Paola, Kansas
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
N 38° 34.348 W 094° 52.607
15S E 336506 N 4271004
This waymark is centered on the Paola City Hall located at 19 East Peoria in Paola, Kansas.
Waymark Code: WM12ARP
Location: Kansas, United States
Date Posted: 04/15/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ScroogieII
Views: 0

Left from Osawatomie on US 169, paved, to PAOLA, 11 m. (857 alt., 3,762 pop.), seat of Miami County. The town, established in 1855, was named for Bap- tiste Peoria, one of the founders. For about a year it was known as Peoria Village, but the name was later corrupted to Paola.

In 1860 prospectors digging with a pick and shovel near Paola found oil at a depth of 275 feet. This was the first oil well west of the Mississippi. However, oil in commercial quantities was not discovered in Kansas till 1889, when a well was sunk six miles east of Paola. In 1884 gas from a field developed a few miles from the town was piped here and Paola's homes and streets were the first in the State to be lighted with natural gas.

- Kansas: a guide to the Sunflower State 1939, pg. 499



My Commentary:
Paola is only now seeing the suburban sprawl from the Kansas City Metro area. It still has the small town charm and feel - the town square still features late 19th and early 20th century buildings. It is also good to see the public buildings of George Washburn still in use.

Paola /pe?'o?l?/ is a city in and the county seat of Miami County, Kansas, United States. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 5,602. It is part of the Kansas City metropolitan area.

Native Americans, then Spanish explorers such as Francisco Vásquez de Coronado in 1541, and French missionary explorers in 1673 lived and traveled throughout the area of what is now Paola. Despite these early European incursions at the start of the 19th century, the area was largely controlled by the Osage people.

Settlement of the area primarily occurred, however, when Kaskaskia, Peoria, Wea, and Piankeshaw tribes were forced to move to the area between 1827 and 1832. These formed the Confederated Allied Tribe, which was led by Baptiste Peoria, who was of both French and Indian ethnicity. They called their settlement Peoria Village.

By the 1840s, Euro-American settlers were moving into the area, and several missionaries lived in and near "Peoria Village". One of those missionaries was an Italian priest who moved to the area in 1852. The priest, Father Paul D. Ponziglione, was credited with renaming Peoria Village to Paola, after a small town on the coast of Calabria, Italy. The Peoria Indians of the area continued to call it Paola, because they had great respect for Father Ponziglione.

By 1854 there was a large number of settlers who moved to the settlement, and a town plat was laid out by 1855. In 1855, the First Territorial Legislature passed an act that incorporated the Paola Town Company. The Paola Town Company and specifically its member Baptiste Peoria with his wife Mary Ann Isaacs are credited as being influential in the founding and development of Paola through the mid-1860s.

During the Civil War a military post was established on the west side of Bull Creek, just west of Paola. At times troops were inside Paola itself. Paola was barely spared an attack on August 21, 1863, by Confederate guerrilla William C. Quantrill during Quantrill's retreat after raiding Lawrence. Paola was 10 miles (16 km) west of the retreat of Confederate Maj. Gen. Sterling Price's force on October 24, 1864, while he was retreating toward Indian Territory. Paola's post was deactivated in August or September 1865.

Following Kansas' admission to the Union in 1861, Civil War pressure to move the Native American tribes increased, and they were exiled to Oklahoma by 1868. Some individuals stayed and became citizens of the United States, however, their leader Baptiste Peoria left Paola with the tribe. From the late 1860s and through the 1870s, Paola grew and progressed, building its first school, jail, and bank.

The railroad came to serve Paola in 1870, which also aided its progress through this time. Following the discovery of natural gas in 1882, Paola became the first town west of the Mississippi River to use it commercially and have the town illuminated using natural gas lanterns. In 1898 the Miami County Courthouse was built, designed by architect George Washburn. Several homes and buildings were designed by Washburn, including the Paola Park Square gazebo and the Paola Free Library. Martha Smith had the Paola Library building constructed in honor of her husband John, a wine maker. It was completed in 1906 and the Paola Park Square's Victorian-style gazebo is from 1913. The library, courthouse, gazebo, and several homes are among those still in use today.

In 1912, James Patterson moved to Paola to establish his winter quarters for his travelling circus, the Patterson Circus. The circus continued until 1927. A wall mural based on a 1924 circus pamphlet, is at 106 W. Peoria. The Patterson's home still stands in Paola in the 600 block of north Mulberry, as the only remaining structure from the circus winter headquarters.

- Paola Kansas Wikipedia Page



George Putnam Washburn (March 21, 1846 – May 16, 1922) was a prominent architect practicing in Kansas. Washburn came to Kansas in 1870, worked as a carpenter and architect, and in 1882 opened an architecture practice in Ottawa, Kansas. His son joined his firm which became George P. Washburn & Son. In 1910 George P.'s son-in-law, Roy Stookey, joined the firm, and George P. retired. After George P. died in 1922 the firm became Washburn & Stookey.

Washburn designed nine Carnegie library buildings in Kansas, and is most known for the 13 courthouses he designed. A number of his buildings are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, with several of the libraries being listed under one study.

- George P. Washburn Wikipedia Page

Book: Kansas

Page Number(s) of Excerpt: 499

Year Originally Published: 1939

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