🇺🇸 Leavenworth is the county seat and largest city of Leavenworth County, Kansas, United States and is part of the Kansas City metropolitan area. It is located on the west bank of the Missouri River. The site of Fort Leavenworth, built in 1827, the city became known in American history for its role as a key supply base in the settlement of the American West. During the American Civil War, many volunteers joined the Union Army from Leavenworth. The city has been notable as the location of several prisons, particularly the United States Disciplinary Barracks and United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth.
1History Leavenworth, founded in 1854, was the first city incorporated in the territory of Kansas. The city developed south of Fort Leavenworth, which was established as Cantonment Leavenworth in 1827 by Colonel Henry Leavenworth. Its location on the Missouri River attracted refugee African-American slaves in the antebellum years, who were seeking freedom from the slave state of Missouri across the river. Abolition supporters helped them find refuge. In the years before the American Civil War, Leavenworth was a hotbed of anti-slavery and pro-slavery agitation, often leading to open physical confrontations on the street and in public meetings.
On April 3, 1858, the "Leavenworth Constitution" for the state of Kansas was adopted here. Although the federal government never approved this early version of the state constitution, it was considered one of the most radical of the four constitutions drafted for the new territory because it recognised freed blacks as citizens.
Refugee African Americans continued to settle in the city during the war. By 1865 it had attracted nearly one-fifth of the 12,000 blacks in the state. In 1866, the 10th Regiment of Cavalry, an all-black unit within the U.S. Army, was stood up at Fort Leavenworth. Charles Henry Langston was an African-American leader from Boston who worked and lived in Leavenworth and north-east Kansas in the Reconstruction era and afterward. In Kansas, Langston worked for black suffrage and the right of African Americans to sit on juries, testify in court, and have their children educated in common schools. African Americans gained suffrage in 1870 after passage of the federal 15th constitutional amendment, and the legislature voted for their right to sit on juries in 1874.
African Americans continued to migrate to the state of Kansas after the war. There were a total of 17,108 African Americans in Kansas in 1870, with 43,107 in 1880, and 52,003 by 1900. Most lived in urban areas.
120th century to present Fred Alexander, a 22-year-old black veteran of the Spanish–American War, was arrested on circumstantial evidence following months of assaults on young white women in late 1900. Witnesses had identified a "large white man" and a "slight black man" as having been seen in the vicinity of the attacks, Police moved him to the penitentiary during questioning, but a lynch mob was forming in Leavenworth. The sheriff needed to bring him to Leavenworth for arraignment at the county court. He refused the governor's offer of state militia, and was unable to protect the prisoner. On January 15, 1901, Alexander was taken from jail by a mob of 5,000 people and to the site of the murder of Pearl Forbes, where he was brutally lynched: burned alive. He protested his innocence to the end. An inquest concluded he had been killed by "persons unknown".
His family refused to claim his body for burial. His father Alfred Alexander, an exoduster, said "The people have mutilated him, now let them bury him". The city arranged burial. African Americans in the region were horrified at Alexander's murder by the mob and created the first state chapter of the Afro-American Council, then the only national organization working for civil rights. (The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) was founded a few years later, and absorbed most members of the AAC.)
In 1972 Benjamin Day became the city's first African-American mayor. Day had been elected to the City Commission one year earlier. Leavenworth appoints its mayor from among the members of the Commission, and Day was named mayor in 1971. Day was a former educator and principal in Leavenworth.
Fort Leavenworth was located outside the city limits until its territory was annexed by the city on April 12, 1977.
In 2008, an underground series of "vaults" was found in the city, apparently built during the late 19th century.
1Geography Leavenworth is located at an elevation of 840 feet (256 m). Located in north-eastern Kansas at the junction of U.S. Route 73 and Kansas Highway 92 (K-92), Leavenworth is 25 mi (40 km) north-west of downtown Kansas City, 145 mi (233 km) south-southeast of Omaha, and 165 mi (266 km) north-east of Wichita.
The city lies on the west bank of the Missouri River in the Dissected Till Plains region of North America's Central Lowlands. Four small tributaries of the river flow generally east through the city. From north to south, these are Quarry Creek, Corral Creek, Three Mile Creek, and Five Mile Creek.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 24.06 square miles (62.32 km²), of which, 24.04 square miles (62.26 km²) is land and 0.02 square miles (0.05 km²) is water. Fort Leavenworth occupies the northern half of the city's area.
