What is it? An Object From the Harvey County Courthouse

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

Our exhibit, 50 Years of Service: the Harvey County Courthouse will open on Saturday, March 21, 2015. Although this exhibit has a lot of photos, it was really difficult to find actual objects to include.

We did find a few, and the photo below is a detail of one of the objects in the exhibit. It looks like  some sort of animal devouring something. It is metal and very heavy.

Detail of Harvey County District Court Seal, ca. 1906.  HCHM Collection

Detail of Harvey County District Court Seal, ca. 1906. HCHM Collection.

 

Harvey County District Seal, ca. 1906.  HCHM Collection.

Harvey County District Seal, ca. 1906. HCHM Collection.

This seal would have been used on official District Court documents.

 

Imprint from the Harvey County District Court Seal.

Imprint from the Harvey County District Court Seal.

 

To read more about Harvey County Courthouses see,  https://hchm.org/courthouse1888/ and watch for future posts.

The exhibit, on-line exhibit and oral histories are funded in part by a grant from the Kansas Humanities Council, a non-profit cultural organization promoting understanding of the history, traditions, and ideas that shape our lives and build community.

An Unusually Warm and Humid Day: March 13, 1990

We welcome Libby Albers, Director at the Hesston Public Library, as a guest blogger this week. To commemorate the 25th Anniversary of the tornado that struck Reno, Harvey and Marion Counties, the Hesston Public Library has worked to preserve the photos, letters, videos and other material related to the storm. This post will highlight some of the project and history of the tornado of March 13, 1990.

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by Libby Albers, Director, Hesston Public Library

This year, 2015, marks twenty-five years since a series of fatal tornadoes swept across south-central Kansas. As part of this important anniversary, the Hesston Public Library has digitized the photographs, personal reflections, letters, videos and other documents collected after the storm. The Digitized Special Collections can be viewed at: http://hesston.digitalsckls.info or via the library’s website: hesstonpubliclibrary.com.

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So much has been written about the outbreak of tornadoes of March 13, 1990: news articles, scientific papers, disaster response papers, entire books (1). The “Hesston Outbreak” not only refers to the F5 tornado that cut through Hesston, KS, but the entire storm system that spanned six states.

http://www.crh.noaa.gov/images/ict/hesston/march13outbreak.jpg

http://www.crh.noaa.gov/images/ict/hesston/march13outbreak.jpg

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 In Hesston, Kansas, it was unusually warm and humid for a day in March.

Before the bell rang, an elementary school teacher chatted with a neighbor across the street. “Somebody is sure in for it tonight,” the neighbor remarked as they discussed the strange heat of the morning.

The preschool teacher, Ms. Judy, also thought the warm weather was an ominous sign.  On the spur of the moment she decided to do a tornado drill with her young pupils.

 Many high school students had traveled to Topeka for “Close-Up Kansas,” while the Junior High Band had gone to Lyons for a band contest.

 A young couple snapped some photos of the sky while innocently cloud watching, imagining animals and characters in the racing along the horizon.

 The weather services already warned of potentially severe storms for the day.

** At 4:34pm a tornado touched down in Pretty Prairie, KS, about 50 miles southwest of Hesston. **

The storm was moving slowly allowing storm spotters to relay information back to the weather service.

 The tornado was moving slowly, but Hesston was projected as its destination. A couple of off-duty first-responders hopped in their pickup truck and decided to do take some field observations.

 ** At 5:00 pm the storm hit Burrton, toppling a chimney of the Fisher home, killing young Lucas who was sheltering with his family in their basement. **

 The local teens had gathered at the Pizza Hut along Lincoln Boulevard to eat and hang out after school.

 ** The tornado sirens in town were screaming.  “By 5:37 p.m. the sirens had already blown three times in Hesston. Unfortunately, loud sirens do not ward off tornadoes like evil spirits” (Herzer, 1990). **

 Hesston College staff were desperately trying to get students to take the warning seriously and take cover. A few residents still stood outside and stared at the approaching black wall, sure it would turn.

