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[edit]
Contents
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[edit] U.S. Census demographic sources
- Population estimates http://www.census.gov/popest/estimates.php
- Annually total population estimates for incorporated places and in selected states, governmentally functioning county sub-divisions (minor civil divisions). The reference date for sub-county estimates is July 1.
[edit] Counties in Kansas
This is a listing of counties in the U.S. state of Kansas. With 105 counties, Kansas ranks sixth in states with the most counties. Due to their use on Kansas license plates, Kansas is the only state with widely-known and used abbreviations for its counties. The counties (and abbreviations) are as follows:
[edit] Counties
Contents:A B C D E F G H J K L M N O P R S T W |
[edit] County data
County | Largest city | Metropolitan area |
Population (2000) |
Density /km² (/mi²) |
Growth 1990 to 2000 |
Per capita income (US$) |
Poverty rate (1999) |
Locator |
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Allen | Iola | 14,385 | 11 (29) | -1.7% | 15,640 | 14.90% | ||
Doniphan | Wathena | 8,249 | 8 (21) | -1.7% | 15,640 | 14.90% |
County | Code | Largest city | Land area km² (mi²) |
Population | Density /km² (/mi²) |
Growth 1990 to 2000 |
Per capita income (US$) |
Poverty rate |
Locator |
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[edit] Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program
[edit] River basins and facilities
- Beaverhead River Basin
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- Clark Canyon Reservoir
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- Upper Missouri Basin
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- Canyon Ferry Reservoir
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- Marias River Basin
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- Lake Elwell
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[edit] Wind River Basin
[edit] Boysen Division, Boysen Unit, Wyoming [8]
Authorization: by the Flood Control Act of December 22, 1944, Public Law 534, which approved the general comprehensive plan set forth in Senate Document 191, as revised and coordinated by Senate Document 247, 78th Congress, 2d session
The Boysen Unit is located along the Wind River in Fremont County about 20 miles south of Thermopolis, Wyoming. Project facilities consist of Boysen Dam, Reservoir, and Powerplant.
The unit provides regulation of the streamflows for power generation, irrigation, flood control, sediment retention, fish propagation, and recreation development. Although direct irrigation from the unit is not provided for, the reservoir does provide storage for irrigation in the Wind River Basin above the reservoir and the Bighorn Basin below the reservoir. The powerplant has an installed capacity of 15,000 kilowatts. The reservoir has a storage capacity of 802,000 acre-feet and a total flood capacity of 892,296 acre-feet.
Construction on Boysen Dam and Powerplant and relocation of the CB&Q Railroad began on September 19, 1947, and was completed on December 11, 1952.
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- Bull Lake
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- Bighorn River Basin
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- Anchor Reservoir
- Bighorn Lake
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- Heart River Basin
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- E.A. Patterson Lake
- Lake Tschida
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- Grand River Basin
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- Shadehill Reservoir
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[edit] Cheyenne River Basin
[edit] Cheyenne Division, Angostura Unit, South Dakota [9]
Authorization: included in Senate Document 191, 78th Congress, 2nd session; reauthorized by the Flood Control Act of 1944, Public Law 534
The Angostura Unit is located on the Cheyenne River at the southeast edge of the Black Hills. It lies within Custer and Fall River counties in southwestern South Dakota. The Angostura Dam and Reservoir are located about 9 miles southeast of Hot Springs, South Dakota. The unit lands consist of 12,218 acres extending along the Cheyenne River 24 miles downstream from the dam. They are served by the Angostura Canal, with a capacity of 290 cubic feet per second, and 39 miles of laterals and 34 miles of open and closed drains.
The unit primarily supplies irrigation water for the production of forage and grain crops (alfalfa and corn, among others). It also provides other benefits, including flood control, fish and wildlife conservation, recreation, and sediment control.
Construction of Angostura Dam began on August 23, 1946 and was completed on December 7, 1949. Irrigation began in 1953.
