Kansas Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
Kansas Famous Firsts, Kansas Interesting Facts, Kansas Trivia
America's Bread Basket:
In 1990 Kansas wheat farmers produced
enough wheat to make 33 billion loaves of bread, or enough to provide
each person on earth with 6 loaves.
More Kansas Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
- A ball of twine in Cawker City measures over 38' in
circumference and weighs more than 16,750 pounds and is still
growing.
- A grain elevator in Hutchinson is 1/2 mile long and holds 46
million bushels in its 1,000 bins.
- South of Ashland the Rock Island Bridge is the longest railroad
bridge of its kind. It measures 1,200 feet long and is 100 feet
above the Cimarron River.
- At Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine
waterbeds for horses are used in surgery.
- Kansas won the award for most beautiful license plate for the
wheat plate design issued in 1981.
- Dodge City is the windiest city in the United States.
- At one time it was against the law to serve ice cream on cherry
pie in Kansas.
- The first woman mayor in the United States was Susan Madora
Salter. She was elected to office in Argonia in 1887.
- The first black woman to win an Academy Award was Kansan Hattie
McDaniel. She won the award for her role in "Gone with the Wind."
- Kansas inventors include Almon Stowger of El Dorado who invented
the dial telephone in 1889; William Purvis and Charles Wilson of
Goodland who invented the helicopter in 1909; and Omar Knedlik of
Coffeyville who invented the first frozen carbonated drink machine
in 1961.
- Smith County is the geographical center of the 48 contiguous
states.
- Amelia Earhart, first woman granted a pilot's license by the
National Aeronautics Associate and first woman to fly solo across
the Atlantic Ocean was from Atchison.
- Dwight D. Eisenhower from Abilene was the 34th President of the
United States.
- Silent comedian Buster Keaton, of early film success, was from
Piqua, Kansas.
- The three largest herds of buffalo (correctly called bison) in
Kansas are located on public lands at the Maxwell Game Preserve
(McPherson), Big Basin (Ashland), and Buffalo Game Preserve (Garden
City).
- Fort Riley, between Junction City and Manhattan, was the cradle
of the United States Cavalry for 83 years. George Custer formed the
famed 7th Cavalry there in 1866. Ten years later, at the Battle of
the Little Big Horn, the 7th was virtually wiped out. The only
Cavalry survivor was a horse named Comanche.
- Wyatt Earp, James Butler "Wild Bill" Hickok and William B. "Bat"
Masterson were three of the legendary lawmen who kept the peace in
rowdy frontier towns like Abilene, Dodge City, Ellsworth, Hays, and
Wichita.
- The public swimming pool at the Lee Richardson Zoo in Garden
City occupies half a city block and holds 2 1/2 million gallons of
water.
- Cedar Crest is the name of the governor's mansion in Topeka, the
state capital.
- Barton County is the only Kansas County that is named for a
woman; the famous volunteer Civil War nurse Clara Barton.
- The Arkansas River may be the only river whose pronunciation
changes as it crosses state lines. In Kansas, it is called the
Arkansas (ahr-KAN-zuhs). On both sides of Kansas (Colorado and
Oklahoma), it is called the Arkansaw.
- Civil War veteran S.P. Dinsmoor used over 100 tons of concrete
to build the Garden of Eden in Lucas. Even the flag above the
mausoleum is made of concrete.
- Handel's Messiah has been presented in Lindsborgeach at Easter
since 1889.
- A monument to the first Christian martyr on United States
Territory stands along Highway 56 near Lyons. Father Juan de Padilla
came to the region with the explorer Coronado in 1541.
- Hutchinson is nicknamed the Salt City because it was built above
some of the richest salt deposits in the world. Salt is still
actively mined, processed and shipped from Hutchinson.
- There are 27 Walnut Creeks in the state.
- There are more than 600 incorporated towns in the state.
- Morton County sells the most trout fishing stamps of all the
Kansas counties.
- Fire Station No. 4 in Lawrence, originally a stone barn
constructed in 1858, was a station site on the Underground Railroad.
- The Hugoton Gas Field is the largest natural gas field in the
United States. It underlies all or parts of 10 southwestern Kansas
counties as well as parts of Oklahoma and Texas. The gas field
underlies almost 8,500 square miles, an area nearly 5 times as large
as the state of Rhode Island.
- The Kansas Speleological Society has catalogued at least 528
caves in 37 Kansas counties. Commanche County has at least 128 caves
and Barber County has at least 117 caves.
- Kansas has the largest population of wild grouse in North
America. The grouse is commonly called the prairie chicken.
- Milford Reservoir with over 16,000 acres of water is the state's
largest lake. The reservoir is located northwest of Junction City.
- The Geodetic Center of North America is about 40 miles south of
Lebanon at Meade's Ranch. It is the beginning point of reference for
land surveying in North America. When a surveyor checks a property
line, he or she is checking the position of property in relation to
Meade's Ranch in northwest Kansas.
- In Italy the city of Milan is 300 miles northwest of Rome. In
Kansas, Milan is less than 25 miles northwest of Rome, in Sumner
County.
- Between 1854 and 1866, 34 steamboats paddled up the Kaw River
(Kansas River). One made it as far west as Fort Riley.
- In 1990 Kansas wheat farmers produced enough wheat to make 33
billion loaves of bread, or enough to provide each person on earth
with 6 loaves.
- Holy Cross Shrine in Pfeifer, was known as the 2 Cent Church
because the building was built using a 2 cent donation on each
bushel of wheat sold by members of the church.
- Kansas produced a record 492.2 million bushels of wheat in 1997,
enough to make 35.9 billion loaves of bread.
- The American Institute of Baking is located in Manhattan.
- A 30 foot tall statue of Johnny Kaw stands in Manhattan. The
statue represents the importance of the Kansas wheat farmer.
- The graham cracker was named after the Reverend Sylvester Graham
(1794-1851). He was a Presbyterian minister who strongly believed in
eating whole wheat flour products.
- The rocks at Rock City are huge sandstone concretions. In an
area about the size of two football fields, 200 rocks, some as large
as houses, dot the landscape. There is no other place in the world
where there are so many concretions of such giant size.
- George Washington Carver, the famous botanical scientist who
discovered more than 300 products made from the peanut, graduated
from high school in Minneapolis in 1885.
- The First United Methodist Church in Hutchinson was built in
1874 during the time of the grasshopper plagues. The grasshoppers
came during the construction of the churches foundation but the
pastor continued with the work. As a result, thousands of
grasshoppers are mixed into the mortar of the original building's
foundation.
- A hailstone weighing more than one and a half pounds once fell
on Coffeyville.
- The Oregon Trail passed thru six states, including Kansas. There
were no Indian attacks reported on the Oregon Trail as the travelers
passed through the state.
- Russell Springs located in Logan County is known as the Cow Chip
Capital of Kansas.
- The world famous fast-food chain of Pizza Hut restaurants opened
its first store in Wichita.
- Sumner County is known as The Wheat Capital of the World.
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