery, Lawrence (R), appointed vice Griffith; served
March 24, 1862 to Jan. 1863.
Goodnow, Isaac T., Manhattan (R), Jan. 1863 to Jan. 1867.
McVicar, Peter, Topeka (R), Jan. 1867 to Jan. 1871.
McCarty, Hugh DeFrance, Leavenworth (R), Jan. 1871 to Jan. 1875.
Fraser, John, Lawrence (R), Jan. 1875 to Jan. 1877.
Lemmon, Allen Borsley, Winfield (R), Jan. 1877 to Jan. 1881.
Speer, Henry Clay, Junction City (R), Jan. 1881 to Jan. 1885.
Lawhead, Joseph Hadden, Fort Scott (R), Jan. 1885 to Jan. 1889.
Winans, George Wesley, Junction City (R), Jan. 1889 to Jan. 1893.
Gaines, Henry Newton, Salina (P), Jan. 1893 to Jan. 1895.
Stanley, Edmund, Lawrence (R), Jan. 1895 to Jan. 1897.
Stryker, William, Great Bend (P), Jan. 1897 to Jan. 1899.
Nelson, Frank, Lindsborg (R), Jan. 1899 to Jan. 1903.
Dayhoff, Insley L., Hutchinson (R), Jan. 1903 to Jan. 1907.
Fairchild, Edward T., Ellsworth (R), Jan. 1907 to Nov. 1912 (resigned).
Ross, W. D., Oskaloosa (R), appointed vice Fairchild, Nov. 19, 1912; elected 1912, 1914 and 1916;
served to Jan. 1919.
Wooster, Miss L.E., Salina (R), Jan. 1919 to Jan. 1923.
Miley, Jess W., Girard (R), Jan. 1923 to Jan. 1927.
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Office of the Secretary of State
Allen, George A., Jr., Frankfort (R), Jan. 1927 to Dec. 12, 1932 (deceased).
Markham, W.T., Yates Center (D), appointed vice Allen, Dec. 12, 1932; elected 1934, 1936;
served to Jan. 1939.
McClenny, Geo. L., Topeka (R), Jan. 1939 to Jan. 1945.
Brooks, L.W., Wichita (R), Jan. 1945 to Jan. 1949.
Throckmorton, Adel F., Wichita (R), Jan. 1949 to Sept. 2, 1966 (resigned).
Kampschroeder, W. C., Topeka (R), appointed vice Throckmorton, Sept. 2, 1966; elected Nov. 1966;
served to Nov. 8, 1967 (deceased).
Hayden, Murle M., Topeka (R), appointed vice Kampschroeder, Dec. 5, 1967; served to
Jan. 14, 1969 (office abolished).
State Superintendents of Insurance
Webb, William C., Fort Scott (R), 1871 to 1873.
Russell, Edward, Leavenworth (R), 1873 to 1874.
Clarkson, Harrison, Topeka (Unknown), 1874 to 1875.
Welch, Orrin T., Topeka (R), 1875 to 1883.
Morris, Richard B., Atchison (D), 1883 to 1887.
Wilder, Daniel W., Hiawatha (R), 1887 to 1891.
McBride, W.H., Osborne (R), 1891 to 1893.
Snider, S.H., Kingman (Unknown), 1893 to 1895.
Anthony, George T., Ottawa (R), 1895 to 1896.
Riddle, Alexander P., Minneapolis (R), 1896 to 1897.
McNall, Webb, Gaylord (P), 1897 to 1899.
Church, Willard V., Marion (R), 1899 to 1903.
Luling, Charles H., Wichita (R), 1903 to 1907.
Barnes, Charles W., Osage City (R), 1907 to 1911.
Lewis, Isaac S., St. John (R), 1911 to 1915.
Wilson, Carey J., Topeka (R), 1915 to 1919.
Travis, Frank L., Iola (R), 1919 to 1923.
Baker, William R., Topeka (R), Jan. 1923 to June 1927 (office reorganized).
State Commissioners of Insurance
Baker, William R., Topeka (R), June 1927 to Jan. 1929.
Hobbs, Charles F., Baldwin (R), Jan. 1929 to Jan. 1947.
Sullivan, Frank, Lawrence (R), Jan. 1947 to Jan. 1971.
Bell, Fletcher, Lawrence (R), Jan. 1971 to Jan. 1991.
Todd, Ron, Lawrence (R), Jan. 1991 to Jan. 1995.
