Milton W. Reynolds was a writer, politician, and newspaper publisher in Kansas.
Reynolds was born in Elmira, New York, on May 23, 1823, to Alexander and Rebecca Reynolds. In 1827, he moved with his parents to Coldwater, Michigan, where he attended a public school and worked on a farm until he was 16. He then taught school, attended Albion Seminary, entered the University of Michigan in 1853, and graduated with the highest honors in 1856. He was editor of the Coldwater Sentinel in 1856-57, when he moved to Nebraska City, Nebraska, and served as editor of the Nebraska City News until 1861. In 1858, he married Sarah Galloway of Livingston, Michigan, and was elected to the Nebraska Legislature on the Democratic ticket that same year. He was re-elected in 1861 on the Union War ticket, and after a protracted struggle, was defeated for Speaker of the House by a fusion of the Democrats and straight Republicans. He was the editor of the Detroit Free Press in Detroit, Michigan, in 1862 before moving to Kansas in 1865.
Settling in Lawrence, he became the vice president of the Kansas Editorial Association and president of its sixth annual convention in 1871. In 1871, he was also one of the incorporators of the Kansas Magazine Company. He was also one of the founders of the Parsons Sun and the receiver of the Humboldt Land Office.
In 1876, he was elected to the legislature and appointed regent of the University of Kansas, a position in which he was very interested. The following year, he resumed publication of the Parsons Sun, and in 1883, his retirement from the Leavenworth Press ended his publishing activities. However, he still corresponded for a number of papers, particularly the Kansas City Journal and the Kansas City Times, under the name of “Kicking Bird,” a nom de plume he appropriated from the Indian chief of that name. Reynolds was one of the promoters of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad, and it was through his efforts that most of the Osage Indians’ ceded lands were settled.
He died at Edmund, Oklahoma, on August 9, 1890.
©Kathy Alexander/Legends of Kansas, updated January 2026.
Also See:
Native American History in Kansas
See Sources.

