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Kansas is a Midwestern state
in the Central United States. The state is named after the Kansas River that
flows through it, which in turn derived its name from the Siouan word Kansa
meaning "People of the south winds."
Located in the heartland of
the country, Kansas is home to the geographical
center of the contiguous United
States. Historically home to large numbers of Native Americans who hunted
buffalo there, the state was first settled by white Americans in the 1850s.
Beginning in 1854, abolitionists from New England and pro-slavery settlers from
neighboring Missouri rushed to the territory to determine if Kansas would become
a free state. Known as Bleeding Kansas, the state was a hotbed of violence and
chaos in its early days as these forces collided. On January 29, 1861 Kansas
entered the Union as a free state. After the Civil War, the population of Kansas
exploded after wave of immigrants turned the prairie into productive farmland.
Today, Kansas is one of the most productive agricultural states, leading the
nation in wheat production.
The state, lying in the
great central plain of the United States, has a generally flat or undulating
surface, and on a large scale appears almost perfectly flat.
The Missouri River
forms nearly 75 miles of the state's northeastern boundary. The Kansas River,
formed by the junction of the Smoky Hill and Republican rivers at
appropriately-named Junction City, joins the Missouri at Kansas City, after a
course of 150 miles across the northeastern part of the state. The Arkansas
River, rising in Colorado, flows with a tortuous course for nearly 500 miles
across three-fourths of the state.
Kansas is the nation's
second largest producer of beef cattle, behind only Texas. Kansas is one of the
most productive agricultural states, leading the
nation in wheat production.
Kansas ranks 8th in U.S. oil production. Production has experienced a steady,
natural decline as it becomes increasingly difficult to extract oil over time.
Kansas also ranks 8th in U.S. natural gas production. Similar to oil,
production has steadily declined since the mid-1990’s with the depletion of the
Hugoton natural gas field—the state's largest field which extends into Oklahoma
and Texas.
Kansas has a reputation as a
progressive state with many firsts in legislative initiatives—it was the first
state to institute a system of workers compensation (1910). Kansas was also one
of the first states to permit women's suffrage in 1912. Suffrage in all states
would not be guaranteed until ratification of the
19th Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution in 1920. The council-manager government was adopted by many larger
Kansas cities in the years following World War I while many American cities were
being run by political machines or organized crime. Kansas was also at the
center of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, a 1954 Supreme Court decision
that banned racially segregated schools throughout the U.S.
Since the 1960s, Kansas has
grown more socially conservative. The 1990s brought new restrictions on
abortion, the defeat of prominent Democrats, i ncluding Dan Glickman, and the
Kansas State Board of Education's infamous 1999 decision to eliminate the theory
of evolution from the state teaching standards, a decision that was later
reversed. In 2005, voters accepted a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex
marriage. The next year, the state passed a law setting a minimum age for
marriage at 15 years. On November 8, 2005, The Kansas State Board of Education,
at the urging of intelligent design advocates, voted to add criticisms of
evolution to the state science standards. However, the Manhattan-Ogden school
board has voted to reject the standards, and several board members who supported
those standards were defeated for reelection in 2006.
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Fast Facts
Population, 2005 - 2,744,687
Capital City - Topeka
Area - 82282 sq.mi, 15th
Border States -
Colorado, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma
Largest Cities -
Wichita, Overland Park, Kansas City
Highest Point - Mt.
Sunflower; 4,039 feet
Lowest Point - Verdigris
River; 680 feet
Area Codes - 316 - 620 - 785
- 913
Motto - Ad astra per aspera
"To the stars
through difficulties"
Time zones
Most of state - Central:
UTC-6/-5
4 western counties -
Mountain: UTC-7/-6
State sales tax - 5.3%
Nickname - Sunflower State
Flower - Sunflower
Web site - www.kansas.gov
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