Driving across Kansas
A Guide to I-70
Ted T. Cable and Wayne A. Maley
May 2003
192 pages, 75 photographs and sketches, 5-1/2 x 8-1/2
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1260-4, $12.95
Named "Outstanding Interpretive Site Publication
for 2003" by the National Association for Interpretation (six-state
region)
In
his introduction to Dan Dancers The Four Seasons of Kansas,
bestselling author William Least Heat-Moon reflects upon the Great
Kansas Passage of those who race their cars westward across Interstate
70 without trying to understand the truth of the place. Ted Cable
and Wayne Maley come to the rescue of those bored and blinkered
speed-driven travelers with a new guide that will expand and enrich
their understanding of a state whose history, in Heat-Moons
words, is a tumbling of guns, torches, hatchets, and knives.
Guided by Cable and Maley, the historical landscapes of I-70 come
back to life, recalling landmarks and legacies relating to pioneer
movements and Indian dispossession, army outposts and great bison
hunts, cowboys and cattle trails, the struggles over slavery and
womens rights, and the emergence of major wheat, beef, oil,
and water industries.
Their guide parcels out information, mile-marker by mile-marker,
in a way thats equally accessible to westbound and eastbound
users alike. For example:
85 Grinnell In 1872, Grinnell had two large sod buildings
for drying buffalo meat. The air was so dry here that meat could
be stripped off in layers and hung to dry. The dried meat would
be preserved and not spoil. This was critical in the days before
coolers and refrigerators. People called this meat jerked
meat because of the way it was torn from the buffalos carcass.
Today at gas stations or convenience stores along I-70 you have
the opportunity to buy similar jerked meat in the form of beef jerky.
117 Capturing an Iron Horse In this area, along the
railroad track paralleling I-70 to the north, Indians tried in 1868
to capture a locomotive alive by taking telegraph wire,
doubling it back and forth several times, and stretching it across
the track with an Indian or two holding each end. Needless to say,
the iron horse running at full steam, tore through the
snare like a rampaging buffalo through a spider web.
298 Fort Riley Ft. Rileys cavalry school became
the only one in the United States and largest in the world. Horse
soldiers were trained until 1950 when all the units became mechanized.
Because of the emphasis on horses, the fort produced the U.S. Olympic
equestrian team for every Olympics between 1894 and 1947.
194 The Clock House The house was built from a kit
in 1905. The initial owners ordered the kit from Sears Roebuck.
All the parts, including window glass and doors, were shipped by
rail to Lecompton, then hauled the final six miles by horse and
wagon to this site. . . . In 1908 it won the national Farm House
of the Year award.
Like the ever popular Roadside Kansas, Driving across Kansas
will reward the observant traveler with a treasure trove of details
sure to increase his or her appreciation for the great Sunflower
State.
Interstate 70 is the main street of Kansas.
This mile-by-mile guide describes the history, plants and animals,
landscape, and agriculture along I-70, from the High Plains of
western Kansas to the Missouri River, and everything in between.--Rex
Buchanan, coauthor of Roadside Kansas: A Travelers
Guide to Its Geology and Landmarks
Effectively combines practical information with history
and geography in a manner that will appeal to anyone who drives
I-70. A highly readable narrative companion for journeys across
Kansas.--Virgil W. Dean, editor of Kansas History:
A Journal of the Central Plains
TED T. CABLE is a professor of Park Management and Conservation
at Kansas State University and author of Interpretation for the
21st Century.
WAYNE MALEY is the director of special projects for the
American Society of Agricultural Engineers and the author of
A Companions Guide for Travelling I-80: Iowa Really Isnt
Boring.
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