Cato, Kansas

History

Cato was founded in 1854.[2] By 1867, Cato contained a store, a blacksmith, and a sawmill.[3]

Cato is believed to be the first community built in the Southeast Kansas area, and it has the distinction of having the first grist mill in Crawford County, the first coal mining operation, the first school in the county, and the first County Fair. Cato was never a large town, reaching its peak population in 1910 with 112 residents.

An old, one-room, stone school house built in 1869 is on the National Register of Historic Places. The stone school house, the Cato Christian Church built in 1915, and a stone bridge that was once on the stage coach route, are all that remain of the community.[4]

Area events

Cato Days

Each year the Cato Historical Preservation Association spends one weekend reminding residents and tourists of the pioneer days. The festival includes tours of the pioneer era community, live music, food, and re-enactments,[5] occasionally "including a shoot-out between Missouri border roughians and Kansas lawmen".[6]

gollark: Also those 8102 digits of tau. Maybe I should compress them.
gollark: There's actually a bit of the code just listing words containing OS.
gollark: Basically, it always starts "PotatOS", then I have 8102 hardcoded digits of tau (from which it picks a random number of them), *then* a randomly picked word containing "OS", then a non-cryptographic hash of some of the code.
gollark: No, PotatOS uses EXTREME VERSIONING.
gollark: So `0.1251192587.4` for example.

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Cato, Kansas
  2. "History of Cato, Kansas". Cato Historical Preservation Association. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
  3. A Twentieth Century History and Biographical Record of Crawford County, Kansas. The Lewis Publishing Company. 1905. pp. 50.
  4. "Cato Days brings people back to their roots". www.morningsun.net. Pittsburg Morning Sun. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  5. "History of Cato, Kansas". Cato Historical Preservation Association. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  6. "Cato Days brings people back to their roots". www.morningsun.net. Pittsburg Morning Sun. Retrieved 13 June 2018.



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