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Hugoton has a semi-arid steppe climate (Köppen BSk) with hot, dry summers and cold, dry winters. The hottest temperature recorded in Hugoton was 116 °F (46.7 °C) on June 25, 1911, which along with Clay Center on the same day, is the highest temperature recorded in Kansas in June. Hugoton also holds the state record high for March.
The bodies of Veronica Butler, 27, and Jilian Kelley, 39, both of Hugoton, Kansas, were found April 14 buried on land in rural Texas County rented by Tad Cullum, who is among five people charged ...
The Hay Meadow massacre occurred on July 25, 1888, and was the most violent event of the Stevens County War in Kansas.. In July 1888, Sam Robinson, the marshal of Hugoton, and a group of men supporting Hugoton for the county seat planned an outing in No Man's Land just south of the county.
A custody battle might have led to the deaths of two Kansas women who vanished on their way to pick up one of the pair's children for a birthday party last month in Oklahoma, court papers revealed ...
[4] [5] The issue was eventually resolved in 1887 when Hugoton became the permanent county seat, though tensions remained high for several years after. [4] Natural gas was discovered in Stevens County in 1927, leading to the development of the Hugoton Natural Gas Area and transforming Hugoton into a major center of the natural gas industry. [4]
The Hugoton Assembly of God, which is Ms Bulter’s reported congregation, held a community prayer for the two women on Monday. Anyone with information regarding this case is asked to contact the ...
KULY (1420 AM) and KHGN (106.7 FM) are radio stations licensed to Ulysses, Kansas and Hugoton, Kansas, United States, respectively. KULY airs a classic hits format. KHGN airs a 1980s hits format. The stations are currently owned by My Town Media, through licensee Western Kansas Broadcast Center, LLC. [3] Logo while simulcasting
Kansas Blood Spilled Into Oklahoma. Blue Skyways (retrieved October 27, 2006) Mason, Henry F. "County Seat Controversies in Southwestern Kansas" The Kansas Historical Quarterly 2:1 (February 1933) 45–65. (retrieved from The Kansas Collection October 27, 2006)