Kansas - School-Age

Kansas

Kansas Flag Map

34th State (January 29, 1861), great plains U.S.

State Abbreviation: KS

Capital: Topeka

Origin of name: Named after the Indians that the Sioux called the Konza, meaning "people of the south wind".

Motto: Ad Astra Per Aspera (To the Stars Through Difficulties)

Nickname: Sunflower State, Wheat State, Jayhawker State, and Midway, USA

Red Wine Grape: Chambourcin

Reptile: Ornate Box Turtle

Soil: Harney Loam Silt

Song: Home on the Range

Tree: Cottonwood Tree

White Wine Grape: Vignoles

Kansas Video


 

 

Things to Know

Senators from Kansas.

Kansas became a U.S. territory in 1803, as part of the Louisiana Purchase when the United States bought land from France.

In the southeastern corner of Kansas is part of the Ozark Plateau.

The Kansas–Nebraska Act of 1854, it was to organize the remaining territories of the Louisiana Purchase before admission to the Union as states. It had the idea of popular sovereignty that any new state added to the U.S. should be able to decide for itself whether it was a slave state or a free state, This lead to tension and violence. Violence erupted in the Kansas territory and the territory became known as "Bleeding Kansas".

Fort Leavenworth, in northeast Kansas is the oldest continuously operating U.S. Army fort west of the Mississippi River.

Kansas is the number one wheat producing state in the United States.

Arkansas River, Kansas River, Missouri River, Republican River, Smoky Hill River

Famous Kansans

Gwendolyn Brooks poet (1917-).

Eva Jessye (1895-1992), musician.

Dr. Samuel Crumbine (1890-1954), Health Crusader
He changed the way we live today.

Walter P. Chrysler (1875-1940)
Auto manufacturer and founder of the Chrysler Corporation.

Frank and Dan Carney (founders of Pizza Hut)
Two brothers who opened the first Pizza Hut restaurant on June 15, 1958 in Wichita.

Emmett Kelly , clown(1898-1979)

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