Belton
History
Origins
and Name
George W. Scott and William H. Colbern purchased about 80
acres of land on August 13, 1869 from Manzey Q. Ashby of Kentucky
who had received it a month earlier from the U.S. Government.
Scott and Colbern filed a plat for the 80 acres in December
1871, and called the new town Belton. Belton was incorporated
in 1872. It was named for a close friend of Scott's, Capt.
Marcus Lindsey Belt, who helped Scott survey the land. The
two had served in the Civil War together. Belton and its environs
were settled largely by families from Kentucky.
Indians
Shawnee Indians lived and owned land four miles west of Belton,
just across the Missouri - Kansas border, on what was known
as the Black Bob Reservation. Located in the southern part
of Johnson County, Kansas, it was deeded to the Shawnees in
the Treaty of May 10, 1844. Because of harassment from both
sides at the beginning of the Civil War, the Shawnees abandoned
their lands and settled in Indian Territory, now Oklahoma.
At the end of the war they found their lands in Kansas had
been occupied by whites and most Indians had to return to
Indian Territory empty-handed.
First
Trading Center
High Blue, two miles west of Belton on 58 Highway, was the
community's first trading center. It is the highest point
between Springfield and the Liberty Memorial hill in Kansas
City, MO., about 1,200 feet above sea level. Belton is located
on a ridge reaching to Lee's Summit. All water north of Main
Street flows into the Little Blue River east of Kansas City.
All water flowing south of Main Street goes to the Grand River
and then the Osage River, finally emptying into the Missouri
River, 10 miles east of Jefferson City.
Order
No. 11
Following the sacking of Lawrence, Kansas in 1863 by Quantrill's
Raiders during the Civil War, the Union Commander in Kansas
City, Brig. Gen. Thomas Ewing, issued the infamous Order No.
11. It decreed the depopulation within 15 days of an area
30 miles wide and 100 miles long south of the Missouri River
on the western border of Missouri. The order affected 20,000
persons who had to salvage what they could of clothing, personal
belongings and livestock, to make a hasty move. Plundering
and devastation followed. Union soldiers confiscated horses
and wagons. