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Sun City is a city in Barber County, Kansas, United States, [1] along the Medicine Lodge River. As of the 2020 census , the population of the city was 37. [ 3 ]
Sun City Township covers an area of 47.99 square miles (124.3 km 2) and contains one incorporated settlement, Sun City. According to the USGS, it contains one cemetery, Sunnyside. The streams of Bear Creek, Elk Creek, Mulberry Creek, North Elk Creek, South Elk Creek and Turkey Creek run through this township.
Barber County is a county located in the south-central portion of the U.S. state of Kansas.Its county seat and most populous city is Medicine Lodge. [2] As of the 2020 census, the county population was 4,228. [1]
Bradford is a ghost town in Wabaunsee County, Kansas, ... Wabaunsee County maps: Current, Historic, KDOT
Interstate 635 (I-635) is a connector highway between I-35 in Overland Park, Kansas, and I-29 in Kansas City, Missouri, Not to be Confused with Interstate 635 in texas approximately 12 miles (19 km) long. It is mostly in the US state of Kansas, servicing the city of Kansas City, Kansas, but extends into
At this point, the highway turns north and crosses the Kansas River into the district of North Lawrence, where the road forms parts of North 2nd Street and North 3rd Street. US-40/US-59 has an interchange with the Kansas Turnpike, signed as Interstate 70, at the Turnpike's East Lawrence plaza. After this, US-40/US-59 exits the Lawrence city limits.
Frederick L. Raymond was an early settler. When the Chicago, Kansas and Nebraska Railway built a line through the area in 1887, part of it ran through Raymond's farm. Raymond was influential in getting a flag station and post office named "Vera" erected at the location. The residents of Vera paid for a siding to be built, and donated 7 acres (2 ...
In 1978, Helen Foresman Spencer, another female Kansas City collector, made a substantial gift to fund the construction of a new space, under the directorship of Charles C. Eldredge. The new building was designed by the architect and Class of 1926 alum Robert E. Jenks in the Neoclassical style from Indiana limestone.