Brief
History from Kansas State Historical
Society:
Sumner County was
organized on February 7, 1871, by John J.
Albert and John S. McMahon. Named for
Senator Charles
Sumner of Massachusetts, it contains
the cities of Conway Springs, Belle
Plaine, Caldwell, Argonia, Mulvane (part),
Mayfield, Oxford, Milan, Hunnewell,
South Haven, Geuda Springs (part), and
Wellington.
The Belle Plaine
Methodist Church, organized in 1871, was
the first church in the county. The first
county fairs were held
near Wellington, the dates are
uncertain. The present fair is held in
Caldwell. The first school district was
organized in Oxford
in 1872.
Interesting public
figures from the county include Susanna
Madora Salter who on April 4, 1887, was
elected mayor of
Argonia, the first woman mayor in
the United States. Joe Maddy, a Wellington
musician, founded the Interlochen Musical
Camp. Fred Stone (1893-1959), who at
one time lived in Wellington, was a
well-known vaudevillian, actor, and movie
personality, who was famous for his
portrayal of the Scarecrow in the ”Wizard
of Oz" on the stage. John Donovan Strong
developed the 200-inch Mount Palomar
telescope. May Williams Ward, one of
Kansas' best known poets and winner of the
Poetry Society of America Award in
1937, was from Wellington.
Local tales relating
to the Chisholm Trail and its hardships,
cowboys, and adventures include a story,
that may also have some
factual basis. When Wellington was
attempting to procure some of the cattle
drover business away from Sumner City,
some
men from Wellington plowed a furrow
from a point on the trail, bypassed Sumner
City, and proceeded into Wellington. From
then on, when herdsmen asked
directions they were told to follow the
trail.
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