Showing posts with label Kansas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kansas. Show all posts

Covered Bridges in Kansas


Covered bridges, which date back to the 19th century in the U.S., were built for the prosaic purpose of protecting wooden bridges from the elements, but they've become a favorite must-see destination for connoisseurs of the historic and the scenic. The 1995 movie, "The Bridges of Madison County," as well as the bestselling novel on which it was based, brought a boost in popularity to covered bridge tours nationwide -- but unlike Iowa, where the story is set, Kansas doesn't have many historic covered bridges of its own. All of its 19th-century bridges are gone, and what bridges remain date back no further than the 1970s.

The Bridges of Southeast Kansas

  • Butler County is home to the Riverside Bridge, in El Dorado's Riverview Park. The covered section of this bridge, built in 2004, spans 40 feet across the Walnut River. The entire bridge is 136 feet long, with uncovered sections of 48 feet long at each end. El Dorado also has a covered walkway, built in 2007, which extends about half a mile from the junction of Main Street to the railroad bridge on the south side of Central Avenue. Mound City, in Linn County, has the 18-foot covered Jayhawk Walk Bridge, located in Mound City Historical Park. Although many of the buildings in the park date back to the 19th and early 20th centuries, the bridge itself was built in 1997.

The Bridges of Northeast Kansas

  • Northeast Kansas has the highest concentration of covered bridges found in the state -- a grand total of five, including the oldest, Johnson County's Whispering Hills Bridge, built in 1970. Douglas County's Don Jones Bridge, which crosses a tributary of Coal Creek, dates back to 1972, and Jefferson County's Oak Holler Bridge was constructed in 1971. Jefferson County is also home to King's Bridge and the Vernon Robb Bridge, both dating from 2000. The latter has the distinction of being the only two-span covered bridge in the state. Shawnee County's 60-foot Ted Ensley Bridge is the newcomer of the bunch, developed as an addition to Topeka's Ensley Gardens in 2004.
  • In western Kansas water is scarce and bridges are few. Many of its early bridges were nothing more than low cement culverts placed in creek beds, and did not even span the creeks from bank to bank. This part of the state can only claim one covered bridge, a small covered walking bridge that spans a section of pathway around Lake Atwood, which is located in the northwest corner of the state about 30 miles north of Colby. The bridge is of wooden construction and is painted red.

The Lost Bridges of Leavenworth County

  • Leavenworth County, in northeastern Kansas, was once home to two covered bridges that now live on only in a few old photographs. Not much is known about the Jarbalo Bridge, other than a brief mention in an old pamphlet put out by the Leavenworth County Historical Society and Museum. While the pamphlet's date is unknown, it mentions an article about this bridge that had recently appeared in the "Mail and Breeze," a newspaper that was published between the 1880s and 1930s. A photograph of this bridge in the Kansas Historical Society archives dates from the 1930s. The Springdale covered Bridge, documented in several photos taken by the Historic American Buildings Survey and currently held by the Library of Congress, was at one point the state's sole surviving covered bridge. It was built around 1859 and repaired in 1946, but was struck by lightning and burned in 1958 to disappear for good from the Kansas landscape.

Ghost Tours in Fort Scott, Kansas


Fort Scott's storied and sometimes violent history dates back to the compound's founding in 1842. The outpost's horse soldiers played a strategic role in protecting pioneers along the Santa Fe and Oregon Trails during the "Bleeding Kansas" conflict, the Civil War and railroad development. It appears not everyone involved in the shuttered fort's history desired to leave. Many who have toured the fort encountered an array of ghostly residents.

Meet Fort Scott's Ghosts

  • Ghosts reportedly appear regularly at Fort Scott -- keep an eye open while touring for figures dressed in period clothing. Apparitions of Civil War soldiers are said to haunt the courtyards, cell blocks and stables. The Officer Quarters are thought to be haunted by an officer who inadvertently shot himself as he approached the building, then died in his wife's arms. The wife's ghost has also made appearances at this building. Following the fort's closure, the Officer Quarters and adjacent Free State Hotel both housed orphans. Visitors report hearing these long-dead children playing in the two buildings. At least one ghost has taken up permanent residence at the hotel. At the stroke of midnight each night, it's reported that an apparition is seen peering out one of the hotel windows.

Dolly the Trolley Tours

  • Board Dolly the Trolley at the Fort Scott Visitor Center for narrated tours of the haunted Fort Scott National Historic Site and other landmarks. Locals share the town's colorful legends during this 50-minute tour. The Dolly tours also showcase the first National Cemetery and area mansions. Tours run from March through December; in the past, Dolly ghost tours held in October have attracted ghost hunters. Check with the Fort Scott Chamber of Commerce and Visitor Center for seasonal schedules.

Park Service Tours

  • Meet the ghosts of Fort Scott on your own terms during a self-guided tour of the site. The National Park Service manages Fort Scott's 20 historic buildings, parade grounds and tallgrass prairie. Admission for a ghost hunt is totally free. Start the expedition by getting acquainted with the fort layout and history via an audio-visual show presented at the Infantry Barracks Museum. You may also wish to stop at the Visitor Center for additional information. Allow four hours to explore the entire complex. Be alert: Visitors have reported talking with costumed people believed to be staff, but later discovered these individuals did not exist. Hour-long guided fort tours are available throughout the summer months. Check at the historic site's Visitor Center for the seasonal schedule.

Dial-A-Ghost

  • The National Park Service also offers a 13-minute cell phone tour of Fort Scott for your use before, during, or after your visit. The tour showcases 12 of the compound's 20 buildings and the fort's contribution to American history. There's no charge; just call 1-620-921-3117. It's also possible to download the tour script from the National Park Service Fort Scott website.