The cornerstone on this church in western KS was dated 1930. Unknowingly, its construction marked a turning point in American history. We think times are tough now, but we don't know tough times.
By the time this church was built, bison had been extirpated from Kansas - replaced by vast herds of cattle grazing what prairie was yet to be converted to row crops. In the years preceding, early settlers had plowed under as much of the virgin prairie soil as possible. Working their hands and feet bare in an attempt to provide for their families. The soil was good, well aerated and fertile. Towns sprung up across the region, schools and post offices were built. Trains took away cattle to be slaughtered and brought in the supplies needed to build communities.
But as we all know, good times are always punctuated by adversity. During the summer of 1930, dust bowl droughts began to consume the Great Plains. Some of the worst drought years in US history were exasperated by the unmatched loss of prairie sod in the years prior. Crops failed and the dry soil had nothing to hold it down as the ever-present Kansas wind sent it airborn almost continuously. Prairie dust storms reached as far as New England. For many families, livestock died and money dried up. Options for survival became scarce.
No doubt there was some heavy prayer going on inside this church in its first few years. Since then, the local landscape has changed - in many ways for the better. I hope those men are proud of what has become of the land they helped settle and farm. Soil conservation and productivity is a top priority of famers in that area today. No-till farming, terracing, riparian buffers, shelter belts, reestablishment of prairie grassland, and various other practices have helped much of the wildlife. I'm confident there were no turkeys within earshot of that church when it was built, but that is no longer the case. The turkeys are there once again, and because of that, so am I.
You should post more often. :smiley-patriotic-flagwaver-an
You write well.
Sent from deep in the woods where the critters roam.
Very well written. Congrats on the successful hunt.
Nice story and gobbler ...
Interesting story and a nice gobbler..congrats
Congrats and thanks for sharing
Congrats, great read, great pictures.
Great job
Sweet! Congrats!
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You put the words together very well.
I love it when hunting land has old structures or cemeteries on them. Once hunted deer on my family's homestead in Nebraska (everyone moved South, but still have the land). Walked into the house where my grandfather was born, now abandoned, and noticed a calendar hanging on the wall. It was from 1944, right when they moved out of it into the new house just 80 yards away.
Makes vivid the connection to the past, beyond just the general, distant idea that people used to hunt for sustenance.
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Well written sir. Congrats on the bird and I really like the pics too. :icon_thumright:
Excellent read and great pictures!!!
Great historical story and congrats on the Rio
congrats, awesome story..
Kansas shelter belts, CRP grass for miles, corn wheat and beans. And the huge cottonwood trees in the sparse creekbottoms.
I drew a kansas bow tag and will be there in late november. I love hunting Kansas. Killed my biggest buck ever on an old overgrown 1 acre homestead. When you see the old remains of homesteads it makes you pause and think. We are not owners of the land just occupants for a very very short time.
Well written and a neat perspective.
Love your sig line too.
Great photos. I like old structures and turkeys.