 Donnie had stayed late at Kropf Lumber to get the evening’s delivery put up so that it wouldn’t get wet. He couldn’t help watching the black cloud in the west. The tornado seemed to be standing still but getting larger.

graham45

“Looking east on Ruesser from beside W. Roupp home” Graham, Duane A., Oatman, Emily, and Graham Productions, “Graham Slide 3-13-90 #45,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/61.

 

"March 1990 Hesston Kansas tornado" by The Wichita Eagle - http://www.crh.noaa.gov/ict/?n=hesston. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:March_1990_Hesston_Kansas_tornado.jpg#/media/File:March_1990_Hesston_Kansas_tornado.jpg

“March 1990 Hesston Kansas tornado” by The Wichita Eagle – http://www.crh.noaa.gov/ict/?n=hesston. Licensed under Public Domain

Dean had just picked his kids up from their grandma’s house and arrived home.  He still had his video camera with him and trained it on the storm.

(If link below does not work, please copy and paste to view the video)

http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/files/original/3/462/Dean_Alison_Video.mp4?video

 http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/462

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 As the tornado moved into Hesston, it increased to F5 intensity. It appeared to head straight for Hesston College and the surrounding retirement communities before a microburst, a powerful downdraft of air, push the track slightly to the north.

screenshot

Source: screen shot from news coverage video.

Storm Damage

Goodyear, Stephen C., “Goodyear photo #87,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/438.

Goodyear, Stephen C., “Goodyear photo #87,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/438.

"Trash at east end of Ruesser St."  Graham, Duane A., Oatman, Emily, and Graham Productions, “Graham Slide 3-13-90 #50,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/66.

“Trash at east end of Ruesser St.”
Graham, Duane A., Oatman, Emily, and Graham Productions, “Graham Slide 3-13-90 #50,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/66.

"Looking SE over rubble at Swartzendrubers Weld Shop" Graham, Duane A., Oatman, Emily, and Graham Productions, “Graham Slide 3-14-90 #017,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/78.

“Looking SE over rubble at Swartzendrubers Weld Shop”
Graham, Duane A., Oatman, Emily, and Graham Productions, “Graham Slide 3-14-90 #017,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/78.

That no one was killed within the town of Hesston seems unfathomable.  Heartbreakingly, the storm took the lives of Ruth Voth of Goessel and young Lucas Fisher of Burton as they sheltered from the weather.

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There are thousands of stories from people who rode out the storm, who volunteered with the massive cleanup effort, who donated their time and supplies to help families rebuild.

Within four days the piles of debris had been cleared and on day five framing for the first house started to go back up.

"Truck load of house parts going to city dump."  Graham, Duane A., Oatman, Emily, and Graham Productions, “Graham Slide 3-17-90 #03,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/109.

“Truck load of house parts going to city dump.” Graham, Duane A., Oatman, Emily, and Graham Productions, “Graham Slide 3-17-90 #03,” Hesston Public Library, accessed March 13, 2015, http://hesston.digitalsckls.info/items/show/109.

Hesston, Kansas would continue to grow and thrive beyond the rubble of March 13, 1990.

 Sources:

The Most Complete and Convenient Court House in the State: Harvey County’s First Courthouse

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

The current Harvey County Courthouse is 50 years old in 2015-2016. To mark the occasion, our exhibit, Fifty Years of Service: The Harvey County Courthouse will open March 21, 2015. This blog post will highlight some of the other buildings that have served as a courthouse over the years.

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Do you know where the first Harvey County courthouse was located?

For most of us, the picture that comes to mind is of the 1906 structure, but before that . . . where was the courthouse located?

There have actually been several courthouse locations.  The first place to house the “County Offices” was the Johnson Building located at the corner of Main and Broadway, but by 1873 the the offices were located in a building owned by B.C.Arnold on Main Street.  From 1875-1880, the offices were located on the second floor of the Hamill Building at 513 Main.    In the 1885 and 1887 City Directories, the “County Offices” were located at the corner of east Broadway and north Main in the Masonic Building.  The County Jail was on Main between 7th and 8th.