[edit] Rapid Creek Basin
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- Pactola Reservoir
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- Belle Fourche River Basin
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- Keyhole Reservoir
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- James River Basin
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- Jamestown Reservoir
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[edit] Kansas River Basin
[edit] Kanaska Division, Almena Unit, Kansas [10]
Authorization: approved by the Flood Control Act of 1944 (Public Law 534, 78th Congress, 2nd session), published as Senate Document 191, April 1944, and authorized by the Flood Control Act of 1946 (Public Law 526, 79th Congress, 2nd session); a water right for 1,600 acre-feet per year was granted by the State of Kansas to the city of Norton in 1963
The Almena Unit is located along Prairie Dog Creek in Norton County in northwestern Kansas. Norton Dam is 2.5 miles upstream from Norton, Kansas which receives its municipal water supply from the reservoir. Almena Diversion Dam is located 8 miles northeast of Norton and about 11 miles downstream from Norton Dam. The Unit serves 5,763 acres of project lands.
Water released for irrigation purposes is diverted by Almena Diversion Dam and then carried by the Almena Main and South Canals and a system of laterals to lands in Prairie Dog Creek Valley extending from 2 miles southwest of Almena to 3 miles east of Long Island. Twenty mile long Almena Main Canal, with a capacity of 100 cubic feet per second, serves 3,830 acres of land on the north side of the creek and terminates just west of Woodruff. Serving 1,520 acres of land on the south side of the valley, Almena South Canal, with a capacity of 36 cubic feet per second, originates at the main canal below Almena and extends to a length of 8.3 miles. The lateral system—17 laterals with a total length of 14.3 miles—serves 2,450 acres, and 2,900 acres are served by turnouts from the canals.
In addition to irrigation and municipal water, the unit provides flood control and offers opportunities for recreation, conservation, and the development of fish and wildlife resources. Prairie Dog State Park lies along the shores of the reservoir. Keith Sebelius Reservoir (formerly Norton Reservoir) has a storage capacity of 134,738 acre-feet; it was named for Keith Sebelius who was a lawyer and U.S. Congressman from Norton.
Construction of Norton Dam began in 1961 and was completed in 1964. Almena Diversion Dam was constructed in 1967.
[edit] Upper Republican Division, Armel Unit, Colorado [11]
Authorization: by the Flood Control Acts of December 22, 1944, and July 24, 1946
The Armel Unit, formerly the St. Francis Unit, is located on the South Fork of the Republican River in Yuma County, near Hale in eastern Colorado.
The unit provides flood control in the upper reaches of the Republican River with a total flood capacity of 307,050 acre-feet. It also provides for recreation and fish and wildlife conservation. Water released to Hale Ditch serves 750 acres, including 400 acres owned and operated by the State of Colorado as a fish hatchery and wildlife habitat area. Irrigation of 24,000 acres was originally to be included in the plan, but it was found to not be economically feasible. The reservoir has a total capacity of 170,160 acre-feet.
Construction of Bonny Dam began December 8, 1948 and was completed May 4, 1951.
[edit] Bostwick Division, Kansas and Nebraska [12]
Authorization: by the Flood Control Act of December 22, 1944, Public Law 534, which approved the general comprehensive plan set forth in Senate Document 191 and 475, as revised and coordinated by Senate Document 247, 78th Congress, 2d session
The Bostwick Division extends along the Republican River through seven counties from Orleans, in south-central Nebraska, above Harlan County Lake, to Concordia in north-central Kansas. Harlan County Dam and Lake are located on the Republican River in Harlan County, Nebraska, and Lovewell Dam and Reservoir are located on the White Rock Creek three miles northwest of Lovewell, Kansas. The division consists of four units: Franklin and Superior-Courtland in Nebraska and Courtland and Scandia in Kansas. The division serves 86,240 acres with an additional 18,000 potential.
