Recent from talks
Contribute something
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Kansas
View on Wikipedia
Kansas (/ˈkænzəs/ ⓘ KAN-zəss)[11] is a landlocked state in the Midwestern region of the United States.[12] It borders Nebraska to the north; Missouri to the east; Oklahoma to the south; and Colorado to the west. Kansas is named after the Kansas River, in turn named after the Kansa people.[13][14][15][16] Its capital is Topeka, and its most populous city is Wichita; however, the largest urban area is the bi-state Kansas City metropolitan area split between Kansas and Missouri.
Key Information
For thousands of years, what is now known as Kansas was home to numerous and diverse Indigenous tribes. The first settlement of non-indigenous people in Kansas occurred in 1827 at Fort Leavenworth. The pace of settlement accelerated in the 1850s, in the midst of political wars over the slavery debate. When it was officially opened to settlement by the U.S. government in 1854 with the Kansas–Nebraska Act, conflict between abolitionist Free-Staters from New England and pro-slavery settlers from neighboring Missouri broke out over the question of whether Kansas would become a free state or a slave state, in a period known as Bleeding Kansas. On January 29, 1861,[17][18] Kansas entered the Union as a free state, hence the unofficial nickname "The Free State". Passage of the Homestead Acts in 1862 brought a further influx of settlers, and the booming cattle trade of the 1870s attracted some of the Wild West's most iconic figures to western Kansas.[19][20]
As of 2015, Kansas was among the most productive agricultural states, producing high yields of wheat, corn, sorghum, and soybeans.[21] In addition to its traditional strength in agriculture, Kansas possesses an extensive aerospace industry. Kansas, which has an area of 82,278 square miles (213,100 square kilometers) is the 15th-largest state by area, the 36th most-populous of the 50 states, with a population of 2,940,865[22] according to the 2020 census, and the 10th least densely populated. Residents of Kansas are called Kansans. Mount Sunflower is Kansas's highest point at 4,039 feet (1,231 meters).[23]
Kansas is generally considered to be the geographic center of the contiguous United States, with Lebanon being approximately the center.
Etymology
[edit]The name Kansas derives from the Algonquian term Akansa, referring to the Quapaw people. These were a Dhegiha Siouan-speaking people who settled in Arkansas around the 13th century. The stem -kansa is named after the Kaw people, also known as the Kansa, a federally recognized Native American tribe.[24] The tribe's name (natively kką:ze) is often said to mean "people of the (south) wind", although this was probably not the term's original meaning.[25][26]
History
[edit]
Before European colonization, Kansas was occupied by the Caddoan Wichita and later the Siouan Kaw people. Tribes in the eastern part of the state generally lived in villages along the river valleys. Tribes in the western part of the state were semi-nomadic and hunted large herds of bison. The first European to set foot in present-day Kansas was the Spanish conquistador Francisco Vázquez de Coronado, who explored the area in 1541.
Between 1763 and 1803, the territory of Kansas was integrated into Spanish Louisiana. During that period, Governor Luis de Unzaga 'le Conciliateur' promoted expeditions and good relations with the Amerindians. Explorer Antoine de Marigny and others continued trading across the Kansas River, especially at its confluence with the Missouri River, tributaries of the Mississippi River.[27]
In 1803, most of modern Kansas was acquired by the United States as part of the Louisiana Purchase. Southwest Kansas, however, was still a part of Spain, Mexico, and the Republic of Texas until the conclusion of the Mexican–American War in 1848, when these lands were ceded to the United States. From 1812 to 1821, Kansas was part of the Missouri Territory. The Santa Fe Trail traversed Kansas from 1821 to 1880, transporting manufactured goods from Missouri and silver and furs from Santa Fe, New Mexico. Wagon ruts from the trail are still visible in the prairie today.
In 1827, Fort Leavenworth became the first permanent settlement of white Americans in the future state.[28] The Kansas–Nebraska Act became law on May 30, 1854, establishing Nebraska Territory and Kansas Territory, and opening the area to broader settlement by whites. Kansas Territory stretched all the way to the Continental Divide and included the sites of present-day Denver, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo.
Bleeding Kansas and the Civil War
[edit]The first non-military settlement of Euro-Americans in Kansas Territory consisted of abolitionists from Massachusetts and other Free-Staters who founded the town of Lawrence and attempted to stop the spread of slavery from neighboring Missouri.
Missouri and Arkansas continually sent settlers into Kansas Territory along its eastern border to sway votes in favor of slavery prior to Kansas statehood elections. Directly presaging the American Civil War these forces collided, entering into skirmishes and guerrilla conflicts that earned the territory the nickname Bleeding Kansas. These included John Brown's Pottawatomie massacre of 1856.
Kansas was admitted to the Union as a free state on January 29, 1861, making it the 34th state to join the United States. By that time, the violence in Kansas had largely subsided, but during the Civil War, on August 21, 1863, William Quantrill led several hundred of his supporters on a raid into Lawrence, destroying much of the city and killing nearly 200 people. He was roundly condemned by both the conventional Confederate military and the partisan rangers commissioned by the Missouri legislature. His application to that body for a commission was flatly rejected due to his pre-war criminal record.[29]
Settlement and the Wild West
[edit]Passage of the Homestead Acts in 1862 accelerated settlement and agricultural development in the state. After the Civil War, many veterans constructed homesteads in Kansas. Many African Americans also looked to Kansas as the land of "John Brown" and, led by freedmen like Benjamin "Pap" Singleton, began establishing black colonies in the state. Leaving southern states in the late 1870s because of increasing discrimination, they became known as Exodusters.
At the same time, the Chisholm Trail was opened and the Wild West era commenced in Kansas. Storied lawman Wild Bill Hickok was a deputy marshal at Fort Riley and a marshal at Hays and Abilene. Dodge City was home to both Bat Masterson and Wyatt Earp, who worked as lawmen in the town. The Dalton Gang robbed trains and banks throughout Kansas and the Southwest and maintained a hideout in Meade. In one year alone,[which?] eight million[citation needed] head of cattle from Texas boarded trains in Dodge City bound for the East, earning Dodge the nickname "Queen of the Cowtowns".
20th century
[edit]In response to demands of Methodists and other evangelical Protestants, in 1881 Kansas became the first U.S. state to adopt a constitutional amendment prohibiting all alcoholic beverages, which was repealed in 1948. Anti-saloon activist Carrie Nation vandalized her first saloon in Kiowa in 1900. In 1922, suffragist Ella Uphay Mowry became the first female gubernatorial candidate in the state when she ran as "Mrs. W.D. Mowry". She later stated: "Someone had to be the pioneer. I firmly believe that some day a woman will sit in the governor's chair in Kansas."[30][31][32]
Kansas suffered severe environmental damage in the 1930s due to the combined effects of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl, and large numbers of people left southwestern Kansas in particular for better opportunities elsewhere.[33] The outbreak of World War II spurred rapid growth in aircraft manufacturing near Wichita in the so-called Battle of Kansas, and the aerospace sector remains a significant portion of the Kansan economy to this day.
Geography
[edit]

Kansas is bordered by Nebraska to the north; Missouri to the east; Oklahoma to the south; and Colorado to the west. The state is divided into 105 counties with 628 cities, with its largest county by area being Butler County.[34] Kansas is located equidistant from the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. The geographic center of the 48 contiguous states is in Smith County near Lebanon. Until 1989, the Meades Ranch Triangulation Station in Osborne County was the geodetic center of North America: the central reference point for all maps of North America. The geographic center of Kansas is in Barton County.
Geology
[edit]Kansas is underlain by a sequence of horizontal to gently westward dipping sedimentary rocks. A sequence of Mississippian, Pennsylvanian and Permian rocks outcrop in the eastern and southern part of the state. The state's western half has exposures of Cretaceous through Tertiary sediments, the latter derived from the erosion of the uplifted Rocky Mountains to the west. These are underlain by older Paleozoic and Mesozoic sediments which correlate well with the outcrops to the east. The state's northeastern corner was subjected to glaciation in the Pleistocene and is covered by glacial drift and loess.
Topography
[edit]The western third of the state, lying in the great central plain of the United States, has a generally flat or undulating surface, while the eastern third has many hills and forests; the middle third is generally hilly, with more sparse vegetation than the eastern third.[35] The land gradually rises from east to west; its altitude ranges from 684 ft (208 m) along the Verdigris River at Coffeyville in Montgomery County, to 4,039 ft (1,231 m) at Mount Sunflower, 0.5 miles (0.80 kilometers) from the Colorado border, in Wallace County. It is a common misconception that Kansas is the flattest state in the nation—in 2003, a tongue-in-cheek study famously declared the state "flatter than a pancake".[36] In fact, Kansas has a maximum topographic relief of 3,360 ft (1,020 m),[37] making it the 23rd flattest U.S. state measured by maximum relief.[38]
Rivers
[edit]
Around 74 mi (119 km) of the state's northeastern boundary is defined by the Missouri River. The Kansas River (locally known as the Kaw), formed by the junction of the Smoky Hill and Republican rivers at appropriately named Junction City, joins the Missouri River at Kansas City, after a course of 170 mi (270 km) across the northeastern part of the state.
The Arkansas River (pronunciation varies), rising in Colorado, flows with a bending course for nearly 500 mi (800 km) across the western and southern parts of the state. With its tributaries, (the Little Arkansas, Ninnescah, Walnut, Cow Creek, Cimarron, Verdigris, and the Neosho), it forms the southern drainage system of the state.
Kansas's other rivers are the Saline and Solomon Rivers, tributaries of the Smoky Hill River; the Big Blue, Delaware, and Wakarusa, which flow into the Kansas River; and the Marais des Cygnes, a tributary of the Missouri River. Spring River is located between Riverton and Baxter Springs.
National parks and historic sites
[edit]Areas under the protection of the National Park Service include:[39]
- Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site in Topeka
- Fort Larned National Historic Site in Larned
- Fort Scott National Historic Site in Bourbon County
- Nicodemus National Historic Site at Nicodemus
- Pony Express National Historic Trail
- Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve near Strong City
Flora and fauna
[edit]
In Kansas, there are currently 238 species of rare animals and 400 rare plants.[40] Among those include: Smooth rockress, Virginia rail, Western Grotto Salamander, Royal Fern, Turkey-tangle, Bobolink, Cave salamander, Mead's Milkweed, Western Prairie Fringed Orchid, Gray bat, Snowy Plover, Strecker's Chorus Frog, Peregrine falcon, Arkansas River Shiner, Whooping Crane, and Black-footed ferret.[41][42] Common animal species and grasses include: crows, deer, lesser prairie-chicken, mice, moles, Virginia opossum, prairie dogs, raccoon, Eastern Gama Grass, Prairie Dropseed, Indian Grass, little bluestem, Switch grass, Northern Sea Oats, Tussock Sedge, Sideoats grama, and Big Bluestem.[43][44]
Climate
[edit]

In the Köppen climate classification, Kansas has three climates: humid continental, semi-arid steppe, and humid subtropical. The eastern two-thirds of the state (especially the northeastern portion) has a humid continental climate, with cool to cold winters and hot, often humid summers. Most of the precipitation falls during both the summer and the spring. The USDA hardiness zones for Kansas range from Zone 5b (−15 °F to −10 °F) in the North to Zone 7a (0 °F to 5 °F) in the South.[45]
The western third of the state—from roughly the U.S. Route 83 corridor westward—has a semi-arid steppe climate. Summers are hot, often very hot, and generally less humid. Winters are highly changeable between warm and very cold. The western region receives an average of about 16 inches (410 millimeters) of precipitation per year. Chinook winds in the winter can warm western Kansas all the way into the 80 degrees Fahrenheit (27 degrees Celsius) range.
The south-central and southeastern portions of the state, including the Wichita area, have a humid subtropical climate with hot and humid summers, milder winters, and more precipitation than elsewhere in Kansas. Some features of all three climates can be found in most of the state, with droughts and changeable weather between dry and humid not uncommon, and both warm and cold spells in the winter.
Temperatures in areas between U.S. Routes 83 and 81, as well as the southwestern portion of the state along and south of U.S. 50, reach 90 °F (32 °C) or above on most days of June, July, and August. High humidity added to the high temperatures sends the heat index into life-threatening territory, especially in Wichita, Hutchinson, Salina, Russell, Hays, and Great Bend. Temperatures are often higher in Dodge City, Garden City, and Liberal, but the heat index in those three cities is usually lower than the actual air temperature.
Although temperatures of 100 °F (38 °C) or higher are not as common in areas east of U.S. 81, higher humidity and the urban heat island effect lead most summer days to heat indices between 107 and 114 °F (42 and 46 °C) in Topeka, Lawrence, and the Kansas City metropolitan area. Also, combined with humidity between 85 and 95 percent, dangerous heat indices can be experienced at every hour of the day.
Precipitation ranges from about 47 inches (1,200 mm) annually in the state's southeast corner to about 16 inches (410 mm) in the southwest. Snowfall ranges from around 5 inches (130 mm) in the fringes of the south, to 35 inches (890 mm) in the far northwest. Frost-free days range from more than 200 days in the south, to 130 days in the northwest. Thus, Kansas is the country's ninth or tenth sunniest state, depending on the source. Western Kansas is as sunny as parts of California and Arizona.
Kansas is prone to severe weather, especially in the spring and the early-summer. Despite the frequent sunshine throughout much of the state, due to its location at a climatic boundary prone to intrusions of multiple air masses, the state is vulnerable to strong and severe thunderstorms. Some of these storms become supercell thunderstorms; these can produce some tornadoes, occasionally those of EF3 strength or higher. Kansas averages more than 50 tornadoes annually.[46] Severe thunderstorms sometimes drop some very large hail over Kansas as well. Furthermore, these storms can even bring in flash flooding and damaging straight line winds.
According to NOAA, the all-time highest temperature recorded in Kansas is (121 °F or 49.4 °C) on July 24, 1936, near Alton in Osborne County, and the all-time low is −40 °F (−40 °C) on February 13, 1905, near Lebanon in Smith County. Alton and Lebanon are approximately 50 miles (80 km) apart.
Kansas's record high of 121 °F (49.4 °C) ties with North Dakota for the fifth-highest record high in an American state, behind California (134 °F or 56.7 °C), Arizona (128 °F or 53.3 °C), Nevada (125 °F or 51.7 °C), and New Mexico (122 °F or 50 °C).
| City | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concordia | 36/17 | 43/22 | 54/31 | 64/41 | 74/52 | 85/62 | 91/67 | 88/66 | 80/56 | 68/44 | 51/30 | 40/21 |
| Dodge City | 41/19 | 48/24 | 57/31 | 67/41 | 76/52 | 87/62 | 93/67 | 91/66 | 82/56 | 70/44 | 55/30 | 44/22 |
| Goodland | 39/16 | 45/20 | 53/26 | 63/35 | 72/46 | 84/56 | 89/61 | 87/60 | 78/50 | 66/38 | 50/25 | 41/18 |
| Topeka | 37/17 | 44/23 | 55/33 | 66/43 | 75/53 | 84/63 | 89/68 | 88/65 | 80/56 | 69/44 | 53/32 | 41/22 |
| Wichita | 40/20 | 47/25 | 57/34 | 67/44 | 76/54 | 87/64 | 93/69 | 92/68 | 82/59 | 70/47 | 55/34 | 43/24 |
Settlement
[edit]
![]() |
Known as rural flight, the last few decades have been marked by a migratory pattern out of the countryside into cities. Out of all the cities in these Midwestern states, 89% have fewer than 3,000 people, and hundreds of those have fewer than 1,000. In Kansas alone, there are more than 6,000 ghost towns and dwindling communities,[48] according to one Kansas historian, Daniel C. Fitzgerald. At the same time, some of the communities in Johnson County (metropolitan Kansas City) are among the fastest-growing in the country.
| City | Population* | Growth rate** | Metro area | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wichita | 397,532 | 3.97% | Wichita |
| 2 | Overland Park | 197,238 | 13.77% | Kansas City, MO-KS |
| 3 | Kansas City | 156,607 | 7.42% | Kansas City |
| 4 | Olathe | 141,290 | 12.25% | Kansas City |
| 5 | Topeka | 126,587 | −0.70% | Topeka |
| 6 | Lawrence | 94,934 | 8.32% | Lawrence |
| 7 | Shawnee | 67,311 | 8.20% | Kansas City |
| 8 | Lenexa | 57,434 | 19.18% | Kansas City |
| 9 | Manhattan | 54,100 | 3.48% | Manhattan |
| 10 | Salina | 46,889 | -1.71% | ‡ |
| 11 | Hutchinson | 40,006 | −4.93% | ‡ |
| 12 | Leavenworth | 37,351 | 5.96% | Kansas City |
| 13 | Leawood | 33,902 | 6.39% | Kansas City |
| 14 | Garden City | 28,151 | 5.60% | ‡ |
| 15 | Dodge City | 27,788 | 1.64% | ‡ |
| 16 | Derby | 25,625 | 15.65% | Wichita |
| 17 | Emporia | 24,139 | -3.12% | ‡ |
| 18 | Gardner | 23,287 | 21.77% | Kansas City |
| 19 | Prairie Village | 22,957 | 7.04% | Kansas City |
| 20 | Junction City | 22,932 | -1.80% | Manhattan |
| 21 | Hays | 21,116 | 2.95% | ‡ |
| 22 | Pittsburg | 20,646 | 2.04% | ‡ |
| 23 | Liberal | 19,825 | −3.41% | ‡ |
| 24 | Newton | 18,602 | −2.77% | Wichita |
| *2020 census[49] **Growth rate 2010–2020 ‡Defined as a micropolitan area | ||||
Kansas has 627 incorporated cities. By state statute, cities are divided into three classes as determined by the population obtained "by any census of enumeration". A city of the third class has a population of less than 5,000, but cities reaching a population of more than 2,000 may be certified as a city of the second class. The second class is limited to cities with a population of less than 25,000, and upon reaching a population of more than 15,000, they may be certified as a city of the first class. First and second class cities are independent of any township and are not included within the township's territory.
Birth data
[edit]Note: Births in table do not add up, because Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number.
| Race | 2013[50] | 2014[51] | 2015[52] | 2016[53] | 2017[54] | 2018[55] | 2019[56] | 2020[57] | 2021[58] | 2022[59] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White: | 34,178 (88.0%) | 34,420 (87.7%) | 34,251 (87.5%) | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... |
| > Non-Hispanic White | 28,281 (72.8%) | 28,504 (72.7%) | 28,236 (72.1%) | 26,935 (70.8%) | 25,594 (70.1%) | 25,323 (69.8%) | 24,549 (69.4%) | 23,663 (68.8%) | 24,056 (69.3%) | 23,669 (68.8%) |
| Black | 2,967 (7.6%) | 3,097 (7.9%) | 3,090 (7.9%) | 2,543 (6.7%) | 2,657 (7.3%) | 2,575 (7.1%) | 2,458 (6.9%) | 2,412 (7.0%) | 2,316 (6.7%) | 2,208 (6.4%) |
| Asian | 1,401 (3.6%) | 1,359 (3.5%) | 1,483 (3.8%) | 1,299 (3.4%) | 1,255 (3.4%) | 1,228 (3.4%) | 1,216 (3.4%) | 1,146 (3.3%) | 1,031 (3.0%) | 1,055 (3.1%) |
| American Indian | 293 (0.7%) | 347 (0.9%) | 330 (0.8%) | 173 (0.5%) | 248 (0.7%) | 217 (0.6%) | 214 (0.6%) | 162 (0.5%) | 183 (0.5%) | 241 (0.7%) |
| Hispanic (of any race) | 6,143 (15.8%) | 6,132 (15.6%) | 6,300 (16.1%) | 6,298 (16.5%) | 5,963 (16.3%) | 5,977 (16.5%) | 6,071 (17.2%) | 5,970 (17.4%) | 6,122 (17.6%) | 6,309 (18.3%) |
| Total Kansas | 38,839 (100%) | 39,223 (100%) | 39,154 (100%) | 38,053 (100%) | 36,519 (100%) | 36,261 (100%) | 35,395 (100%) | 34,376 (100%) | 34,705 (100%) | 34,401 (100%) |
- Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.
Life expectancy
[edit]The residents of Kansas have a life expectancy near the U.S. national average. In 2013, males in Kansas lived an average of 76.6 years compared to a male national average of 76.7 years and females lived an average of 81.0 years compared to a female national average of 81.5 years. Increases in life expectancy between 1980 and 2013 were below the national average for males and near the national average for females. Male life expectancy in Kansas between 1980 and 2014 increased by an average of 5.2 years, compared to a male national average of a 6.7-year increase. Life expectancy for females in Kansas between 1980 and 2014 increased by 4.3 years, compared to a female national average of a 4.0 year increase.[60]
Using 2017–2019 data, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation calculated that life expectancy for Kansas counties ranged from 75.8 years for Wyandotte County to 81.7 years for Johnson County. Life expectancy for the state as a whole was 78.5 years.[61] Life expectancy for the United States as a whole in 2019 was 78.8 years.[62]
Regions
[edit]Northeast Kansas
[edit]
The northeastern portion of the state, extending from the eastern border to Junction City and from the Nebraska border to south of Johnson County is home to more than 1.5 million people in the Kansas City (Kansas portion), Manhattan, Lawrence, and Topeka metropolitan areas. Overland Park, a young city incorporated in 1960, has the largest population and the largest land area in the county. It is home to Johnson County Community College.
Olathe is the county seat and home to Johnson County Executive Airport. The cities of Olathe, Shawnee, De Soto and Gardner have some of the state's fastest growing populations. The cities of Overland Park, Lenexa, Olathe, De Soto, and Gardner are also notable because they lie along the former route of the Santa Fe Trail. Among cities with at least one thousand residents, Mission Hills has the highest median income in the state.
