Le Loup, Kansas, in the northeastern part of Franklin County, got its start as a station on the Leavenworth, Lawrence & Galveston Railroad in 1870. It is an extinct town today.
The town was first named Ferguson after Robert Ferguson, one of the first settlers and the owner of the land on which the town was located. Other early settlers were J. A. Stonebraker, who, in company with Robert Ferguson, built the first house in 1870; William Hog, George Morally, and Dr. Combs. J.A. Stonebraker also opened the first store, in which a post office was established on September 30, 1870, with Stonebraker appointed Postmaster.
The first sermon was preached in the depot building by Reverend Dr. Pile in 1872.
The community was renamed LeLoup after a French traveler got off at Ferguson and mistook a coyote for a wolf and began shouting “le loup.” The community then voted to change the name to LeLoup, and the post office’s name changed on May 8, 1879.
In the summer of 1879, a schoolhouse was built in the southern part of town, and Cyrus Jenkins taught the fall term.
Some old settlers said that the sale and use of whiskey slowed the village’s early progress. However, by the early 1880s, it was inhabited and surrounded by a good, industrious class of people and was described as an important shipping point for grain, hay, and stock.
By 1910, the village was on the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, had several good stores, a money order post office with one rural route, telegraph and express facilities, and a population of 100.
Le Loup remained a small town in the following decades. Its post office closed on February 15, 1954.
There are still several homes in the area. It was seven miles northeast of Ottawa.
©Kathy Alexander/Legends of Kansas, update December 2025.
Also See:
Extinct Towns of Franklin County
Sources:
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.