The division provides benefits for flood control, irrigation, sediment control, fish and wildlife enhancement, and recreation. The Franklin Unit facilities serve 14,944 acres and include the 47.9-mile-long Franklin Canal, Naponee Canal, and the 4.9-mile-long Franklin South Side Pump Canal which receives water directly from the river through a pumping plant 17 miles downstream from Harlan County Dam. The Superior-Courtland Diversion Dam is located on the Republic River three miles west of Guide Rock, Nebraska. The diversion dam along with the 30-mile-long Superior Canal and the Courtland Canal system serves 7,843 acres in the Superior-Courtland Unit and 62,000 acres in the Courtland Unit. The storage capacity of the lake is 840,561 acre-feet and of the reservoir is 92,150 acre-feet.
Construction began in March 1949, and the existing features were completed in June 1968. Harlan County Dam was completed on December 2, 1952.
[edit] Loup River Basin
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- Sherman Reservoir
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[edit] Niobrara River Basin
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- Box Butte Reservoir
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[edit] Sandhills Division, Ainsworth Unit, Nebraska [13]
Authorization: August 21, 1954, by Presidential approval of Public Law 612, 83rd Congress, 2nd session (68 Stat. 757)
The Ainsworth Unit is located on the Snake River 14 miles upstream from its confluence with the Niobrara River in Cherry County southwest of Valentine, in north-central Nebraska. The irrigable lands extend 22 miles from west to east and 14 miles from north to south, beginning near Johnstown and continuing eastward to a point near Long Pine, all in Brown and Rock counties.
The unit's primary purpose is to provide a full water supply for the irrigation of 34,540 acres of land, but additional benefits include recreation, fish and wildlife, and water quality control. Project facilities include Merritt Dam and Reservoir, the 52.9 mile long Ainsworth Canal, a system of laterals with a total length of 170 miles, and surface and subsurface drains. Ainsworth Canal is a cement-lined canal with an initial capacity of 580 cubic feet per second extending eastward from the dam through the Sandhills to the project lands. The reservoir has a storage capacity of 74,486 acre-feet, and the total drainage area contribution above the dam is about 600 square miles.
Construction of Merritt Dam began in August 1961, with the storage of water beginning in February 1964, and was completed in May 1964. Merritt Dam and Reservoir were placed in operation and maintenance status on March 10, 1965. The irrigation distribution system began construction in April 1962 and was completed in June 1966, and it was placed in operation and maintenance status on September 1, 1966.
[edit] North Platte River Basin
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- Kortes Reservoir
- Gray Reef Reservoir
- Glendo Reservoir
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[edit] Demographics
As of the year 2005, Kansas had an estimated population of 2,744,687, making it the 33rd most populous state in the United States; it has grown by 0.4% from the prior year and 2.1% since the year 2000.
[edit] Regions
Statistics in this article have been broken out into six regions within the state.
With more than one million people, the North East region is the most densely populated and most urbanized of the six regions and includes the metropolitan areas of Kansas City, Topeka, Lawrence, and St. Joseph. It includes the following counties: Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Douglas, Franklin, Jackson, Jefferson, Johnson, Leavenworth, Linn, Miami, Nemaha, Osage, Shawnee, Wabaunsee, and Wyandotte.
The South East region includes the micropolitan areas of Pittsburg, Coffeyville, and Parsons. It includes the following counties: Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Chautauqua, Cherokee, Coffey, Crawford, Elk, Greenwood, Labette, Montgomery, Neosho, Wilson, and Woodson.
The North Central region includes the micropolitan areas of Manhattan, Salina, and Emporia. It includes the following counties: Chase, Clay, Cloud, Dickinson, Ellsworth, Geary, Jewell, Lincoln, Lyon, Marshall, Mitchell, Morris, Ottawa, Pottawatomie, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Washington.