Several institutions of higher education are located in Northeast Kansas including Baker University (the oldest university in the state, founded in 1858 and affiliated with the United Methodist Church) in Baldwin City, Benedictine College (sponsored by St. Benedict's Abbey and Mount St. Scholastica Monastery and formed from the merger of St. Benedict's College (1858) and Mount St. Scholastica College (1923)) in Atchison, MidAmerica Nazarene University in Olathe, Ottawa University in Ottawa and Overland Park, Kansas City Kansas Community College and KU Medical Center in Kansas City, and KU Edwards Campus in Overland Park. Less than an hour's drive to the west, Lawrence is home to the University of Kansas, the largest public university in the state, and Haskell Indian Nations University.
To the north, Kansas City, with the second largest land area in the state, contains a number of diverse ethnic neighborhoods. Its attractions include the Kansas Speedway, Sporting Kansas City, Kansas City Monarchs, and The Legends at Village West retail and entertainment center. Nearby, Kansas's first settlement Bonner Springs[63] is home to several national and regional attractions including the Providence Medical Center Amphitheater, the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, and the annual Kansas City Renaissance Festival. Further up the Missouri River, the city of Lansing is the home of the state's first maximum-security prison. Historic Leavenworth, founded in 1854, was the first incorporated city in Kansas. North of the city, Fort Leavenworth is the oldest active Army post west of the Mississippi River. The city of Atchison was an early commercial center in the state and is well known as the birthplace of Amelia Earhart.

To the west, nearly a quarter million people reside in the Topeka metropolitan area. Topeka is the state capital and home to Washburn University and Washburn Institute of Technology. Built at a Kansas River crossing along the old Oregon Trail, this historic city has several nationally registered historic places. Further westward along Interstate 70 and the Kansas River is Junction City with its historic limestone and brick buildings and nearby Fort Riley, well known as the home to the U.S. Army's 1st Infantry Division (nicknamed "the Big Red One"). A short distance away, the city of Manhattan is home to Kansas State University, the second-largest public university in the state and the nation's oldest land-grant university, dating back to 1863. South of the campus, Aggieville dates back to 1889 and is the state's oldest shopping district of its kind.
South Central Kansas
[edit]
In south-central Kansas, the Wichita metropolitan area is home to more than 600,000 people.[64] Wichita is the largest city in the state in terms of both land area and population. 'The Air Capital' is a major manufacturing center for the aircraft industry and the home of Wichita State University. Before Wichita was 'The Air Capital' it was a Cowtown.[65] With a number of nationally registered historic places, museums, and other entertainment destinations, it has a desire to become a cultural mecca in the Midwest. Wichita's population growth has grown by double digits and the surrounding suburbs are among the fastest growing cities in the state. The population of Goddard has grown by more than 11% per year since 2000.[66] Other fast-growing cities include Andover, Maize, Park City, Derby, and Haysville.
Wichita was one of the first cities to add the city commissioner and city manager in their form of government.[65] Wichita is also home of the nationally recognized Sedgwick County Zoo.[65]

Up river (the Arkansas River) from Wichita is the city of Hutchinson. The city was built on one of the world's largest salt deposits (of what would form Strataca), and it has the world's largest and longest wheat elevator. It is also the home of Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center, Prairie Dunes Country Club and the Kansas State Fair. North of Wichita along Interstate 135 is the city of Newton, the former western terminal of the Santa Fe Railroad and trailhead for the famed Chisholm Trail. To the southeast of Wichita are the cities of Winfield and Arkansas City with historic architecture and the Cherokee Strip Museum (in Ark City). The city of Udall was the site of the deadliest tornado in Kansas on May 25, 1955; it killed 80 people in and near the city.[67]
Southeast Kansas
[edit]
Southeast Kansas has a unique history with a number of nationally registered historic places in this coal-mining region. Located in Crawford County (dubbed the Fried Chicken Capital of Kansas), Pittsburg is the largest city in the region and the home of Pittsburg State University. The neighboring city of Frontenac in 1888 was the site of the worst mine disaster in the state in which an underground explosion killed 47 miners. "Big Brutus" is located 1.5 miles (2.4 km) outside the city of West Mineral. Along with the restored fort, historic Fort Scott has a national cemetery designated by President Lincoln in 1862. The region also shares a Media market with Joplin, Missouri, a city in Southwest Missouri.
Central and North-Central Kansas
[edit]
Salina is the largest city in central and north-central Kansas. South of Salina is the small city of Lindsborg with its numerous Dala horses. Much of the architecture and decor of this town has a distinctly Swedish style. To the east along Interstate 70, the historic city of Abilene was formerly a trailhead for the Chisholm Trail and was the boyhood home of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, and is the site of his Presidential Library and the tombs of the former president, First Lady and son who died in infancy. To the west is Lucas, the Grassroots Art Capital of Kansas.
Northwest Kansas
[edit]
Westward along the Interstate, the city of Russell, traditionally the beginning of sparsely populated northwest Kansas, was the base of former U.S. Senator Bob Dole and the boyhood home of U.S. Senator Arlen Specter. The city of Hays is home to Fort Hays State University and the Sternberg Museum of Natural History, and is the largest city in the northwest with a population of around 20,001.
Two other landmarks are located in smaller towns in Ellis County: the "Cathedral of the Plains" is located 10 miles (16 km) east of Hays in Victoria, and the boyhood home of Walter Chrysler is 15 miles (24 km) west of Hays in Ellis. West of Hays, population drops dramatically, even in areas along I-70, and only two towns containing populations of more than 4,000: Colby and Goodland, which are located 35 miles (56 km) apart along I-70.
Southwest Kansas
[edit]
Dodge City, famously known for the cattle drive days of the late 19th century, was built along the old Santa Fe Trail route. The city of Liberal is located along the southern Santa Fe Trail route. The first wind farm in the state was built east of Montezuma. Garden City has the Lee Richardson Zoo. In 1992, a short-lived secessionist movement advocated the secession of several counties in southwest Kansas.[68]
Around the state
[edit]
Located midway between Kansas City, Topeka, and Wichita in the heart of the Bluestem Region of the Flint Hills, the city of Emporia has several nationally registered historic places and is the home of Emporia State University, well known for its Teachers College. It was also the home of newspaper man William Allen White.
Demographics
[edit]Population
[edit]
The United States Census Bureau estimates that the population of Kansas was 2,913,314 on July 1, 2019, a 2.11% increase since the 2010 United States census and an increase of 58,387, or 2.05%, since 2010.[69] This includes a natural increase since the last census of 93,899 (246,484 births minus 152,585 deaths) and a decrease due to net migration of 20,742 people out of the state. Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net increase of 44,847 people, and migration within the country produced a net loss of 65,589 people.[70] At the 2020 census, its population was 2,937,880.
In 2018, the top countries of origin for Kansas's immigrants were Mexico, India, Vietnam, Guatemala and China.[71]
The population density of Kansas is 52.9 people per square mile.[72] The center of population of Kansas is located in Chase County, at 38°27′N 96°32′W / 38.450°N 96.533°W, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) north of the community of Strong City.[73]
The focus on labor-efficient grain-based agriculture—such as a large wheat farm that requires only one or a few people with large machinery to operate, rather than a vegetable farm that requires many people—is causing the de-population of rural areas across Kansas.[74]
According to HUD's 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, there were an estimated 2,397 homeless people in Kansas.[75][76]
| Census | Pop. | Note | %± |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1860 | 107,206 | — | |
| 1870 | 364,399 | 239.9% | |
| 1880 | 996,096 | 173.4% | |
| 1890 | 1,428,108 | 43.4% | |
| 1900 | 1,470,495 | 3.0% | |
| 1910 | 1,690,949 | 15.0% | |
| 1920 | 1,769,257 | 4.6% | |
| 1930 | 1,880,999 | 6.3% | |
| 1940 | 1,801,028 | −4.3% | |
| 1950 | 1,905,299 | 5.8% | |
| 1960 | 2,178,611 | 14.3% | |
| 1970 | 2,246,578 | 3.1% | |
| 1980 | 2,363,679 | 5.2% | |
| 1990 | 2,477,574 | 4.8% | |
| 2000 | 2,688,418 | 8.5% | |
| 2010 | 2,853,118 | 6.1% | |
| 2020 | 2,937,880 | 3.0% | |
| 2024 (est.) | 2,970,606 | [77] | 1.1% |
| 1910–2020[78] | |||
Race and ethnicity
[edit]
According to the 2021 United States census estimates, the racial makeup of the population was:[79] White American, non-Hispanic (74.7%), Hispanic or Latino (12.7%), Black or African American (6.2%), Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander (0.1%), two or more races (3.3%), Asian (3.2%), and American Indian and Alaska Native (1.2%). At the 2020 census, its racial and ethnic makeup was 75.6% White, 5.7% African American, 2.9% Asian American, 1.1% Native American, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 4.9% some other race, and 9.5% two or more races.
| Racial composition | 1990[80] | 2000[81] | 2010[82] | 2020[83] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 90.1% | 86.1% | 83.8% | 75.6% |
| Black | 5.8% | 5.8% | 5.9% | 5.7% |
| Asian | 1.3% | 1.7% | 2.4% | 2.9% |
| Native | 0.9% | 0.9% | 1.0% | 1.1% |
| Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander |
– | – | 0.1% | 0.1% |
| Other race | 2.0% | 3.4% | 3.9% | 4.9% |
| Two or more races | – | 2.1% | 3.0% | 9.5% |
Non-Hispanic White 30–40%50–60%60–70%70–80%80–90%90%+Hispanic or Latino 50–60%60–70%
As of 2004, the population included 149,800 foreign-born (5.5% of the state population). The ten largest reported ancestry groups, which account for nearly 90% of the population, in the state are: German (33.75%), Irish (14.4%), English (14.1%), American (7.5%), French (4.4%), Scottish (4.2%), Dutch (2.5%), Swedish (2.4%), Italian (1.8%), and Polish (1.5%).[84] Kansas is also home to a large Czech community.[85]
Mexicans are present in the southwest and make up nearly half the population in certain counties. Many African Americans in Kansas are descended from the Exodusters, newly freed blacks who fled the South for land in Kansas following the Civil War.[86]
There is a growing Asian community in Kansas. Since 1965, more and more Asian families have moved to Kansas from countries such as the Philippines, China, Korea, India, and Vietnam.[87]
- Birth data
| Race | 2013[50] | 2014[51] | 2015[52] | 2016[53] | 2017[54] | 2018[55] | 2019[56] | 2020[57] | 2021[58] | 2022[59] | 2023[88] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 28,281 (72.8%) | 28,504 (72.7%) | 28,236 (72.1%) | 26,935 (70.8%) | 25,594 (70.1%) | 25,323 (69.8%) | 24,549 (69.4%) | 23,663 (68.8%) | 24,056 (69.3%) | 23,669 (68.8%) | 23,088 (67.8%) |
| Black | 2,967 (7.6%) | 3,097 (7.9%) | 3,090 (7.9%) | 2,543 (6.7%) | 2,657 (7.3%) | 2,575 (7.1%) | 2,458 (6.9%) | 2,412 (7.0%) | 2,316 (6.7%) | 2,208 (6.4%) | 2,211 (6.5%) |
| Asian | 1,401 (3.6%) | 1,359 (3.5%) | 1,483 (3.8%) | 1,299 (3.4%) | 1,255 (3.4%) | 1,228 (3.4%) | 1,216 (3.4%) | 1,146 (3.3%) | 1,031 (3.0%) | 1,055 (3.1%) | 1,028 (3.0%) |
| American Indian | 293 (0.7%) | 347 (0.9%) | 330 (0.8%) | 173 (0.5%) | 248 (0.7%) | 217 (0.6%) | 214 (0.6%) | 162 (0.5%) | 183 (0.5%) | 163 (0.5%) | 142 (0.4%) |
| Hispanic (any race) | 6,143 (15.8%) | 6,132 (15.6%) | 6,300 (16.1%) | 6,298 (16.5%) | 5,963 (16.3%) | 5,977 (16.5%) | 6,071 (17.2%) | 5,970 (17.4%) | 6,122 (17.6%) | 6,309 (18.3%) | 6,576 (19.3%) |
| Total | 38,839 (100%) | 39,223 (100%) | 39,154 (100%) | 38,053 (100%) | 36,519 (100%) | 36,261 (100%) | 35,395 (100%) | 34,376 (100%) | 34,705 (100%) | 34,401 (100%) | 34,065 (100%) |
As of 2011, 35.0% of Kansas's population younger than one year of age belonged to minority groups (i.e., did not have two parents of non-Hispanic white ancestry).[89]
Language
[edit]English is the most-spoken language in Kansas, with 91.3% of the population speaking only English at home as of the year 2000. 5.5% speak Spanish, 0.7% speak German, and 0.4% speak Vietnamese.[90]
Religion
[edit]- Christianity (74.0%)
- Irreligion (23.0%)
- Unitarian Universalism (1.00%)
- New Age (1.00%)


The 2014 Pew Religious Landscape Survey showed the religious makeup of adults in Kansas was as follows:[91] 57% Protestant, 18% Catholic, 1% Mormon, 1% Jehovah's Witness, 20% unaffiliated, 1% Buddhist, and 2% other religions. In 2022, the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI)'s study revealed 74% of the total population were Christian; among them, 59% were Protestant, 13% Catholic, and 2% Mormon. The religiously unaffiliated were 23% of the population, Unitarian Universalists 1%, and New Agers 1%.[92]
Kansas's capital Topeka is sometimes cited as the home of Pentecostalism as it was the site of Charles Fox Parham's Bethel Bible College, where glossolalia was first claimed as the evidence of a spiritual experience referred to as the baptism of the Holy Spirit in 1901. It is also the home of Reverend Charles Sheldon, author of In His Steps, and was the site where the question "What would Jesus do?" originated in a sermon of Sheldon's at Central Congregational Church.
Kansas is the location of the second Baháʼí Faith community west of Egypt, when the Baháʼí community of Enterprise, KS was started in 1897. From that beginning the Baháʼí Faith spread across Kansas.[93]

Topeka is also home of the Westboro Baptist Church, a hate group according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.[94][95][96] The church has garnered worldwide media attention for picketing the funerals of U.S. servicemen and women for what church members claim as "necessary to combat the fight for equality for gays and lesbians". They have sometimes successfully raised lawsuits against the city of Topeka.
Largest immigrant groups
[edit]| # | Country | Population [1] |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 81,933 | |
| 2 | 13,526 | |
| 3 | 11,119 | |
| 4 | 8,223 | |
| 5 | 6,271 | |
| 6 | 5,005 | |
| 7 | 4,108 | |
| 8 | 3,919 | |
| 9 | 3,447 | |
| 10 | 3,326 |
Economy
[edit]Kansas's total gross domestic product was $226 billion in 2023.[97] The state's 2023 per capita income was $63,732, which ranked 29th among U.S. states, and median household income was measured at $68,925.[98][99]
Total Employment of the metropolitan areas in the State of Kansas by total Non-farm Employment in 2016[100]
- Kansas Portion of the Kansas City MO-KS MSA: 468,400 non-farm, accounting for 40.9% of state GDP in 2015[101]
- Wichita, KS MSA: 297,300 non-farm
- Topeka, KS MSA: 112,600 non-farm
- Lawrence KS, MSA: 54,000 non-farm
- Manhattan, KS MSA: 44,200 non-farm
- Total employment: 1,184,710
Total Number of employer establishments in 2016: 74,884[102]
In 2015, the job growth rate was 0.8%, among the lowest rates in America with only "10,900 total nonfarm jobs" added that year.[103] As of April 2016, the state's unemployment rate was 4.2%.[104]
The State of Kansas had a $350 million budget shortfall in February 2017.[105] In February 2017, S&P downgraded Kansas's credit rating to AA−.[106]
Nearly 90% of Kansas's land is devoted to agriculture.[74] The state's agricultural outputs are cattle, sheep, wheat, sorghum, soybeans, cotton, hogs, corn, and salt. As of 2018, there were 59,600 farms in Kansas, 86 (0.14%) of which are certified organic farms.[74] The average farm in the state is about 770 acres (more than a square mile), and in 2016, the average cost of running the farm was $300,000.[74]
By far, the most significant agricultural crop in the state is wheat. Eastern Kansas is part of the Grain Belt, an area of major grain production in the central United States. Approximately 40% of all winter wheat grown in the U.S. is grown in Kansas.[74] Roughly 95% of the wheat grown in the state is hard red winter wheat.[74] During 2016, farmers of conventionally grown wheat farmed 8.2 million acres and harvested an average of 57 bushels of wheat per acre.[74]
The industrial outputs are transportation equipment, commercial and private aircraft, food processing, publishing, chemical products, machinery, apparel, petroleum, and mining.
| Rank | Business | Employees | Location | Industry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Spirit AeroSystems | 12,000 | Wichita | Aviation |
| 2 | Sprint Corporation | 7,600 | Overland Park | Telecommunications |
| 3 | Textron Aviation | 6,812 | Wichita | Aviation |
| 4 | General Motors | 4,000 | Kansas City | Automotive manufacturing |
| 5 | Bombardier Aerospace | 3,500 | Wichita | Aviation |
| 6 | Black & Veatch | 3,500 | Overland Park | Engineering consulting |
| 7 | National Beef | 3,500 | Liberal | Food products |
| 8 | Tyson Foods | 3,200 | Holcomb | Food products |
| 9 | Performance Contracting | 2,900 | Lenexa | Roofing and siding |
| 10 | National Beef | 2,500 | Dodge City | Food products |
The state's economy is also heavily influenced by the aerospace industry. Several large aircraft corporations have manufacturing facilities in Wichita and Kansas City, including Spirit AeroSystems, Bombardier Aerospace (LearJet), and Textron Aviation (a merger of the former Cessna, Hawker, and Beechcraft brands). Boeing ended a decades-long history of manufacturing in Kansas between 2012 and 2013.
Major companies headquartered in Kansas include the Garmin (Olathe), YRC Worldwide (Overland Park), and Koch Inc. (with national headquarters in Wichita).
Kansas is also home to three major military installations: Fort Leavenworth (Army), Fort Riley (Army), and McConnell Air Force Base (Air Force). Approximately 25,000 active duty soldiers and airmen are stationed at these bases which also employ approximately 8,000 civilian DoD employees. The U.S. Army Reserve also has the 451st Expeditionary Sustainment Command headquartered in Wichita that serves reservists and their units from around the region. The Kansas Air National Guard has units at Forbes Field in Topeka and the 184th Intelligence Wing in Wichita. The Smoky Hill Weapons Range, a detachment of the Intelligence Wing, is one of the largest and busiest bombing ranges in the nation. During World War II, Kansas was home to numerous Army Air Corps training fields for training new pilots and aircrew. Many of those airfields live on today as municipal airports.
Energy
[edit]

Kansas has vast renewable resources and is a top producer of wind energy in the US, with an installed capacity of about 6,100 Megawatts (MW) from nearly 3,200 wind turbines in 2019. Wind generated the largest share of electricity from the state at 41%. An additional 700 MW of capacity was scheduled to come online during 2020. Kansas is also a leading national producer of renewable ethanol and biodiesel fuels at nearly 600 million gallons per year.[108]
Kansas is one of 28 states with a nuclear power plant, Wolf Creek in Burlington, which houses a Westinghouse pressurized water reactor. The plant came online in 1985, and cost over $5 billion to construct. It is owned by Evergy.
Kansas is ranked eighth in U.S. petroleum extraction. Production has experienced a steady decline as the state's limited economical reserves especially from the Anadarko Basin are depleted. Since oil prices bottomed in 1999, oil production in Kansas has remained fairly constant, with an average monthly rate of about 2.8 million barrels (450,000 cubic meters) in 2004. The recent higher prices have made carbon dioxide sequestration and other oil recovery techniques more economical.
Kansas is also ranked eighth in U.S. natural gas production. Production has steadily declined since the mid-1990s with the gradual depletion of the Hugoton Natural Gas Field—the state's largest field which extends into Oklahoma and Texas. In 2004, slower declines in the Hugoton gas fields and increased coalbed methane production contributed to a smaller overall decline. Average monthly production was over 32 billion cubic feet (0.91 cubic kilometers).
Taxes
[edit]Tax is collected by the Kansas Department of Revenue.
Revenue shortfalls resulting from lower than expected tax collections and slower growth in personal income following a 1998 permanent tax reduction have contributed to the substantial growth in the state's debt level as bonded debt increased from $1.16 billion in 1998 to $3.83 billion in 2006. Some increase in debt was expected as the state continues with its 10-year Comprehensive Transportation Program enacted in 1999.
In 2003, Kansas had three income brackets for income tax calculation, ranging from 3.5% to 6.45%.
The state sales tax in Kansas is 6.15%. Various cities and counties in Kansas have an additional local sales tax. Except during the 2001 recession (March–November 2001), when monthly sales tax collections were flat, collections have trended higher as the economy has grown and two rate increases have been enacted. If there had been no change in sales tax rates or in the economy, the total sales tax collections for 2003 would have been $1,797 million, compared to $805.3 million in 1990. However, they instead amounted to $1,630 million an inflation-adjusted reduction of 10%. The state sales tax is a combined destination-based tax, meaning a single tax is applied that includes state, county, and local taxes, and the rate is based on where the consumer takes possession of the goods or services. Thanks to the destination structure and the numerous local special taxing districts, Kansas has 920 separate sales tax rates ranging from 6.5% to 11.5%.[109] This taxing scheme, known as "Streamlined Sales Tax" was adopted on October 1, 2005, under the governorship of Kathleen Sebelius.[110] Groceries are subject to sales tax in the state. All sales tax collected is remitted to the state department of revenue, and local taxes are then distributed to the various taxing agencies.
As of June 2004, Moody's Investors Service ranked the state 14th for net tax-supported debt per capita. As a percentage of personal income, it was at 3.8%—above the median value of 2.5% for all rated states and having risen from a value of less than 1% in 1992. The state has a statutory requirement to maintain cash reserves of at least 7.5% of expenses at the end of each fiscal year; however, lawmakers can vote to override the rule, and did so during the most recent budget agreement.
