Elk Falls, Kansas

Started by Warph, November 23, 2013, 04:30:25 AM

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Warph


"Elk Falls is a state of mind...  There's nothing
like it anywhere."

-- Mil Penner, Exploring Kansas


In the heart of the Kansas Ozarks is the small town of Elk Falls, which touts itself as the "World's largest living ghost town." Thriving as a mere shadow of its former self, the mid-nineteenth century settlement attracts thousands of yearly visitors to its "Outhouse Tours" and other eccentric attractions.

Sitting on a wooded bend in the road not far from the Oklahoma border, the first settler to locate upon the town site was a man by the name of R. H. Nichols in February, 1870.  Soon after, the enterprise of establishing a town site was conceived, and Nichols, with six other businessmen, formed a town site company laying out lots and making plans for the new settlement. Nichols built a small house, which also served as a loan and real estate office, a general store was built, a drug store and blacksmith shop opened, the post office was established and school was taught to twenty-five pupils by Miss Dora Simmons at her father's residence. By 1871, the site was named Elk Falls, deriving its name from a nearby waterfall at the Elk River, and became the temporary county seat of Howard County. The same year, a school building was erected in a small one-story frame house, where services for the Methodist Episcopal Church were also held.

However, elections in 1872 and 1873 failed to establish a clear choice between Elk Falls, Peru, Boston, Longton, and Howard for the county seat. After a questionable election of 1873, citizens of Boston raided Elk Falls and took the county records and furnishings. The records were hidden in Cowley County and the town of Boston posted armed guards to keep out the Howard County sheriff.

The bitterness became academic when Elk County was divided into Elk and Chataugua Counties in 1875, with Elk Falls falling within Elk County and the town of Howard becoming the county seat due to its central location.

In 1875 E. A. Hall and L.J. Johnston constructed a grist and flour mill on the river near the falls, from which the power was derived with a turbine water wheel.  The three story frame building was built at a cost of $1600.  Grinding wheat from both locals and others who shipped it in, the mill provided flour throughout the entire state.

In order to create a water supply for severe droughts that often plagued the area, a several dams were built along the Elk River, from logs, lumber, and timbers, but one after another they were destroyed by high waters during floods. Finally, a man by the name of Jo Johansen, a Swede from Minnesota, took over the mill and built the present dam, made of sandstone rocks cemented together, which has withstood the floods more than a century.

In 1879 a Baptist Church was built and in the following year a new Methodist Episcopal Church was built.

By 1883 the new and rising town had attracted many prospects and numerous improvements had been made, increasing the population to more than five hundred residents. Much of the population were children, as the school included more than 200 students.

On November 15, 1892, the board of Elk County Commissioners, voted to build an iron truss bridge over Elk River, connecting the dirt roads into the main thoroughfare leading into Elk Falls from the northeast. Built at a cost of $2,000, it was completed in 1893. Pratt Truss Bridge, as it is called, was unique for its type since expansion joint were made from rollers, rather than wheels. The bridge still stands today and is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Pratt Truss Bridge in Elk Falls


Sometime in the late nineteenth century, the grist mill was closed and the building moved to the south side of the river and used to store hay in. Though the small town had two stores, two barber shops, a doctor's office, a dentist, a drug store and a feed store, the population had begun to fall by 1927, having only 269 residents.



When Kansas Highway 160 was built through Elk Falls in 1957, the traffic on the old steel bridge dwindled to almost nothing. And, when the Elk River experienced a dramatic flood in 1976, most of the wooden planks making up the bridge floor were taken with the turbulent waters. The old bridge was no longer feasible for repair or vehicular traffic and the Elk County Commissioners voted to condemn the bridge and closed it. However, plans to destroy the bridge were fortunately delayed and in 1983, the bridge was preserved as a foot bridge.  In 1992, the bridge was made a historical site by the Kansas State Historical Society and in 1994 was placed on the National Register of Historic Sites.

Today, while Elk Falls describes itself as a living ghost town, it also has to say: "We ain't dead yet!" Not the typical tourist destination, this off the beaten path town, has done its absolute best to stay alive. This is a place where the visitor can slow down, feel the soothing tranquility of the Falls, relax, and see a bit of history without the frenzied pace of a city.

Several years ago, an Elk Falls resident got an idea to draw tourists by calling it the world's largest living ghost town. Evidently, at the time of this idea, some of the people really appreciated it, while others weren't so happy, preferring to remain anonymous in the dying town.  However, the idea caught hold. Numerous artists and craftsmen began to converge on the dying town and within a few short years, the ghost town was drawing thousands of visitors each year.

Though many of the artists and performers have since moved on and Elk Falls is once again making good on its "ghost town" claim, its falls are still running and an old attraction known as the Rock Garden, built in the 1930's, is currently being restored and will eventually be the home of Elk Falls Pottery, an establishment that has been thriving for three decades.

"The Falls" can be seen at the east end of Montgomery Street, about three blocks east of the main street in Elk Falls.

Be sure to visit Elk Falls during its annual "Outhouse Tour," which brings hundreds of tourists through the tiny town.



Elk Falls Open House & Outhouse Tour
November 22 - 23, 2013

"Take nothing but photos - leave
nothing  but footprints - break nothing
but silence - kill nothing but time."

-- Explorer's Code

Kansas Outhouse

Elk Falls is located about 35 miles northeast of Independence, Kansas on U.S. 160.
Contact Information:
Friends of Elk Falls Association
P.O. Box 115
Elk Falls, Kansas 67345
"Every once in a while I just have a compelling need to shoot my mouth off." 
--Warph

"If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at all."
-- Warph

"A gun is like a parachute.  If you need one, and don't have one, you'll probably never need one again."

sixdogsmom

Even prettier in person, Warph. Come see it some time!  ;)
Edie

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Lopoza

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