Kansas Essays

  • The Kansas-Nebraska Act Of Kansas

    1029 Words  | 3 Pages

    during the time of Bleeding Kansas. In 1854, the Kansas-Nebraska Act was made to allow each territory to decide for themselves on the concern of slavery by using popular sovereignty. Even though the idea of popular sovereignty was fair, many proslavery men crossed the borders of Kansas and voted illegally, trying to change the result. Kansas' government was changed too. Also, violence broke out several times during Bleeding Kansas. Yet, after all of the violence, Kansas' issue with slavery would finally

  • Fossil Discoveries in Kansas

    1135 Words  | 3 Pages

    Fossil Discoveries in Kansas Did you know, in the state of Oklahoma it is against the law to either hunt or catch whales? Sounds sort of ridiculous when you think logically about it, but according to paleontologists it isn’t that far fetched. Over 65 million years ago Kansas, including the whole Midwest Region of North America from the Arctic Circle to the Gulf of Mexico, was covered by the Sea. Due to the continental uplifts of the mountain ranges in North America during the Pangaea stage

  • The Death Penalty in Kansas

    2196 Words  | 5 Pages

    will discuss the history of the death penalty in the state of Kansas, and some of our most famous cases. In doing so, I will show how the state and the federal government have constantly struggled to come up with a reasonable solution for an extremely controversial issue. Furthermore, I will discuss the cost of the death penalty in the state and how those costs are affecting our next generation of leaders. On a fall night in 1906 Kansas Governor Edward Hotch sent a letter to Governor Fletcher D.

  • Essay On Kansas Places

    1568 Words  | 4 Pages

    place that is unique to Kansas (city, town, county, lake, river area, region (i.e., Flint Hills, northeast Kansas) or a building or attraction. • Give historically and/or currently accurate details about the place. • Explain how the place is important to Kansas. Theme: “Kansas Places” Describe a place that is unique to Kansas and explain its importance to the state of Kansas. A place could be a city, town, county, lake, river area, region (i.e., Flint Hills, northeast Kansas) or a building. Descriptions

  • Descriptive Essay On Kansas

    1142 Words  | 3 Pages

    One might assume Kansas is merely nothing but fields. Endless fields of goldenrod-colored wheat swaying gracefully with the soft wind. Some may also think of Sunflowers. Millions and millions of tiny yellow specks filled with fuzzy bees doing their natural work, giving life to the wonderful little things, but no. Kansas is filled with bright, busy cities and streets too, people from across the globe, and places from museums to small local coffee shops. Kansas is certainly a special state, propped

  • The History of Kansas

    2517 Words  | 6 Pages

    The state of Kansas was tossed back and forth between the French, British, Spanish and Americans. France surrendered its North American possessions at the end of the French and Indian War, also known as the Seven Year War. New Orleans and the Louisiana Territory west of the Mississippi were in Spain’s possession in 1762. French territories east of the Mississippi, including Canada, were ceded to Britain. Napoleon, who took power in 1799, aimed to gain control back over North American territory. As

  • Bleeding Kansas

    1444 Words  | 3 Pages

    Bleeding Kansas The Compromise of 1850 brought relative calm to the nation. Though most blacks and abolitionists strongly opposed the Compromise, the majority of Americans embraced it, believing that it offered a final, workable solution to the slavery question. Most importantly, it saved the Union from the terrible split that many had feared. People were all too ready to leave the slavery controversy behind them and move on. But the feeling of relief that spread throughout the country would prove

  • Bloody Kansas Essay

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bloody Kansas Bloody Kansas, or Bleeding Kansas, is the term describing the violence which occurred during the settling of the Kansas territory. The phrase was first coined by antislavery publicists for the New York Tribune. During the Civil War, Illinois Senator Stephen Douglas, wishing to lure trans-continental railroad developers to build a rail system ending in Chicago in order to gain more profit for his own state, was halted in his efforts by Federal Law, which required him to first organize

  • Wichita, Kansas and Tornados

    571 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wichita, Kansas is a moderately sized city, population just over 372,000 (www.city-data.com, 2011) in the heart of America and was established in 1870 at the junction of the Arkansas Rivers. The railroad arrived in 1872 and the flow of beef and grain from the region to the east began. Today the city is known for another modern transportation enterprise: aviation. The first Cessna Comet airplane was manufactured there in 1917 (www.wichita.gov, 2011). Currently there are many airports and landing fields

  • Bleeding Kansas Dbq

    1001 Words  | 3 Pages

    Kansas became the battleground over the slavery question from 1855-1861 causing bloody feuds which would strike an era known as “Bleeding Kansas”. Due to the repeal of the Missouri Compromise northern states become furious and came pouring in from all around to help decide the destiny of Kansas. This decision would soon create violence between three different political parties who fought for control. As the decision drew to close violence will not only erupt on the street between citizens but in