The South Central region includes the most populous city in the state, but it is not as urbanized as the North East region. It includes the metropolitan area of Wichita, the micropolitan areas of Hutchinson and McPherson, and the following counties: Butler, Cowley, Harper, Harvey, Kingman, McPherson, Marion, Reno, Rice, Sedgwick, and Sumner.
The North West region is the least densely populated region and includes the micropolitan area of Hays. It includes the following counties: Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellis, Gove, Graham, Logan, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Rooks, Russell, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace.
The South West is the largest region, and has a population density only slightly larger than the North West. It includes the micropolitan areas of Dodge City, Garden City, Great Bend, and Liberal. In includes the following counties: Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Greeley, Hamilton, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearny, Kiowa, Lane, Meade, Morton, Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Rush, Scott, Seward, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens, and Wichita.
[edit] Population
As of the year 2005, Kansas had an estimated population of 2,744,687, which was an increase of 10,990, or 0.4%, from the prior year and an increase of 55,863, or 2.1%, since the year 2000. This included a natural increase since the last census of 76,138 people (that is 204,663 births minus 128,525 deaths) and a decrease due to net migration of 19,541 people out of the state. Immigration from outside the United States resulted in a net increase of 38,222 people, and migration within the country produced a net loss of 57,763 people.
As of 2004, the population included 149,800 foreign-born (5.5% of the state population), and an estimated 47,000 illegal aliens (1.7% of state population).
United States | Kansas | North East | South East | North Central | South Central | North West | South West | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total population | 281,421,906 | 2,688,418 | 1,111,341 (41.3%) | 213,083 (7.9%) | 296,371 (11.0%) | 741,132 (27.6%) | 102,988 (3.8%) | 223,503 (8.3%) |
Land area | 9,161,923 km² (3,537,438 mi²) | 211,900 km² (81,815 mi²) | 22,412 km² (8,653 mi²) | 23,055 km² (8,902 mi²) | 34,633 km² (13,372 mi²) | 27,877 km² (10,763 mi²) | 44,237 km² (17,080 mi²) | 59,687 km² (23,045 mi²) |
Density | 30.7/km² (79.6/mi²) | 12.7/km² (32.9/mi²) | 49.6/km² (128.4/mi²) | 9.2/km² (23.9/mi²) | 8.6/km² (22.2/mi²) | 26.6/km² (68.9/mi²) | 2.3/km² (6.0/mi²) | 3.7/km² (9.7/mi²) |
Census | Urban | %± | Rural | %± | % Urban |
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1860 | 10,045 | 97,161 | 9.4 | ||
1870 | 51,870 | +416.4 | 312,529 | +221.7 | 14.2 |
1880 | 104,956 | +102.3 | 891,140 | +185.1 | 10.5 |
1890 | 269,539 | +156.8 | 1,158,569 | +30.0 | 18.9 |
1900 | 329,696 | +22.3 | 1,140,799 | -1.5 | 22.4 |
1910 | 492,312 | +49.3 | 1,198,637 | +5.1 | 29.1 |
1920 | 616,485 | +25.2 | 1,152,772 | -3.8 | 34.8 |
1930 | 729,834 | +18.4 | 1,151,165 | -0.1 | 38.8 |
1940 | 753,941 | +3.3 | 1,047,087 | -9.0 | 41.9 |
1950 | 993,220 | +31.7 | 912,079 | -12.9 | 52.1 |
1960 | 1,328,741 | +36.0 | 849,870 | -6.8 | 61.0 |
1970 | 1,484,870 | +11.8 | 761,708 | -10.4 | 66.1 |
1980 | 1,575,899 | +6.1 | 787,780 | +3.4 | 66.7 |
[edit] Census of 2000
Ancestry | Nation | State | NE | SE | NC | SC | NW | SW |