Sebelius, Kathleen, Topeka (D), Jan. 1995 to Jan. 2003.
Praeger, Sandy, Lawrence (R), Jan. 2003—.
State Printers
McNeal, Thomas A., Topeka (R), 1907 to 1911.
Austin, William C., Cottonwood Falls (R), 1911 to 1915.
Smith, W.R., Columbus (R), Jan. 1915 to Feb. 1919 (resigned).
Zumwalt, Imri, Bonner Springs (R), Feb. 1919 to May 9, 1921 (deceased).
Kelley, E.E., acting state printer, May 14, 1921 to Sept. 1, 1921.
Walker, Bert P., Osborne (R), Sept. 1, 1921 to June 30, 1933.
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Austin, William C., Cottonwood Falls (R), July 1, 1933 to June 14, 1944 (deceased).
McCalla, Leonard, Garnett (R), appointed vice Austin, June 20, 1944; served to June 30, 1945.
Voiland, Ferd, Jr., Topeka (R), July 1, 1945 to June 30, 1957 (resigned).
Washabaugh, Lillie M., Natoma (D), appointed vice Voiland, July 1, 1957; elected to office
one succeeding term; served July 1, 1959 to June 30, 1961.
Neibarger, Jean M., Tonganoxie (R), July 1, 1961 to Jan. 1964 (resigned).
Timberlake, Harry, Leavenworth (R), appointed vice Neibarger, Jan. 3, 1964;
served to July 1, 1965.
Sanders, Robert R., Salina (R), July 1, 1965 to June 30, 1977 (office abolished).
Kansas Supreme Court
Political affiliation has been indicated by Republican, (R); Democrat, (D); Independent, (I);
and People’s party, (P). In 1890, the People’s party was commonly known as the
Alliance; later it was better known as the Populist Party.
After July 1, 1959, all Supreme Court justices are elected under the nonpartisan
plan, which was adopted by constitutional amendment.
Chief Justices
Ewing, Thomas Jr., Leavenworth (R), Feb. 9, 1861 to Nov. 28, 1862 (resigned).
Watson, John Hampton, Emporia (R), elected Nov. 4, 1862; Supreme Court ruled
election void because proclamation was not issued for election of chief justice
(resignation of Judge Ewing did not reach governor’s desk until Nov. 28, 1862).
Cobb, Nelson, Lawrence (D), appointed vice Ewing, Dec. 28, 1862 to Jan. 5, 1864.
Crozier, Robert, Leavenworth (R), Jan. 5, 1864 to Jan. 14, 1867.
Kingman, Samuel Austin, Atchison (R), Jan. 14, 1867 to Dec. 30, 1876 (resigned).
Horton, Albert Howell, Atchison (R), appointed vice Kingman, Dec. 31, 1876 to
April 30, 1895 (resigned).
Martin, David, Atchison (R), appointed vice Horton, April 30, 1895 to Jan. 11, 1897.
Doster, Frank, Marion (P), Jan. 11, 1897 to Jan. 12, 1903.
Johnston, William Agnew, Minneapolis (R), Jan. 12, 1903 to June 30, 1935 (resigned).
Burch, Rousseau Angelus, Salina (R), July 1, 1935 to Jan. 11, 1937.
Dawson, John Shaw, Hill City (R), Jan. 11, 1937 to Jan. 8, 1945 (retired).
Harvey, William West, Ashland (R), Jan. 8, 1945 to Mar. 1, 1956 (resigned).
Smith, William A., Valley Falls (R), March 1, 1956 to Jan. 3, 1957 (resigned).
Thiele, Walter G., Lawrence (R), Jan. 3, 1957 to Jan. 14, 1957 (retired).
Parker, Jay S., Hill City (R), Jan. 14, 1957 to May 1, 1966 (retired).
Price, Robert T., Topeka, May 1, 1966 to Sept. 1, 1971 (retired).
Fatzer, Harold R., Kinsley, Sept. 1, 1971 to Sept. 19, 1977 (retired).
Schroeder, Alfred G., Newton, Sept. 19, 1977 to Jan. 12, 1987 (retired).
Prager, David, Topeka, Jan. 12, 1987 to Sept. 1, 1988 (retired).
Miller, Robert H., Overland Park, Sept. 1, 1988 to Aug. 31, 1990 (retired).
Holmes, Richard W., Wichita, Sept. 1, 1990 to Aug. 31, 1995 (retired).
