(Ch. 5 – Pages 96-119). 1861 – Kansas becomes a state and Topeka the capital 1861 - 1865 – The...
Transcript of (Ch. 5 – Pages 96-119). 1861 – Kansas becomes a state and Topeka the capital 1861 - 1865 – The...
Ad Astra Per Aspera:Kansas Becomes a State
(Ch. 5 – Pages 96-119)
1861 – Kansas becomes a state and Topeka the capital
1861 - 1865 – The Civil War
1862 – James Lane recruits African-American soldiers for the First Colored Infantry
1863 – Quantrill and Confederates raid Lawrence
1864 – Battle of Mine Creek and Sand Creek Massacre
1866 – Construction on Capitol Building Begins
1867 – Medicine Peace Lodge Treaty
Timeline
Fort Atkinson was established 8 August 1850 Fort Aubrey was established early in September 1865Fort Belmont was built about 1860 Fort Dodge was established April 10, 1865Fort Harker was established in August of 1864 Fort hays was established October 11, 1865Fort Larned was established October 22, 1859
Fort Leavenworth, was established May 8, 1827 Fort Mann was established in 1845
Fort Monument was established in Nov. of 1865
Jan. 29, 1861 - Kansas statehood begins
State government based on Wyandotte Constitution
Charles Robinson elected first governor
Kansas ~ The 34th State
“Kansas has been the testing ground for every experiment in morals, politics, and social life...every political fallacy nurtured by misfortune, poverty, and failure... has here found tolerance and advocacy... something startling has always happened, or has been constantly anticipated.”
~ John James Ingalls
John James Ingalls Proposed state
motto and designed state seal (though seal was changed) as secretary of state
Member of the 1859 Wyandotte Constitutional Convention
Kansas State Constitution
United States Constitution
Slavery Bill of Rights prohibited slavery (1861)
Did not prohibit slavery until 13th Amendment (1865)
Women’s Suffrage
Women given right to vote in school board elections (1861)
Did not allow women to vote until the 19th Amendment (1920)
Kansas State and U.S. Constitutions
Seal of the Territory of Kansas
Seal of the State of Kansas
Populi Voce Nata“Born of the Popular Will”
Ad Astra Per Aspera“To the Stars Through
Difficulty”
Landscape with a rising sun (the east). River and steamboat (commerce). Settler's cabin and a man plowing a field (agriculture). Wagons heading west (American expansion/pioneer life). Seal also
shows Indians hunting buffalo, 34 stars (34th state to join Union) and the state motto (“Ad Astra Per Aspera”).
Drouthy Kansas by Henry Worrall
Drouthy: thirsty or dry
The artist Henry Worrall attempted to improve the image of Kansas as a dry and uninhabitable place
What persuasive techniques did Worrall show in his painting?
Ad Astra Per Aspera
“To the Stars Through Difficulty”
State Motto
Wyandotte Constitution modeled after U.S. Constitution
Document has Bill of Rights
Inalienable - incapable of being alienated, surrendered or transferred
Establishing a State Government
Legislative Branch
Makes and passes laws
Two chambers: House of Representatives and Senate
Senate - 40 members who serve four-year terms
House of Representatives - 125 members who serve two-year terms
State Government
Executive Branch
Administer laws passed by legislature Headed by Governor who may serve up to
two four-year terms
Includes Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General, State Treasurer and other agency directors
Governor can approve or veto bills
State Government
Judicial Branch
Interpret laws and settle disputes between people
Hear criminal cases where the state brings charges against a person
State Supreme Court has 7 justices appointed by the governor
State Government
A criminal case involves a crime. The court decides if a person is guilty and what punishment fits the crime.
Remember – All people are innocent until proven guilty (It’s the American way)
A civil case is between two parties that have a dispute over such things as money or property rights.
State Government - Judicial Branch Criminal and Civil Cases
Local governments include city and county government.