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Central European | ||||||||
• German | 15.2% | 25.9% | 25.5% | 20.5% | 29.8% | 24.7% | 39.0% | 25.5% |
• Polish | 3.2% | 1.3% | 1.8% | 0.8% | 1.1% | 1.0% | 0.9% | 0.8% |
• Czech | 0.6% | 0.8% | 0.7% | 0.2% | 1.7% | 0.8% | 1.7% | 0.6% |
Anglo-Celtic | ||||||||
• Irish | 10.9% | 11.5% | 13.6% | 11.3% | 11.0% | 10.1% | 8.8% | 8.2% |
• English | 8.7% | 10.8% | 11.8% | 10.6% | 10.2% | 10.5% | 9.9% | 7.9% |
• Scotch-Irish | 1.5% | 1.9% | 2.1% | 1.9% | 1.7% | 1.9% | 1.5% | 1.4% |
• Scottish | 1.7% | 1.9% | 2.2% | 1.7% | 1.7% | 1.8% | 1.5% | 1.1% |
• Welsh | 0.6% | 0.8% | 0.9% | 0.7% | 1.0% | 0.7% | 0.5% | 0.5% |
U.S. or American | 7.3% | 8.8% | 7.4% | 13.0% | 8.5% | 9.8% | 9.0% | 9.3% |
French | 3.0% | 3.1% | 3.1% | 3.2% | 3.8% | 3.0% | 2.9% | 2.2% |
Scandinavian | ||||||||
• Swedish | 1.4% | 2.4% | 2.4% | 1.7% | 4.3% | 2.2% | 2.4% | 1.4% |
• Norwegian | 1.6% | 1.1% | 1.3% | 0.7% | 1.3% | 1.0% | 1.0% | 0.6% |
Dutch | 1.6% | 2.3% | 2.1% | 2.6% | 2.3% | 2.5% | 2.3% | 2.1% |
Italian | 5.6% | 1.9% | 2.5% | 2.4% | 1.5% | 1.5% | 0.8% | 0.8% |
Russian | 0.9% | 0.6% | 0.7% | 0.1% | 0.4% | 0.6% | 1.2% | 0.7% |
[edit] Ancestry
The largest reported ancestries in the state are: German (25.9%), Irish (11.5%), English (10.8%), American (8.8%), French (3.1%), and Swedish (2.4%). 'American' includes those reported as Native American or African American.
Americans of British ancestry are common throughout Kansas, as are German-Americans. People of German ancestry are especially strong in the northwest, people of British ancestry and descendents of white Americans from other states are especially strong in the southeast. Mexicans are present in the southwest and make up nearly half the population in certain counties. Kansas City and Junction City are predominantly black. 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.
[edit] Congressmen
[edit] United States Congressional Delegations from Kansas
Congress | District | |||||||
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1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | |
36th (1859–1861) |
Martin F. Conway[A] (at-large) | |||||||
37th (1861–1863) |
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38th (1863–1865) |
Abel C. Wilder (at-large) | |||||||
39th (1865–1867) |
Sidney Clarke (at-large) | |||||||
40th (1867–1869) |
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41st (1869–1871) |
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42nd (1871–1873) |
David P. Lowe (at-large) | |||||||
43rd (1873–1875) |
David P. Lowe, Stephen A. Cobb and William A. Phillips (all at-large) | |||||||
44th (1875–1877) |
William A. Phillips | John Randolph Goodin | William Ripley Brown | |||||
45th (1877–1879) |
Dudley Chase Haskell | Thomas Ryan | ||||||
46th (1879–1881) |
John A. Anderson | James R. Hallowell[B] (at-large) | ||||||
47th (1881–1883) |
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48th (1883–1885) |
Lewis Hanback, Edmund N. Morrill, Bishop Walden Perkins and Samuel Ritter Peters (all at-large) | |||||||
49th (1885–1887) |
Edmund N. Morrill | Edward Hogue Funston | Bishop Walden Perkins | Thomas Ryan | John Alexander Anderson | Lewis Hanback | Samuel Ritter Peters | |
50th (1887–1889) |
Erastus Johnson Turner | |||||||
51st (1889–1891) |
Harrison Kelley | |||||||
52nd (1891-1893) |
Case Broderick | Benjamin Hutchinson Clover (Populist) | John Grant Otis (Populist) | John Davis (Populist) | William Baker (Populist) | Jerry Simpson (Populist) | ||
53rd (1893-1895) |
