Osage
County Museum
The
Osage County Historical Society Museum houses a collection of artifacts
donated primarily by former and present residents of Osage County.
Exhibits are arranged so that the viewer gets some insight into
business, occupational, and family life of bygone eras.
Burlingame
is the oldest continually occupied town in Osage County, having
been founded in 1854. At about the same time, the Sauk and Fox nations
were removed to the southeastern part of the county. The Indian
Agency was located near the present-day town of Quenemo. Other towns
quickly sprang up throughout the county as the presence of coal
became known.
For
many years the major economic forces in Osage County were coal mining,
railroading and farming. As the coal fields were depleted, the railroads
followed suit. Farming remains and is supplemented with recreation
as both Pomona Lake and Melvern Lake are situated in our county.
Because
of the mining and farming opportunities, a variety of ethnic groups
came to Osage County. Immigrants from England, Wales, Ireland, Sweden,
Germany, France and Italy quickly settled in, were assimilated,
and these ethnic surnames remain today. They settled in among Whites,
who could trace ancestries to American colonial times, African-Americans
seeking opportunity in a Free State after the Civil War, and the
Sauk and Fox who did not allow their people to be removed easily
to Indian Territory in present-day Oklahoma.
Our
museum tries to represent the wide variety of historic, economic,
cultural and ethnic aspects of Osage County, Kansas, from early
settlement in the 1850s onward. We hope that you will include our
museum and family research center in your Kansas travel plans.
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