The Masonic Building, 700 N. Main, housed the courthouse from 1880-1888 and 1897-1906. Photo ca. 1880

The Masonic Building, 700 N. Main, housed the courthouse from 1880-1888 and 1897-1906. Photo ca. 1880

A push was made to construct a courthouse in 1887. In November 1887, the bond issue for a new courthouse for Harvey County failed to pass.

The Bretch brothers, Samuel, William and John, were successful businessmen in Harvey County and later Sedgwick County. They proposed a solution to the need for a courthouse.   They would construct a three story building that would serve as a courthouse.

bretchheadline 001

The Newton Evening Kansan praised them for “coming to the rescue with a proposition to erect a suitable building which the county should lease for a courthouse for five years.”

Bretch Building Drawing Newton Evening Kansan, 28 July 1888

The new building was designed by architect Willliam L. Ross.

A newspaper article from the July 28, 1888 Newton Evening Kansan described the new Harvey County Courthouse as “one of the most complete and convenient courthouses in the state.”  The building cost around $30,000 and was “one of the best arranged buildings of its kind in the state.”

The first floor housed the treasurer’s office, the county clerk and the commissioners’ offices  and a “double vault” on the left.  On the right were the offices of the sheriff, register and probate judge.

Layout of first floor of Bretch Building.

Layout of first floor of Bretch Building.

A courtroom and related offices were located on the second floor.

Layout of second floor of Bretch Building.

Layout of second floor of Bretch Building.

For several years the “handsome building,” a “monument to the industry and enterprise of . . . two young men,” served as a courthouse for Harvey County.

Bretch Building,  811 Main, Newton, 1910.

Bretch Building, 811 Main, Newton, 1910.

The Bretch Building was the county courthouse until 1896.  The offices then moved back to the second floor of the Masonic Building at the corner of Main & Broadway.

The Bretch Brothers continued to operate a wholesale and retail grocery business at the 811 location.

Bretch Brothers Advertisement from the Newton Kansan, 1888

Bretch Brothers Advertisement from the Newton Kansan, 1888

Bretch Brothers Wholesale & Retail Grocery , 811-813 Main, opened in 1881 from the Western Journal of Commerce, 1901.

Bretch Brothers Wholesale & Retail Grocery , 811-813 Main, opened in 1881 from the Western Journal of Commerce, 1901.

Bethel Commercial College

The Bethel Commercial College was located on the third floor of the Bretch Building beginning in about 1913.  Charles N. Parsons was the superintendent.

Newton Business College

In 1917, Parsons is listed as the principal of the Newton Business College located on the third floor of the Bretch Building, 811 Main, Newton.

Newton Business College, Newton Buick Agency, Goodrich Tires, Nicodemus Garage, 811 -813 Main, Newton, 1917.

Newton Business College, Newton Buick Agency, Goodrich Tires, Nicodemus Garage, 811 -813 Main, Newton, 1917.

Parsons Apartments

The upper levels of the building were converted to apartments in the early 1920s.  C.N. Parsons was the manager.

parsonsapartment-1

Bretch Building, 811-813 N. Main, Newton, 1993

Bretch Building, 811-813 N. Main, Newton, 1993

Sadly, this structure was found to be unsafe in the early 1990s  and was torn down.

Demolition of Bretch Building, 811-813 N. Main, Newton,1994

Demolition of Bretch Building, 811-813 N. Main, Newton,1994

Sources:

  • Newton Evening Kansan, 28 July 1888, “Harvey County’s Handsome New Court House.
  • Evening Kansan Republican 15 Feb. 1905, “Mrs. William L. Ross,” p. 4.
  • Evening Kansan Republican 9 Feb. 1911, “William L Ross Passes Beyond,” p. 1
  • Western Journal of Commerce, 1901.
  • 50th Anniversary Ed. of the Newton Kansan 22 August 1922.
  • Newton City Directories, 1885, 1887, 1902-1903.
  • Voter Registration Book, 1882-1902, HCHM Archives.
  • Western Journal of Commerce: Souvenir Edition, Newton Kansas,1901.
  • Newton Kansan 50th Anniversary Edition, 22 August 1922.
  • United States Federal Census: 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910.