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Ladore, Kansas

Coordinates: 37°24′20″N 95°19′01″W / 37.405606°N 95.316994°W / 37.405606; -95.316994
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

37°24′20″N 95°19′01″W / 37.405606°N 95.316994°W / 37.405606; -95.316994 Ladore is a ghost town in Neosho County, Kansas, United States.

History

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The community was founded sometime between 1865 and 1867 twelve miles south of present-day Erie, Kansas and six miles north of Parsons, Kansas and is today it was located in section 27 of Ladore Township. Its founding is credited to J. N. Roach, W. C. Dickerson and S. Rosa who initially settled on the name Fort Roach until it was changed to Ladore in 1869.[1] The plat for the town was filed September 30, 1870 by the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad.

According to an 1870 census the town had a population of 839 and had grown to 1,060 by the year 1880.[2] In 1870 the Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad founded Parsons, Kansas which quickly grew into a railway hub. This resulted in many citizens moving to nearby Parsons and on March 15, 1901, the Ladore post office closed as a result of the dwindling population.[3][4] Today the only remains of the town is the Ladore Cemetery that is a half mile east of Lake Parsons.

The town is most well known for the lynching of five outlaw men (William Ryun, Patrick Starr, Patsey Riley, Richard Pitkin and Alexander Matthews) on May 11, 1870, by a group of up to 300 people after the men had robbed and beaten several members of the town and raped three teenage girls.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "History Of The State Of Kansas". 1976. p. 834. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  2. ^ "The Rough and Gone Town of Ladore, Kansas". Lost Kansas Communities. Misty Mog. 2010. p. 7. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  3. ^ "Kansas Post Offices, 1828-1961". Kansas Historical Society. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  4. ^ Beach, David (May 28, 2014). How did the Whiskey go Down at Ladore?. CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1499679915.
  5. ^ Lawrence A. Bowes (August 15, 1902). "One Limb and Hemp for Five" (Newspaper). Topeka, Kansas: The Mail and Breeze. p. 5. Retrieved April 11, 2023.

Further reading

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