During his campaign for the 2010 election, Governor Sam Brownback called for a complete "phase out of Kansas's income tax".[111] In May 2012, Governor Brownback signed into law the Kansas Senate Bill Substitute HB 2117.[112] Starting in 2013, the "ambitious tax overhaul" trimmed income tax, eliminated some corporate taxes, and created pass-through income tax exemptions, he raised the sales tax by one percent to offset the loss to state revenues but that was inadequate. He made cuts to education and some state services to offset lost revenue.[113] The tax cut led to years of budget shortfalls, culminating in a $350 million budget shortfall in February 2017. From 2013 to 2017, 300,000 businesses were considered to be pass-through income entities and benefited from the tax exemption. The tax reform "encouraged tens of thousands of Kansans to claim their wages and salaries as income from a business rather than from employment."[105]
The economic growth that Brownback anticipated never materialized. He argued that it was because of "low wheat and oil prices and a downturn in aircraft sales".[111] The state general fund debt load was $83 million in fiscal year 2010 and by fiscal year 2017 the debt load sat at $179 million.[114] In 2016, Governor Brownback earned the title of "most unpopular governor in America". Only 26 percent of Kansas voters approved of his job performance, compared to 65 percent who said they did not.[115] In the summer of 2016 S&P Global Ratings downgraded Kansas's credit rating.[106] In February 2017, S&P lowered it to AA−.[106]
In February 2017, a bi-partisan coalition presented a bill that would repeal the pass-through income exemption, the "most important provisions of Brownback's overhaul", and raise taxes to make up for the budget shortfall. Brownback vetoed the bill but "45 GOP legislators had voted in favor of the increase, while 40 voted to uphold the governor's veto."[105] On June 6, 2017, a coalition of Democrats and newly elected Republicans overrode [Brownback's] veto and implemented tax increases to a level close to what it was before 2013.[111] Brownback's tax overhaul was described in a June 2017 article in The Atlantic as the United States' "most aggressive experiment in conservative economic policy".[111] The drastic tax cuts had "threatened the viability of schools and infrastructure" in Kansas.[111]
Transportation
[edit]


For automobiles, Kansas first required its residents to register their vehicles and display license plates in 1913. Plates are currently issued by the Kansas Department of Revenue through its Division of Vehicles and only rear plates have been required since 1956. Kansas is one of only 19 U.S. states that don't require front license plates.
Highways
[edit]
Kansas is served by two Interstate highways with one beltway, two spur routes, and three bypasses, with over 874 miles (1,407 km) in all. The first section of Interstate in the nation was opened on Interstate 70 (I-70) just west of Topeka on November 14, 1956.[116]
I-70 is a major east–west route connecting to Denver, Colorado and Kansas City, Missouri. Cities along this route (from west to east) include Colby, Hays, Salina, Junction City, Topeka, Lawrence, Bonner Springs, and Kansas City.
I-35 is a major north–south route connecting to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and Des Moines, Iowa. Cities along this route (from south to north) include Wichita, El Dorado, Emporia, Ottawa, and Kansas City (and suburbs).
Spur routes serve as connections between the two major routes. I-135, a north–south route, connects I-35 at Wichita to I-70 at Salina. I-335, a southwest–northeast route, connects I-35 at Emporia to I-70 at Topeka. I-335 and portions of I-35 and I-70 make up the Kansas Turnpike. Bypasses include I-470 around Topeka, I-235 around Wichita, and I-670 in downtown Kansas City. I-435 is a beltway around the Kansas City metropolitan area while I-635 bypasses through Kansas City.
U.S. Route 69 (US-69) travels south to north, from Oklahoma to Missouri. The highway passes through the eastern section of Kansas, traveling through Baxter Springs, Pittsburg, Frontenac, Fort Scott, Louisburg, and the Kansas City area.
Kansas also has the country's third largest state highway system after Texas and California. This is because of the high number of counties and county seats (105) and their intertwining.
In January 2004, the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) announced the new Kansas 511 traveler information service.[117] By dialing 511, callers will get access to information about road conditions, construction, closures, detours and weather conditions for the state highway system. Weather and road condition information is updated every 15 minutes.
Interstate Highways
[edit]U.S. Routes
[edit]Aviation
[edit]The state's only major commercial (Class C) airport is Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport, located along US-54 on the western edge of the city. Manhattan Regional Airport in Manhattan offers daily flights to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport and Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, making it the second-largest commercial airport in the state.[118] Most air travelers in northeastern Kansas fly out of Kansas City International Airport, located in Platte County, Missouri, as well as Topeka Regional Airport in the state's capital.
In the state's southeastern part, people often use Tulsa International Airport in Tulsa, Oklahoma or Joplin Regional Airport in Joplin, Missouri. For those in the far western part of the state, Denver International Airport is a popular option. Connecting flights are also available from smaller Kansas airports in Dodge City, Garden City, Hays, Hutchinson, Liberal, or Salina.
Dotted across the state are smaller regional and municipal airports, including the Lawrence Municipal Airport, which houses many aircraft for the city of Lawrence and the University of Kansas, Miami County Airport, Wamego Airport, Osage City Municipal Airport, which is the headquarters of Skydive Kansas, Garden City Regional Airport, Manhattan Regional Airport, and Dodge City Regional Airport.
Rail
[edit]
Up through the mid 20th century, railroads connected most cities in Kansas. During World War II, less profitable links were abandoned for scrap metal drives, then additional mileage was reduced as passenger service was halted caused by the wide spread use of automobiles and trucking on the expanding highway system.
For passenger service, currently the Southwest Chief Amtrak route runs through the state on its route from Chicago, Illinois to Los Angeles, California on the BNSF railway. Stops in Kansas include Lawrence, Topeka, Newton, Hutchinson, Dodge City, and Garden City.[119]

An Amtrak Thruway connects Newton to the Heartland Flyer in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[120] There has been proposals to modify the Amtrak routing through Kansas, such as: removing rail service from the Southwest Chief between Albuquerque, New Mexico and Dodge City,[121] and extending rail service for the Heartland Flyer from Oklahoma City to Newton with new stops at Arkansas City and Wichita.[122][123]
For freight service, there are three Class I railroads in Kansas: BNSF, Union Pacific, and CPKC; as well as many shortline railroads.[124]
Transit
[edit]Public transportation in Kansas is provided through a network of regional and local transit systems that serve both urban and rural communities throughout the state. In the Kansas City metropolitan area, RideKC integrates services across multiple providers, offering bus routes, the KC Streetcar, and mobility options to facilitate regional travel. Johnson County Transit, operating under the RideKC brand, delivers fixed commuter and express bus routes, microtransit, and paratransit services, connecting Johnson County with the broader Kansas City, Kansas and downtown Kansas City, Missouri.[125]
Lawrence Transit provides fare-free public transit to the city of Lawrence through a partnership with the University of Kansas. The service includes fixed-route buses and paratransit, with routes serving both the university campus and the broader community. The fare-free model is funded through a combination of university student fees and city resources. Also available through KU is "SafeRide", which is a free transportation service for Lawrence college students at KU and Haskell Indian Nations University for night time transportation to the passenger's home. Lawrence Transit also partners with RideKC for routes to Johnson County along K-10 Highway.[126][127][128]
Topeka Metro and Wichita Transit have both operated in their respective cities since the 1950s, and Kansas Rides is a statewide initiative that connects Kansans living in rural parts of the state with public transit providers in all 105 counties. It helps users find fixed-route systems, demand-response services, and specialized transportation options across the state.[129]
| Local transit map |
|---|
Law and government
[edit]State and local politics
[edit]Executive branch: The executive branch consists of one officer and five elected officers. The governor and lieutenant governor are elected on the same ticket. The attorney general, secretary of state, state treasurer, and state insurance commissioner are each elected separately.
Legislative branch: The bicameral Kansas Legislature consists of the Kansas House of Representatives, with 125 members serving two-year terms, and the Kansas Senate, with 40 members serving four-year terms.
Judicial branch: The judicial branch of the state government is headed by the Kansas Supreme Court. The court has seven judges. A vacancy is filled by the Governor picking one of three nominees selected by the nine-member Kansas Supreme Court Nominating Commission. The board consists of five Kansas lawyers elected by other Kansas lawyers and four members selected by the governor.
Political culture
[edit]Since the 1930s, Kansas has remained one of the most socially conservative states in the nation. The 1990s brought the defeat of prominent Democrats, including Dan Glickman, and the Kansas State Board of Education's 1999 decision to eliminate evolution from the state teaching standards, a decision that was later reversed.[130] 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.[131] Kansas's path to a solid Republican state has been examined by journalist and historian Thomas Frank in his 2004 book What's the Matter with Kansas?.
19th-century state politics
[edit]Kansas was founded as a free-state by anti-slavery advocates from New England. During its early history, it faced political turmoil from politicians trying to sway the newly founded state towards pro-slavery or pro-abolition sentiment. Ultimately, upon achieving statehood in 1861, Kansas became a Republican stronghold due to the Republican party's establishment as the anti-slavery party. The state's first officials, including Governor Charles Robinson and Senators James Lane and Samuel Pomeroy, were Republicans. From 1861 to 1888, Republicans dominated Kansas politics, winning the majority of congressional and gubernatorial races. This era saw the implementation of progressive policies, including the adoption of prohibition in 1881 and early support for women's suffrage.[132]
Starting in 1887 Kansas women could vote in city elections and hold certain offices.[133]
In the 1890 elections, Populists secured a majority in the state legislature and elected a U.S. Senator. However, internal divisions and strategic counteractions by Republicans led to the movement's decline by the late 1890s.[134]
20th-century state politics
[edit]Kansas was the first state to institute a system of workers' compensation (1910) and to regulate the securities industry (1911). Kansas also permitted women's suffrage in 1912, almost a decade before the federal constitution was amended to require it.[135] 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 model 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, notably the Pendergast Machine in neighboring Kansas City, Missouri. 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., though, infamously, many Kansas residents opposed the decision, and it led to protests in Topeka after the verdict.[136]
The state backed Republican Presidential Candidates Wendell Willkie and Thomas E. Dewey in 1940 and 1944, respectively, breaking ranks with the majority of the country in the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Kansas also supported Dewey in 1948 despite the presence of incumbent president Harry S. Truman, who hailed from Independence, Missouri, approximately 15 miles (24 km) east of the Kansas–Missouri state line. After Roosevelt carried Kansas in 1936, only one Democrat has won the state since, Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.
21st-century state politics
[edit]| Party | Number of voters | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | 900,078 | 45.08% | |
| Unaffiliated | 567,753 | 28.43% | |
| Democratic | 499,110 | 24.99% | |
| Libertarian | 23,800 | 1.19% | |
| No Labels Kansas | 5,136 | 0.26% | |
| United Kansas | 805 | 0.04% | |
| Total | 1,996,682 | 100.00% | |
In 2008, Democrat Governor Kathleen Sebelius vetoed permits for the construction of new coal-fired energy plants in Kansas, saying: "We know that greenhouse gases contribute to climate change. As an agricultural state, Kansas is particularly vulnerable. Therefore, reducing pollutants benefits our state not only in the short term—but also for generations of Kansans to come."[138] However, shortly after Mark Parkinson became governor in 2009 upon Sebelius's resignation to become Secretary of U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, Parkinson announced a compromise plan to allow construction of a coal-fired plant.
In 2010, Republican Sam Brownback was elected governor with 63 percent of the state vote. He was sworn in as governor in 2011, Kansas's first Republican governor in eight years. Brownback had established himself as a conservative member of the U.S. Senate in years prior, but made several controversial decisions after becoming governor, leading to a 23% approval rating among registered voters – the lowest of any governor in the United States.[139] In May 2011, much to the opposition of art leaders and enthusiasts in the state, Brownback eliminated the Kansas Arts Commission, making Kansas the first state without an arts agency.[140] In July 2011, Brownback announced plans to close the Lawrence branch of the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services as a cost-saving measure. Hundreds rallied against the decision.[141] Lawrence City Commission later voted to provide the funding needed to keep the branch open.[142]
Democrat Laura Kelly defeated former Secretary of State of Kansas Kris Kobach in the 2018 election for Governor with 48.0% of the vote.[143][144]
In August 2022, Kansas voters rejected the controversial Value Them Both Amendment, which would have eliminated the right to an abortion in the state constitution. The vote was the first referendum on abortion since Roe v. Wade was overturned earlier that summer, and the result was hailed as a landmark victory for pro-choice advocates in the traditionally socially conservative state.[145]
In a 2020 study, Kansas was ranked as the 13th hardest state for citizens to vote in.[146]
National politics
[edit]

The state's current delegation to the Congress of the United States includes Republican Senators Jerry Moran of Manhattan, and Roger Marshall of Great Bend. In the House of Representatives, Kansas is represented by Republican Representatives Tracey Mann of Quinter (District 1), Jake LaTurner of Pittsburg (District 2), Ron Estes of Wichita (District 4), and Democratic Representative Sharice Davids of Kansas City (District 3) Davids is the second Native American to represent Kansas in Congress, after Republican Charles Curtis (Kaw).
Historically, Kansas has been strongly Republican, dating from the Antebellum age when the Republican Party was created out of the movement opposing the extension of slavery into Kansas Territory. Kansas has not elected a Democrat to the U.S. Senate since the 1932 election, when Franklin D. Roosevelt won his first term as president in the wake of the Great Depression. This is the longest Senate losing streak for either party in a single state. Senator Sam Brownback was a candidate for the Republican party nomination for president in 2008. Brownback was not a candidate for re-election to a third full term in 2010, but he was elected Governor in that year's general election. Moran defeated Tiahrt for the Republican nomination for Brownback's seat in the August 2010 primary, then won a landslide general election victory over Democrat Lisa Johnston.
The only non-Republican presidential candidates Kansas has given its electoral vote to are Populist James Weaver and Democrats William Jennings Bryan (once), Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt (twice), and Lyndon Johnson. In 2004, George W. Bush won the state's six electoral votes by an overwhelming margin of 25 percentage points with 62% of the vote. The only two counties to support Democrat John Kerry in that election were Wyandotte, which contains Kansas City, and Douglas, home to the University of Kansas, located in Lawrence. The 2008 election brought similar results as John McCain won the state with 57% of the votes. Douglas, Wyandotte, and Crawford County were the only counties in support of President Barack Obama.[147]
Abilene was the boyhood home to Republican president Dwight D. Eisenhower, and he maintained lifelong ties to family and friends there. Kansas was the adult home of two losing Republican candidates (Governor Alf Landon in 1936 and Senator Bob Dole in 1996).
The New York Times reported in September 2014 that as the Democratic candidate for Senator has tried to drop out of the race, independent Greg Orman has attracted enough bipartisan support to seriously challenge the reelection bid of Republican Pat Roberts:
- Kansas politics have been roiled in recent years. The rise of the Tea Party and the election of President Obama have prompted Republicans to embrace a purer brand of conservatism and purge what had long been a robust moderate wing from its ranks. Mr. Roberts has sought to adapt to this new era, voting against spending bills that included projects for the state that he had sought.[148]
State laws
[edit]The legal drinking age in Kansas is 21. In lieu of the state retail sales tax, a 10% Liquor Drink Tax is collected for liquor consumed on the licensed premises and an 8% Liquor Enforcement Tax is collected on retail purchases. Although the sale of cereal malt beverage (also known as 3.2 beer) was legalized in 1937, the first post-Prohibition legalization of alcoholic liquor did not occur until the state's constitution was amended in 1948. The following year the Legislature enacted the Liquor Control Act which created a system of regulating, licensing, and taxing, and the Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) was created to enforce the act. The power to regulate cereal malt beverage remains with the cities and counties. Liquor-by-the-drink did not become legal until passage of an amendment to the state's constitution in 1986 and additional legislation the following year. As of November 2006, Kansas still has 29 dry counties and only 17 counties have passed liquor-by-the-drink with no food sales requirement.[149] Today there are more than 2,600 liquor and 4,000 cereal malt beverage licensees in the state.[150]
On May 12, 2022, Gov. Laura Kelly signed legislation (Senate Bill 84) that legalizes sports betting in the state, making Kansas the 35th state to approve sports wagering in the US. This would give the four state-owned casinos the right to partner with online bookmakers and up to 50 retailers, including gas stations and restaurants, to engage in sports betting.[151]
Education
[edit]Education in Kansas is governed at the primary and secondary school level by the Kansas State Board of Education. The state's public colleges and universities are supervised by the Kansas Board of Regents.
Twice since 1999 the Board of Education has approved changes in the state science curriculum standards that encouraged the teaching of intelligent design. Both times, the standards were reversed after changes in the composition of the board in the next election.
Culture
[edit]
Music
[edit]The rock band Kansas was formed in the state capital of Topeka, the hometown of several of the band's members.
Joe Walsh, guitarist for the famous rock band the Eagles, was born in Wichita. Danny Carey, drummer for the band Tool, was raised in Paola.
Singers from Kansas include Leavenworth native Melissa Etheridge, Sharon native Martina McBride, Chanute native Jennifer Knapp (whose first album was titled Kansas), Kansas City native Janelle Monáe, Prairie Village native Joyce DiDonato, and Liberal native Jerrod Niemann.
The state anthem is the American classic Home on the Range, written by Kansan Brewster Higley. Another song, the official state march adopted by the Kansas Legislature in 1935 is called The Kansas March, which features the lyrics, "Blue sky above us, silken strands of heat, Rim of the far horizon, where earth and heaven meet, Kansas as a temple, stands in velvet sod, Shrine which the sunshine, sanctifies to God."[152]
Literature
[edit]The state's most famous appearance in literature was as the home of Dorothy Gale, the main character in the novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900). Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House on the Prairie, published in 1935, is another well-known tale about Kansas.
Kansas was also the setting of the 1965 best-seller In Cold Blood, described by its author Truman Capote as a "nonfiction novel". Mixing fact and fiction, the book chronicles the events and aftermath of the 1959 murder of a wealthy farmer and his family who lived in the small West Kansas town of Holcomb in Finney County.
The fictional town of Smallville, Kansas is the childhood home of Clark Kent/Superman in American comic books published by DC Comics. Also Keystone City is a Kansas city where The Flash works and lives.
The science fiction novella A Boy and His Dog, as well as the film based on it,[153] take place in post-apocalyptic Topeka.
The winner of the 2011 Newbery Medal for excellence in children's literature, Moon Over Manifest, tells the story of a young and adventurous girl named Abilene who is sent to the fictional town of Manifest, Kansas, by her father in the summer of 1936. It was written by Kansan Clare Vanderpool.
Lawrence is the setting for a number of science fiction writer James Gunn's novels.
Art
[edit]
Kansas is home to a number of art museums. The Wichita Art Museum collection focuses on American art.[154] The Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art in Overland Park exhibits artists of national and international recognition.[155] The Spencer Museum of Art, at University of Kansas in Lawrence, has a diverse permanent collection and Ingrid & J.K. Lee Study Center as an education space.[156]
Film
[edit]

The first film theater in Kansas was the Patee Theater in Lawrence. Most theaters at the time showed films only as part of vaudeville acts but not as an exclusive and stand alone form of entertainment. Though the Patee family had been involved in vaudeville, they believed films could carry the evening without other variety acts, but to show the films it was necessary for the Patee's to establish a generating plant (back in 1903 Lawrence was not yet fully electrified). The Patee Theater was one of the first of its kind west of the Mississippi River. The specialized equipment like the projector came from New York City.[157]
Kansas has been the setting of many award-winning and popular American films, as well as being the home of some of the oldest operating cinemas in the world. The Plaza Cinema in Ottawa, Kansas, located in the northeastern portion of the state, was built on May 22, 1907, and it is listed by the Guinness Book of World Records as the oldest operating cinema in the world.[158][159] In 1926, The Jayhawk Theatre, an art-deco movie house in Topeka opened its doors for the first time to movie going audiences, and today, in addition to screenings of independent films, the theatre acts as a venue for plays and concerts. The Fox Theater in Hutchinson was built in 1930, and was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.[160] Like the other theaters listed here, The Fox still plays first run movies to this day.
- As was the case with the novel, Dorothy Gale (portrayed by Judy Garland) in the 1939 fantasy film The Wizard of Oz was a young girl who lived in Kansas with her aunt and uncle. The line, "We're not in Kansas anymore", has entered into the English lexicon as a phrase describing a wholly new or unexpected situation.[161]
- The 1967 feature film In Cold Blood, like the book on which it was based, was set in various locations across Kansas. Many of the scenes in the film were filmed at the exact locations where the events profiled in the book took place. A 1996 TV miniseries was also based on the book.
- The 1988 film Kansas starred Andrew McCarthy as a traveler who met up with a dangerous wanted drifter played by Matt Dillon.
- The 2005 film Capote, for which Philip Seymour Hoffman was awarded the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of the title character, profiled the author as he traveled across Kansas while writing In Cold Blood (although most of the film itself was shot in the Canadian province of Manitoba).
- The setting of The Day After, a 1983 made-for-television movie about a fictional nuclear attack, was the city of Lawrence.
- Due to the super hero Superman growing up in the fictional Smallville, Kansas, multiple films featuring the super hero have been entirely or at least partially set in Kansas including Superman (1978), Superman III (1983), Man of Steel (2013), Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016), and Justice League (2017).
- The 2012 film Looper is set in Kansas.
- The 1973 film Paper Moon in which Tatum O'Neal won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress (The youngest to win an Academy Award) was based in and filmed in Kansas. The film was shot in the small towns of Hays; McCracken; Wilson; and St. Joseph, Missouri. Various shooting locations include the Midland Hotel at Wilson; the railway depot at Gorham; storefronts and buildings on Main Street in White Cloud; Hays; sites on both sides of the Missouri River; Rulo Bridge; and Saint Joseph, Missouri.
- Scenes of the 1996 film Mars Attacks! took place in the fictional town of Perkinsville. Scenes taking place in Kansas were filmed in Burns, Lawrence, and Wichita.
- The 2007 film The Lookout is set mostly in Kansas (although filmed in Canada). Specifically two locations; Kansas City and the fictional town of Noel, Kansas.[162]
- The 2012 documentary The Gridiron was filmed at The University of Kansas
- The 2014 ESPN documentary No Place Like Home was filmed in Lawrence and the countryside of Douglas County, Kansas
- The 2017 film Thank You for Your Service is primarily set in Kansas, including the cities of Topeka and Junction City.
