Lost Harvey County: An Album

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

Sometimes all that is left is a photograph of a group of children or an obscure mention in a history book, but Harvey County can count at least 17 lost towns since 1871. Some were only on the map for a year or two, boasting a post office and maybe a blacksmith shop. Others, like Annelly, were the site of a school long after the post office and other services had disappeared. Several, like Alta Mill and Zimmerdale, were once thriving, if small, communities. The reasons for their disappearance vary.

Lost Harvey County Map, drawn by Jeanine Stultz, ca. 200.

Lost Harvey County Map, drawn by Jeanine Stultz, ca. 2000. Click to enlarge.

This post is simply a listing of the communities that we know about at this time with the dates of the post office, if available.  Along with the listing are the photos that we have in our collection that have been identified as from that community.

We would welcome any information or photographs on any of these, or other, Harvey County communities.  We have the capability to scan documents and photographs, so a person can keep the original if they want. Watch for future blog posts as information becomes available.

Alta Mills/Valentine, Alta Township

  • Post Office: January 1877 – July 1901
Alta Mill

Alta Mills, ca. 1898

There are actually several articles and a web page focused on the history of the Alta Mill area.

For the story behind the name “Alta,” visit the Mystery of Alta Muse 

Annelly, Richland Township

  • Post Office: August 1885 – December 1921
Annelly School, 1877.

Annelly School, 1877.

Annelly School, June 1987.

Annelly School, Reunion, June 1987.

Braddock, Walton Township

Doyle, Walton Township

Darlington, unknown Harvey County location – likely Darlington Township

  • Post Office : April 1878-October 1873.

Egypt, unknown Harvey County location 

  • Post Office: July 1884 – January 1885
  • One early map has Egypt located in Lake Township, to the south east and slightly below Patterson, with railroad tracks.

Eleanor, Highland Township

  • Post Office: June 1883 – August 1898

Garden City, Garden Township

  • Post Office: August 1872-August 1878

Goldschaar, Newton Township

  • Community established in 1877 by Prussian Mennonites, no Post Office.
  • Goldschaar means “Golden Plowshare.”
goldshaar-1

Goldschaar, 1877.

 

Goldschaar  also has  a well documented history in connection to the three families that initially settled the small village.

Hillside Farm, Halstead Township

  • Post Office: September 1872 – August 1876

McLain, 

  • Post Office: April 1886 – May 1906
Centennial School, 1898, Will Patton, teacher. Located near McLain, Ks

Centennial School, 1898, Will Patton, teacher. Located near McLain, Ks

Mission, Macon Township

Mission ATSF Tower, Harvey County, 1911.

Mission ATSF Tower, Harvey County, 1911.

Patterson, Lake Township

  • Post Office: May 1888-January 1927
patterson-1

Friendship Fundamental Baptist Church, January 1945, Patterson, Ks

Putnam, Sedgwick Township

  • Post Office: May 1891 – June 1907

Sheldon, Pleasant Township

  • Post Office: July 1871 – October 1885 or 1888.  David E. Sheldon postmaster.

Trousdale/Zimmerdale, Emma Township

  • Post Office: November 1893 – September 1906
Zimmerdale School No. 79, 1961.

Zimmerdale School No. 79, 1961.

Zimmerdale  was first known as “Trousdale” after the early settler W.J. Trousdale.  The name was changed to Zimmerdale,  a combination of another family in the area, Zimmerman, and Dale for the Trousdale family.

Lloyd Nebergall tanker at Vicker's Station, Zimmerdale, 1939.

Lloyd Nebergall tanker at Vicker’s Station, Zimmerdale, 1939.

Elevator at Zimmerdale, 1970s.

Elevator at Zimmerdale, 1970s.

Sources:

  • Baughman, Robert.  “Kansas Post Offices” in Lost Harvey County File, Curator’s Office, HCHM.
  • “Lost  Harvey County” File, Curator’s Office.  Contains notes from research by Jeanine Stultz in the early 2000s.
  • HCHM Photo Archives.

Open For Business – Again

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

Note: This post concludes our three part series on the Ragsdale/Knoepker Opera House Fire, January 1, 1915.

It is hard to imagine what Thomas H. McManus thought on the morning of January 1, 1915 after viewing the destruction of his business, for the second time in five months. The Weekly Kansan Republican noted that McManus“had no statement to make . . . He is very much discouraged.”

A heavy loser in the fire that consumed the 500 block of Main in August, McManus was temporarily located in the Opera House while he was rebuilding his store at 516 Main.