Makes local laws called ordinances
Makes sure federal, state and local laws are followed
Provides important services, safe communities and a desirable place to live
Federal (United States), State (Kansas), Local: County (Johnson County), City (Olathe)
Local Government
Governor of Kansas
Charles Robinson1st Governor of Kansas
Sam Brownback46th Governor of Kansas
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Drought, failing crops and, in some areas, scarce drinking water
No money in the state treasury, and state was in debt
No guns or ammunition in state armory – a storehouse for arms
Hostile border with proslavery Missouri
A Rough Start
Kansas Relief Committee – appealed to the government, churches and people to provide assistance to the starving people of Kansas
Broadsides – advertisement or public notice printed on a large piece of paper
A Rough Start – Help!!!!
Thad Allton/The Capital-Journal
After a century of debate concerning the artwork at the Statehouse, the "Ad Astra" statue was placed on the Capitol dome in October.
Kansas State Capital
One month after Battle of Mine Creek
Trail from Kansas to gold fields in Colorado ran through Cheyenne and Arapaho lands
About 700 US volunteer soldiers attacked Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle’s camp, killing more than 150 Indians
Led to further distrust between Indians and European Americans.
Sand Creek Massacre (1864)
Sand Creek Massacre, 1864 (Artist: O. Y. Rookstool)
Three treaties signed between the US Gov. and Indians on the plains - Cheyenne, Arapaho, Kiowa, Apache and Comanche at Medicine Lodge Creek, Kansas
Plains Indians considered Medicine Lodge sacred area and the river to have healing powers
US Gov. wanted peace with Plains Indians by having tribes live on reservations. But many Indians refused.
Medicine Peace Lodge Treaties (1867)
US Gov. promised to protect Indians from whites and provide them with schools, farming tools and food
Treaties opened up area for American settlement and the railroad
Some tribes chose to live on reservations; others chose to remain free.
Medicine Peace Lodge Treaties (1867)
Medicine Peace Lodge Treaties
Comanche Chief Ten Bears
Flew an American flag (given to him by Pres. Lincoln and a white flag from his tipi – but the signals were ignored
Colorado forces killed 163 Cheyenne by shooting or stabbing. They burned down the village encampment. Most of the victims were women and children. For months afterward, members of the militia displayed trophies in Denver of their battle, including body parts they had taken for souvenirs
Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle
Julia Louisa Lovejoy (1812-1882)
Abolitionist
Julia and her husband, Charles Lovejoy, a moved to Kansas Terr. in 1855 from New Hampshire as part of the New England Emigrant Aid Company
Built the first house in Manhattan, later moved to Lawrence
Diary and letters reveal what life was like during the territorial days of Kansas
“My neighbors began to clear their houses of all their valuables, and secrete them in woods and cornfields. I caught a little tin trunk with our valuable papers and husband’s watch in it…and concealed it in tall weeds…Nearer and nearer they came.”
~ Lovejoy, who lived in Lawrence, describing William Quantrill’s raid on the town
Julia Louisa Lovejoy
Kansas and the Civil War
Quantrill Raids Olathe!!!
Just after midnight on Sept. 7, 1862, raiders under the command of William Quantrill attacked Olathe, killing several men and looting businesses and private homes This flag, apparently carried by
one of the Confederate raiders, was dropped in Olathe.
Kansas became a state less than three months before the Civil War started (Kansas statehood begins Jan. 29, 1861; the Civil War starts April 12, 1861)
The Civil War (1861-1865) was fought between the Union (northern states) and the Confederacy (southern states)
Kansas and the Civil War
Most Kansans supported the Union (which they had just joined) and wanted the Union preserved, as did President Lincoln.
Kansas had the highest death rate of any state in the Union (Nearly 8,500 of 20,000 volunteers in Kansas regiments died in Civil War battles
Kansas and the Civil War
Kansas and the Civil WarJames Lane’s Frontier Guard
One of Kansas’ first U.S. senators
Lane organized Kansans into the Frontier Guard
More than 100 Kansans provided special protection for President Lincoln
James Lane
“I have a hundred men from Kansas in this crowd, all armed, all fighting men, just from the victorious fields of Kansas!”
