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The Fort Hays State Historic Site is located at (38.8616784, -99.3423263) at an elevation of 2,024 feet (617 m It consists of 177 acres (72 ha) on the south side of the U.S. Route 183 Bypass immediately southwest of Hays, Kansas .
Seeking better defensive ground, Armes walked his command south toward Fort Hays while maintaining the defensive square. After 8 hours of combat, 2,000 rounds of defensive fire and 15 miles of movement in the square, the Cheyenne disengaged and withdrew as the troopers gained a bluff in sight of the fort. Company F, without reinforcements ...
Fort Hays State University: Reveille: 1914 – 2003: Fort Hays State Reveille yearbooks [a] Kansas Kansas State University Resource includes K-State Salina books Royal Purple previously Bell Clapper & Sunrise: 1891 – 2009: Kansas Royal Purple yearbooks [a] Kansas University of Kansas: Quivira (1893), Jayhawker (1918+) 1893 – 1982 (sporadic)
USA TODAY’s Books Reporter read 50 books this year. Here are the stories that stuck with her the most in 2024, including "Intermezzo" and "James."
Along the Dakota Hogback north of Laporte, Colorado, the Fort Hays Limestone formed a secondary hogback, which was extensively quarried for manufacture of up to 450,000 tons of cement a year. [9] The full depth of the Niobrara was quarried by the Western Portland Cement Company at Yankton, South Dakota , which supplied cement to the Panama ...
James J. "Gentleman Jim" Yeager (February 2, 1909 – May 17, 1971) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Fort Hays State University (1935), Iowa State University (1937–1940), and the University of Colorado at Boulder (1941–1943, 1946–1947), compiling a career college football record of 48–38–3.
The list also includes one book that won two categories: Romance queen Emily Henry's "Funny Story" was readers' pick for both "Best Romance" and "Best Audiobook," which was a newly introduced ...
In 1867, Fort Hays was established on a low slope south of Big Creek, its role being to provide security for the Smoky Hill Trail.For the most part, the "fort" was still just a bivouac of hundreds of tents in the late summer of 1867 [4] when it became the center of a war with the plains tribes over the construction of the Kansas Pacific Railway parallel to the trail.