Grow, Sell & Eat Local!

Our County's development was highly influenced by the Indian tribes native to this area as well as those brought here by government treaties. The area that became Franklin County had the most immigrant Indians of all counties in Kansas. Franklin County was home to Pawnee, Missouri, Muncie, Osage, Ottawa, Kansa, Teton, Chippewa, Shawnee, Sac, Fox, and serveral smaller tribes. These tribes were given grants and reservations out of land of the Louisiana Purchase. Indians lived in this area for thousands of years before European explorers, traders and settlers arrived. French explorers first began to penetrate the area now known as eastern Kansas around the time of the establishment of the Province of Louisiansa. The French named the river that flows though Franklin County, the Marais des Cygnes, which means "marsh of the swans." The river served as a route for trappers headed west. The French traders of the 1600s forged good relations with the Indians during this time period. In 1801, the Spanish gave the territory back to the French who sold it to the United States as part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. The Ottawas became one of the tribes with a great deal of influence on the county. The word Ottawa means to trade, and that is what this tribe did. They supplied two thirds of France's New World supply of fur during the 1600s. The British offered more supplies for their furs so the Ottawa sided with the British during the Revolutionary War. When America won, the Ottawas were foreced to give up their homes. In 1832, the Ottawa Indians gave up their Ohio lands to the U.S. government in exchange for 34,000 acres of what is now Franklin County Kansas. Joseph Badger King, an Ottawan who was forcibly removed from Ohio to Kansas and eventually relocated to Oklahoma once wrote: "It was indeed a beautiful country which we had left in Ohio but as I recall now, the new land in eastern Kansas was not a whit less attractive and pleasing. The swelling upland prairies and wooded valleys were not only beautiful to the eye, but they were teeming with wild game, which of course, made it rich to the Indians' way of thinking." The first permanent white settlers to make their home in Franklin County were the Rev. Jothan Meeker and his wife, Eleanor, American Baptist missionaries assigned to help the Ottawas. The Rev. Meeker founded the City of Ottawa as an Indian Mission. Ottawa was incorporated as a city on Nov. 23, 1867, and still serves as the Franklin County seat. When the Ottawas signed a treaty moving them to Oklahoma in 1867, settlers flocked in and the town of Ottawa prospered. The land was well suited for farming and ranching. Development was spured by the coming of the railroads in 1868. A period of economic expansion resuted in construction of homes and storefronts, many of which are now restored to their original beauty and grace the pages of the National Registry of Historic Places. The nationally famous Chautauqua Assemblies were near the banks of the Marais des Cygnes and played a central role in the development of the area. Ottawa wasn't the only community prospering in Franklin County. Centropolis, was formed by Indian agent Perry Fuller in 1856. Le Loup in northeastern Franklin County, was an early shipping point for grain, hay and stock on the now defunct Southern Kansas Railroad, which later became the Santa Fe. Pomona, now known for its lake, is situated 10 miles west of Ottawa and is one of the most scenic regions in the state. This land was once owned by the Sac and Fox Indians. The city's founder, John H. Whetstone, chose the name Pomona for the goddess of fruit. Whetstone planted 30,000 fruit trees and established the Pomona Fruit Company, which shipped jellies and preserves all over the United States. Princeton, 6 miles south of Ottawa, was a stop for the Leavenworth, Lawrence and Galveston Railroad company. Rantoul, in east-central Franklin County, was named for Robert Rantoul, a Massachusetts abolitionist and is near Brown's Station, the land of John Brown's sons. Richmond, a railroad town laid out in 1870. Wellsville, in the northeast corner of the county, was known as the "English Blue Grass Capitol" of the world for its production of grass seed. Williamsburg, in the southwest part of the county was established as a railroad town in 1868. Lane, named for the charismatic early Kansas politician, U.S. Senator and General, James Henry Lane, grew from a ford on the Pottawatomie Creek called "Dutch Henry's Crossing". John Brown's Pottawatomie Massacre took place just north of Lane.




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Orscheln Parking Lot, Ottawa, KS 66067


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