  • A Time Of Change:The 1880’s and 1890’s Kansas

    2583 Words  | 6 Pages

    and 1890’s Kansas As history cascades through an hourglass, the changing, developmental hands of time are shrouded throughout American history. This ever-changing hourglass of time is reflected in the process of maturation undertaken by western America in the late nineteenth century. Change, as defined by Oxford’s Dictionary, is “To make or become different through alteration or modification.” The notion of change is essential when attempting to unwind the economic make-up of Kansas in the 1880’s

  • Kansas City Baseball Team

    724 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Kansas City Royals are a Major League Baseball team. The Royals are not as old as some of the other major league teams out there. The Royals are young teams that is making things happen in the majors in the past few years but this season is still young so we don’t know as their fan base what to expect from the Kansas City Royals this year. The Royals play in a stadium called Kauffman Stadium. The Royals have won 2 World Series in the franchise history. The Kansas City Royals came to the City

  • The Importance Of The Kansas-Nebraska Act

    2040 Words  | 5 Pages

    Pierce signed the Kansas-Nebraska act, which formed the territories of Kansas and Nebraska. The act effectively nullified the Missouri compromise of 1820, and gave the two new territories an opportunity to choose, through popular vote, whether they would permit or outlaw slavery. Southern slave holders viewed the act as a chance to spread slavery into the new territories and Northern free-staters saw a means to end it. Pro and anti-slavery advocates poured into the new territory of Kansas to help sway

  • Geography: Kansas City

    963 Words  | 2 Pages

    Kansas City is a large city, a major city in one of the largest metropolitan areas of more than two million people on both sides of the Missouri–Kansas border. Kansas City was founded in 1838 at the meeting of the Missouri and Kansas rivers and was incorporated in its present form in 1853. Kansas City, Kansas, is the location of several important battles during the Civil War. The city is well known for its diverse offerings to the musical styles of jazz and blues as well as to its two most noted

  • 1850s Kansas: A Free-Stater's Domestic Struggle

    1509 Words  | 4 Pages

    Bleeding Kansas Catherine is a mother in the 1850’s living on the border of Kansas as a free-stater. Everyday she devotes her time to making sure the house is ship-shape. She works on sewing clothes for her fast growing children, and then spends hours making food so she can keep her family’s bellies full and their faces smiling. Today as she finished her long list of daily chores and began to make dinner, she remembered that her husband said he will be coming home a little late. So she decided to

  • The Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Collapse of the Whig Party and the Rise of the Republican Party

    536 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Collapse of the Whig Party and the Rise of the Republican Party The Kansas-Nebraska act did lead to the collapse of the Whig Party and the rise of the Republican Party; however there are other reasons that contributed to it as well. Firstly the Kansas-Nebraska act played a part in the downfall of the Whig Party. The Kansas-Nebraska act stated that the 36° 30 line would be abolished. It also said that Nebraska would be split up into two territories: Nebraska

  • Cold Weather And Snowstorms In The Winter Of 1880-1881

    625 Words  | 2 Pages

    settlers prepared to protect their livestock. Cattle turned their tails to the wind and "drifted" for miles across the open range until they dropped from hunger or exhaustion. Losses were high, up to 75% in some areas, and consequently some large western Kansas cattle companies were bankrupted. Business and rail traffic were paralyzed for weeks. The force of eleven Union Pacific locomotives was unable to "buck" through and cut in the snow near ...

  • Black Jazz Musicians

    947 Words  | 2 Pages

    has experienced particularly high levels of advancement in Kansas City throughout history. "For a brief period from the late 1920s through the late 1930s, Kansas City was a mecca for Midwestern and southwestern black jazz musicians. Some extraorginary music resulted from the healthy competition and collegiality that grew among musicians of significantly different backgrounds and styles. Among the musicians who marked the sound of Kansas City then were Bill "Count" Basie, Bennie Moten, Lester Young

  • Comparative Analysis: Poem and Song for Sons

    964 Words  | 2 Pages

    Although the poem “Mother to Son” by Langston Hughes and the song “Carry on Wayward Son” by Kansas are different in some ways, such as, the narrator's gender, but they’re similar in many ways. They’re similar in theme, their intended audience (son), and the way the creator use imagery to paint a picture. Kansas’ “Carry on Wayward Son” is told by a male. In the song he says, “ … I was a blind man… I was a madman.” This shows the narrator is a male. This is important because it shows the difference

  • When The Texas Cattle Boom

    667 Words  | 2 Pages

    the railroads in Abilene, Kansas. Joseph McCoy, a stock dealer from Springfield, Illinois, decided a new trail was necessary west of the farms. In 1867, he chose a route that would reach Abilene and the railroads with the least amount of problems. This route was to become well-known as the Chisholm Trail. Jesse Chisholm was a half-breed, a Scotch Cherokee Indian trader, who in 1866 drove a wagon through the Indian territory, known now as Oklahoma, to the Wichita, Kansas, where he had a trading post