McFarland, Kay, Topeka, Sept. 1, 1995 to Jan. 12, 2009 (retired).
Davis, Robert E., Topeka, Jan. 12, 2009—.
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Office of the Secretary of State
Justices
Kingman, Samuel Austin, Hiawatha (R), Feb. 1861 to Jan. 9, 1865 (elected Chief Justice, 1866).
Bailey, Lawrence Dudley, Emporia (R), Feb. 1861 to Jan. 11, 1869.
Safford, Jacob, Topeka (R), Jan. 9, 1865 to Jan. 9, 1871.
Brewer, David Josiah, Leavenworth (R), Jan. 9, 1871 to April 8, 1884 (resigned).
Hurd, Theodore A., Leavenworth (D), appointed vice Brewer, April 23, 1884 to Dec. 1, 1884.
Johnston, William Agnew, Minneapolis (R), Dec. 1, 1884 to Jan. 12, 1903 (Chief Justice).
Valentine, Daniel Mulford, Ottawa (R), Jan. 11, 1869 to January 9, 1893.
Allen, Stephen Haley, Pleasanton (P), Jan. 9, 1893 to January 9, 1899.
Smith, William Redwood, Kansas City (R), Jan. 9, 1899 to July 1, 1905 (resigned).
Cunningham, Edwin Wilbur, Emporia (R), Jan. 15, 1901 to Aug. 16, 1905 (deceased).
Greene, Adrian Lawrence, Newton (R), Jan. 15, 1901 to July 28, 1907 (deceased).
Ellis, Abram Halsted, Beloit (R), Jan. 15, 1901 to Sept. 25, 1902 (deceased).
Pollock, John Calvin, Winfield (R), Jan. 15, 1901 to Dec. 2, 1903 (resigned).
Atkinson, William D., Parsons (R). Appointed vice Pollock, Jan. 1, 1904 to Dec. 1, 1904.
Burch, Rousseau Angelus, Salina (R), appointed vice Ellis, Sept. 29, 1902; served to
July 1, 1935 (Chief Justice).
Mason, Henry Freeman, Garden City (R), Jan. 12, 1903 to May 4, 1927 (deceased).
Smith, Clark Allen, Cawker City (R), Dec. 1, 1904 to Jan. 11, 1915.
Porter, Silas Wright, Kansas City (R), appointed vice Wm. R. Smith, July 1, 1905 to Jan. 8, 1923.
Graves, Charles Burleigh, Emporia (R), appointed vice Cunningham, Aug. 21, 1905 to Jan. 9, 1911.
Benson, Alfred Washburn, Ottawa (R), appointed vice Greene, Aug. 1, 1907 to Jan. 11, 1915.
West, Judson S., Kansas City (R), Jan. 9, 1911 to Jan. 8, 1923.
Dawson, John Shaw, Hill City (R), Jan. 11, 1915 to Jan. 11, 1937 (Chief Justice).
Marshall, John, Topeka (R), Jan. 11, 1915 to March 25, 1931 (deceased).
Hopkins, Richard Joseph, Garden City (R), Jan. 8, 1923 to Dec. 27, 1929 (resigned).
Harvey, William West, Ashland (R), Jan. 8, 1923 to Jan. 8, 1945 (Chief Justice).
Hutchinson, William Easton, Garden City (R), appointed vice Mason,
May 12, 1927 to Jan. 9, 1939.
Jochems, William D., Wichita (R), appointed vice Hopkins, Jan. 4, 1930; served to Dec. 1, 1930.
Smith, William A., Valley Falls (R), Dec. 1, 1930 to March 1, 1956 (Chief Justice).
Sloan, Edward Ray, Holton (D), appointed vice Marshall, April 6, 1931 to Jan. 9, 1933.
Thiele, Walter G., Lawrence (R), Jan. 9, 1933 to Jan. 3, 1957 (Chief Justice).
Wedell, Hugo T., Chanute (R), appointed vice Johnson, July 3, 1935 to Jan. 10, 1955.
Allen, Harry K., Topeka (D), Jan. 11, 1937 to Jan. 11, 1943.
Hoch, Homer, Marion (R), Jan. 9, 1939 to Jan. 30, 1949 (deceased).
Parker, Jay S., Hill City (R), Jan. 11, 1943 to Jan. 14, 1957 (Chief Justice).