- The 2017 documentary When Kings Reigned was filmed in Lawrence.
- The 2019 film Brightburn took place in the fictional town of Brightburn. As is evident with scenes in the film depicting mountains (Kansas has no mountain ranges), it was filmed in Georgia instead of in Kansas.
Television
[edit]- The protagonist brothers of the 2005 TV show Supernatural hail from Lawrence, with the city referenced numerous times on the show.
- Most of the second season of the TV Series Prison Break had scenes that took place in Kansas. Specifically the towns of Ness City and Tribune as the character T–Bag searches for his ex-girlfriend who turned him in to the police. A season 1 episode also briefly took place in Topeka.
- 2006 TV series Jericho was based in the fictitious town of Jericho, Kansas, surviving post-nuclear America.
- Early seasons of Smallville, about Superman as a teenager, were based in a fictional town of Smallville, Kansas. Unlike most other adaptations of the Superman story, the series also places the fictional city of Metropolis in western Kansas, a few hours from Smallville.
- Gunsmoke, a radio series western, ran from 1952 to 1961, took place in Dodge City, Kansas.
- Gunsmoke, television series, the longest running prime time show of the 20th century, ran from September 10, 1955, to March 31, 1975, for a total of 635 episodes.
- The 2009 Showtime series United States of Tara is set in Overland Park, a suburb of Kansas City.
Sports
[edit]Professional
[edit]
| Team | Sport | League | City |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sporting Kansas City | Soccer | Major League Soccer | Kansas City |
| Sporting Kansas City II | Soccer | MLS Next Pro | Kansas City |
| Kansas City Monarchs | Baseball | American Association | Kansas City |
| Garden City Wind | Baseball | Pecos League | Garden City |
| Kaw Valley FC | Soccer | USL League Two | Lawrence, and Topeka |
| Salina Liberty | Indoor football | Champions Indoor Football | Salina |
| Southwest Kansas Storm | Indoor football | Champions Indoor Football | Dodge City |
| Wichita Thunder | Ice hockey | ECHL | Wichita |
| Wichita Wind Surge | Baseball | Texas League | Wichita |
| Wichita Wings | Indoor Soccer | MASL 2 | Wichita |
Sporting Kansas City, who have played their home games at Village West in Kansas City since 2008, are the second top-tier professional sports league (after the original Wichita Wings of the MISL) and first Major League Soccer team to be located within Kansas. In 2011 the team moved to their new home, a $165 million soccer specific stadium now known as Children's Mercy Park.
Historically, Kansans have supported the major league sports teams of Kansas City, Missouri, including the Kansas City Royals (MLB), and the Kansas City Chiefs (NFL), in part because the home stadiums for these teams are a few miles from the Kansas border. The Chiefs and the Royals play at the Truman Sports Complex, located about 10 miles (16 km) from the Kansas–Missouri state line. FC Kansas City, a charter member of the National Women's Soccer League, played the 2013 season, the first for both the team and the league, on the Kansas side of the metropolitan area, but played on the Missouri side until folding after the 2017 season. From 1973 to 1997 the flagship radio station for the Royals was WIBW in Topeka.[163]
Some Kansans, mostly from the westernmost parts of the state, support the professional sports teams of Denver, particularly the Denver Broncos of the NFL.
Two major auto racing facilities are located in Kansas. The Kansas Speedway located in Kansas City hosts races of the NASCAR, IndyCar, and ARCA circuits. Also, the National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) holds drag racing events at Heartland Park Topeka. The Sports Car Club of America has its national headquarters in Topeka.
History
[edit]The history of professional sports in Kansas probably dates from the establishment of the minor league baseball Topeka Capitals and Leavenworth Soldiers in 1886 in the Western League.[164][165] The African-American Bud Fowler played on the Topeka team that season, one year before the "color line" descended on professional baseball.[165]
In 1887, the Western League was dominated by a reorganized Topeka team called the Golden Giants: a high-priced collection of major leaguer players, including Bug Holliday, Jim Conway, Dan Stearns, Perry Werden and Jimmy Macullar, which won the league by 15.5 games.[165] On April 10, 1887, the Golden Giants also won an exhibition game from the defending World Series champions, the St. Louis Browns (the present-day Cardinals), by a score of 12–9. However, Topeka was unable to support the team, and it disbanded after one year.
The first night game in the history of professional baseball was played in Independence on April 28, 1930, when the Muscogee (Oklahoma) Indians beat the Independence Producers 13–3 in a minor league game sanctioned by the Western League of the Western Baseball Association with 1,500 fans attending the game. The permanent lighting system was first used for an exhibition game on April 17, 1930, between the Independence Producers and House of David semi-professional baseball team of Benton Harbor, Michigan with the Independence team winning 9–1 before a crowd of 1,700 spectators.[166]
College
[edit]
The history of intercollegiate of athletics in the state dates back to 1866, with the establishment of the University of Kansas baseball team, which competed against local area teams and schools in the Kansas State Fair. The Jayhawks baseball team is one of the oldest intercollegiate baseball programs in the United States.[167]
The governing body for intercollegiate sports in the United States, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), was headquartered in Johnson County, Kansas from 1952 until moving to Indianapolis in 1999.[168][169]
NCAA Division I schools
[edit]
While there are no franchises of the four major professional sports within the state, many Kansans are fans of the state's major college sports teams, especially the Jayhawks of the University of Kansas (KU), and the Wildcats of Kansas State University (KSU or "K-State"). The teams are rivals in the Big 12 Conference.
Both KU and K-State have tradition-rich programs in men's basketball. The Jayhawks are a perennial national power, ranking first in all-time victories among NCAA programs. The Jayhawks have won six national titles, including NCAA tournament championships in 1952, 1988, 2008, and 2022. They also were retroactively awarded national championships by the Helms Foundation for 1922 and 1923. K-State also had a long stretch of success on the hardwood, lasting from the 1940s to the 1980s, making four Final Fours during that stretch. In 1988, KU and K-State met in the Elite Eight, KU taking the game 71–58. After a 12-year absence, the Wildcats returned to the NCAA tournament in 2008, and advanced to the Elite Eight in 2010 and 2018. KU is fifth all-time with 15 Final Four appearances, while K-State's four appearances are tied for 17th.
Conversely, success on the gridiron has been less frequent for both KSU and KU. However, there have been recent breakthroughs for both schools' football teams. The Jayhawks won the Orange Bowl for the first time in three tries in 2008, capping a 12–1 season, the best in school history. And when Bill Snyder arrived to coach at K-State in 1989, he turned the Wildcats from one of the worst college football programs in America,[170] into a national force for most of the 1990s and early 2000s. The team won the Fiesta Bowl in 1997, achieved an undefeated (11–0) regular season and No. 1 ranking in 1998, and took the Big 12 Conference championship in 2003. After three seasons in which K-State football languished, Snyder came out of retirement in 2009 and guided them to the top of the college football ranks again, finishing second in the Big 12 in 2011 and earning a berth in the Cotton Bowl, and winning the Big 12 again in 2012.
Wichita State University, which also fields teams (called the Shockers) in Division I of the NCAA, is best known for its baseball and basketball programs. In baseball, the Shockers won the College World Series in 1989. In men's basketball, they appeared in the Final Four in 1965 and 2013, and entered the 2014 NCAA tournament unbeaten. The school also fielded a football team from 1897 to 1986. The Shocker football team is tragically known for a plane crash in 1970 that killed 31 people, including 14 players.
NCAA Division II schools
[edit]Notable success has also been achieved by the state's smaller schools in football. Pittsburg State University, an NCAA Division II participant, has claimed four national titles in football, two in the NAIA and most recently the 2011 NCAA Division II national title. Pittsburg State became the winningest NCAA Division II football program in 1995. PSU passed Hillsdale College at the top of the all-time victories list in the 1995 season on its march to the national runner-up finish. The Gorillas, in 96 seasons of intercollegiate competition, have accumulated 579 victories, posting a 579–301–48 overall mark.
Washburn University, in Topeka, won the NAIA Men's Basketball Championship in 1987. The Fort Hays State University men won the 1996 NCAA Division II title with a 34–0 record, and the Washburn women won the 2005 NCAA Division II crown. St. Benedict's College (now Benedictine College), in Atchison, won the 1954 and 1967 Men's NAIA Basketball Championships.
The Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference has its roots as one of the oldest college sport conferences in existence and participates in the NAIA and all ten member schools are in the state of Kansas. Other smaller school conferences that have some members in Kansas are the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association the Midlands Collegiate Athletic Conference, the Midwest Christian College Conference, and the Heart of America Athletic Conference. Many junior colleges also have active athletic programs.
Emporia State's women's basketball team, under head coach Brandon Schneider, who is now serving as the women's basketball coach at the University of Kansas, has seen success as well. In 2010 the team won the NCAA Division II National Championship. Emporia State and Washburn in Topeka share a heated rivalry in all sports, mostly due to the close proximity of both cities.
Junior colleges
[edit]The Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference has been heralded as one of the best conferences in all of NJCAA football, with Garden City Community College, Independence Community College, and Butler Community College all consistently in contention for national championships.
High school
[edit]The Kansas State High School Activities Association (KSHSAA) is the organization which oversees interscholastic competition in the state of Kansas at the high school level. It oversees both athletic and non-athletic competition, and sponsors championships in several sports and activities.
Rivalry with Missouri
[edit]
Kansas and Missouri are two bordering U.S. states with a long and tumultuous history. The relationship between these two states has its roots in Bleeding Kansas, but mutual distrust has continued off and on since then, even in sporting contexts.[171] These states also share the Kansas City metropolitan area, where both states each have a city named Kansas City on either side of the Missouri River. The bitterness sown during Bleeding Kansas lingers in the Border War between the University of Kansas and the University of Missouri.[172] The two states compete economically, mainly at the border which is also called a Border War.[173] In 2019, the governors of the two states signed an agreement to stop offering financial incentives to pull business across the border.[174] In 2022, the governor of Kansas said that agreement did not include enticement of the Chiefs football team moving its arena from Missouri to Kansas.[175] In 2024, the Kansas House of Representatives and Kansas State Senate passed legislation that would give professional sports programs north of $1 billion in STAR bonds for the development of stadiums and entertainment districts in Kansas City, Kansas. The Chiefs and Royals both hired lobbyists in 2024 that appealed to the Kansas Legislature. As of March 2025, the Chiefs haven't commented directly on a move to Kansas, but the Royals have expressed interest in building a riverfront stadium on the junction between the Kansas River and Missouri River. Kansas House of Representatives member Sean Tarwater said that talks with the Chiefs were intensifying in February 2025, and that Kansas was close to "bringing over at least one team, maybe two".[176] In June 2024, an architecture firm in Kansas released a video featuring 3D renderings of a potential design for a domed stadium in Kansas City, Kansas.[177][178]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The Kansas City area is the largest metropolitan and urban area in the state alone; however, the Wichita metropolitan area is the largest centered in the state.
- ^ a b Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988
References
[edit]- ^ Riney-Kehrberg, Pamela. "Wholesome, Home-Baked Goodness: Kansas, the Wheat State" (PDF). Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains (Spring 2011). Kansas State Historical Society: 60–69. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 8, 2022. Retrieved April 25, 2022.
- ^ "New vanity tag rule spurs drivers' creativity". Archived from the original on March 10, 2010. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
- ^ a b c Geography, US Census Bureau. "State Area Measurements and Internal Point Coordinates". Archived from the original on March 16, 2018. Retrieved May 31, 2016.
- ^ Perlman, Howard. "Area of each state that is water". Archived from the original on June 25, 2016.
- ^ a b "Kansas Geography from NETSTATE". Archived from the original on June 4, 2016.
- ^ a b "Elevations and Distances in the United States". United States Geological Survey. 2001. Archived from the original on October 15, 2011. Retrieved October 21, 2011.
- ^ "United States Census Quick Facts Kansas". Retrieved January 9, 2025.
- ^ "Household Income in States and Metropolitan Areas: 2023" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on January 12, 2025. Retrieved January 12, 2025.
- ^ "Median Annual Household Income". The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
- ^ "Governor's Signature Makes English the Official Language of Kansas". US English. May 11, 2007. Archived from the original on July 10, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2008.
- ^ "Kansas". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.
- ^ "Current Lists of Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas and Delineations". Archived from the original on January 27, 2017.
- ^ Langsdorf, Edgar (May 1950). "A Review of Early Navigation on the Kansas River". Kansas Historical Quarterly. Kansas Historical Society. Archived from the original on September 22, 2022. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
- ^ "Kansas history page". Archived from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved April 13, 2019.
- ^ The Encyclopedia of Kansas (1994) ISBN 0-403-09921-8
- ^ John Koontz, p.c.
- ^ "Today in History: January 29". Memory.loc.gov. Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ "Kansas Quick Facts". governor.ks.gov. Archived from the original on May 11, 2011. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
- ^ Clavin, Thomas; Clavin, Tom (February 28, 2017). Dodge City: Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, and the Wickedest Town in the American West. St. Martin's Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-250-07148-4. Archived from the original on March 29, 2024. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ Magazine, Smithsonian. "How Dodge City Became a Symbol of Frontier Lawlessness". Smithsonian Magazine. Archived from the original on January 6, 2024. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
- ^ "Kansas Agriculture". Kansas Department of Agriculture. Archived from the original on September 20, 2015. Retrieved September 14, 2015.
- ^ "2020 Census" (PDF). Census.gov. April 26, 2021. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 26, 2021. Retrieved April 26, 2021.
- ^ "Mount Sunflower—Kansas, United States • peakery". April 3, 2011. Archived from the original on April 3, 2011.
- ^ Bright, William (2004). Native American placenames of the United States. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 47. ISBN 0-8061-3576-X. OCLC 53019644.
- ^ Rankin, Robert. 2005. "Quapaw". In Native Languages of the Southeastern United States, eds. Heather K. Hardy and Janine Scancarelli. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, p. 492.
- ^ Connelley, William E. 1918. "Indians Archived February 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine". A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans, ch. 10, vol. 1.
- ^ Cazorla, Frank, G. Baena, Rosa, Polo, David, Reder Gadow, Marion (2019) Luis de Unzaga (1717–1793) Pioneer in the birth of the United States and in the liberalism. Foundation Malaga
- ^ Partin, John W. Partin (1983). "A Brief History of Fort Leavenworth" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on April 12, 2019. Retrieved January 24, 2019.
- ^ Jones, Gray Ghosts and Rebel Riders Holt & Co. 1956, p. 76
- ^ "Less of Oratory and More Work Novel Platform Archived July 9, 2021, at the Wayback Machine." Alliance, Ohio: The Alliance Review and Leader, April 21, 1922.
- ^ "Mrs. W.D. Mowry Dies Archived July 9, 2021, at the Wayback Machine." Emporia, Kansas: The Emporia Gazette, August 2, 1923, p. 5.
- ^ "Pioneer Woman Candidate for Governor Dies: Mrs. W.D. Mowry on Republican Ticket in Primary Last Year Archived July 9, 2021, at the Wayback Machine." Concordia, Kansas: Concordia Blade-Empire, August 2, 1923, front page.
- ^ "The Dust Bowl | Great Depression and World War II, 1929-1945 | U.S. History Primary Source Timeline | Classroom Materials at the Library of Congress | Library of Congress". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Archived from the original on October 13, 2023. Retrieved September 28, 2023.
- ^ "Kansas Land Area County Rank". www.usa.com. Archived from the original on February 20, 2021. Retrieved November 27, 2019.
- ^ "Physiographic Regions". geokansas.ku.edu. Retrieved September 20, 2025.
- ^ "Kansas Is Flatter Than a Pancake". Improbable.com. Archived from the original on July 30, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ "Highest, Lowest, and Mean Elevations in the United States". infoplease.com. Archived from the original on May 21, 2018. Retrieved May 20, 2018.
- ^ "Fracas over Kansas pancake flap". Geotimes.org. Archived from the original on January 24, 2004. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ "Kansas". National Park Service. Archived from the original on December 17, 2006. Retrieved July 15, 2008.
- ^ "Kansas Natural Heritage Inventory: Rare plants and animals, and natural communities". Kansas Biological Survey. February 12, 2013. Archived from the original on May 10, 2022. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ Kansas, Natural Heritage Inventory (January 9, 2014). "Rare Vertebrates of Kansas" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 10, 2022. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ Parks, Kansas Department of Wildlife &. "Threatened and Endangered Wildlife". ksoutdoors.gov. Retrieved September 20, 2025.
- ^ K-State Research, and Extension. "Native Plants" (PDF). www.johnson.k-state.edu. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 10, 2022. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ "Kansas Wildflowers and Grasses". www.kswildflower.org. Archived from the original on February 26, 2021. Retrieved March 16, 2021.
- ^ "Kansas Hardiness Zones Map - 2023". Plantmaps. Archived from the original on January 17, 2024. Retrieved January 17, 2024.
- ^ "Annual Average Number of Tornadoes, 1953–2004". National Climatic Data Center. Archived from the original on October 16, 2011. Retrieved October 25, 2006.
- ^
- "Concordia Weather—Kansas—Average Temperatures and Rainfall". Country Studies US. Archived from the original on November 3, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
- "Dodge City Weather—Kansas—Average Temperatures and Rainfall". Country Studies US. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
- "Goodland Weather—Kansas—Average Temperatures and Rainfall". Country Studies US. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
- "Topeka Weather—Kansas—Average Temperatures and Rainfall". Country Studies US. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
- "Wichita Weather—Kansas—Average Temperatures and Rainfall". Country Studies US. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
- ^ Fitzgerald, Daniel C. "KS extinct locations". Archived from the original on December 6, 2012.
- ^ "Population Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on May 12, 2023. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
- ^ a b "Births: Final Data for 2013" (PDF). National Vital Statistics Reports. CDC. January 15, 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on September 11, 2017. Retrieved June 7, 2017.
- ^ a b "Births: Final Data for 2014" (PDF). National Vital Statistics Reports. CDC. December 23, 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 14, 2017. Retrieved June 7, 2017.
- ^ a b "Births: Final Data for 2015" (PDF). National Vital Statistics Reports. CDC. January 5, 2017. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 31, 2017. Retrieved June 7, 2017.
- ^ a b "data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 3, 2018. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
- ^ a b "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 1, 2019. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
- ^ a b "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 28, 2019. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
- ^ a b "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 24, 2021. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
- ^ a b "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 10, 2022. Retrieved February 20, 2022.
- ^ a b "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 1, 2023. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
- ^ a b "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 4, 2024. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
- ^ "US Health Map". Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation. University of Washington. Archived from the original on December 23, 2020. Retrieved December 27, 2020.
- ^ "Kansas: Life Expectancy". Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Archived from the original on June 28, 2021. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
- ^ "Mortality in the United States, 2019" (PDF). Centers for Disease Control. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 10, 2021. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
- ^ Miller, Rober B. (2013). Bonner Springs (Images of America). Arcadia Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-4671-1043-3.
- ^ N/A. "Wichita (city), Kansas". Archived from the original on July 3, 2019. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
- ^ a b c "Go Wichita Convention and Visitors Bureau". Gowichita.com. Archived from the original on July 19, 2013. Retrieved September 28, 2013.
- ^ "Annual estimates of the population through July 1, 2006". Population Estimates. Census Bureau, Population Division. June 28, 2007. Archived from the original on December 6, 2006.
- ^ "The Blackwell Tornado of 25 May 1955". NWS Norman, Oklahoma. June 13, 2006. Archived from the original on October 8, 2006. Retrieved January 28, 2007.
- ^ McCORMICK, PETER J. "THE 1992 SECESSION MOVEMENT IN SOUTHWEST KANSAS". digitalcommons.unl.edu/. Archived from the original on February 4, 2021. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
- ^ "QuickFacts Kansas; UNITED STATES". 2018 Population Estimates. United States Census Bureau, Population Division. March 3, 2019. Archived from the original on January 15, 2019. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
- ^ "Cumulative Estimates of the Components of Population Change for the United States, Regions and States: April 1, 2000, to July 1, 2006", Population Estimates, US: Census Bureau, Population Division, December 22, 2006, NST-EST2006-04, archived from the original on September 16, 2004,
Kansas population has increased at a decreasing rate, reducing the number of congressmen from 5 to 4 in 1992 (Congressional Redistricting Act, eff. 1992).
- ^ "Immigrants in Kansas" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on March 29, 2023. Retrieved August 18, 2023.
- ^ Wright, John W., ed. (2007). The New York Times 2008 almanac. New York: Penguin. p. 178. ISBN 9780143112334.
- ^ "Population and Population Centers by State". U.S. Census Bureau. 2000. Archived from the original on February 23, 2010. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f g Brown, Corie (April 26, 2018). "Rural Kansas is dying. I drove 1,800 miles to find out why". New Food Economy. Archived from the original on May 17, 2018. Retrieved May 16, 2018.
- ^ "2007–2022 PIT Counts by State". Archived from the original on March 14, 2023. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
- ^ "The 2022 Annual Homelessness Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on March 11, 2023. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
- ^ "Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Counties: April 1, 2020 to July 1, 2024". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on June 18, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- ^ "Historical Population Change Data (1910–2020)". Census.gov. United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on April 29, 2021. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
- ^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Kansas". Census.gov. Archived from the original on May 17, 2022. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
- ^ "Historical Census Statistics on Population Totals By Race, 1790 to 1990, and By Hispanic Origin, 1970 to 1990, For The United States, Regions, Divisions, and States". July 25, 2008. Archived from the original on July 25, 2008.
- ^ Kansas Statistical Abstract. "Population in Kansas and the U.S., by Race/ Page 7" (PDF). ipsr.ku.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 5, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
- ^ "Decennial Census by Decade". U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on May 22, 2017. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
- ^ "Race and Ethnicity in the United States: 2010 Census and 2020 Census". U.S. Census Bureau. August 12, 2021. Archived from the original on August 15, 2021. Retrieved August 12, 2021.