 McManus Department Store, 510-512-514, Main, Newton, 1911.

McManus Dept. Store, 1911.

McManus Dept. Store, 1911.

Scene from 4 August 1914, McManus Department Store, 510-512-514, Main, Newton.

mcmanusstore1914

After the August 4, 1914 Fire

mcmanusdetail1914

McManus Dept Store Open For Business Opera Block

According to the newspaper reports after the Opera House fire, he was well stocked with new merchandise.

“The heaviest loser, aside from the owner of the opera block, is T.H. McManus, who has built up the stocks of his department store in this building since the great fire in August, when he was also one of the heaviest losers.  . . the rooms occupied were packed full of new goods.  the store occupied the entire front of the first floor and a part of the second floor.”

Bystanders had been able to rescue “a few armsful of ready-to-wear garments,” McManus’ desk, and the “safe was dug out of the debris.”  Everything else was a loss.

Born in Ireland in the mid-1860s,  Thomas H. McManus had immigrated to the United Sates in the 1880s.  In February 1895, he purchased purchased the dry goods portion of H.M. Walt’s Newton store.  A year later, McManus married a Kansas girl by the name of Bernice.  They had at least two daughters,  A. Irene, born in 1897, and Bernice, who died at eleven months.  For a short time, his brother Bernard, was also part of the business.

T.H. McManus, 1914

T.H. McManus, 1914

Following the opera house fire, the Weekly Kansan Republican had words of encouragement for McManus.

“He has overcome great obstacles . . . and will not himself be overcome by this last disaster.  He is, of course, undetermined on future plans in detail, but Newton needs Tom McManus, and will pardon the expressed thought that his greatest asset is his loyal friends in the locality.” 

On January 2, McManus announced that the grocery portion of his business would be ready to open at a temporary location on west 6th.  In addition, he expected to be in his new building on Main by the middle of January.  Noting that he “has employed 113 men . . . and they will be kept at work night and day until the work is finished.”

Newton Kansan Republican, 2 January 1915

Newton Kansan Republican, 2 January 1915

McManus operated some form of his business in Newton until approximately 1920.  At some point after 1920, the McManus family moved to California.  Bernnice McManus died in 1928 and Thomas in 1934.  There are both buried at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California.

Thomas H. McManus Marker at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, CA

Thomas H. McManus Marker at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, CA

Trousdale Building

Although McManus lost the most, several other businesses also suffered from the fire.  The Trousdale Building was the structure to the north of the opera house. A hotel, operated by J.E. Hall, and Marten Motor Co were located in the building. In addition to hotel guests, Hall and his wife lived in the building and lost all of their personal possessions in addition to new furniture for their new restaurant.

Opera House Fire, January 1, 1915.  Building at the far right Marten Motor Co, 709 N. Main.

Opera House Fire, January 1, 1915. Building at the far right Marten Motor Co, 709 N. Main.

Once the structure was “declared safe,” the Martin Motor Co.  continued to operate in the Trousdale Building. Until the evening of January 6, when,

“during the worst of the wind storm they [the walls] were blown over. The bricks fell on the top of Martens garage . . . and the roof on the south side was caved in and the automobiles which were kept in the building were covered with falling brick and wood. . . there is not much chance of any of them being repaired.”

Martin Motor Co. after January 6, 1915

Marten lost two cars, both Buicks, one of which had never been used. Seven other men lost cars they had stored there. Luckily, only one person was in the building at the time, Dora Dahlem worked for Marten Motors, and she was able to get out safely.  She reported that “from the noise that was made she thought that an earthquake was taking place.” The damage was estimated to be around $8,000. Following the collapse, “a force of men was set to work . . . tearing down part of the third story in order to prevent another occurrence.”

Total losses for the opera house fire $158,000 and affected six businesses, not including Knoepker’s loss as property owner. Those affected included; T.H. McManus, J.E. Hall, W.J. Trousdale, Mel Reynolds, John Murphy and Martens.

The cause of the fire that consumed the Ragsdale/Knoepker Opera House, took one life, and damaged nearby structures in the early morning hours of January 1, 1915, was never determined.

Sources:

  • Evening Kansan Republican, 1 January 1915, 2 January 1915.
  • Weekly Kansan Republican, 7 January 1915.
  • Newton Journal 8 January 1915.
  • Newton City Directories:  1887, 1902, 1905, 1911, 1913, 1917, 1919, 1931.
  • U.S. Census, 1900, 1910.
  • Early Fire Protection In Newton, Kansas, 1872-1922.
  • Newton Kansan 50th Anniversary, 22 August 1922.
  • Fent, Mary Jeanine. Ragsdale Opera House — Newton, Kansas, 1885-1915. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1977. HCHM Archives.
  • HCHM Photo Archives
  • Find A Grave, Thomas H. McManus and Bernice McManus.

