Brief History from
wikipedia:
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 recognized 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 northeast 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.
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