More Extinct Towns:
Town |
Post Office Dates | Additional Information |
Alert | 1871-1886 | Alert was west of Randolph. |
Army City | 1918-1922 | Army City was a town built in 1917 to satisfy the needs of Camp Funston on the Fort Riley, Kansas, military reservation. |
Ashland Colony | None | |
Bala | 1871-1966 | Bala, Kansas, is a ghost town in eastern Riley County. |
Berlin | 1872-1876 | |
Bodaville | 1895-1905 | A rural hamlet near the northern line of Riley County, it received its mail from Barnes, in Washington County, after its post office closed. Lasita, on the Rock Island Railroad, ten miles south, was the nearest railway station. The population in 1910 was 50. It was about 35 miles from Manhattan, the county seat, and about 12 miles from Barnes. |
Center Hill | 1903-1904 | |
Clarkson | 1889-1892 | |
Cleburne-Big Timber | 1866-1960 | Cleburne, Kansas, first called Big Timber, one of the river towns of Riley County, was located in Swede Township, in the northwest corner of the county. It was razed when Tuttle Creek Dam was built. |
Donneganna | 1871 | The post office was only open for three months. |
Grandview | 1895 | The post office was only open for two months. |
Grant | 1880-1898 | Grant was located in Wildcat Township. The first settlers were S.D. Houston and Henry Eubank who made their homes on Wild Cat Creek in 1855. The same year, Henry Condray and his sons Mincher, William, and John settled near the mouth of Mill Creek, built dwellings, and started a mill and a blacksmith shop. In 1856 came Jonas Kress; in 1857 and 1858, Lemuel Knapp, Samuel Kimble, George Slye, John Warner and his sons John and George, Lorenzo Westover, Jesse White, and Joshua Williams. A post office opened on April 16, 1880, with H.C. Kennedy as postmaster. The first schoolhouse was built in 1859 with V. Ruddrick as the first teacher. The first church was the Methodist Episcopalian. Though the town showed promising signs in its early years, its post office closed on December 15, 1898. |
Henryville | 1857-1870 | |
Lamoil | 1881-1884 | |
Lasita | 1892-1935 | In 1910, Lasita was a station on the Union Pacific Railroad in Fancy Creek Township. It had a money order post office, some local trade, and a population of 35. It was 32 miles northwest of Manhattan, the county seat. |
Magic | 1882-1892 | |
May Day | 1871-1954 | May Day, Kansas was a hamlet near the west branch of Fancy Creek in northern Riley County. |
Monterey | 1890-1899 | |
Shannon | 1855-1858 | |
Stockdale | 1872-1943 | Stockdale was located at the junction of Mill Creek and the Big Blue River in Grant Township of Riley County. |
Tauromee | 1856-1858 | The post office moved from Juniata. |
Timber Creek | 1870-1871 | The post office moved to Bala. |
Vinton | 1870-1888 | There was a post office in Ogden Township, the extreme southwestern corner of Riley County. It was eight miles west of Ogden, the nearest railroad point. |
Walsburg | 1891-1935 | |
Winkler/Winkler’s Mills | 1874-1960 | This village was located on Fancy Creek, in Fancy Creek Township, in the northwestern part of Riley County. It was named for August Winkler of St. Louis, Missouri, who settled in the vicinity in 1857 and built the county’s first permanent grist mill. More settlers arrived in 1872. In 1878, it had a grist and sawmill operated by the Winkler Brothers, a public school, a general store, a blacksmith, a hotel, and a population of 35. It exported grain and cattle from Waterville, on the Central Branch Union Pacific Railroad, 17 miles away. In 1895, Winkler’s Mills’s name was changed to Winkler. In 1910, it had a money-order post office and a population of 18. It was 35 miles from Manhattan, the county seat, and eight miles from Randolph, the nearest shipping point. Today, this old town is under Tuttle Creek Reservoir. |
Zeandale | 1857-1868 | The unincorporated community of Zeandale, Kansas, is a ghost town near the Kansas River in southeast Riley County. |
By Kathy Alexander/Legends of Kansas, updated November 2024.
Also See:
Big Dam Foolishness at Tuttle Creek Lake
Sources:
1878 Gazetteer and Business Directory R. L. Polk & Co.
Blackmar, Frank W.; Kansas: A Cyclopedia of State History, Vol I; Standard Publishing Company, Chicago, IL 1912.
Cutler, William G; History of Kansas; A. T. Andreas, Chicago, IL, 1883.
Kansas Post Office History