Grinter Place

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Grinter Place
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Grinter Place (USA)
Grinter Place
Location: 1420 South 78th Street, Muncie, Kansas
Coordinates: 39°4′32.06″N 94°45′35.66″W / 39.0755722, -94.7599056Coordinates: 39°4′32.06″N 94°45′35.66″W / 39.0755722, -94.7599056
Built/Founded: 1857
Architect: Unknown
Architectural style(s): Colonial
Added to NRHP: January 25, 1971
NRHP Reference#: 71000338[1]
Governing body: Private

Grinter Place is a house on the US National Register of Historic Places above the Kansas River in the Muncie neighborhood of Kansas City, Kansas.

The house was constructed by Moses Grinter where he and his half-Delaware wife lived until he died in 1878 and she in 1905. Near this place, the Delaware Crossing (or "Military Crossing"; sometimes "the Secondine'") allowed passage from the old Indian trail where it met the waters of the Kaw River. Around 1831, Grinter, one of the earliest permanent white settler in the area, set up the Grinter Ferry on the Kansas River here. His house, the Grinter Place, still stands at 1420 South 78th Street. The ferry was used by individuals such as traders, freighters and soldiers traveling between Fort Leavenworth and Fort Scott on the military road. Others would cross this area on their way to Santa Fe. The area was home to the first non-military post office in Kansas.

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By the 1820s, François Gesseau Chouteau's family, part of the American Fur Company, operated posts in this vicinity. Beginning in the 1830s, the Delaware tribe, the Wyandot tribe, Munsee tribe and the Shawnee tribe, all Eastern United States tribes, were relocated in this area. The Delaware agency, smithy, and Baptist and Methodist missions were located near the Grinter Place. Between 1863 and 1864, the Union Pacific Eastern Division built a railway through the area between the house and the Kaw River. In 1869, the Union Pacific constructed rails through the area and they continued on to the western border of the state. By the 1870s, the Eastern United States tribes were removed from the area and relocated further south to what is now the state of Oklahoma.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2007-01-23).

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