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Kansas National Historic Trails follow settlers’ paths westward

Two covered wagons crossing in the background are seen on Kansas’s state flag, a reference to the pioneer roots of the state.

The paths chartered by these covered wagons are still mapped across the state by the National Park Service.

In the early 1800s, the United States forcibly relocated Indian tribes from the Great Lakes area to the Kansas territory. By 1854, the state opened up to settlement by people with European ancestry, and by 1861, the Indian tribes that moved to the area lost most of their land except for a couple small reservations.

“After the Civil War and before 1890 the population of Kansas increased by the greatest amount in its history. More than one million people streamed into Kansas seeking a new life on the frontier,” the Kansas Historical Society’s report on the settlement of Kansas says.

The settlers followed trails that people can still follow today. There are 21 National Historic Trails in the United States, and five pass through Kansas.

What is a National Historic Trail?

The National Parks Service designates National Historic Trails as routes of significance for exploration, migration, struggle, trade or military action.

Not all of them are for the pioneer past. One Civil Rights Movement march is recognized in Alabama from Selma to Montgomery.

The trails vary significantly in length and landscape, with the shortest being the Chilkoot Trail in Alaska at just 33 miles to the 5,600-mile California Trail that runs from Kansas City, Missouri, to Portland, Oregon.

And unlike the trails they follow, the dirt paths are usually gone. The trails tend to mostly follow modern roadways in about the same places the trails passed through.

What Historic Trails go through Kansas?

The National Historic Trails that pass through Kansas are the following:

California Trail.Lewis and Clark Trail.Oregon Trail.Pony Express TrailSanta Fe Trail.

The California Trail follows the estimated 250,000 men and women who moved west during the gold rush in the 1840s. It starts on the Kansas-Missouri border up through Nebraska, Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, California and Oregon.

The Lewis and Clark Trail begins in western Pennsylvania and follows the famous explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark’s continent-spanning journey across what is now the United States.

From Kansas City, it goes north along the border before crossing into Nebraska.

But the Lewis and Clark Trail was rugged, and most settlers moving by wagon used the Oregon Trail in their westward trek. The trail starts in Independence, Missouri, and goes northwest from Topeka in a route that ends in Oregon City, Oregon.

The Pony Express Trail is 1,800 miles from St. Joseph, Missouri, to Sacramento, California. Its namesake is the short-lived courier service that delivered parcels across the west in just 10 days. It only briefly passes through northeast Kansas.

The Santa Fe Trail goes the longest distance through Kansas; rather than heading north into Nebraska like other National Historic Trails that cross the state. It followed a trade route between Missouri and what was then Mexico in Santa Fe.

What National Historic Trail sites are near Topeka?

The California and Oregon Trails cross the Kansas River near Kansas Avenue in Topeka, then follow US-24 highway northwest. The trail goes by the Kansas Museum of History in Topeka and about 30 miles northwest leads to St Mary’s Mission and Oregon Trail Nature Park.

The Santa Fe Trail is is about 30 miles south of Topeka along US-56 highway. Visitors can still see ruts left by wagons in Overbrook, Kansas, about 30 miles south of Topeka, as well as some historical artifacts from Kansas history at the Schuyler Museum in Burlington, Kansas.

With a little driving, dozens of other sites are along the National Historic Trails in eastern Kansas and western Missouri. The National Parks Service lists 34 historical attractions along the trails in the region.

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Publish date : 2024-08-14 22:18:00

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