Burch, Allen Banks, Wichita (R), Jan. 8, 1945 to May 31, 1948 (deceased).
Cowan, Austin M., Wichita (R), appointed vice Burch, June 9, 1948 to Nov. 30, 1948.
Price, Robert T., Topeka (R), November 30, 1948 to May 1, 1966 (Chief Justice).
Arn, Edward F., Wichita (R), appointed vice Hoch, Feb. 21, 1949 to March 1, 1950 (resigned).
Wertz, William J., Wichita (R), appointed vice Arn, March 1, 1950, to Dec. 4, 1950; elected
Nov. 7, 1950 for regular term; served Jan. 8, 1951 to Oct. 1, 1965 (retired).
Kagey, Lloyd M., Wichita (R), elected Nov. 7, 1950 for unexpired term; served Dec. 4, 1950
to Jan. 8, 1951.
Robb, Clair E., Wichita (R), Jan. 10, 1955 to Aug. 6, 1965 (deceased).
Fatzer, Harold R., Kinsley (R), appointed vice Harvey, March 1, 1956 to
Sept. 1, 1971 (Chief Justice).
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2010 Kansas Directory
Hall, Fred, Dodge City (R), appointed vice Smith, Jan. 3, 1957 to April 7, 1958 (resigned).
Schroeder, Alfred G., Newton (R), Jan. 14, 1957 to Sept. 19, 1977 (Chief Justice).
Jackson, Schuyler W., Topeka (D), appointed vice Hall, April 7, 1958 to Feb. 8, 1964 (resigned).
Fontron, John F., Hutchinson, appointed vice Jackson, March 5, 1964 to Oct. 1, 1975 (resigned).
Kaul, Robert H., Wamego, appointed vice Robb, Sept. 27, 1965; served to Sept. 17, 1977 (resigned).
O’Connor, Earl E., Overland Park, appointed vice Wertz, Oct. 1, 1965 to Nov. 10, 1971 (resigned).
Fromme, Alex M., Hoxie, appointed vice Parker, May 2, 1966 to Oct. 25, 1982 (deceased).
Owsley, Perry L., Pittsburg, appointed vice Price, Sept. 24, 1971 to Dec. 31, 1978 (resigned).
Prager, David, Topeka, appointed vice O’Connor, Dec. 4, 1971 to Jan. 12, 1987 (Chief Justice).
Miller, Robert H., Overland Park, appointed vice Fontron, Nov. 1, 1975 to Sept. 1, 1988 (Chief Justice).
Holmes, Richard Winn, Wichita, appointed vice Kaul, Sept. 17, 1977 to Sept. 1, 1990 (Chief Justice).
McFarland, Kay, Topeka, appointed vice Fatzer, Sept. 19, 1977 to Sept. 1, 1995 (Chief Justice).
Herd, Harold, Coldwater, appointed vice Owsley, March 18, 1979; served to Jan. 11, 1993 (retired).
Lockett, Tyler C., Wichita, appointed vice Fromme, Feb. 11, 1983 to Jan. 13, 2003.
Allegrucci, Donald L., Pittsburg, appointed vice Schroeder, Jan. 12, 1987 to Jan. 8, 2007 (retired).
Six, Frederick N., Lawrence, appointed vice Prager, Sept. 1, 1988 to Jan. 13, 2003.
Abbott, Bob, Junction City, appointed vice Miller, Sept. 1, 1990 to June 6, 2003.
Davis, Robert E., Topeka, appointed vice Herd, Jan. 11, 1993 to Jan. 12, 2009 (Chief Justice).
Larson, Edward, Hays, appointed vice Holmes, Sept. 1, 1995 to Sept. 4, 2002.
Nuss, Lawton R., Salina, appointed vice Larson, Sept. 4, 2002—.
Luckert, Marla J., Topeka, appointed vice Six, Jan. 13, 2003—.
Gernon, Robert L., Topeka, appointed vice Lockett, Jan. 13, 2003 to March 30, 2005 (deceased).
Beier, Carol A., Wichita, appointed vice Abbott, Sept. 5, 2003—.
Rosen, Eric S., Topeka, appointed vice Gernon, Nov. 18, 2005—.
Johnson, Lee A., Caldwell, appointed vice Allegrucci, Jan. 8, 2007—.
Biles, Dan, Shawnee, appointed vice McFarland, Jan. 12, 2009—.