Horace Ladd Moore | Thomas Jefferson Hudson (Populist) | Charles Curtis | William Alexander Harris (Populist) (at-large) | ||||
54th (1895-1897) |
Orrin Larabee Miller | Snyder Solomon Kirkpatrick | William Alexander Calderhead | Chester Isaiah Long | Richard Whiting Blue (at-large) | |||
55th (1897-1899) |
Mason Summers Peters (Populist) | Edwin Reed Ridgely (Populist) | William Davis Vincent (Populist) | Nelson B. McCormick (Populist) | Jerry Simpson (Populist) | Jeremiah Dunham Botkin (Populist) (at-large) | ||
56th (1899-1901) |
Charles Curtis[C] | Justin De Witt Bowersock | James Monroe Miller | William Alexander Calderhead | William Augustus Reeder | Chester Isaiah Long | Willis Joshua Bailey (at-large) | |
57th (1901-1903) |
Alfred Metcalf Jackson | Charles Frederick Scott (at-large) | ||||||
58th (1903-1905) |
Philip Pitt Campbell | Victor Murdock | ||||||
59th (1905-1907) |
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60th (1907-1909) |
Daniel R. Anthony, Jr.[C] | Charles Frederick Scott | Edmond Haggard Madison | Victor Murdock | ||||
61st (1909-1911) |
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62nd (1911-1913) |
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Fred Schuyler Jackson | Rollin Raymond Rees | Isaac Daniel Young | ||||
63rd (1913-1915) |
Joseph Taggart | Dudley Doolittle | Guy Tresillian Helvering | John Robert Connelly | George Arthur Neeley | |||
64th (1915-1917) |
Jouett Shouse | William Augustus Ayres | ||||||
65th (1917-1919) |
Edward Campbell Little | |||||||
66th (1919-1921) |
Homer Hoch | James George Strong | Hays Baxter White | Jasper Napoleon Tincher | ||||
67th (1921-1923) |
Richard Ely Bird | |||||||
68th (1923-1925) |
William Henry Sproul | William Augustus Ayres | ||||||
69th (1925-1927) |
Chauncey Bundy Little | |||||||
70th (1927-1929) |
Ulysses Samuel Guyer | Clifford Ragsdale Hope | ||||||
71st (1929-1931) |
William Lambertson | Charles Isaac Sparks | ||||||
72nd (1931-1933) |
Harold Clement McGugin | |||||||
73rd (1933-1935) |
William Randolph Carpenter | William Augustus Ayres | Kathryn Ellen McCarthy | |||||
74th (1935-1937) |
Edward White Patterson | John Mills Houston | Frank Carlson | |||||
75th (1937-1939) |
Edward Herbert Rees | |||||||
76th (1939-1941) |
Thomas Daniel Winter | |||||||
77th (1941-1943) |
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78th (1943-1945) |
Everett Power Scrivner | Clifford Ragsdale Hope | ||||||
79th (1945-1947) |
Albert Cole | |||||||
80th (1947-1949) |
Herbert Alton Meyer | Wint Smith | ||||||
81st (1949-1951) |
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82nd (1951-1953) |
Myron Virgil George | |||||||
83rd (1953-1955) |
Howard S. Miller | |||||||
84th (1955-1957) |
William H. Avery | |||||||
85th (1957-1959) |
James Floyd Breeding | |||||||
86th (1959-1961) |
Newell Adolphus George | Denver David Hargis | ||||||
87th (1961-1963) |
Robert Fred Ellsworth | Walter Lewis McVey, Jr. | Garner E. Shriver | Bob Dole | ||||
88th (1963-1965) |
Bob Dole | William H. Avery | Robert Fred Ellsworth | Joe Skubitz | ||||
89th (1965-1967) |
Chester Lewis Mize | |||||||
90th (1967-1969) |
Larry Winn | |||||||
91st (1969-1971) |
Keith Sebelius | |||||||
92nd (1971-1973) |
Bill Roy | |||||||
93rd (1973-1975) |
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94th (1975-1977) |
Martha Elizabeth Keys | |||||||
95th (1977-1979) |
Dan Glickman | |||||||
96th (1979-1981) |
James Edmund Jeffries | Robert Russell Whittaker | ||||||