A Most Tragic Death: Willis T. Green

by Kristine Schmucker, HCHM Curator

(Note: This is part two of a three part series on the Opera House Fire on January 1, 1915) Click here for Part 1.

On the evening of Dec 31,1914 around 7:30, W.T. Green, age 70,  walked with a friend, Albert Nichol, from the Arcade Hotel to his room on the third floor of the Knoepker Opera House.  At 2:30 in the morning on January 1, 1915 fire was reported at the Opera House.  Within an hour the entire structure was involved.  The next morning, people began to realize that no one had seen Mr. Green since 7:30 the night before, and the worst was feared.

“Several witnesses of the fire have stated that they saw a man at the window in the room which was occupied by Mr. Green.”  The man stood “at the window for a brief while.  He appeared there in an undershirt, then in a moment disappeared. . .. No one of the big  crowd that gathered around the ruins this morning had seen Mr. Green since last evening.”

fire-3

A group of about forty men worked  to move debris in the area where they believed Green’s rooms would have been. At about 2:00 in the afternoon, Phil Lagree, foreman of the Newton street department, “picked up something with his shovel that looked like flesh.”  The paper  noted that even though “his features were unrecognizable” the body of W.T. Green had been found. From the location of the body, it looked “as though he had made an effort to get out in the hallway when the floor caved in.”

Newton Kansan Republican, 2 January 1915

Newton Kansan Republican, 2 January 1915

Green, a Civil War veteran, was an early settler in Harvey County.  Born in Putman County, Ohio, in November 1846, Green served with the 194th Regiment Ohio Volunteers Infantry Company I in 1865.   He moved to Harvey County in 1872 with his wife, Mary Smith Green, and three children. Here, he homesteaded a hundred and sixty acre farm in Darlington Township, section 15.

Darlington Township, Sect 15, 14,22, 23. Edwards Plat Map, 1882

Darlington Township, Sect 15, 14,22, 23. Edwards Plat Map, 1882

After several years, he moved to Newton.  In 1898, he served as a clerk of the district court and for several years, worked as engineer at the city water works. His wife, Mary, died in February 1905.  For the last years of his life, Green, was not employed and lived on the third floor of the opera house where he felt “at home in his old room.”

On that night, Green was unable to escape the blazing building.

The Kansan reported;

“During the excitement of getting the people out of the rooming house . . . it was not known that he had not escaped . . . when several remembered having seen a man’s form at the window . .   the whole building was in flames and had it really been known for a certainty that a man was in the building, it would have been impossible for any one to attempt to rescue him.”

Willis T. Green, Marker Greenwood Cemetery, Newton, Ks, courtesy Jullian Wall

Willis T. Green, Marker Greenwood Cemetery, Newton, Ks, courtesy Jullian Wall

Green was survived by three children, Mrs. Joe Shuck, Mrs. L.C. Palmer and Frank C. Green and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery, Newton, Ks.

Sources:

  • Newton City Directories: 1885, 1887, 1902, 1905, 1911, 1913.
  • Evening Kansan Republican, 1 January 1915
  • Newton Kansan Republican 2 January 1915, “Willis T. Green Met Awful Death”, p. 1.
  • Evening Kansan Republican, 1 January 1915
  • Newton Journal 8 January 1915.
  • Newton Kansan Republican, 6 February 1905 “Mrs. Willis Green Dead”, p. 1
  • Edwards Atlas, Darlington Township, 1882.
  • 194th Regiment Ohio Volunteers Infantry Company I at http://www.civilwarindex.com/armyoh/rosters/194th.oh.inf
  • U.S. General Index to Pension Files, 1861-1934, Wilson t. Greene, 1890.
  • U.S. Veterans Administration Pension Payment Cards, 1907-1933, Wilson T. Greene, 1907-1933.
  • Sgt W.T. Green, Find A Grave Memorial #43771804
  • Mary E. Greene, Find A Grave memorial #43771835
  • Burial Record for Willis T. Greene and Mary E Greene at http://newton.harvey.ks.govern.com/cmquery
  • Fent, Mary Jeanine. Ragsdale Opera House — Newton, Kansas, 1885-1915. MA Thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1977. HCHM Archives.
  • HCHM Photo Archives

 

Next week, Part 3 will conclude the series with businesses affected by the fire.