Brief
History from wikipedia:
In 1854, the Kansas
Territory was organized, then in 1861
Kansas became the 34th U.S. state. In
1855, Shawnee County was
established.
Before the treaty of 1854,
the area now known as Shawnee County was
inhabited by Shawnee, Kansas, and
Pottowatomie Indian tribes. Westward
expansion brought the country its first
white settler in 1830 when Frederick
Choteau opened a trading post on American
Chief (now Mission) Creek. In 1855,
Shawnee became one of the first counties
established by the Kansas territorial
legislature with a population of
250. General H. J. Strickler, of
Tecumseh, who was a member of the council
in 1855, and also of the joint committee
on Counties, claimed Shawnee for the name
of his county. At that time, Shawnee
County borders were entirely south of the
Kansas River and extended south to include
Osage City and Carbondale. The
legislature later desired to make Topeka
the county seat and moved the borders of
the county to their present locations to
make Topeka centrally located in the
county.
1855 also saw the first ever
meeting of the Shawnee County Board of
Commissioners. Tecumseh was the first
county seat, and the first county
courthouse was opened there in 1856.
The building was 40x50 feet but was never
finished. Topeka was made the county seat
by popular vote in 1858, and a new
courthouse was built at 4th Street and
Kansas Avenue in 1867. In 1896, a new
larger courthouse was constructed at 5th
and Van Buren, with more than 50,000
residents then living in the county.
That building remained in use until the
current courthouse at 7th and Quincy
opened in 1965.
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