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The South Fork Cottonwood River starts south of Matfield Green, then flows northward along the east side of Matfield Green and Bazaar. It merges with the North Fork Cottonwood River about 3 miles east of Cottonwood Falls [ 7 ] then flows eastward near Saffordville and across into Lyon County near Plymouth, Kansas, then along the south edge of ...
Cottonwood Falls is the largest city and county seat of Chase County, Kansas, United States. [1] As of the 2020 census , the population of the city was 851. [ 4 ] It is located south of Strong City along the south side of the Cottonwood River .
Red Cloud is practically walking distance to the border with Kansas.The drive southeast to Cottonwood Falls (above) is an easy 4 hours past farm and prairie, and on the way you can take a quick ...
The Cottonwood River Bridge is a historic bridge across the Cottonwood River at the north edge of Cottonwood Falls, Kansas. The bridge was built in 1914 by the Missouri Valley Bridge and Iron Company, who bid $13,700 for its contract. It is 207 feet (63 m) long and rises 25.5 feet (7.8 m) above the river.
Chase County is a county located in the U.S. state of Kansas.Its county seat and most populous city is Cottonwood Falls. [3] As of the 2020 census, the county population was 2,572. [1]
Falls Township covers an area of 50.72 square miles (131.4 km 2). The streams of Buck Creek, South Fork Cottonwood River, Spring Creek and Stout Run run through this township. The streams of Buck Creek, South Fork Cottonwood River, Spring Creek and Stout Run run through this township.
The Cottonwood River in Emporia in Lyon County, Kansas, overflowed following heavy rain and storms in May.The river’s water level was at about 32 feet on Thursday, May 9, the National Weather ...
Cottonwood Falls, Kansas, approximately 0.5 mile south of Strong City; La Junta Subdivision, branch of the BNSF Railway; National Register of Historic Places listings in Chase County, Kansas; Cottonwood River and Great Flood of 1951; Kansas State League, 1909 / 1910 baseball league; April 1956 tornado outbreak