Leavenworth, along with the rest of Leavenworth County, lies within the Kansas City metropolitan area. Lansing, Kansas, is located to the south.
1Economy As of 2010, 58.6% of the population over the age of 16 was in the labor force. 7.8% was in the armed forces, and 50.8% was in the civilian labor force with 47.0% being employed and 3.8% unemployed. The composition, by occupation, of the employed civilian labor force was: 34.5% in management, business, science, and arts; 22.8% in sales and office occupations; 23.2% in service occupations; 8.4% in natural resources, construction, and maintenance; 11.0% in production, transportation, and material moving. The three industries employing the largest percentages of the working civilian labor force were: educational services, health care, and social assistance (22.7%); public administration (15.6%); and retail trade (13.0%). The U.S. military at Fort Leavenworth is the city's largest employer, employing roughly 5,600 people, followed by Leavenworth Public Schools and the Department of Veteran Affairs Eastern Kansas Health Care System.
The cost of living in Leavenworth is below average; compared to a U.S. average of 100, the cost of living index for the city is 87.1. As of 2010, the median home value in the city was $124,200, the median selected monthly owner cost was $1,282 for housing units with a mortgage and $428 for those without, and the median gross rent was $762.
1Economy: Top employers According to the town's 2015 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the top employers in the city include: 1 Fort Leavenworth; 2 U.S.D. 453; 3 Dwight D. Eisenhower Veterans Affairs Medical Center; 4 Northrop Grumman; 5 Central Plains Consolidated Accounts; 6 Cubic Defense Applications Group; 7 Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary; 8 Leavenworth County; 9 Walmart Supercenter; 10 Hallmark Cards, Inc.
1Museum The Richard Allen Cultural Center and Museum contains items and artifacts from African American pioneers and members of the military, including the "Black Dignity" collection of 1870s-1920s photographs from the Mary Everhard Collection.
Leavenworth enjoys year-round plays and musicals performed by a community theater group, the River City Community Players.
The Annual Saint Patrick's Day Parade is held each year since 1984 on March 17 at 12noon in downtown Leavenworth. The day begins with a 9:00 a.m. Roman Catholic Mass at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, "The Old Cathedral", ancestral home of the Irish of Leavenworth. Various fraternal and civic clubs and restaurants host events, and monies raised above Parade costs are donated to local charities.
1Military A parade is held each year on Veterans' Day in downtown Leavenworth to honor veterans. Leavenworth has an active Byron H. Mehl American Legion Post #23 and Veterans of Foreign Wars George Edward White Post 56. Leavenworth High School boasts the very first Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps in the country.
1Points of interest Leavenworth has a 28-block historic shopping district, which includes antique shops, restaurants, a brewery and a variety of artisan gift shops.
Leavenworth is home to the C.W. Parker Carousel Museum, listed as one of the "8 Wonders of Kansas Customs" by the Kansas Sampler Foundation. The Leavenworth County Historical Society maintains a museum at the Edward Carroll House, a Victorian-era mansion that is open to the public for touring.
Haymarket Square is a covered lot where a local farmer's market takes place from May to October.
1Parks and recreation The Leavenworth Parks and Recreation Department maintains a system of more than 25 public parks as well as Riverfront Community Center, which includes an indoor cardio room and pool, and Wollman Aquatic Center. An off-leash dog park near the Dwight D. Eisenhower Veterans Affairs Medical Center was built with public donations in 2010.
1Government Leavenworth is a city of the first class with a commission-manager form of government. The city commission is the city's governing body and consists of five members, including the mayor and the mayor pro-tem. It sets city policies, adopts the city government's annual operating budget, and appoints city boards, commissions, and officials, including the city manager. Commissioners are elected to either four-year or two-year terms; one is appointed to serve as mayor, and another to serve as mayor pro-tem. The commission meets on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month. The city manager is the city's chief executive, responsible for the day-to-day administration of the city government. The manager supervises all city government departments and employees, prepares and proposes the annual operating budget, and recommends policies to the city commission.
As the county seat, Leavenworth is the administrative centre of Leavenworth County. The county courthouse is located south of downtown at 4th and Walnut streets, and all departments of the county government base their operations in the city.
