New Johnson County Sculpture Memorializes ‘Trail of Death’

Michigan-based artist Aaron Squadroni sits inside Fire Keepers Circle, the art installation he and Leah Yellowbird created at Heritage Park in Olathe, Kansas. Squadroni was putting the finishing touches on the sculpture in advance of the ribbon cutting scheduled for Saturday. (Chase Castor | Flatland)

It’s common for Aaron Squadroni to interact with people interested in his art. But usually it’s completed work in a gallery, not an unfinished piece near a lake. Squadroni, along with Leah Yellowbird, created Fire Keepers Circle, a new public artwork commemorating the Potawatomi Trail of Death. The piece is in Heritage Park in Olathe.…

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KC Area Museums Reviewing Extensive Indigenous Holdings

Native American pottery and artifacts fill a table at the Wyandotte County Historical Museum on March 26, 2025 in Bonner Springs, Kansas. (Chase Castor | Flatland)

Arrowheads, skinning knives, spearheads pulled from Kansas City fields, and prehistoric woven fibers teased from centuries-cold fire pits sit on the floor of a closed wing of the Wyandotte County Historical Museum. They are now under a year-long review to comply with strict federal guidelines designed to give Native American tribes greater control of the…

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Abandoned Swope Park Lodge Eyed for Native American Center

Spring growth surrounds Hope Lodge in Swope Park on April 08, 2025, in Kansas City, Missouri. Hope Lodge is the last functional building remaining from Camp Hope, a dilapidated summer camp within Swope Park. (Chase Castor | Flatland)

The playground bullies had cornered a target, a little girl about 5 years old. Chris Cotten remembered running across the park, demanding an explanation. “Oh, we’re just picking on this Indian,” was the reply. That Indian, the one with skin darker than his own, was Cotten’s younger sister. “We’re adopted, and I’m part Indian too,”…

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Kansas City Bears Racial Scars of Interstate System

Bruce R. Watkins Drive runs behind Paseo Baptist Church, 2501 Paseo Blvd. The church's founding pastor, Rev. D. A. Holmes, was a leading opponent of the Watkins Drive project, which severed Black neighborhoods.

Political power, civic influence, and blatant racism shaped the construction of the federal highway system crisscrossing the U.S. today. Kansas City was an extraordinarily adept player in the post-WW II effort. As a result, interstates slice and encircle the metropolitan area, U.S. 71 Highway runs along the east side of town, and many other connecting…

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Cultivating History Pt. 3: Business Success Breeds Resentment

After the deaths of Junius Groves in 1925 and his wife Matilda in 1930, the Groves family struggled financially, leading to receiving an eviction notice in 1933. (newspapers.com)

Junius Groves had built a potato empire by 1907, when educator Booker T. Washington showcased his success in his book, “The Negro in Business.” Groves then was shipping potatoes across North America while also importing what Washington called “fancy seed potatoes” from distant states. “He would get seed potatoes from Idaho and other places, and…

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