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Kansas
Below you are links to informational
sites related to the Kansas Gun laws and regulations. (
Legal lawyer stuff as follows:
Center-fire- Greenfield Industries are not responsible nor
endorses any information found on listed links. blah, blah,
blah. You get the picture. Take everything you read with a
grain of salt.) We have even included some
comical links such as the
Brady Campaign , because everybody enjoys a little
fictional reading from time to time.
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Kansas has had a dramatic
history, even before it became the 34th state. Historians have
reported that Native Americans were living in Kansas as early
as 12,000 B.C. They were followed for centuries by many
different tribes making the history of Kansas entwined with
the first Americans.
Between 1541 and 1739 explorers from Spain and France came to
the area in search of gold, knowledge and trade with the
Indians. In 1803, Kansas became a part of the United States as
part of the Louisiana Purchase. Fifty-one years later it was
organized as a territory which included the eastern half of
Colorado.
Conflict over slavery led to bloody battles between free-staters
(anti-slavery) and pro-slavery forces. This led to the attack
on Lawrence by pro-slavery forces and the widespread public
outcry associated with "Bleeding Kansas." Kansas became part
of the United States as a free state in 1861.
After the Civil War expansion of the rail system to Kansas and
the increasing stream of immigrants lured to the state by
offers of cheap land, Native Americans were forced into
smaller and smaller reservations. Ultimately their removal to
Indian Territory forced the final confrontation in the late
1870's that ended the independent life of the Native
Americans.
The establishment of military posts to protect the railroads
and trails used by immigrants led to the establishment of
small towns which followed the posts. By 1870, the Kansas cow
towns, following the westward expansion of the railroads,
became well established. Such towns as Dodge City, Abilene,
Caldwell, Newton and Wichita took their turns as the Queens of
the Trail. To this day, the cattle industry remains an
important part of the state's economy.
The introduction of Turkey Red Winter Wheat by Mennonites from
Russia in 1874 was a milestone in Kansas agriculture. The
wheat was ideally suited to the Kansas climate and has made
Kansas one of the leading wheat-producing states in the
nation.
The 20th century brought mining, oil production, the discovery
of natural gas and helium, the meatpacking industry,
automobile manufacturing and the aircraft industry. In this
century Kansas has changed from being primarily a cattle and
wheat state to a thriving industrial and agricultural state.
As the center of the 48 contiguous states, Kansas has proven
to be an attractive location for many companies serving
national and international markets.
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