Sunday, October 24, 2010

Sitka, Kansas

Sitka Main Street, 1917

Tearing down Sitka home

Train going through town.
Trucks line up at elevator

Home Lumber and Supply Co.

Lackey store and city hotel

Interior of Lackey store

Main street 1939

Sitka church burning

Sitka 1911

Reed service station

Sitka Roundup

PLat map

Arial photo





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Eldora McMinimy stands by the Sitka sign. She wrote a book about the town.
The elevator is the last business in town.

SITKA - Preparing to haul water to thirsty cattle during October's dry spell, professional steer wrestler Jule Hazen peered across a landscape where a lively town once stood.
An old bank - now a heaping pile of bricks - sits near the corner of the city street that leads to his ranch house. A few foundations are scattered in the neighboring pasture where cattle graze across sidewalks that lead to nowhere - signs that people once inhabited this farming and ranching community.

But not anymore. Living in the nearly 100-year-old home he and his wife, Heidi, bought earlier this year, Hazen is the last cowboy in Sitka, population 2.

"My cousin said you can still see where the city blocks were at from the top of the elevator," Hazen said, gesturing to the town's last business, a cooperative open only during harvest seasons.

Those taking U.S. 183 to the Oklahoma border will find Sitka, Kan., a small pit stop in southern Clark County. It seems the town, once a center of commerce, has quietly slipped away.

An old home just north of Sitka.

Eldora McMinimy published a book last year on the history of Sitka, Kansas, which is now a ghost town in Clark County.

This sidewalk once lead to the old school,  Now it's a sidewalk to nowhere


A old water pump still rests in a pasture where houses once stood.

The old school was turned into a restaurant, which closed in 1999.

An old home is falling in.





13 comments:

  1. We really enjoyed the series about Ghost Towns. As we know the author Of the Sitka one, we will enjoy getting to read one.Thanks for the interesting pictures. Duane and Molly Williams from another Ghost Town location, Modoc,Ks.

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  2. I've always found Sitka a fascinating place when I've driven through!

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  3. Many fond memories driving through there as a kid. Lived just south of there in OK.

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  4. The town was famous for many years as where the Sitka Social Club was. Reputed to have a great steak.

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    1. I remember going there with my parents in the 80s. They had a huge burger I think was called the cattleman’s burger. Big enough to feed two.

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    2. They were huge and my buddy ate two of the along with the fries in one sitting. Still can't believe it.

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  5. I remember eating some great chicken fry steak at the restaurant there when I was a kid. Drove through Sitka many times. Nice to see some of the history.

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  6. I remember eating some great chicken fry steak at the restaurant there when I was a kid. Drove through Sitka many times. Nice to see some of the history.

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  7. My aunt lives in Ashland. I'd love to meet Mr. Hazen and look around the old town myself.

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  8. Had the best steak and the best bread I've ever eaten at the Sitka Social Club back in the early 90s

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  9. When I was driving for my Dad's Trucking Company I would stop every chance I got, the nachos were the best.

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  10. Sitka has a sad chapter in its history. On July 24, 1919, Luther Turner was murdered when an unknown assailant with a shotgun fired through the screen door of Turner’s home. The suspects were acquitted in trials. Turner’s murderer is unknown to this day. Find the story on Rootsweb: http://sites.rootsweb.com/~kscomanc/turner_luther.html. My questions to you are: where was that house? Are there photos of it? Does it still exist? There is another ghost town. Belvedere. There was a murder there, too. It remains a mystery. What a story.

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    1. Very interesting story, I had seen something about this before. My family has for a long time and still does leased this piece of land from the Loesch (sp?) family. To my understanding the house stood 1/2 mile or so north of the county road. It is no longer there or any traces of it except for the nearby windmill

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