- ^ "Kansas—Social demographics". American Community Survey Office. 2006. Archived from the original on September 10, 2004. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ "Czechs in Kansas - Kansapedia". Archived from the original on September 29, 2023. Retrieved September 13, 2023.
- ^ Painter, Nell Irvin. Exodusters: Black Migration to Kansas After Reconstruction. United States, W. W. Norton, 1992. p.146
- ^ "Asian Americans in Kansas - Kansapedia". Archived from the original on September 29, 2023. Retrieved September 13, 2023.
- ^ "Data" (PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved April 11, 2025.
- ^ Exner, Rich (June 3, 2012). "Americans under age 1 now mostly minorities, but not in Ohio: Statistical Snapshot". The Plain Dealer. Archived from the original on July 14, 2016.
- ^ "Languages—Kansas". City-data.com. Archived from the original on October 26, 2016. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
- ^ Pew Research Center, Religious Landscape Study: Religious composition of adults in Kansas Archived May 18, 2015, at the Wayback Machine (2014).
- ^ "PRRI – American Values Atlas". ava.prri.org. Archived from the original on April 4, 2017. Retrieved April 15, 2023.
- ^ Herrmann, Duane L (1997). Early Baha'is of Enterprise. Topeka: Buffalo Press. ISBN 1-879448-11-4.
- ^ "Westboro Baptist protests at Atlanta HBCU graduation ceremonies". 11Alive.com. May 19, 2019. Archived from the original on May 10, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
- ^ "Anti-LGBTQ hate groups on the rise in U.S., report warns". NBC News. March 30, 2020. Archived from the original on May 11, 2021. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
- ^ "Westboro Baptist Church". Southern Poverty Law Center. Archived from the original on March 6, 2011.
- ^ Account, Economic (March 29, 2024). "GDP by State". U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). Archived from the original on August 17, 2018. Retrieved May 20, 2024.
- ^ Account, Economic (March 29, 2024). "Personal Income by State". U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). Archived from the original on May 20, 2024. Retrieved May 20, 2024.
- ^ "S1901: Income in the Past 12 Months". Explore Census Data. United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on May 20, 2024. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
- ^ 2017 Kansas Economic Report Archived February 20, 2021, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved April 8, 2020.
- ^ 2020 Economic Forecast Archived November 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved April 8, 2020.
- ^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Kansas". www.census.gov. Archived from the original on November 1, 2019. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
- ^ Abouhalkah, Yael T. (November 30, 2015), Kansas has low but misleading unemployment rate under Gov. Sam Brownback, archived from the original on February 27, 2017, retrieved February 26, 2017
- ^ "Local Area Unemployment Statistics". Bls.gov. Archived from the original on August 28, 2010. Retrieved February 26, 2017.
- ^ a b c Max Ehrenfreund (February 22, 2017), "Republicans' 'real-live experiment' with Kansas's economy survives a revolt from their own party", The Washington Post, archived from the original on February 24, 2017, retrieved February 25, 2017
- ^ a b c Blinder, Alan (February 22, 2017), "Kansas Lawmakers Uphold Governor's Veto of Tax Increases", The New York Times, archived from the original on February 20, 2021, retrieved February 25, 2017
- ^ "Kansas Department of Commerce—Official Website—Economic Overview Charts". Kansascommerce.com. Archived from the original on December 15, 2017. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
- ^ "Kansas State Energy Profile Analysis". U.S. Energy Information Administration. Archived from the original on March 21, 2021. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
- ^ "Publication 1700". Kansas Department of Revenue. Archived from the original on April 5, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
- ^ "Streamlined Sales Tax—Kansas". Streamlined Sales Tax. Archived from the original on April 5, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
- ^ a b c d e Berman, Russell (June 7, 2017). "The Death of Kansas's Conservative Experiment". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on June 12, 2017. Retrieved June 7, 2017.
- ^ "Senate Substitute for HB 2117 by Committee on Taxation—Reduction of income tax rates for individuals and determination of income tax credits; severance tax exemptions; homestead property tax refunds; food sales tax refunds". Archived from the original on October 30, 2014. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
- ^ Editorial Board (April 13, 2013). "Editorial: Louisiana's lawmakers realize what Missouri's don't: Income tax cuts are suicidal". Archived from the original on August 20, 2014. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
- ^ Carpenter, Tim. "Kansas state government bond debt surges $2 billion since 2010". The Topeka Capital. Archived from the original on May 2, 2018. Retrieved May 2, 2018.
- ^ "America's Most (and Least) Popular Governors—Morning Consult". Morning Consult. Archived from the original on May 1, 2018. Retrieved May 2, 2018.
- ^ I-70—the First Open Interstate, Kansas Department of Transportation, July 24, 2014, archived from the original on October 26, 2016, retrieved October 7, 2016
- ^ "KDOT Launches New Traveler Information Service" (Press release). Kansas Department of Transportation. January 22, 2004. Archived from the original on January 18, 2006. Retrieved July 14, 2006.
- ^ "Manhattan Airport Official Site". Archived from the original on May 29, 2010. Retrieved July 14, 2010.
- ^ "Amtrak Southwest Chief". Amtrak. Archived from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
- ^ "Wichita Returns to the Amtrak Map". Amtrak. April 18, 2016. Archived from the original on August 13, 2017. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
- ^ Ben Kuebrich, Amtrak May End Passenger Rail Service in West Kansas. Moran: "Amtrak Is Not Doing Its Job" Archived July 1, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, KCUR. June 28, 2018. Retrieved April 8, 2020.
- ^ "Heartland Flyer Extension". storymaps.arcgis.com. Amtrak Connect Us. September 17, 2021. Archived from the original on January 30, 2023. Retrieved January 29, 2023.
- ^ Garcia, Rafael (January 30, 2023). "Could Kansans soon hop a train to Texas? Billions in federal funding might mean yes". Topeka Capital-Journal. Archived from the original on February 3, 2023.
- ^ "Kansas State Railroad Map 2017" (PDF). Kansas Department of Transportation. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 29, 2017. Retrieved August 14, 2017.
- ^ "Transit - RideKC in Johnson County". Johnson County Kansas. February 26, 2025. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ "510 K-10 Connector | Routes | RideKC". ridekc.org. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ "SafeRide". transportationservices.ku.edu. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ "Fares & Bus Passes". Lawrence Transit. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ "Home". Kansas Rides | Kansas Public Transportation. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ "Vote by Kansas School Board Favors Evolution's Doubters". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013.
- ^ "Kansas Lawmakers Set Minimum Marriage Age to 15". Fox News. May 5, 2006. Archived from the original on November 19, 2012. Retrieved March 10, 2021.
- ^ "Charles Robinson - Kansapedia - Kansas Historical Society". www.kansashistory.gov. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ Society, Kansas State Historical (1912). Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society.
- ^ "Populism, Its Rise and Fall". University Press of Kansas. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ * Scott, Anne Firor; Scott, Andrew MacKay (1982). One Half the People: The Fight for Woman Suffrage. University of Illinois Press. p. 166. ISBN 978-0-252-01005-7.
- ^ "Civil Rights Movement". NCpedia. Archived from the original on July 26, 2021. Retrieved August 20, 2021.
- ^ "Kansas Secretary of State | Elections | Elections Statistics Data". Kansas Secretary of State. March 3, 2025.
- ^ "Kansas Governor Rejects Two Coal-Fired Power Plants" (Press release). Ens-newswire.com. March 21, 2008. Archived from the original on February 2, 2011. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ "Here Are America's Least (and Most) Popular Governors". MorningConsultant.com. Archived from the original on December 20, 2016.
- ^ "Kansas governor eliminates state's art funding". Los Angeles Times. May 31, 2011. p. m. Archived from the original on September 17, 2011. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
- ^ Hittle, Shaun (July 16, 2011). "Hundreds rally against closing SRS office". ljworld.com. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
- ^ "Lawrence City Commission approves funding for SRS office". ljworld.com. August 9, 2011. Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
- ^ Smith, Mitch (November 6, 2018). "Laura Kelly, a Kansas Democrat, Tops Kobach in Governor's Race". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 3, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
- ^ Shorman, Jonathan; Woodall, Hunter (November 8, 2018). "Democrat Laura Kelly defeats Kris Kobach to become Kansas' next governor". The Wichita Eagle. Material. Archived from the original on May 8, 2020. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
- ^ "Kansas abortion vote: Major victory for pro-choice groups". BBC News. August 3, 2022. Archived from the original on October 30, 2022. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
- ^ J. Pomante II, Michael; Li, Quan (December 15, 2020). "Cost of Voting in the American States: 2020". Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy. 19 (4): 503–509. doi:10.1089/elj.2020.0666. ISSN 1533-1296. S2CID 225139517.
- ^ "2008 Election Results—Kansas". CNN. Archived from the original on November 7, 2008. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ Jonathan Martin, "National G.O.P. Moves to Take Over Campaign of Kansas Senator", New York Times September 4, 2014 Archived September 11, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Liquor Licensee and Supplier Information". Alcoholic Beverage Control, Kansas Department of Revenue. Archived from the original on December 8, 2006. Retrieved January 18, 2007.
- ^ "History of Alcoholic Beverages in Kansas". Alcoholic Beverage Control, Kansas Department of Revenue. 2000. Archived from the original on January 17, 2007. Retrieved January 18, 2007.
- ^ "Kansas Legalizes Online and Retail Sports Wagering". casinoreviews.net. May 16, 2022. Archived from the original on May 16, 2022. Retrieved May 18, 2022.
- ^ "Kansas March—Kansapedia—Kansas Historical Society". www.kshs.org. Archived from the original on November 27, 2018. Retrieved November 26, 2018.
- ^ Eder, Richard (June 17, 1976). "A Boy and His Dog". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 7, 2013. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
- ^ "The Best Art Museum in Every U.S. State (slide 44 of 51)". Art & Object. June 27, 2023. Archived from the original on February 17, 2024. Retrieved March 5, 2023.
- ^ Thorson, Alice (April 24, 2017). "A 'Game-Changing Asset'". Flatland. Archived from the original on December 1, 2023. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
- ^ Denesha, Julie (January 24, 2023). "Spencer Museum of Art's new redesign brings a 'broader range of voices' to Lawrence". KCUR - Kansas. Archived from the original on February 24, 2024. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
- ^ Butters, Gerald R. (2007). Banned in Kansas: Motion Picture Censorship, 1915–1966. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 9780826217493.
- ^ "Guinness World Records: Kansas venue is world's oldest cinema". Kansas City Star. March 8, 2018. Archived from the original on July 9, 2019. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
- ^ "Oldest purpose-built cinema in operation". Guinness World Records. Archived from the original on August 7, 2018. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
- ^ "Data". npgallery.nps.gov. Archived from the original on February 10, 2019. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
- ^ "PBR: Toto—we're not in Kansas any more ..." BBC Newsnight. December 9, 2009. Archived from the original on February 11, 2014.
- ^ "The Lookout" (PDF). dailyscript.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 12, 2013.
- ^ "Making Airwaves Through History". Findarticles.com. December 2, 2002. Archived from the original on May 15, 2011. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ Evans, Harold (1940). "Baseball in Kansas, 1867–1940". Kansas Historical Quarterly. Archived from the original on March 16, 2008. Retrieved February 18, 2008.
- ^ a b c Madden, W.C.; Stewart, Patrick (2002). The Western League: A Baseball History, 1885 through 1999. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-1003-3.
- ^ Bowman, Larry G. "I Think It Is Pretty Ritzy Myself: Kansas Minor League Teams and Night Baseball". Kansas History, Winter 1995/1996, pp 248–257. Kansas Historical Society. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
- ^ ""Baseball in Kansas, 1867-1940," by Harold C. Evans, Kansas Historical Quarterly, May, 1940". www.kancoll.org. Retrieved March 24, 2025.
- ^ Jim Davis, Loss of NCAA headquarters not related to incentives Archived April 10, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Kansas City Business Journal (June 8, 1997).
- ^ Sam Epstein, Sports Law (Cengage Learning, 2013), p. 19.
- ^ Looney, Douglas (September 4, 1989). "Futility U". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on October 9, 2019. Retrieved October 9, 2019.
- ^ "Things You May Not Know About the US States". Archived from the original on March 6, 2014. Retrieved March 6, 2014.
- ^ Brennan, Eamonn (November 23, 2007). "Some rivalries can survive realignment – Men's College Basketball Nation Blog – ESPN". Espn.go.com. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
- ^ Jordan, Dave (May 1, 2010). "Group wants to stop Missouri-Kansas border war". KCTV5. Archived from the original on October 16, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
- ^ Hardy, Kevin (August 14, 2019). "'Sometimes common sense does prevail.' Missouri, Kansas celebrate end of border war". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
- ^ Bergan, Shain (March 31, 2022). "Governor 'all for it' on moving Chiefs to Kansas, says team was not part of Border War truce". KCTV5. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
The Kansas governor on Thursday morning stoked conversation on the possibility of a Chiefs move to the other side of the state line, noting that the NFL franchise was not part of the 2019 Border War truce between the two states.
- ^ House Committee on Appropriations 02/13/2025. Retrieved March 24, 2025 – via www.youtube.com.
- ^ Sloan, Nick (May 1, 2024). "Renderings from Manica Architecture show a potential domed-stadium for the Kansas City Chiefs". KMBC. Retrieved March 24, 2025.
- ^ Sloan, Nick (February 28, 2025). "How we got here: A look back at what's led to recent discussion about the Chiefs, Royals' futures in the metro". KMBC. Archived from the original on March 8, 2025. Retrieved March 24, 2025.
Bibliography
[edit]- Mechem, Kirke (1956). The Annals of Kansas: 1911 to 1925. Kansas Historical Society. Archived from the original on February 5, 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2019.; 559 pages.
- Mechem, Kirke (1954). The Annals of Kansas: 1886 to 1910. Kansas Historical Society. Archived from the original on February 4, 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2019.; 535 pages.
- Wilder, Daniel W. (1886). The Annals of Kansas: 1541 to 1885. Kansas Publishing House. Archived from the original on February 4, 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2019.; 1204 pages.
- Connelley, William E., ed. (1918), A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans, Lewis Publishing Company, archived from the original on August 9, 2020, retrieved September 17, 2018; 5 volumes; 2731 pages; (Vol1), (Vol2), (Vol3), (Vol4), (Vol5); the 1919 edition contains additional biographies.
- Connelley, William E. (1916). History of Kansas Newspapers: A History of the Newspapers and Magazines Published in Kansas from 1854 to 1916. Kansas Historical Society. Archived from the original on February 4, 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2019.; 369 pages.
- Blackmar, Frank W., ed. (1912), Kansas: A Cyclopedia of State History, Embracing Events, Institutions, Industries, Counties, Cities, Towns, Prominent Persons, Etc, Standard Publishing Co, archived from the original on August 8, 2020, retrieved September 17, 2018; 3 volumes; 2723 pages; (Vol1), (Vol2), (Vol3)
- Everts, Louis H., ed. (1887), Official State Atlas of Kansas, L.H. Everts & Co, archived from the original on January 25, 2019, retrieved April 23, 2018; 610 pages.
- Cutler, William G., ed. (1883). History of the State of Kansas. A.T. Andreas Publisher. Archived from the original on November 9, 2018.; 3 volumes; 1616 pages; (Hathi Trust Archived September 22, 2020, at the Wayback Machine) (Internet Archive)
- Robinson, Sara (1856). Kansas: Its Interior and Exterior Life. Crosby, Nichols and Company.
External links
[edit]- State of Kansas
- Kansas Travel and Tourism Division Archived February 11, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
- Kansas Historical Society Archived January 25, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
- Kansas Memory Archived May 17, 2013, at the Wayback Machine—documents, photographs, and other primary sources provided by the Kansas Historical Society
- Kansas State Agency Databases Archived February 25, 2020, at the Wayback Machine—Annotated list of searchable databases produced by Kansas state agencies
- USGS real-time, geographic, and other scientific resources of Kansas Archived December 30, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- Kansas State Facts from USDA Archived May 3, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
Maps
- Kansas Department of Transportation maps Archived February 28, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
- Kansas Highway Map (PDF), KSDOT, 2019, archived from the original on January 3, 2021, retrieved October 29, 2015.
- Kansas Railroad Map (PDF), KSDOT, 2019, archived from the original on January 3, 2021, retrieved October 29, 2015.
- "Access state, county, city, railroad, and other maps", Kansas Memory (digital portal), the Kansas State Historical Society, archived from the original on January 20, 2021, retrieved May 15, 2013.
Geographic data related to Kansas at OpenStreetMap- "Kansas Maps", Perry–Castañeda Library (map collection), The University of Texas, archived from the original on December 15, 2017, retrieved February 17, 2004.