97th (1981-1983) |
Pat Roberts | |||||||
98th (1983-1985) |
Jim Slattery | |||||||
99th (1985-1987) |
Jan Meyers | |||||||
100th (1987-1989) |
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101st (1989-1991) |
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102nd (1991-1993) |
Dick Nichols | |||||||
103rd (1993-1995) |
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104th (1995-1997) |
Sam Brownback | Todd Tiahrt | ||||||
105th (1997-1999) |
Jerry Moran | Jim Ryun | Vince Snowbarger | |||||
106th (1999-2001) |
Dennis Moore | |||||||
107th (2001-2003) |
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108th (2003-2005) |
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109th (2005-2007) |
- Notes
- ^ Elected December 6, 1859 and assumed office January 30, 1861 following the admission of Kansas as a state (January 29).
- ^ Hallowell was elected in 1878 as a “Congressman-at-large” but refused the seat since Kansas was entitled to only three seats. Cutler writes in his History of Kansas: “Ex-Gov. Samuel J. Crawford was nominated by the Democrats and Nationals for ‘Congressman-at-large,’ an office which had no existence in fact or in reasonable expectation; the Republicans furnished James R. Hallowell as his opponent.”[1]
- ^ Curtis was re-elected in the 1906 elections to serve in the 60th Congress, but he resigned on January 28, 1907, before the beginning of the new term (March 4, 1907), to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated with the resignation of Senator Joseph R. Burton. Anthony was elected May 23, 1907 to finish Curtis's term and assumed office on December 2, 1907.
- ^ Cutler, William G. [1883]. "Legislative and Political Annals, Part 8", History of the State of Kansas. Chicago: A. T. Andreas. Retrieved on August 27, 2006.
[edit] Kansas's 1st congressional district
The apportionment was amended by the act of March 13, 1897, which placed Shawnee County in the first district and Pottawatomie County in the fourth district.[2]
- Notes
- ^ Conway was elected December 6, 1859 and assumed office January 30, 1861 following the admission of Kansas as a state (January 29).
- ^ The three representatives for the state of Kansas in the 43rd Congress were Congressmen-at-large David P. Lowe, Stephen A. Cobb (from Wyandotte) and William A. Phillips (from Salina).
- ^ Curtis previously served three terms (1893–1899) in the fourth district before Shawnee County was moved to the first district.[2]
- ^ Curtis was re-elected in the 1906 elections to serve in the 60th Congress, but he resigned on January 28, 1907, before the beginning of the new term (March 4, 1907), to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated with the resignation of Senator Joseph R. Burton. Anthony was elected May 23, 1907 to finish Curtis's term and assumed office on December 2, 1907.
- ^ Avery subsequently served one term (1963–1965) in the second district because of redistricting following the 1960 census.
- ^ Dole previously served one term (1961–1963) in the sixth district before it was eliminated with redistricting following the 1960 census.
- ^ Cutler, William G. [1883]. "Legislative and Political Annals, Part 8", History of the State of Kansas. Chicago: A. T. Andreas. Retrieved on August 27, 2006.
- ^ a b "Congressional Districts". Kansas: a cyclopedia of state history, embracing events, institutions, industries, counties, cities, towns, prominent persons, etc ... I: 400–401. (1912). Ed. Frank W. Blackmar. Chicago: Standard Pub Co.