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Vail (Theodore Newton) Autograph letter signed (“Theo. N Vail”), Mass: “Enclosed I hand you appointment as agent for the State of Kansas, excepting the County of Wyandot. If you will execute and return the within I will then forward duplicate duly executed by this Co.” to Prescott Keys, Concord, Kansas, one page, 8vo, printed letterhead ...
- A Correspondent Named “Allegro”
- The Duel. . . According to ‘Allegro:’ A Short Summary
- The Death of Hugh Anderson: The Duel That Never happened.
In a May 2, 1878 letter to the editor, a “Citizen” reflected on the “old Commonwealth crowd” of editors and reporters mentioning “Allegro who wrote those blood-curdling letters from Newton” and “who ought not be forgotten.” According to the letter, Allegro was a “mild-mannered, gentlemanly fellow, but a beat of the first water.” During the summer o...
Allegro submitted the story entitled “Meeting of the Desperadoes Hugh Anderson, of Texas and Arthur McCluskey of Kansas,” which was printed July 22, 1873. He claimed to be an eyewitness to the event. According to his account, Art McCluskey, the reported brother of Mike McCluskey, who was killed in Newton by Anderson, arrived in Medicine Lodge, Indi...
In December 2014, researcher Douglas Ellison dug deeper into the facts surrounding the “duel to the death” between Art McCluskey and Hugh Anderson in Medicine Lodge. According to Ellison, the story of the duel at Medicine Lodge, Indian Territory was widely discredited in 1873, including in Newton. The editor of the Newton Kansan,H.C. Ashbaugh, had ...
In 1885 Warkentin organized the Newton Milling and Elevator Company, which subsequently became one of the largest in central Kansas. Newton was designated a division point of the Santa Fe Railway in 1873.
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Aug 29, 2014 · One intriguing theory by cowboy poet Neal Torrey, follows Riley to Nebraska and the Dakotas where he reinvented himself as the famous outlaw “Doc” Middleton. Middleton was a slim blond man of quiet nature who had as one of his many aliases “Jim Riley”.
Summary: These two black and white photographs show the Governor of New York, Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning as the Republican candidate for the U.S. vice-presidency in Newton, Kansas. In the first photograph Roosevelt is standing on the rear platform of a train with Kansas Governor William Stanley, and an unidentified gentleman.
Jul 29, 2024 · Kansas Statewide Online Genealogy Records. This table shows links to statewide collections. To find links to collections on the county level, use the county Wiki pages. Some subscription websites listed below can be searched for free at a FamilySearch center or FamilySearch affiliate library.
2" x 2" identical photos (acceptable for passports/other forms of government ID) at this Post Office ™ location. For more passport information, visit the Department of State's website at travel.state.gov
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