Kansas
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Name origin and historical usage
The name "Kansas" derives from "Kǎnsa," the autonym of the Kansa people (also known as Kaw or Kanza), a Dhegiha Siouan-speaking tribe indigenous to the region.[9][10] The term "Kǎnsa" translates to "people of the south wind," stemming from the Siouan root kʰáŋze or aca, denoting southward winds prevalent in their territory along the Kansas River.[11][12] This etymology reflects the tribe's self-identification rather than an external descriptor, distinguishing it from related names like "Arkansas," which arose from a separate Algonquian adaptation of a similar Siouan term for downstream Quapaw kin.[9] European usage began with French explorers in the late 17th century, who encountered the Kansa and recorded variants such as "les Cannes" or "Kanpez" for the tribe and their river, transliterating the name into "Rivière des Kansas" by the 1680s.[9][13] The Kansas River, flowing eastward through present-day Kansas into the Missouri River, thus propagated the name geographically, as the Kansa inhabited its watershed and controlled trade routes there until displaced in the 19th century.[13] American settlers adopted the appellation during westward expansion; the Kansas Territory was formally organized on May 30, 1854, encompassing lands named for the river and tribe, amid debates over slavery that intensified regional conflicts.[13] Upon statehood on January 29, 1861, "Kansas" retained this indigenous-derived nomenclature without alteration, symbolizing the area's pre-colonial human geography despite the Kansa population having been reduced to reservations by federal removals under the Indian Removal Act of 1830 and subsequent treaties, such as the 1855 cession of their Kansas lands.[11][14] The name's persistence underscores a pattern in U.S. toponymy where Native terms were appropriated for administrative convenience, often detached from their original tribal contexts as Euro-American settlement dominated.[10]History
Indigenous peoples and early settlement
The territory comprising modern Kansas was inhabited for millennia by Native American peoples, with historic tribes including the Kansa (also known as Kaw), Osage, Pawnee, and Wichita dominating the landscape at the time of European contact.[15] The Kansa, a Dhegiha Siouan-speaking group numbering around 1,200 individuals in the early 19th century, occupied lands along the Kansas River, relying on bison hunting, agriculture, and trade networks that extended eastward.[14] The Osage, another Dhegiha Siouan people, controlled vast expanses in southeastern Kansas and adjacent regions, with a population estimated at 5,000–6,000 in the late 17th century; they were semi-nomadic hunters who dominated regional trade and warfare, ceding much of their Kansas territory via the 1808 Treaty of Fort Clark.[16] To the north, the Pawnee, a Caddoan-speaking confederacy of four bands totaling about 10,000 by 1800, maintained semi-sedentary villages with earth lodges along tributaries of the Missouri and Platte rivers, practicing irrigated farming of corn, beans, and squash alongside communal bison hunts.[17] In the south, the Wichita, a Caddoan group with villages along the Arkansas River, numbered roughly 3,500 in the early 1700s and sustained themselves through agriculture and trade, though they faced territorial pressure from Osage incursions by the mid-18th century.[18] Other nomadic groups, such as the Comanche, Kiowa, Cheyenne, and Arapaho, traversed Kansas as buffalo hunters, often clashing with sedentary tribes over hunting grounds.[19] European exploration began with Spanish expeditions, as Francisco Vázquez de Coronado led a party of about 1,500 men through central Kansas in 1541, seeking the fabled city of Quivira among the Pawnee (referred to as Harahey or Quivira people), only to find grass-covered plains and dispersed villages rather than gold or urban wealth.[20] French traders and missionaries, including Étienne de Veniard in 1714, established fleeting contacts along the Missouri River by the late 17th century, exchanging goods like firearms and metal tools for furs and horses, which disrupted indigenous economies and intensified intertribal conflicts over equestrian warfare.[21] No permanent French or Spanish colonies formed in Kansas, as the region remained a buffer zone claimed by multiple powers until the 1763 Treaty of Paris transferred French claims east of the Mississippi to Britain and west to Spain, followed by Spain's retrocession to France in 1800.[21] American acquisition via the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 integrated Kansas into U.S. territory, prompting initial forays like the 1806 return of Lewis and Clark's Corps of Discovery, which skirted the Kansas border while mapping the region for trade potential.[20] The U.S. government established trading factories, such as one at the Osage River mouth in 1808, to regulate commerce and reduce British influence, though these closed by 1822 amid corruption and tribal resistance.[21] Permanent white settlement commenced with military outposts, including Fort Leavenworth founded on May 8, 1827, by Colonel Henry Leavenworth with 3rd U.S. Infantry troops from St. Louis, serving as a base to protect the Santa Fe Trail and Oregon Trail emigrants from tribal raids.[21] Missions followed, with the Shawnee Methodist Mission established near present-day Turner in 1830 to educate and convert displaced eastern tribes relocated under removal policies, marking the onset of organized non-military white presence amid ongoing land cessions like the Kansa's 1825 treaty yielding 24 million acres.[14] By the 1840s, trail traffic swelled to thousands annually, fostering transient camps and ferries but delaying widespread homesteading until federal policies post-1840s encouraged displacement of tribes to reservations, setting the stage for denser settlement.[20]Territorial era and Bleeding Kansas
The Kansas Territory was established on May 30, 1854, through the Kansas-Nebraska Act, signed by President Franklin Pierce, which organized the region west of Missouri and Iowa into the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820 by introducing popular sovereignty, allowing settlers to decide the status of slavery by vote.[22][23] This mechanism aimed to resolve sectional tensions over slavery's expansion but instead incited competition, as pro-slavery advocates from Missouri and anti-slavery migrants, organized by groups like the New England Emigrant Aid Company, rushed to influence the territory's future.[24] Territorial elections quickly devolved into fraud and intimidation, with the March 30, 1855, legislative vote seeing hundreds of non-resident Missourians, dubbed "Border Ruffians," cross the border to cast illegal ballots, securing a pro-slavery majority that convened the "Bogus Legislature" in Shawnee Mission and enacted laws favoring slavery, including disenfranchising free-soilers.[25] Free-state supporters responded by drafting the Topeka Constitution in October 1855, establishing a rival government that President Pierce denounced as treasonous, though it reflected the growing anti-slavery settler population.[26] These parallel governments exacerbated divisions, setting the stage for armed conflict as both factions armed themselves and clashed over land claims and political control. "Bleeding Kansas" denotes the ensuing guerrilla warfare from 1855 to 1859, marked by mutual atrocities that claimed approximately 50 to 200 lives, though exact figures remain disputed due to incomplete records and partisan accounts.[27] A pivotal escalation occurred on May 21, 1856, when a pro-slavery posse of about 800 men, led by Sheriff Samuel J. Jones, sacked Lawrence, the free-state stronghold, destroying two newspaper offices, the Free State Hotel, and several homes, while throwing printing presses into the Kansas River; though no direct combat deaths resulted, the raid symbolized southern aggression against northern abolitionist influence.[28][29] In retaliation, abolitionist John Brown and his sons, along with a small band, conducted the Pottawatomie Massacre on the night of May 24–25, 1856, hacking to death five pro-slavery settlers along Pottawatomie Creek using broadswords and rifles, an act that intensified retaliatory raids and dispersed violence across the territory.[30][31] Further electoral manipulations culminated in the Lecompton Constitution of 1857, drafted by a pro-slavery convention whose delegate selection involved widespread fraud and free-state boycotts, proposing slavery's protection while offering a misleading ballot on its expansion; the document's submission to Congress divided Democrats, with President James Buchanan endorsing it despite evidence of irregularities, leading to its ultimate rejection and the dissolution of pro-slavery dominance.[32][33] The Wyandotte Constitution, adopted in 1859 by a free-state convention, explicitly banned slavery and gained congressional approval, paving the way for Kansas's admission as a free state on January 29, 1861, amid the Civil War's onset, as southern senators' withdrawal eased passage.[26] This resolution affirmed anti-slavery majorities but left a legacy of partisan violence that foreshadowed national conflict.Statehood and economic expansion (1861–1900)
Kansas was admitted to the Union as the 34th state on January 29, 1861, following the approval of the Wyandotte Constitution, which prohibited slavery and established a framework for governance amid the preceding territorial conflicts.[34][35] The U.S. Senate had endorsed the constitution on January 21, 1861, overriding earlier pro-slavery proposals like the rejected Lecompton Constitution, thereby securing Kansas's status as a free state just before the Civil War's outbreak.[36] Statehood brought immediate challenges, including the need to organize a capital at Topeka and address lingering border tensions with Missouri, but it also opened avenues for federal support under the Homestead Act of 1862, which encouraged settlement by granting 160-acre plots to claimants who improved the land.[37] During the Civil War (1861–1865), Kansas contributed significantly to Union efforts, with over 20,000 of its approximately 30,000 military-age men enlisting, resulting in the highest per capita casualty rate of any state at around 8,000 deaths from combat, disease, and other causes.[38] The First Kansas Infantry Regiment, including both white and Black volunteers, saw action in campaigns such as the Battle of Baxter Springs in October 1863, where Confederate guerrilla leader William Quantrill's forces killed over 100 Union soldiers and civilians.[39] These sacrifices strained the young state's resources but fostered a sense of resilience, with minimal Confederate incursions due to Kansas's free-state alignment and vigilant militias. Postwar reconstruction accelerated economic expansion through railroad development, beginning with the Union Pacific Eastern Division (later Kansas Pacific) chartered in 1863 to connect eastern Kansas to the West.[40] By the 1870s, lines like the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad facilitated mass immigration and commodity transport, with over 8,000 miles of track laid by 1900, linking every county and enabling the shipment of goods to national markets.[41] The cattle industry boomed via Texas longhorn drives along trails such as the Chisholm Trail to Abilene (established 1867 by Joseph McCoy) and the Western Trail to Dodge City; in 1874 alone, four railroads exported 122,900 head in eight months, transforming railheads into "cowtowns" and generating millions in revenue before barbed wire and overgrazing curtailed open-range ranching by the 1880s.[42][43] Agricultural growth complemented rail expansion, as settlers broke prairie sod for wheat and corn cultivation, with Kansas emerging as a leading wheat producer by the 1890s; yields rose from modest postwar levels to over 100 million bushels annually by 1900, supported by mechanical innovations like the steel plow.[44] Population surged from 107,206 in 1860 to 364,399 in 1870 and 1,428,108 by 1900, driven by European immigrants (including German Mennonites fleeing Russia in 1873–1874) and Black "Exodusters" escaping Southern oppression post-1879, though challenges like grasshopper plagues (e.g., 1874) and droughts periodically disrupted progress.[45][46] This era's causal drivers—federal land policies, transportation infrastructure, and labor inflows—laid the foundation for Kansas's agrarian economy, despite vulnerabilities to environmental shocks and market fluctuations.[47]20th-century transformations
![Wichita, Kansas skyline aerial view.jpg][float-right] The early 20th century saw Kansas agriculture expand through mechanization and increased wheat production, but overcultivation contributed to vulnerability during the 1930s Dust Bowl, a period of severe drought and dust storms that devastated the western High Plains. From 1934 to 1936, wind erosion stripped topsoil from millions of acres, leading to farm foreclosures, mass migration, and economic collapse in rural areas; in Kansas, approximately 100,000 residents left the state amid "black blizzards" that reduced visibility to near zero and caused health issues like dust pneumonia.[48][49][50] Oil discoveries transformed local economies, particularly the 1915 El Dorado field in Butler County, which initiated a Mid-Continent boom producing over 100 million barrels by the 1920s and drawing workers to boomtowns.[51][52] This influx spurred infrastructure development but also volatile price swings, with production peaking mid-century before declining due to depletion.[53] Wichita emerged as the "Air Capital of the World" starting in the 1920s, with manufacturers like Cessna (founded 1927) and Beechcraft establishing factories that produced training aircraft during World War I and bombers during World War II, employing tens of thousands and diversifying the economy beyond agriculture.[54][55] By 1945, the city hosted over 20 aviation firms, contributing to postwar growth as Boeing and others expanded operations.[56] The 1954 Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka declared segregated public schools unconstitutional, originating from a challenge by Black families in Topeka against state laws permitting segregation in larger cities. This ruling, consolidating five cases including Kansas's, dismantled the "separate but equal" doctrine nationwide, though implementation faced resistance and delayed desegregation until the 1960s.[57] Postwar mechanization and consolidation reduced Kansas farm numbers from over 200,000 in 1900 to about 65,000 by 2000, while yields rose through hybrid seeds and irrigation, shifting production toward larger operations focused on wheat, cattle, and sorghum.[58] Population grew modestly from 1.66 million in 1900 to 2.69 million by 2000, with urbanization concentrating 70% in cities by century's end, fueled by interstate highways and service sector expansion.[59][60] These shifts marked a transition from agrarian isolation to integrated industrial and urban economies, though rural depopulation persisted.[44]Post-2000 developments
In the early 2000s, Kansas transitioned through Democratic governorships under Kathleen Sebelius (2003–2009) and Mark Parkinson (2009–2011), emphasizing expansions in health insurance coverage and education investments amid a national recession. Sebelius, elected in 2002 and reelected in 2006, signed legislation to cover more children under state health programs and addressed budget strains from declining revenues. The state faced fiscal pressures, with general fund revenues dropping 5% in fiscal year 2002 due to economic slowdowns in agriculture and manufacturing.[61] The election of Republican Sam Brownback in 2010 marked a shift toward supply-side tax reforms. In February 2012, Brownback signed House Bill 2117, slashing individual income tax rates by 25%, eliminating the lowest bracket, and reducing business taxes, with projections of adding 22,000 jobs within five years. However, state revenues fell short by over $700 million annually by 2014, prompting cuts to Medicaid, infrastructure, and K-12 education funding, while job growth lagged national averages and peer states.[62][63] In June 2017, the Republican-controlled legislature overrode Brownback's veto to enact Senate Bill 40, raising sales taxes and restoring income tax brackets, effectively reversing much of the 2012 cuts amid ongoing deficits exceeding $1 billion cumulatively. Brownback resigned in 2018 to become U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom, succeeded briefly by Jeff Colyer (R). Democrat Laura Kelly, elected in 2018 and reelected in 2022, prioritized infrastructure repairs and school funding restorations, signing a $1.4 billion roads plan in 2018.[64] Parallel to tax debates, school funding litigation intensified, rooted in the state constitution's adequacy clause. The Gannon v. State cases, initiated in 2012, led the Kansas Supreme Court to rule in 2015, 2016, and 2017 that funding levels were unconstitutional, particularly after Brownback-era reductions of $100 million annually, exacerbating inequities for low-wealth districts. Court mandates drove legislative boosts, including a 2016 capital outlay increase and base aid hikes to $4,005 per pupil by 2017, totaling over $750 million in new appropriations by 2019. The litigation concluded in February 2024 when the court released jurisdiction, affirming compliance after bipartisan formula adjustments under Kelly.[65][66] Economically, Kansas experienced modest population growth from 2.69 million in 2000 to approximately 2.94 million by 2025, averaging 0.4% annually, concentrated in urban areas like Johnson and Sedgwick counties, while rural depopulation persisted. The state's real GDP rose to $185.72 billion in 2024, but per capita growth trailed the U.S. amid agriculture volatility and aviation sector challenges in Wichita, where Boeing's 2012 decision to consolidate 787 production reduced local jobs by thousands, though firms like Spirit AeroSystems sustained the "Air Capital" status with innovations in advanced air mobility by 2025. Recent policies, including the 2023 Framework for Growth, targeted diversification, yielding national-leading quarterly expansions in late 2023 via investments in manufacturing and agribusiness.[67][68][69] Natural disasters underscored vulnerabilities, with Kansas incurring 102 billion-dollar weather events from 1980–2024, over half post-2000, including severe droughts, floods, and tornadoes. On May 4, 2007, an EF5 tornado devastated Greensburg, destroying 95% of the town, killing 11 residents, injuring 63, and causing $250 million in damage, prompting a "green" rebuild emphasizing sustainable energy. Subsequent outbreaks, such as the 2016 "Dust Bowl"-like drought costing agriculture $1.5 billion and wildfires in 2021 burning over 500,000 acres, strained budgets and highlighted infrastructure needs in the tornado alley region.[70][71][72]Geography
Geological foundations
The geology of Kansas consists predominantly of sedimentary rocks, accumulated in layers up to several thousand feet thick, spanning from the Paleozoic Era to the Cenozoic Era, with the Precambrian basement rocks buried deeply subsurface and not exposed at the surface.[73] These rocks were deposited in environments ranging from shallow marine seas and coastal swamps to fluvial and evaporative basins, reflecting repeated cycles of sea level rise and fall influenced by tectonic stability in the cratonic interior of North America.[74] The absence of significant igneous or metamorphic rocks at or near the surface underscores Kansas's position within the stable Midcontinent region, where erosion has planed down older highlands, leaving a relatively flat bedrock foundation overlain by thin Quaternary deposits in most areas.[73] In eastern Kansas, Paleozoic strata dominate the bedrock, with the Pennsylvanian System (approximately 323–299 million years ago) forming the thickest sequence, up to 3,500 feet in the south, characterized by cyclothemic repetitions of limestone, shale, sandstone, and thin coal seams from deltaic and swampy coastal plain settings.[74][73] Underlying these are Mississippian limestones and shales (about 359–323 million years ago), deposited during marine transgressions, while Permian rocks (299–252 million years ago) extend westward, featuring red shales, limestones, and extensive evaporite beds of salt and gypsum up to 400 feet thick in restricted basins, as seen in formations like the Wellington.[74] These Paleozoic layers dip gently westward at about 10 feet per mile, creating subtle structural lows that trap hydrocarbons and influence groundwater flow.[73] Western Kansas exposes younger Mesozoic and Cenozoic bedrock, with Cretaceous rocks (145–66 million years ago) including the Niobrara Chalk Formation—soft, fossil-rich marine limestones formed in a vast interior seaway—and the underlying Dakota Sandstone, a porous aquifer sourced from ancient river systems.[74] These Cretaceous units, up to 1,300 feet thick, outcrop in chalk badlands and escarpments, such as those in Gove County, where differential weathering of chalk and shale has produced prominent features like Monument Rocks.[74] Overlying these in the High Plains is the Tertiary Ogallala Formation (Miocene, about 23–5 million years ago), comprising 150–300 feet of unconsolidated sands and gravels eroded from the rising Rocky Mountains, which cap the bedrock and contribute to the region's semi-arid aquifer system.[73][74] The overall structural framework features minimal faulting or folding, with a broad synclinal sag in central Kansas and northeastward dips in Cretaceous strata at 5–7 feet per mile, fostering resource accumulations like oil and gas in Pennsylvanian reservoirs without major tectonic disruption.[73] This stable, layered sedimentary foundation, sculpted by long-term erosion rather than orogeny, accounts for Kansas's characteristic low-relief plains and the scarcity of surface bedrock exposures outside dissected eastern and western margins.[75]Topographical features
Kansas topography is dominated by the Great Plains, featuring a gradual westward increase in elevation from a low of 679 feet (207 meters) at the Verdigris River in Montgomery County to a high of 4,039 feet (1,231 meters) at Mount Sunflower in Wallace County, yielding a maximum relief of about 3,360 feet (1,024 meters).[76] [77] The state's surface generally slopes eastward, with flat to gently rolling plains prevailing across much of the area, interrupted by localized escarpments and hill regions.[77] Physiographic divisions include 11 distinct regions shaped by geological processes such as erosion, glaciation, and sedimentation.[78] In the northeast, the Glaciated Region exhibits rolling hills and kettles from Pleistocene ice advances, while the southeast's Osage Cuestas consist of alternating ridges and valleys formed by differential erosion of dipping sedimentary layers.[78] The central Flint Hills, spanning from near the Nebraska border to Oklahoma, represent the state's most elevated and rugged terrain, with steep hills of cherty limestone rising up to 400 feet in escarpments and narrow valleys dissecting the landscape.[77] [78] Westward, the Smoky Hills and Arkansas River Lowlands transition to broader plains, with chalk badlands like those at Monument Rocks in Gove County showcasing erosional pillars up to 70 feet high amid otherwise flat High Plains.[78] The western High Plains and Dissected High Plains feature minimal relief, with elevations often exceeding 3,000 feet and surfaces suited to large-scale farming due to their uniformity.[79] These features reflect Kansas's position as a continental interior lowland, with topography primarily sculpted by fluvial erosion and wind rather than tectonic uplift.[77]Hydrological systems
Kansas's hydrological systems are dominated by river basins within the broader Missouri River watershed, with the state divided primarily between the Kansas River basin in the north and east and the Arkansas River basin in the south and west. The Kansas River, formed by the confluence of the Smoky Hill River and Republican River near Junction City, flows 170 miles eastward to join the Missouri River at Kansas City, draining about 60,000 square miles including parts of Kansas, Nebraska, and Colorado.[80] The Arkansas River traverses southern Kansas for over 300 miles, originating in the Rockies and carrying sediment loads that historically shaped the landscape, though flow is now regulated by upstream dams. These systems provide essential water for agriculture, industry, and municipalities but experience variable flows due to seasonal precipitation and upstream diversions.[81] Surface water storage in Kansas relies heavily on reservoirs, as natural lakes are scarce and small; the largest, Lake Inman in McPherson County, covers about 160 acres during wet periods but often shrinks significantly. The state features 24 major reservoirs constructed mainly by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Bureau of Reclamation for flood control, irrigation, and water supply, with a combined capacity exceeding 10 million acre-feet. Key examples in the Kansas River basin include Tuttle Creek Reservoir (capacity 3.7 million acre-feet, completed 1953) and Milford Lake (1.9 million acre-feet, completed 1968), which mitigate flooding from intense spring rains while supporting recreation and downstream water releases. In the Arkansas basin, reservoirs like John Martin Dam influence flows, though much of western Kansas depends on smaller impoundments amid low perennial streamflows.[82][83][84] Groundwater from the High Plains aquifer, encompassing the Ogallala formation, sustains over 90% of water use in western and central Kansas, primarily for irrigating 3 million acres of cropland via center-pivot systems that pump an average of more than 2 billion gallons daily. This aquifer, up to 800 feet thick in places but recharging slowly at rates below 1 inch per year, has seen water-level declines of 100-300 feet since intensive pumping began post-1950, with a further drop exceeding one foot statewide in 2024 alone due to extraction outpacing natural replenishment. Three groundwater management districts oversee the Ogallala portion, implementing local controls like reduced irrigation to extend aquifer viability, as unchecked decline threatens agricultural productivity in this semi-arid region.[85][86][87][88]
Climate patterns and environmental risks
Kansas experiences a continental climate with significant seasonal variations, featuring hot summers and cold winters. Statewide, the average temperature reaches 76.8°F during summer months and drops to 33.0°F in winter, reflecting the influence of its interior continental position. Annual precipitation totals vary regionally, averaging around 30 inches statewide but declining westward from over 40 inches in the southeast to under 20 inches in the northwest, with the majority occurring as convective thunderstorms in spring and early summer. This east-west gradient results from the state's position in the transition zone between humid eastern influences and drier western air masses.[89][90][91] The state's climate classification predominantly falls under humid subtropical (Cfa) in the east and semi-arid (BSk) in the west, based on 1991-2020 normals, contributing to agricultural adaptability but also inherent variability. Temperature extremes are common, with record highs exceeding 110°F and lows below -20°F recorded historically, underscoring the potential for rapid weather shifts driven by frontal systems and jet stream dynamics. Precipitation inconsistency exacerbates risks, as annual totals can fluctuate widely, from drought lows of 17.3 inches in 1956 to flood-inducing highs.[92] Environmental risks in Kansas are amplified by its location in Tornado Alley, where severe thunderstorms spawn frequent tornadoes, averaging 96 events annually and ranking the state third in tornado density at 4.4 per 100 square miles. Hailstorms, often accompanying these systems, cause substantial agricultural and property damage, with impacts heightened by the flat terrain allowing unimpeded storm development.[93][94][95] Hydrological extremes pose additional threats, including recurrent droughts—more severe and frequent in the north and west, with western regions averaging two multi-decade events per century—and devastating floods, such as the 2007 statewide event affecting over 20 counties and the 1951 Kansas River flood reaching historic crests. Wildfire risk is elevated in grasslands and urban interfaces, with projections indicating up to 30 additional high-risk days per year due to drier fuels and warmer conditions. These hazards, rooted in climatic variability rather than solely anthropogenic factors, necessitate robust mitigation through land management and infrastructure resilience.[96][97][98][99]Biodiversity and protected areas