Kansas Court of Appeals
Chief Judges
Harman, Jerome, Columbus, Jan. 10, 1977 to Jan. 1, 1978 (retired).
Foth, J. Richard, Topeka, Jan. 1, 1978 to Aug. 21, 1985 (deceased).
Abbott, Bob, Junction City, appointed vice Foth, Sept. 18, 1985 to Aug. 31, 1990.
Briscoe, Mary Beck, Topeka, appointed vice Abbott, Sept. 1, 1990 to June 1, 1995 (resigned).
Brazil, J. Patrick, Eureka, appointed vice Briscoe, June 1, 1995 to Jan. 8, 2001.
Rulon, Gary W., Emporia, appointed vice Brazil, Jan. 8, 2001—.
Judges
Foth, J. Richard, Topeka, Jan. 10, 1977 to Jan. 1, 1978 (Chief Judge).
Abbott, Bob, Junction City, Jan. 10, 1977 to Sept. 18, 1985 (Chief Judge).
Rees, John E., Wichita, Jan. 10, 1977 to Oct. 31, 1992 (retired).
Spencer, Corwin C., Oakley, Jan. 10, 1977 to Jan. 31, 1984 (retired).
Parks, Sherman A., Topeka, Jan. 10, 1977 to June 30, 1987 (retired).
Swinehart, Joe H., Kansas City, Jan. 10, 1977 to Jan. 13, 1986 (retired).
Meyer, Marvin W., Oberlin, appointed vice Harman, Jan. 1, 1978 to June 30, 1987 (retired).
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Office of the Secretary of State
Briscoe, Mary Beck, Topeka, appointed vice Spencer, March 15, 1984 to
Aug. 31, 1990 (Chief Judge).
Brazil, J. Patrick, Eureka, appointed vice Abbott, Nov. 14, 1985 to June 1, 1995 (Chief Judge).
Davis, Robert E., Leavenworth, appointed vice Foth, March 20, 1986 to Jan. 11, 1993.
Six, Frederick N., Lawrence, appointed vice Parks, Aug. 18, 1987 to Sept. 1, 1988.
Elliott, Jerry G., Wichita, fills position 8, created pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3002;
appointed Sept. 11, 1987—.
Larson, Edward, Hays, appointed vice Meyer, Oct. 16, 1987 to Sept. 1, 1995.
Rulon, Gary W., Emporia, fills position 9 created pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3002; appointed
Dec. 18, 1987; served to Jan. 8, 2001 (Chief Judge).
Gernon, Robert L., Hiawatha, fills position 10 created pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3002;
appointed March 3, 1988; served March 3, 1988 to Jan. 13, 2003 (Supreme Court Justice).
Lewis, Robert J. Jr., Atwood, appointed vice Six, Jan. 24, 1989 to May 3, 2004 (deceased).
Pierron, G. Joseph, Olathe, appointed vice Abbott, Dec. 11, 1990—.
Royse, M. Kay, Wichita, appointed vice Rees, Jan. 22, 1993 to Sept. 1, 1999 (deceased).
Green, Henry W. Jr., Leavenworth, appointed vice Davis, April 22, 1993—.
Marquardt, Christel E., Lenexa, appointed vice Briscoe, Oct. 6, 1995—.
Knudson, David S., Salina, appointed vice Larson, Dec. 7, 1995 to Aug. 1, 2003.
Beier, Carol A., Wichita, appointed vice Royse, Dec. 17, 1999 to Sept. 5, 2003 (Supreme Court Justice).
Johnson, Lee A., Caldwell, appointed vice Brazil, Jan. 11, 2001 to Jan. 8, 2007 (Supreme Court Justice).
Malone, Thomas E., Wichita, fills position 11 created pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3002;
appointed May 1, 2003—.
Greene, Richard E., Wichita, appointed vice Gernon June 18, 2003—.
Hill, Stephen D., Paola, appointed vice Knudson, Dec. 5, 2003—.
McAnany, Patrick D., Overland Park, appointed vice Beier, Feb. 6, 2004—.
Caplinger, Nancy Landis, Topeka, appointed vice Lewis, Oct. 1, 2004—.
Buser, Michael B., Overland Park, fills position 12 created pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3002;
appointed Jan. 28, 2005—.
Leben, Steve A., Fairway, appointed vice Johnson, June 15, 2007—.
Standridge, Melissa Taylor, Overland Park, fills position 13 created pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3002;
appointed Feb. 29, 2008—.
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