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It was established in 1931 and continued publication until 1977. The Kansas Historical Quarterly in turn continued Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society, and the society's other transactions, published by the Kansas State Historical Society from 1875 to 1928 (ISSN 0275-2700, OCLC 1755021). [11] [12] [13]
Sloan, Charles William Jr. "Kansas Battles the Invisible Empire: The Legal Ouster of the KKK From Kansas, 1922-1927," Kansas Historical Quarterly (1974) 40#3 pp 393–409 online; Socolofsky, Homer E. "Kansas in 1876" Kansas Historical Quarterly (1977) 43#1 pp 1–43 online
Atherton was also the author of many articles on frontier history in the Missouri Historical Review. One fine example of his research is Vol. 30, no. 1 1935, page 3, on the frontier Missouri Mercantile Firm “James and Robert Aull”. [20] He also published an article in the Kansas Historical Quarterly.
LeRoy's post was an army post in LeRoy, Kansas.Established September 12, 1861 by U.S. Senator James H. Lane, when Fort Scott was threatened by advancing Confederate troops, the Union post was one of many established in eastern Kansas to guard against Confederate guerrilla attack.
Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press. ISBN 978-1-60949-006-5. Langsdorf, Edgar (1964). "Price's Raid and the Battle of Mine Creek" (PDF). The Kansas Historical Quarterly. 30 (3). Topeka, Kansas: Kansas State Historical Society. ISSN 0022-8621. Lause, Mark A. (2016). The Collapse of Price's Raid: The Beginning of the End in Civil War ...
Osawatomie Brown is an 1859 play by Kate Edwards, about John Brown's attack on slave owners in Kansas, and its sequel, his raid on Harper's Ferry. The play premiered just two weeks after Brown's execution.
Mason, Henry F. "County Seat Controversies in Southwestern Kansas" The Kansas Historical Quarterly 2:1 (February 1933) 45-65. (retrieved from The Kansas Collection October 27, 2006) Least Heat-Moon, William. PrairyErth (1991) Wood, Margaret Lyon. The Memorial of Samuel N. Wood (1891) PBS abolitionist map The first fugitive slave in Kansas Territory
Thaddeus Hyatt (July 21, 1816 – July 25, 1901) was an American abolitionist and inventor. In his opposition to slavery, Hyatt organized the efforts of abolitionists in Kansas to have the territory admitted to the Union as a free-state and campaigned for the federal government to aid Kansans afflicted by drought.