Ghost Settlement on the Prairie: A Biography of Thurman, Kansas

Ghost Settlement on the Prairie: A Biography of Thurman, Kansas
ISBN-10
0700606807
ISBN-13
9780700606801
Category
History / United States / State & Local / Midwest (IA, IL, IN, KS, MI, MN, MO, ND, NE, OH, SD, WI)
Pages
320
Language
English
Published
1995
Publisher
University Press of Kansas
Author
Joseph V. Hickey

Description

Four miles southeast of the village of Matfield Green in Chase County, Kansas—the heart of the Flint Hills—lies the abandoned settlement of Thurman. At the turn of the century Thurman was a prosperous farming and ranching settlement with fifty-one households, a post office, two general stores, a blacksmith shop, five schools, and a church. Today, only the ruins of Thurman remain.

Joseph Hickey uses Thurman to explore the settlement form of social organization, which—along with the village, hamlet, and small town—was a dominant feature of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American life. He traces Thurman's birth in 1874, its shallow rises and falls, and its demise in 1944. Akin to what William Least Heat-Moon did for Chase County in PrairyErth, Hicky provides a "deep map" for one post-office community and, consequently, tells us a great deal about America's rural past.

Describing the shifting relationships between Thurmanites and their Matfield Green neighbors, Hickey details how social forces set in motion by the American ideal of individualism and the machinations of capitalist entrepreneurs produced a Darwinian struggle between Thurman stock raisers and Flint Hills "cattle barons" that ultimately doomed Thurman. Central to the story are the concept of "ordinary entrepreneurship" and the profoundly capitalist attitudes of the farmers who settled Thurman and thousands of other communities dotting the American landscape.

Hickey's account of Thurman's social organization and disintegration provides a new perspective on what happened when the cattle drives from Texas and the Southwest shifted in the 1880s from the Kansas cowtowns to the Flint Hills. Moreover, he punctures numerous myths about the Flint Hills, including those that cattle dominated because the land is too rocky to farm or that Indians refused to farm because of traditional beliefs.

Like many other small rural communities, Hickey argues, Thurman during its seventy-year history was actually several different settlements. A product of changing social conditions, each one resulted from shifting memberships and boundaries that reflected the efforts of local entrepreneurs to use country schools, churches, and other forms of "social capital" to gain advantages over their competitors. In the end, Thurman succumbed to the impact of agribusiness, which had the effect of transforming social capital from an asset into a liability. Ultimately, Hickey shows, the settlement's fate echoed the decline of rural community throughout America.

Similar books

  • Kalamazoo Lost & Found
    By Lynn Smith Houghton, Pamela Hall O'Connor

    Dewey , Robert , Conrad Hilberry , Lawrence Barrett , and Gail Griffin . Kalamazoo College : A Sesquicentennial Portrait . Kalamazoo , MI : Kalamazoo College , 1982 . Dobson , Raymond . History of the Order of Elks . Rev. ed .

  • A history of the city of Cleveland
    By James Harrison Kennedy

    The law and the gospel in their visible forms reached Cleveland at about the same time, in the persons of Samuel Huntington, and the Rev. Joseph Badger. The first named was the earliest lawyer to settle in this city; the latter was the ...

  • Ohio Place Names
    By Larry L. Miller

    Larry L. Miller. Galena Delaware County . Gilbert Carpenter founded a village named Zoar ... Later owners included Clark Higgins , Samuel Kell , M. A. Platt , Rosline Smith , Spicer L. Smith , George W. McDowell , and D. B. Peters .

  • Compendium of history and biography of the city of Detroit and Wayne County, Michigan
    By Clarence Monroe Burton

    The momentary humors of the French king and the incidents occurring in London, penetrated the leagues of virgin forests in the New World, and left their marks indelibly imprinted upon the future of that straggling row of rude cabins far ...

  • Captured by the Indians
    By Minnie Buce Carrigan

    Minnie Buce Carrigan, William Elsey Connelley.

  • A History of Missouri: 1820 to 1860
    By William E. Foley

    A History of Missouri: 1820 to 1860

  • Sin in the Second City: Madams, Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America's Soul
    By Karen Abbott

    Step into the perfumed parlors of the Everleigh Club, the most famous brothel in American history-and the catalyst for a culture war that rocked the nation. Operating in Chicago's notorious...

  • The Rural Midwest Since World War II
    By Joseph Leslie Anderson

    J.L. Anderson seeks to change the belief that the Midwest lacks the kind of geographic coherence, historical issues, and cultural touchstones that have informed regional identity in the American South,...

  • The Middle West: Its Meaning in American Culture
    By James R. Shortridge

    It is the "heartland," the home of the average--middle--American. Yet the definition of the Middle West, that most amorphous of regions, is elusive and changing. In historical, cultural, political, literary,...

  • Irish in Michigan
    By Eileen K. Metress, Seamus P. Metress

    Irish immigration to the United States can be divided into five general periods, from 1640 to the present: the colonial, prestarvation, great starvation, post-starvation, and post- independence periods. Immigration to...