Address delivered at the quarter-centennial celebration of the admission of Kansas as a state
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About This Book
A gubernatorial address frames the state's emergence as a modern Athena, born of national conflict and characterized by wisdom, industry, and civic vigor. The speaker outlines three phases of development—an era of armed border strife, a period of uncertainty, and a later triumph of reconstruction and growth—and credits the anti-slavery struggle and wartime service with shaping civic character. He reviews material progress since admission: marked population and farm expansion, rapid railroad and telegraph growth, agricultural improvement, expanded education, and broader legal and social opportunities for women, arguing these forces converted a remote prairie into an enterprising, civilized commonwealth.
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