Victorian West
Class and Culture in Kansas Cattle Towns
C. Robert Haywood
344 pages, 27 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0477-7, $29.95
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0624-5, $14.95
Picture a Kansas cattletown. What
do you see? Most people see a "Gunsmoke" version of
Dodge City--a dusty frontier town full of thirsty cowboys, gunslingers,
outlaws, and ladies of the evening.
But the "Gunsmoke" version tells only half the story,
according to historian C. Robert Haywood. Two cultures existed
simultaneously in Kansas cattle towns, Haywood writes. Alongside
the Wild West culture of the cattle trailing industry there existed
a highly developed Victorian society, complete with civic activists,
churches, boosterism, small-town politics, and Victorian architecture
to rival that of the east coast.
In Victorian West Haywood examines education, recreation,
social stratification, philanthropy and common community goals
in three Kansas cowtowns--Dodge City, Wichita, and Caldwell.
He finds that the Victorian attitudes of the post-Civil War era
prevailed in Kansas as well as the rest of the nation.
Since the Wild West aspect of cattletown life has been so
heavily stressed in both academic and popular arenas, the development
of Kansas towns as progressive, even elegant Victorian cities,
has been overlooked. But, according to Haywood, life in Kansas
cattletowns was clearly tied to dominant Victorian themes: society
was stratified, Victorian fads were emulated, "fancies"
were coveted, and Victorian manners and morals were part of the
process of refinement.
In Victorian West Haywood relates Victorian themes
like optimism, anxiety, anti-intellectualism, and the commercial
spirit to the Kansas community experience. He also provides a
synthesis of cultural information that places the cowtowns of
Kansas in a broader cultural context.
"Thanks to Haywood's anecdotal and lively style, the
social and recreational panorama beyond the saloons and burlesque
houses comes to life. He has lifted his discussion far beyond
the level of local history and has made an important contribution
not only to our knowledge of Victorian life and culture, but
to American social history as well. This volume will be useful
and appealing not only to students of Kansas and regional history,
but also to those with an interest in the broader national themes
which Haywood ties, most effectively, to the Kansas frontier."--Michael
B. Husband, director, Old Cowtown Museum, Wichita
C. ROBERT HAYWOOD, a third-generation Kansan, is professor
of history emeritus at Washburn University. He is author of several
books including Tough Daisies: Kansas
Humor from "The Lane County Bachelor" to Bob Dole
and Trails South: Wagon-Road Economy in the Dodge City-Panhandle
Region.
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