Kansas encompasses a range of ecosystems centered on grassland prairies, with scattered riparian woodlands, wetlands, and floodplains supporting notable biological diversity. The state's flora features dominant prairie grasses such as big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii) and Indiangrass (Sorghastrum nutans), alongside over 500 plant species in preserved tallgrass areas, including wildflowers and forbs adapted to periodic fires and grazing. Fauna includes 31 mammal species like white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), mule deer (O. hemionus), pronghorn (Antilocapra americana), coyotes (Canis latrans), and reintroduced American bison (Bison bison), which historically shaped prairie dynamics through herbivory and trampling. Avian diversity exceeds 150 species in key habitats, encompassing migratory waterfowl, raptors, and grassland birds such as the greater prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus cupido), while reptiles and amphibians number around 39 species, including snakes and frogs reliant on wetland edges. Aquatic systems host diverse fish and invertebrates, though many face pressures from habitat alteration.[100][101][102] Biodiversity has declined due to agricultural conversion, which has fragmented habitats and reduced native prairie to less than 4% of its presettlement extent, exacerbating vulnerabilities for species dependent on large contiguous grasslands. Kansas recognizes 22 state-endangered and 30 threatened species, predominantly aquatic taxa like the pallid sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus albus) and various mussels, alongside terrestrial ones including the black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes) and gray bat (Myotis grisescens). Federal listings under the Endangered Species Act include nine endangered and nine threatened species as of 2016, such as the whooping crane (Grus americana) and interior least tern (Sternula antillarum athalassos), reflecting ongoing recovery efforts amid hydrological changes from dams and irrigation.[103][104][105][106] Protected areas conserve these elements through federal, state, and private initiatives, with the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve—established November 12, 1996—protecting 10,894 acres of Flint Hills prairie via National Park Service ownership of 180 acres and conservation easements on the remainder, preserving fire-maintained grasslands and offering over 40 miles of trails for public access. National wildlife refuges, managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, include Quivira National Wildlife Refuge (established 1955, 22,135 acres), which safeguards inland marshes and sand dunes critical for over 300 bird species in the Central Flyway migration route. Additional federal sites encompass Flint Hills National Wildlife Refuge (wetlands along the Verdigris River), Kirwin National Wildlife Refuge (reservoir habitats), Marais des Cygnes National Wildlife Refuge (bottomland forests), and the 108,000-acre Cimarron National Grassland, focused on shortgrass prairie restoration.[107][108][109] State efforts include 28 state parks and numerous wildlife areas, such as Cheyenne Bottoms (Kansas's largest wetland at 41,000 acres, supporting migratory birds) and Kanopolis State Park (riparian and prairie habitats), which mitigate fragmentation through prescribed burns, grazing management, and public recreation. Private entities like The Nature Conservancy bolster these via easements and preserves emphasizing native species propagation, countering pervasive land-use pressures from row-crop farming.[110][111]Demographics
Population dynamics
Kansas's resident population reached 2,970,606 as of July 1, 2024, reflecting a 0.65% increase from 2,951,500 in 2023.[59] This modest annual growth aligns with a longer-term pattern of slow expansion, with the state adding approximately 68,745 residents between 2014 and 2024, or 2.37% overall.[112] Between 2010 and 2022, Kansas experienced population increases in 9 of 12 years, though rates remained below the national average, peaking at 0.9% from 2019 to 2020.[113] Historically, Kansas's population dynamics shifted from rapid post-statehood growth in the late 19th century—driven by agricultural settlement and railroad expansion—to stagnation and relative decline as a share of the U.S. total by the mid-20th century.[45] Growth rates fell from highs exceeding 2% in the 1860s-1880s to under 1% in recent decades, influenced by out-migration from rural areas amid mechanized farming and urban job opportunities elsewhere.[45] By the 2020s, the state's annual growth hovered around 0.5%, contrasting with faster U.S. expansion and underscoring challenges like persistent net domestic out-migration.[59] Population change in Kansas derives primarily from natural increase (births minus deaths) offsetting negative net domestic migration, with limited international inflows. The 2023 birth rate stood at 11.6 per 1,000 residents, a 0.9% decline from 11.7 in 2022 and the lowest on record, reflecting a fertility rate of 59.5 births per 1,000 females aged 15-44—below replacement levels.[114] [115] Age-adjusted mortality has risen, contributing to subdued natural increase, though exact 2024 components remain provisional. Net domestic migration resulted in a loss of 4,700 residents in 2024, continuing a trend of outflows to states with stronger economic pull factors like lower taxes or job markets.[116] Urbanization has intensified these dynamics, with population concentrating in metropolitan areas while rural counties depopulate. Between 2010 and 2020, 80 of Kansas's 105 counties lost residents, primarily rural ones, as agricultural consolidation reduced farm labor needs and youth migrated to cities for education and employment.[117] Growth occurred in suburbs like Johnson County near Kansas City and Wichita metro, where 2024 estimates show metro-area gains outpacing statewide averages.[117] This pattern exacerbates rural economic strain, with projections indicating continued slow statewide growth or potential stagnation absent policy shifts addressing migration drivers.[118]Racial and ethnic demographics
As of the 2020 United States Census, Kansas's population totaled 2,937,880 residents, with non-Hispanic Whites comprising the largest group at 74.4% (approximately 2,185,000 individuals).[119] Black or African Americans accounted for 5.5% (about 161,000), Asians 3.1% (91,000), and American Indians and Alaska Natives 0.9% (26,000, including those identifying with multiple races).[119] Hispanics or Latinos of any race represented 12.5% (367,000), a category that overlaps with racial identifications and reflects significant growth from prior decades.[119] Persons identifying as two or more races increased to 5.0% (147,000), indicative of rising multiracial self-reporting following changes in Census methodology.[113]| Racial/Ethnic Group | 2020 Census Percentage | Approximate Population |
|---|---|---|
| White (non-Hispanic) | 74.4% | 2,185,000 |
| Hispanic or Latino (any race) | 12.5% | 367,000 |
| Black or African American | 5.5% | 161,000 |
| Asian | 3.1% | 91,000 |
| Two or more races | 5.0% | 147,000 |
| American Indian/Alaska Native | 0.9% | 26,000 |
Linguistic and immigrant profiles
Approximately 88% of Kansas residents aged five and older speak only English at home, according to the 2019-2023 American Community Survey (ACS) estimates, reflecting the state's historical settlement patterns dominated by English-speaking European descendants and limited linguistic diversification until recent decades. Spanish is the predominant non-English language, spoken at home by about 9.5% of the population, primarily among Hispanic communities concentrated in urban areas like Wichita and rural southwestern counties tied to agricultural labor.[124] Other non-English languages include Vietnamese (spoken by roughly 0.5% of households), German (0.4%), and smaller shares of Chinese, Arabic, and Somali, often linked to post-1990 refugee resettlements and labor migration; these collectively account for under 3% statewide, with limited English proficiency reported among 4-5% of speakers of languages other than English. [125] Kansas's immigrant profile features a foreign-born population of 7.1% as of 2022 ACS data, totaling around 207,000 individuals, lower than the national average of 13.9% and stable since the 2010s due to selective economic pull factors like meatpacking and manufacturing rather than broad policy-driven inflows.[126] [127] Mexico remains the primary origin country, contributing over 40% of foreign-born residents, followed by India (around 8%), Vietnam (6%), China (5%), and Somalia (3%), with these groups arriving largely through family reunification, employment visas, or refugee programs since the 1990s.[128] [129] Recent data indicate growth in African and Southeast Asian origins, particularly in southwest Kansas where Burmese and Somali communities have expanded via secondary migration to fill labor shortages in food processing, comprising up to 20-30% of some local workforces.[130] Naturalization rates stand at about 45% among foreign-born, with unauthorized estimates at 45,000-50,000, concentrated in low-wage sectors.[131] This composition underscores causal drivers of immigration—economic opportunities over welfare incentives—with empirical evidence from census flows showing net positive fiscal contributions in aggregate, though localized strains on services in high-immigration counties.[132]Religious affiliations
Approximately 70% of adults in Kansas identify as Christian, surpassing the national average, according to the Pew Research Center's Religious Landscape Study.[133] Protestants form the largest subgroup within Christianity, encompassing evangelical traditions at 27% and mainline denominations at 18%, with historically Black Protestant churches accounting for an additional 3%.[133] Catholics represent 19% of the population, while smaller Christian groups such as Latter-day Saints (2%), Orthodox Christians (1%), and Jehovah's Witnesses (less than 1%) contribute to the overall Christian majority.[133] The religiously unaffiliated population, often termed "nones," has grown notably, reflecting broader national trends of declining affiliation; Kansas ranks as the 10th most religious state based on metrics including daily prayer (58% of adults), belief in God (82%), and importance of religion (51% deem it very important), per Pew's 2023-2024 data.[134] Weekly religious service attendance has fallen from 48% in 2007 to 34% in 2023-2024, driven by factors such as secularization in urban areas like Wichita and Lawrence.[135] Non-Christian faiths remain marginal, comprising less than 1% of adults, including negligible shares of Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, and Hindus concentrated in metropolitan regions.[133] Congregational membership data from the 2020 U.S. Religion Census, compiled by the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies, reports 1,352,241 adherents (46% of the state's 2,937,880 residents), with Catholics leading at 414,939 members, followed by United Methodists (165,658) and non-denominational Christians (164,486); this undercounts self-identified affiliates due to its focus on reported church rolls rather than personal identification.[136]Economy
Primary sectors
Agriculture constitutes the dominant primary sector in Kansas, directly generating $61.89 billion in output and supporting 260,000 jobs statewide as of 2024, making it the state's largest industry and ranking seventh nationally by production value.[137] The sector encompasses crop production and livestock, with Kansas leading the United States in winter wheat output at 22.8% of the national total and sorghum production, while ranking third in cattle inventory at 6.9%.[138] In 2024, the state harvested 7.15 million acres of winter wheat yielding 307.45 million bushels at an average of 43 bushels per acre.[139] Soybeans covered 4.43 million harvested acres, and sorghum production further underscores the emphasis on grain crops suited to the Great Plains climate.[139] Livestock, particularly beef cattle, drives significant value, with the sector contributing $10 billion to the economy in 2023 and total cattle and calf inventory at 5.95 million head as of January 1, 2025, reflecting a 3% decline from the prior year amid market pressures.[140] [141] Kansas ranks third nationally in cattle, alongside production of hogs, bison, and sunflowers, with overall agricultural cash receipts reaching $24.6 billion in 2022, led by cattle, corn, wheat, soybeans, and sorghum.[142] The state's 55,734 farms, predominantly family-owned, span vast cropland representing 7.4% of the U.S. total, enabling efficient large-scale operations.[143] Net farm income is projected at $2.9 billion for 2024, buoyed by crop yields despite volatility in input costs and global markets.[144] Mining, primarily oil and natural gas extraction, plays a secondary role in primary sectors, with gross domestic product from these activities at $564.7 million in 2024, down from peaks in prior years due to declining reserves and production trends.[145] Statewide oil output totaled 2.2 million barrels in May 2025, alongside 10.5 million cubic feet of natural gas, positioning Kansas as the 13th-ranked U.S. producer by barrels of oil equivalent that month.[146] Production has fallen over 43% since 2014, influenced by maturing fields and macroeconomic factors, though three refineries process up to 408,000 barrels per day, supporting 2% of national capacity.[147] [148] Forestry and other extractive activities remain negligible in comparison.[149]Industrial and service contributions
Manufacturing constitutes a cornerstone of Kansas's industrial economy, contributing $26.5 billion to the state's gross domestic product in 2024 and employing 173,400 workers, or 11.5% of total state employment.[150][151] The sector added 4,000 jobs in 2023, reflecting a 2.4% growth amid national recovery trends.[152] Advanced manufacturing, encompassing precision engineering and machinery, underpins this output, supported by the state's central location and skilled workforce. Aerospace and defense represent a specialized industrial strength, with Kansas hosting over 450 supply chain firms providing engineering and manufacturing for national defense needs.[153] Wichita, dubbed the Air Capital of the World, anchors this cluster through major employers like Spirit AeroSystems and Textron Aviation, which produce aircraft components and leverage the region's historical aviation heritage dating to post-World War II expansions.[149] Food processing, tied to agricultural inputs, adds value through facilities converting raw commodities into packaged goods, though precise subsector GDP shares remain integrated within broader manufacturing figures.[149] The service sector drives a larger portion of economic activity, with finance, insurance, real estate, rental, and leasing generating the highest GDP contribution in 2023 at an estimated leading share of the state's $174.8 billion total real GDP.[154] Characteristic financial services include community banking, insurance providers such as Farm Bureau Financial Services, and corporate operations; Overland Park hosts headquarters for engineering firm Black & Veatch and Compass Minerals, while rural areas rely on local banks for agribusiness lending.[155][156][157][158] Professional and business services, alongside government and healthcare, bolster employment, comprising key nonfarm job categories in the 1.44 million total recorded for 2023.[152] Logistics and distribution services capitalize on Kansas's interstate highway and rail networks, facilitating freight movement; the state ranks prominently in multimodal transportation, with railroads handling significant agricultural and manufactured exports valued at $14.08 billion in 2023.[159][149] These industrial and service contributions interlink with primary sectors, as manufacturing often processes agricultural outputs while services support supply chains, yielding a diversified base less vulnerable to commodity fluctuations.[149] In 2023, private sector service employment led overall job gains of 1.9%, underscoring resilience in non-goods-producing activities.[160]Fiscal policies and taxation
Kansas maintains a tax system featuring individual income taxes, sales taxes, and locally administered property taxes as its principal revenue mechanisms, with no state-level estate or inheritance tax. The state income tax applies progressively, though recent reforms have narrowed brackets: for tax year 2025, single filers face 5.2% on the first $23,000 of taxable income and 5.58% on amounts exceeding that threshold, yielding an effective top marginal rate of approximately 5.58% for higher earners.[161][162] Corporate income tax rates mirror individual brackets but proposals in 2025 legislation, such as Senate Bill 269, seek further reductions to as low as 4% contingent on budget surpluses.[163] Sales taxes provide significant revenue, with the state rate fixed at 6.5% since 2017; combined state, county, and city rates typically range from 7% to 10.5% depending on locality, such as 9.35% in Overland Park and Wichita.[164][165] Property taxes, levied by counties, cities, and school districts via mill levies, fund local services without a statewide rate; the average effective rate stands at about 1.29% of assessed value, with residential properties assessed at 11.5% of market value and agricultural land at 30%.[166] These local taxes generated approximately $4.2 billion in fiscal year 2024, underscoring their role in education and infrastructure funding.[167] Fiscal policy emphasizes annual balanced budgets mandated by the state constitution, executed through an executive budget process where the governor proposes allocations, reviewed and adjusted by the Republican-controlled legislature.[168] The fiscal year 2026 all-funds budget totals $25.6 billion, reflecting a 5.4% decrease from the prior year amid revenue growth from energy and agriculture sectors.[169] A notable historical episode occurred with Governor Sam Brownback's 2012 tax reforms, which eliminated income taxes on pass-through business income and reduced individual rates from brackets topping 6.45% to a flat 4.9% for most filers, intended to spur economic growth via supply-side incentives.[170] However, the cuts correlated with revenue declines exceeding 10% annually by 2014, prompting $1.1 billion in mid-year deficits, underfunded pensions, and sharp reductions in K-12 education spending—Kansas per-pupil funding fell 15% in real terms relative to inflation from 2012 to 2016, lagging neighboring states.[171][63] Legislative reversal came in 2017, overriding Brownback's veto to restore two income tax brackets (3.1% to 5.7%) and reinstate business taxes, stabilizing revenues but highlighting fiscal vulnerabilities from unoffset rate reductions.[64] Subsequent surpluses, driven by federal aid and commodity booms, enabled 2024's Senate Bill 1, which accelerated depreciation deductions and cut rates further, reducing projected FY2025 revenues by $1.2 billion while maintaining reserves above 10% of expenditures.[172] Critics from left-leaning analyses, such as the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, attribute the original experiment's shortfalls to overreliance on dynamic scoring without spending restraints, whereas conservative outlets like the Cato Institute contend external factors like energy downturns amplified issues but affirm long-term growth potential from lower rates.[62][173] Current policy under Democratic Governor Laura Kelly and GOP majorities balances restraint with targeted relief, including property tax caps for seniors and exemptions for military retirees, amid debates over sustainability given volatile agricultural revenues comprising 20% of the general fund.[174]Recent economic trends and challenges
Kansas's economy demonstrated resilience in 2024 with real GDP growth reported in eight of eleven supersectors from 2023 levels, supported by labor force expansion of 21,386 individuals.[175] However, unemployment edged upward to 3.6% by December 2024, reflecting a climb from 2.6% in 2022 amid national economic pressures.[152] [176] Early 2025 indicators pointed to a slowdown, with GDP growth weakening due to reduced consumer spending and external factors like potential tariffs.[177] The aviation manufacturing sector, centered in Wichita, encountered significant disruptions from Boeing's operational challenges and its July 2024 acquisition of Spirit AeroSystems, Kansas's largest private employer.[178] [179] A Boeing machinists' strike halted 737 production, leading Spirit to furlough approximately 700 workers for 21 days in October 2024 and an additional 300 in June 2025, exacerbating cash burn and revenue declines.[180] [181] Boeing's 2024 deliveries of 265 737 Max jets marked a sharp drop, directly impacting Kansas's fuselage production, which constitutes 70% of the model.[182] Agriculture, a cornerstone sector contributing substantially to GDP, faced adverse weather patterns including persistent drought conditions through 2024, depleting the Ogallala Aquifer and reducing crop yields.[183] [184] Farm income projections declined for 2024 due to lower planted areas in key crops like wheat, compounded by erratic rainfall delaying harvests and increasing indemnity claims, with drought accounting for 35.8% of losses.[185] [186] [187] Regulatory burdens and aquifer depletion further strained rural economies, hindering long-term productivity.[188]Government and Politics
Governmental framework
The government of Kansas operates under a constitution adopted at the Wyandotte Convention on July 29, 1859, and ratified by voters on October 4, 1859, which took effect upon the state's admission to the Union on January 29, 1861.[189][190] This framework establishes a republican form of government divided into three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial, with mechanisms for checks and balances to prevent any single branch from dominating.[191] The state constitution has been amended over 100 times, reflecting adaptations to demographic, economic, and social changes while preserving core structures like separation of powers.[190] The executive branch is headed by the governor, elected by popular vote to a four-year term, with a limit of two consecutive terms but eligibility to run again after one term out of office.[192] The governor enforces state laws, commands the Kansas National Guard, and appoints officials including judges and agency heads, subject to legislative confirmation in some cases.[193] Other elected executives include the lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, state treasurer, and insurance commissioner, each serving four-year terms.[194] The legislative branch, known as the Kansas Legislature, is bicameral, comprising a 125-member House of Representatives elected to two-year terms and a 40-member Senate elected to four-year terms.[195] It convenes annually in January for sessions typically lasting up to 90 days in odd-numbered years and 50 days in even-numbered years, with power to pass laws, approve budgets, and impeach officials.[196] Bills require majority approval in both chambers and gubernatorial signature, or can override vetoes with two-thirds votes.[196] The judicial branch is led by the Kansas Supreme Court, consisting of seven justices appointed by the governor from a nominating commission's recommendations and retained via nonpartisan elections every six years.[197] It serves as the final arbiter on state law, hearing appeals from the 15-judge Court of Appeals and original jurisdiction cases.[197] Below are 28 district courts handling trials, with local magistrates for minor matters.[198] Local government includes 105 counties, each governed by a three- to five-member board of county commissioners elected to four-year terms, responsible for services like roads, law enforcement, and elections.[199] Kansas has 627 incorporated cities, structured primarily as mayor-council or council-manager forms, with home rule authority under the constitution allowing local ordinances not conflicting with state law.[200] Two unified governments combine county and city functions: Wyandotte County/Kansas City and Greeley County/Tribune.[200]Political evolution
The political evolution of Kansas began with intense conflict during its territorial phase following the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, which allowed popular sovereignty on slavery and sparked "Bleeding Kansas," a period of guerrilla warfare between pro-slavery settlers from Missouri and anti-slavery migrants from the North, resulting in over 200 deaths from 1855 to 1859.[27] Fraudulent elections, such as the pro-slavery Lecompton Constitution of 1857, deepened divisions, but free-state advocates prevailed, leading to Kansas's admission as a free state on January 29, 1861, under a Republican-leaning Wyandotte Constitution that prohibited slavery.[37] This foundational anti-slavery stance entrenched Republican dominance in the state's early politics, with the party controlling the governorship and legislature amid Civil War loyalty to the Union. In the late 19th century, economic distress from falling crop prices and railroad monopolies fueled the Populist movement, organized through the Farmers' Alliance, culminating in the formation of the People's Party. The 1890 elections marked a high point, with Populists securing 92 legislative seats and advocating for reforms like subtreasuries and currency expansion; orator Mary Elizabeth Lease urged farmers to "raise less corn and more hell."[201] [202] Through fusion with Democrats, Populists elected Governor Lorenzo Lewelling in 1892 and controlled the legislature in 1893, passing progressive measures on labor and taxation, but internal divisions and the 1896 national fusion with Democrats led to decline, restoring Republican majorities by 1900.[203] The 20th century solidified Republican hegemony, with the party winning every gubernatorial election after 1900 except during brief progressive and New Deal interludes; Kansas supported Democratic presidential candidates only in 1912, 1916, 1932, 1936, and 1964 amid national landslides.[204] Early reforms included women's suffrage in 1912 and prohibition enforcement until 1948, reflecting moral conservatism intertwined with agrarian interests. Post-World War II, moderate Republicans like Alf Landon and Robert Docking (Democrat, 1967-1975) governed, but legislative power shifted toward conservatives, especially after the 2010 Tea Party surge that elected Senator Jerry Moran and reinforced GOP supermajorities.[205] Since 2000, Kansas has voted Republican in every presidential election, comprising 84.4% of votes since 1900, driven by rural and western conservatism on issues like agriculture, taxes, and abortion restrictions post-Roe v. Wade.[206] While urban areas like Johnson County have trended Democratic, gaining seats in 2022, the state legislature remains overwhelmingly Republican, with unified GOP control from 2017 to 2023 until Democratic Governor Laura Kelly's reelection.[207] This evolution from territorial violence to Populist insurgency and enduring Republican control underscores Kansas's shift toward stable, market-oriented conservatism, tempered by occasional reformist challenges rooted in economic realities rather than ideological imports.Contemporary partisan landscape
Kansas maintains a pronounced Republican orientation in its partisan alignment, evidenced by voter registration figures showing Republicans comprising 45.0% of registered voters as of December 2, 2024, compared to 25.4% Democrats and approximately 25.6% unaffiliated, with minor parties holding the remainder.[208] This disparity underscores a structural advantage for Republicans, particularly in rural and suburban areas, where conservative turnout consistently drives outcomes. Urban centers like Lawrence and parts of Kansas City exhibit stronger Democratic support, but these are insufficient to offset statewide Republican majorities in most contests.[208] In federal elections, Kansas has voted Republican in every presidential contest since 1968, a streak reinforced in 2024 when Donald Trump secured 57.16% of the vote against Kamala Harris's 41.04%, yielding a 16-point margin amid total turnout exceeding 1.3 million ballots.[209] Both U.S. Senate seats remain in Republican hands: Jerry Moran won re-election in 2022 with 81.2% in the primary and a comfortable general election margin, while Roger Marshall, elected in 2020, holds the other term through 2026.[210] Kansas's four congressional districts are uniformly represented by Republicans, reflecting the state's partisan voting index, which aligns with a solid Republican tilt based on recent presidential performance relative to national averages.[211] At the state level, Republicans control the legislature with supermajorities—85 of 125 House seats and 31 of 40 Senate seats following the 2024 elections—enabling overrides of gubernatorial vetoes and advancement of conservative priorities on taxation and regulation.[212] However, Democratic Governor Laura Kelly has held office since 2018, narrowly defeating Republican Derek Schmidt in 2022 by 49.54% to 47.33% in a race influenced by voter rejection of a constitutional amendment restricting abortion access earlier that year.[213] This divided government highlights pockets of Democratic competitiveness in moderate-leaning statewide races, though Republican dominance persists in legislative and federal arenas, buoyed by demographic stability in agricultural and energy-dependent regions.[212]Major policy debates
