Monticello Township, Johnson County, Kansas
Monticello Township is a former township in northwest Johnson County, Kansas. It is now merged with Lenexa and Shawnee, Kansas.
History
In 1858 Monticello elected 21-year-old James Butler Hickok (better known as Wild Bill Hickok) as town constable. At one time Monticello had a stage shop, stores, saloons, blacksmith, doctor, hotel, general store, school house, churches, and about 15 dwellings. The 1910 population was about 63. The town was bypassed by the Kansas Midland Railroad (Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe), which instead passed Olathe which caused the town to lose its county seat status. In 1987, Shawnee annexed land south of 55th to 83rd/79th west to the Kansas River, increasing the city size to 42 square miles (110 km2).
Before its annexation, Monticello Township was the natural crossroads for fur trading and later westward emigration by wagon.
See also
- Oregon Trail
- California Trail
- Harold "Jug" McSpaden - PGA Tour player and golf course architect
- National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame north along K-7 Corridor
References
Notable residents
- Manuel Lisa - Fur trader
- Wild Bill Hickok - Lawman
- Jug McSpaden - Professional golfer
- William S. Williams - Mountain man
External links
- City of Shawnee Kansas: Historic Towns Revised version (June, 2006)
- Monticello Township passes into history (January, 2006)
- KCAHTA: Kansas City Area Historical Trails Association
- Lost Cities of Johnson County: Monticello
- Historic Frontier Trails Map A full-color map of the trails of Johnson, Wyandotte and part of Leavenworth Counties, Kansas
- Kaw Valley Heritage: Monticello Ferry Company
- Lost Towns of Johnson County