~ James Lane to Southerners who booed him in Washington D.C., showing his resolve to defend the nation’s capital after
the outbreak of the Civil War
Kansas and the Civil War
Dark Blue: Union states
Red: Confederate states
Light Blue: Border states
Kansas and the Civil War
Kansas and Missouri Kansas
Free state
Union state
Missouri
Slave state (Missouri Compromise of 1820)
Border state during Civil War
Not a Confederate state (never seceded from the Union) but home to many Confederates and Southern sympathizers
Battle fought between Union and Confederate forces at Mine Creek, where Union forces defeated Confederate General Sterling Price
At least 200 Confederate soldiers died;
Union troops also suffered causualties
Kansas and the Civil War
Battle of Mine Creek
Battle of Mine Creek painting by Samuel Reader
Samuel Reader
Samuel Reader Self-portrait of Samuel
Reader staking a claim in Kansas Territory.
He came here for land, but stayed for the free-state cause.
Fought with Union troops against Confederate troops led by Gen. Price; taken prisoner but escaped by posing as a Confederate
Background
“Order No. 11”: issued by Union patrolling the Kansas-Missouri border to clear all settlers out of four western Missouri counties
image depicts the scene of William Quantrill's raid in 1863
Kansas and the Civil War
Quantrill Raids Lawrence!!!
August 21, 1863 - Quantrill and 400 men raided Lawrence, KS.
At least 140 men and boys were killed and about a quarter of the town’s buildings burned.
William C. Quantrill, Confederate guerilla
Laura Ingalls Wilder (1867-1957)
Recreation of Little House on the Prairie cabin (Independence, KS)
Ten Bears (?-1872) Comanche Chief
who spoke at the Medicine Lodge Peace Treaties
Abolitionist, sent letters to newspapers back east about Kansas Terr.
She and her husband, Charles Haseltine Lovejoy, a preacher, moved in 1855 from New Hampshire to Kansas Terr. as part of the New England Emigrant Aid Company.
oldest active army post west of the Mississippi River
Served as first Kansas capital during territorial Kansas
Protected wagons trains on the Santa Fe and Oregon-California Trails.
Fort Leavenworth (1827)
Built to protect the expanding American frontier
Fort Riley (1853)
Troops protect workers building the Union Pacific Railroad
Fort Hays (1865)
Comanche Chief Ten Bears spoke at the Medicine Lodge Peace Treaties
“The Comanches are not weak, and blind, like pups of a dog when seven sleeps old. They are strong and farsighted, like grown horses…But there are things which you have said to me which I do not like. They were not sweet like sugar, but bitter like gourds. You said that you wanted to put us upon reservations, to build us houses and to make us Medicine Lodges. I do not want them.”
Ten Bears
Source: Ten Bears, Yapparika Comanche ChiefPublic Domain Document
I heard of your coming when I was many sleeps away I knew that you had come to do good to me and my people. I looked for the benefits which would last forever, and so my face shines with joy as I look upon you.
My people have never first drawn a bow or fired a gun against the whites. It was you who sent out the first soldier, and it was we who sent out the second.
blue dressed soldiers and the Utes came from out of the night when it was dark and still, and for campfires, they lit our lodges. Instead of hunting game, they killed my braves and the warriors of the tribe cut short their hair for the dead.
The Comanches are not weak and blind like the pups of a dog when seven sleeps old. They are strong and farsighted like grown horses. We took their road and went on it. The white women cried, and our women laughed.
But there are things which you have said to me which I did not like. They were not sweet like sugar, but bitter like gourds. You said that you wanted to put us on a reservation, to build us houses and to make us Medicine Lodges. I do not want them.
I was born upon the prairie where the wind blew free, and there was nothing to break the light of the sun. I was born where there were no enclosures, and where everything drew free breath. I want to die there, and not within walls.
I know every stream and every wood between the Rio Grande and the Arkansas. I have hunted and lived over the country. I lived like my fathers before me, and like them I lived happily.
Do not ask us to give up the buffalo for the sheep. The young men have heard talk of this, and it has made them sad and angry. Do not speak of it any more. The white man has the country we loved and we only wish to wander on the prairie until we die.
Any good thing you say to me shall not be forgotten. I shall carry it as near to my heart as my children, and it shall be as often on my tongue as the name of the Great Spirit.
I want no blood upon my land to stain the grass. I want it all clear and pure, and I wish it so, that all who go through among my people may find peace when they come in, and leave it when they go out.
- Ten Bears of the Yapparika Comanche