Kansas's major policy debates often center on fiscal conservatism versus spending priorities, reflecting the tension between a Republican supermajority in the legislature and Democratic Governor Laura Kelly. In the 2025 legislative session, Republicans prioritized property tax relief and further income tax reductions, including phasing out the state grocery sales tax, amid debates over long-term budget sustainability following the partial reversal of 2012 tax cuts under former Governor Sam Brownback.[214][215] Those cuts, which eliminated income taxes on small businesses and reduced rates, initially projected $934 million in annual revenue losses by 2018 but failed to spur the anticipated economic boom, resulting in deficits exceeding $1 billion by 2017 and prompting a 2017 legislative override of Brownback's veto to restore some taxes.[63][216] Kelly vetoed related bills in 2025, citing risks to education and infrastructure funding, while GOP leaders argued surplus revenues—$248 million above projections for fiscal year 2025—justify cuts without discipline.[217][218] Education funding disputes focus on school choice expansions versus public school support, with Republicans advancing voucher-like tax credit scholarships of up to $8,000 per child for private or non-accredited schools in bills like Senate Bill 75 during the 2025 session.[219][220] Opponents, including rural districts and educators, contend such measures divert resources from underfunded public schools, where per-pupil funding remains contentious post-2016 Supreme Court-mandated increases, and exacerbate inequities in areas lacking private options.[221][222] The legislature rejected full voucher plans in 2023 and 2025, but a limited tax credit expansion passed the Senate without House action, highlighting partisan divides amid fears of "fearmongering" accusations against public school advocates.[223][224] Medicaid expansion remains a flashpoint, with Kelly proposing coverage for approximately 150,000 low-income adults via a work-requirement model since 2023, aiming to reclaim $3.8 billion in federal funds over five years while addressing rural hospital closures.[225][226] GOP supermajorities have rejected these plans annually, including in 2024 and early 2025 budget proposals, citing federal approval uncertainties, added state costs estimated at $100 million annually post-enhanced federal match, and preferences for private alternatives.[227][228] Kelly included expansion in her 2026 fiscal year budget, framing it as economic relief, but legislative resistance persists amid debates over able-bodied coverage and waiting lists.[229][230] Abortion policy debates intensified after the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs decision, with Kansas voters rejecting a constitutional amendment on August 2, 2022, that would have affirmed no right to abortion, preserving state protections by a 59-41% margin.[231] The Republican legislature responded with measures like a 2024 law requiring clinics to document patients' reasons for seeking abortions, challenged in court by July 2024 for violating privacy rights under the state constitution.[232][233] Kelly vetoed stricter bills, arguing they infringe on the 2022 voter mandate, while proponents seek legislative authority to regulate post-viability procedures amid ongoing litigation.[234] Water resource management, particularly the depleting Ogallala Aquifer underlying western Kansas, drives debates over usage rights and conservation, with aquifer levels dropping over one foot in 2024 alone in key areas.[87] Under prior appropriation doctrine, water rights holders face proposed 25-30% pumping reductions to stabilize levels, as endorsed by the Kansas Water Authority in 2024 for the first time, prioritizing long-term sustainability over unrestricted irrigation supporting $4 billion in annual agriculture.[235][236] Farmers anticipate "reckoning" through phased safe-yield policies and local groundwater management districts, balancing economic reliance on crops like corn against depletion risks projected to render parts unviable by 2070 without intervention.[88][237]Law and Legal System
State constitution and judiciary
The Constitution of Kansas was drafted by a convention on July 29, 1859, and ratified by voters on October 4, 1859, facilitating the state's admission to the Union on January 29, 1861.[238] It comprises a preamble, a Bill of Rights, and 15 articles addressing legislative, executive, and judicial powers, local government, education, taxation, and other matters.[190] The document has undergone 95 amendments since adoption, reflecting adaptations to social, economic, and legal changes while preserving core structures.[190] The Bill of Rights enshrines fundamental protections, including equal and inalienable natural rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness for all individuals (§1); inherent political power in the people, with no special privileges immune from legislative alteration (§2); and the right of peaceable assembly and petition (§3).[189] Distinctive provisions emphasize individual autonomy, such as the right to bear arms for self, family, and state defense (§4, amended in 2010 to clarify personal bearing without permission); protections against involuntary servitude except as punishment for crime (§6); and an inviolate guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures (§15), which employs stronger language than comparable federal protections and has supported independent state grounds for excluding evidence.[189][239][240] These elements have positioned the constitution as a potential source for broader individual rights interpretations beyond federal minima, though judicial application has varied.[241] Amendments originate via legislative proposal—requiring majority approval in each house over two legislative sessions—or constitutional convention, followed by voter ratification by simple majority; no more than five may be submitted per general election to avoid voter overload.[238] Article 14 prohibits amendments to the general provisions article in isolation, ensuring baseline stability, while historical failures, such as repeated unsuccessful bids to adjust legislative compensation, highlight voter resistance to certain fiscal changes.[242][243] Kansas maintains a unified judicial branch under the Supreme Court, which exercises original jurisdiction in cases involving statewide issues, appeals from lower courts, and administrative oversight of the system, including rulemaking for practice and procedure.[244] The court consists of seven justices, appointed by the governor from three to five nominees selected by a nine-member Supreme Court Nominating Commission (five attorneys elected by the bar, four non-attorneys appointed by the governor), with initial one-year retention elections thereafter every six years.[245][246] This merit-based process, established by constitutional amendment in 1972, aims to prioritize qualifications over partisanship, though recent legislative proposals seek to introduce direct elections for Supreme Court justices amid debates over judicial independence.[247][248] The Court of Appeals, an intermediate appellate body with 14 judges, reviews district court decisions in three-judge panels, handling most civil and criminal appeals unless transferred to the Supreme Court.[249] Judges are appointed directly by the governor subject to Senate confirmation, followed by retention elections every four years; the Supreme Court designates a chief judge to manage caseloads, panel assignments, and venues.[245][249] District courts, numbering 105 judges across 29 districts as of recent counts, conduct trials and initial appeals, with selection varying by district: partisan or nonpartisan elections in some, merit selection (gubernatorial appointment from commission nominees with retention) in others, requiring candidates to be at least 30 years old and licensed attorneys for five years.[246] Lower courts include municipal and traffic tribunals for minor offenses.[244] The system's emphasis on retention elections reinforces accountability to voters while insulating from frequent partisan contests, though critics argue it insulates judges from public scrutiny on contentious rulings.[245]Criminal justice and enforcement
Kansas maintains a statewide criminal justice system characterized by declining crime rates and stable but elevated incarceration levels. In 2024, the overall crime index rate fell to 23.3 offenses per 1,000 residents, the lowest in over two decades, down from 27 per 1,000 in 2023, according to data compiled by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI).[250] Violent crimes decreased by 6.7% to 12,643 incidents, yielding a rate of 4.2 per 1,000 people, with murders dropping 25% from 157 in 2023 to 117.[251] [252] Property crimes, including burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson, occurred at a rate of 19.2 per 1,000 residents. These trends align with national patterns but reflect localized enforcement efforts amid rural-urban disparities, where urban areas like Wichita and Kansas City report higher incidences of violent offenses.[253] Law enforcement in Kansas comprises over 300 agencies, including municipal police, county sheriffs, and the Kansas Highway Patrol, with sworn officer numbers approaching pre-2020 levels of 3.84 per 1,000 residents as of 2024.[254] [255] The KBI coordinates investigations into major crimes, including drug trafficking, which remains a priority given Kansas's position on methamphetamine and opioid corridors; common charges involve possession or distribution of methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine, and marijuana, classified as felonies under severity levels tied to quantity and intent.[255] [256] Enforcement emphasizes interdiction, with federal partnerships addressing interstate flows, though rural areas face resource strains in responding to property and drug-related offenses.[257] The state's corrections system incarcerates at a rate of 648 per 100,000 residents, above the national average, with a prison population of approximately 9,000 as of 2024, predominantly male and including admissions that rose 13.6% in fiscal year 2023 to over 4,400.[258] [259] [260] Capital punishment is authorized for aggravated circumstances in murder cases, mandating either death or life without parole, but no executions have occurred since 1965 despite reinstatement in 1994; the system faces legal challenges alleging arbitrariness, racial disparities in sentencing, and high costs without deterrent effect.[261] [262] [263] Recent reforms, driven by the Kansas Criminal Justice Reform Commission established in 2019, have emphasized alternatives to incarceration, including expanded community supervision and diversion programs, averting an projected 800 additional prisoners through Justice Reinvestment Initiative policies implemented since 2012.[264] [265] These efforts address overcrowding and a documented shortage of public defenders—needing 277 more as of 2024—while prioritizing evidence-based practices like de-escalation training over expansive decriminalization.[266] [267] Despite progress, systemic issues persist, including disparities in pretrial detention and drug policy enforcement, with critics from organizations like the ACLU arguing for further reductions in nonviolent sentencing severity.[268]Regulatory environment
Kansas maintains a regulatory framework administered primarily through executive agencies under the governor's oversight, with rules codified in the Kansas Administrative Regulations (KAR), encompassing over 73,000 restrictions as of 2023.[269] The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) oversees environmental compliance, including air emissions, water quality under the Clean Water Act, and waste management, enforcing permits and inspections to balance public health with industrial activity in agriculture and energy sectors.[270] [271] The Kansas Department of Labor enforces workplace standards, setting overtime eligibility after 46 hours per week—higher than the federal 40-hour threshold—while adhering to the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, with no state mandates for paid sick leave or meal breaks beyond federal requirements.[272] [273] Business regulations emphasize licensing and permitting through agencies like the Kansas Department of Agriculture and the Office of the Securities Commissioner, attracting firms via low compliance burdens compared to coastal states, though critics argue excessive rules impose hidden costs equivalent to a tax on operations, hindering growth in manufacturing and farming.[274] [188] Kansas operates as an at-will employment state, allowing termination without cause absent contracts, with recent 2025 legislation clarifying enforceability of non-solicitation covenants to protect employer interests without broad non-compete bans.[275] [276] Reform initiatives have aimed to streamline oversight, including a 2024 legislative push for a "regulatory sandbox" exempting innovative businesses from select rules to foster product delivery, and a statewide modernization launched in October 2025 by Secretary of State Scott Schwab to digitize and reduce the regulatory filing burden.[277] [278] These efforts reflect ongoing tensions between deregulation for economic competitiveness—evident in Kansas's mid-tier ranking for regulatory volume—and maintaining standards for environmental and worker safety, with environmental policy explicitly weighing resource conservation against property rights and energy production needs.[279]Transportation
Road networks
Kansas maintains approximately 139,000 miles of public roads, streets, and highways, comprising the fourth-largest such system in the United States by total mileage. Of this network, the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) oversees roughly 10,000 miles of the state highway system, encompassing Interstate Highways, U.S. routes, and Kansas-numbered highways that handle the preponderance of intercity travel and freight transport. Local governments maintain the remaining approximately 129,000 miles, primarily rural county and township roads.[280][281][282] The Interstate Highway System in Kansas spans about 800 miles, facilitating efficient cross-state movement of goods and passengers. Interstate 70 traverses the state east-west for 424 miles, connecting urban centers like Topeka and Hays while serving as a key transcontinental corridor for agricultural exports and manufactured products. Interstate 35 runs north-south for 235 miles, linking the Oklahoma border through Wichita and Kansas City to Missouri, and supports heavy trucking volumes tied to the region's logistics hubs. Auxiliary routes include I-135, linking Wichita northward to I-70 near Salina; I-335, a bypass around Topeka; and urban loops such as I-435 and I-470 serving the Kansas City metropolitan area. Kansas holds historical significance as the site of the nation's first Interstate segment: an 8-mile portion of I-70 west of Topeka opened to traffic on November 14, 1956, predating broader federal implementation under the Interstate Highway Act.[283][284] Complementing the free Interstate network, the Kansas Turnpike Authority operates a 236-mile toll road paralleling segments of I-35, I-335, I-470, and I-70 from the Oklahoma border to Kansas City, funded solely by user fees without state tax subsidies. This controlled-access facility, constructed starting in 1954, enhances capacity on high-traffic alignments and includes service plazas for long-haul drivers. U.S. Highways such as US-50, US-54, US-69, US-75, and US-400, alongside over 300 state routes, form a secondary grid connecting rural areas to interstates, with KDOT prioritizing maintenance on these arterials to sustain Kansas's role in national supply chains. Average daily vehicle-miles traveled across the system reached 86.6 million in 2024, reflecting robust utilization amid agricultural and industrial demands.[285][280]Air and rail systems
Kansas's commercial air transportation is primarily handled by Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport (ICT), the state's largest facility, which recorded 1,809,142 total passengers (arrivals and departures) in 2024, a record high reflecting a 5% increase over 2023 driven by expanded airline capacity and routes.[286] The airport supports nonstop service from carriers such as American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, and United Airlines to major hubs including Dallas/Fort Worth, Chicago O'Hare, and Denver, facilitating connectivity for the state's central and southern regions. Smaller commercial-service airports, including Manhattan Regional Airport near Kansas State University and Dodge City Regional Airport, handle limited scheduled passenger flights with volumes in the tens of thousands annually, serving local and agricultural needs. The state operates over 420 public-use airports, the majority dedicated to general aviation for private, corporate, and agricultural operations, underscoring Kansas's reliance on smaller fields amid sparse population density. Freight rail forms the backbone of Kansas's rail system, with 18 railroads managing 4,701 miles of track and employing 4,273 workers as of recent data, transporting commodities like grain, chemicals, and intermodal cargo essential to the state's agricultural and manufacturing economy.[287] Class I carriers BNSF Railway and Union Pacific dominate the network, handling the bulk of long-haul freight with efficient, high-volume operations that benefit from the flat terrain of the Great Plains. Passenger rail service is limited to Amtrak's Southwest Chief, providing one daily round-trip route from Chicago to Los Angeles with stops at six Kansas stations: Lawrence, Topeka, Newton, Hutchinson, Dodge City, and Garden City.[288] Fiscal year 2024 saw 43,226 total boardings and alightings across these stations, reflecting modest demand primarily for cross-country travel.[289] Trains operate on BNSF tracks, where federal law mandates dispatching preference for Amtrak over freight, yet on-time performance stands at 34%, attributed to host railroad priorities and infrastructure constraints.[289] In April 2025, Kansas enacted legislation creating dedicated funding for intercity passenger rail to bolster Amtrak service, while the Kansas Department of Transportation assesses expansions, including a potential extension of the Heartland Flyer from Oklahoma to Newton for improved regional connectivity.[290][291]Other infrastructure
Kansas maintains an extensive network of pipelines for the transportation of crude oil, natural gas, and refined petroleum products, connecting production areas in the Midwest to refineries, storage facilities, and markets across the region. The Kansas Corporation Commission regulates intrastate common carrier pipelines for liquid petroleum, ensuring safety and operational standards for numerous operators.[292] For instance, the Jayhawk Pipeline system utilizes multiple pumping stations within the state to transport crude oil, operated on behalf of entities like Kaw Pipeline Company.[293] Enbridge's Platte Pipeline, spanning 933 miles from Casper, Wyoming, to Wood River, Illinois, crosses the northeast corner of Kansas, averaging 140,000 barrels per day of crude oil transport.[294] Recent developments underscore ongoing expansion in pipeline infrastructure. In July 2024, ONEOK announced plans for a 230-mile, 16-inch diameter natural gas liquids pipeline from Scott City, Kansas, to Denver International Airport, including upgrades to existing pump stations to enhance capacity.[295] Similarly, the Elk Creek Pipeline, a 900-mile, 20-inch diameter line with 900,000 barrels per day capacity, integrates Kansas segments into broader crude oil transport networks.[296] These systems, including over 1,000 miles operated by MV Pipelines across Kansas and Oklahoma, support energy logistics amid regional production growth, though proposals like the Kansas Express Oil Pipeline from Coldwater to Cushing have faced delays or cancellation.[297][298] Inland waterway transportation occurs primarily via the Missouri River, which enables barge shipments of bulk commodities such as grain, scrap metal, and fertilizer, with activity concentrated near Kansas City. Barge traffic on the river has increased as of June 2025, benefiting local commerce, reducing road congestion, and lowering emissions compared to truck transport.[299] The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers maintains navigation channels, supporting daily boat and barge movements reported through Kansas City District operations.[300] Despite this resurgence—building on efforts since 2016 to revive the river as a freight corridor—the Missouri River remains underutilized relative to southern waterways, with commercial traffic extending upstream to Sioux City, Iowa, but limited by seasonal water levels and infrastructure constraints.[301][302]Education
Primary and secondary systems
Primary and secondary education in Kansas is compulsory for children aged seven to eighteen, with children under seven subject to attendance requirements if enrolled in school; exemptions for sixteen- and seventeen-year-olds are available upon completion of a form certifying intent to pursue employment, vocational training, or other approved activities.[303][304] The system comprises 287 local school districts operating 1,305 public schools, serving approximately 497,753 students as of 2022, supported by around 36,406 classroom teachers for a student-teacher ratio of roughly 13.7:1.[305] Enrollment has stabilized near 490,000 to 492,000 students since 2014, following a peak of 492,102 in 2019-20.[306] Oversight falls under the Kansas State Department of Education (KSDE), directed by a ten-member State Board of Education elected from geographic districts—each encompassing four contiguous state senatorial districts—for four-year terms, as established by the state constitution.[307][308] The board sets statewide academic standards, approves curricula frameworks, and administers assessments like the Kansas Assessment Program, while local districts retain primary control over operations, budgeting, and instruction under accreditation guidelines. Private and parochial schools must meet equivalent standards for accreditation, and homeschooling complies with notification and basic instructional requirements. Funding derives primarily from state aid (about 50-60% of total), local property taxes, and federal sources, totaling nearly $8.5 billion for K-12 in 2023-24, or roughly $17,650 per pupil including all expenditures.[309] The state's base state aid per pupil stood at $8,469.38 for fiscal year 2025, with supplemental weights for special needs students, though total per-pupil spending ranks Kansas 20th nationally at $16,594.[310][311] Ongoing litigation and legislative adjustments, stemming from the 2016 Gannon v. Kansas ruling on equitable funding, have increased allocations but tied them to enrollment and inflation metrics rather than performance outcomes.[312] Student performance, as measured by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) in 2024, shows mixed results: fourth-grade mathematics averaged 237—statistically unchanged from prior years and aligned with the national average of 237—while fourth-grade reading declined to 213, below the national average and reflecting a seven-point drop since 2022 equivalent to nearly a year's learning loss.[313][314] Only 26% of eighth-graders reached proficiency in mathematics, with 24% below basic, and persistent gaps exist by socioeconomic status and race, where low-income and minority students score 20-40 points lower.[315][316] Despite per-pupil spending rising over 45% in the past decade adjusted for inflation, achievement levels have stagnated or declined post-pandemic, prompting calls for reforms emphasizing phonics-based reading, school choice, and accountability over increased funding alone.[317][309]Higher education institutions
The higher education system in Kansas is coordinated by the Kansas Board of Regents, which oversees six state universities, one municipal university, 19 community colleges, and six technical colleges, serving over 100,000 students statewide as of recent data.[318][319] Public institutions emphasize accessible education, with a focus on agriculture, engineering, health sciences, and applied research tied to the state's economy. Enrollment across the system has shown growth, particularly at flagship universities, amid efforts to boost retention and affordability.[320] The University of Kansas (KU), founded in 1866 in Lawrence, is the state's largest and oldest public research university, with a total enrollment of 31,169 students in fall 2025, including 22,085 undergraduates.[321][322] KU ranks 143rd overall and 74th among public universities in U.S. News & World Report's 2026 evaluations, recognized for research output and programs in medicine, law, and engineering.[323] Its Lawrence campus spans 1,000 acres, hosting the KU Medical Center in Kansas City for advanced health research.[324] Kansas State University (K-State), established in 1863 in Manhattan as the nation's first land-grant university, reported 21,213 for-credit students in fall 2025, marking three consecutive years of enrollment increases.[325][326] K-State offers over 250 undergraduate programs across nine colleges, with strengths in agriculture, veterinary medicine, and aviation, and is ranked among the top 100 public universities for value.[327][325] The university maintains campuses in Salina and Olathe, emphasizing extension services for rural development.[327] Wichita State University (WSU), a municipal institution since 1964 but founded in 1895 as Fairmount College, enrolls about 14,280 undergraduates on its 330-acre urban campus in Wichita.[328][329] WSU is designated as a high-research-activity university, noted for innovation in engineering, business, and health professions, and ranks as the most affordable research university in its region.[330][331] Other notable state universities include Fort Hays State University (FHSU), offering extensive online programs with over 200 degrees; Emporia State University, focused on teacher education; and Pittsburg State University, strong in technology and nursing.[332] These institutions contribute to Kansas's higher education landscape by providing specialized training aligned with workforce needs, such as in manufacturing and energy sectors.[333]| Institution | Founded | Total Enrollment (Recent) | Key Strengths |
|---|---|---|---|
| University of Kansas | 1866 | 31,169 (2025) | Research, medicine, law[321] |
| Kansas State University | 1863 | 21,213 (2025) | Agriculture, engineering, land-grant extension[325] |
| Wichita State University | 1895 (public 1964) | ~16,000 (2024 est.) | Applied learning, aviation, affordability[328][330] |
Recent performance metrics
In Kansas public K-12 schools, the adjusted cohort graduation rate reached a record 89.5% for the class of 2024, up from 80.6% in 2010 when the current formula was adopted.[334] This figure reflects steady improvement but varies by district, with urban areas like Wichita at 79.2% and Kansas City at 73.4% over recent years.[335] On the 2024 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), Kansas fourth-graders scored an average of 237 in mathematics, matching the national average, while reading scores averaged 213, one point below the national 214; eighth-grade reading averaged 255, two points below the national 257.[313] [336] [337] These results indicate no significant change from 2022 and position Kansas below national averages in most categories, with rankings in the low 30s for non-low-income students.[314] Pandemic recovery lags persist, with Kansas ranking 20th in mathematics and 36th in reading among states from 2019 to 2024, retaining over 40% math and 60% reading deficits relative to pre-COVID trends.[338]| Grade | Subject | Kansas Average | National Average |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4th | Math | 237 | 237 |
| 4th | Reading | 213 | 214 |
| 8th | Reading | 255 | 257 |