Leavenworth lies within Kansas's 2nd U.S. Congressional District. For the purposes of representation in the Kansas Legislature, the city is in the 5th district of the Kansas Senate and the 40th, 41st, and 42nd districts of the Kansas House of Representatives.
The United States Department of Veterans Affairs operates the Dwight D. Eisenhower Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Leavenworth as part of its Eastern Kansas Health Care System. The Medical Center includes a Consolidated Mail Outpatient Pharmacy (CMOP), part of an initiative to provide mail-order prescriptions to veterans using automated systems at strategic locations throughout the United States, as well as the Central Plains Consolidated Patient Account Center (CPAC), a billing and collection agency.
1Fort Leavenworth Fort Leavenworth, known as the "Intellectual Center of the Army", is home to the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center. It is also home to the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, School of Advanced Military Studies, the Center for Army Leadership, the Combat Studies Institute, the Combined Arms Doctrine Directorate, the Center for Army Lessons Learned and the Mission Command Center of Excellence.
1Prisons Leavenworth is the location of several federal and state detention centres and prisons: • United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth (USP) constructed in 1903, and its satellite prison camp, operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons • United States Disciplinary Barracks, the U.S. military's only maximum-security facility • Midwest Joint Regional Correctional Facility, another U.S. military facility • Leavenworth Detention Center, operator by for-profit prison corporation, CoreCivic for the United States Marshals Service.
1Education: Universities The main campus of University of Saint Mary, a four-year, private Catholic university, is in Leavenworth. In addition, Kansas City Kansas Community College operates a satellite campus in the city.
1Media The Leavenworth Times, published by GateHouse Media, is the city's daily newspaper. Gatehouse Media also publishes The Fort Leavenworth Lamp, a weekly newspaper covering local military news, on contract with the U.S. Army.
Leavenworth is in the Kansas City radio and television markets. Two radio stations are licensed in the city: KKLO broadcasts from Leavenworth on 1410 AM, a Fox News affiliate; KQRC-FM broadcasts from Mission, Kansas on 98.9 FM, playing a Rock format. The major regional newspaper is the Kansas City Star.
1Leavenworth has a population of over 37,351 people. Leavenworth also forms the centre of the wider Leavenworth County which has a population of over 82,184 people. It is also a part of the larger Kansas City Metropolitan Area.
To set up a UBI Lab for Leavenworth see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork
Twin Towns, Sister Cities Leavenworth has links with:
🇯🇵 Ōmihachiman, Japan 🇦🇺 Wagga Wagga, Australia🇺🇸 Batesville 39.3
🇺🇸 Ocean City 39.279
🇺🇸 Ellicott City 39.267
🇺🇸 Clarksburg 39.267
🇺🇸 Parkersburg 39.263
🇺🇸 Texas City -94.912
🇺🇸 Saint Joseph -94.833
Locations Near: Leavenworth -94.9167,39.3
🇺🇸 Lenexa -94.75,38.95 d: 41.5
🇺🇸 Kansas City -94.567,39.083 d: 38.6
🇺🇸 Overland Park -94.661,38.977 d: 42.2
🇺🇸 Olathe -94.809,38.885 d: 47.1
🇺🇸 Saint Joseph -94.833,39.75 d: 50.5
🇺🇸 Lawrence -95.25,38.95 d: 48.4
🇺🇸 Independence -94.407,39.08 d: 50.3
🇺🇸 Lee's Summit -94.367,38.917 d: 63.8
🇺🇸 Blue Springs -94.274,39.018 d: 63.7
Antipodal to: Leavenworth 85.083,-39.3
🇲🇺 Port Mathurin 63.417,-19.683 d: 17005.5
🇦🇺 Bunbury 115.637,-33.327 d: 17212.5
🇦🇺 Mandurah 115.721,-32.529 d: 17170.2
🇦🇺 Rockingham 115.717,-32.267 d: 17158.6
🇦🇺 City of Cockburn 115.833,-32.167 d: 17144
🇦🇺 Vincent 115.834,-31.936 d: 17133.1
🇦🇺 Wanneroo 115.803,-31.747 d: 17126.8
🇦🇺 Perth 115.86,-31.956 d: 17131.8
🇦🇺 Cannington 115.934,-32.017 d: 17128.4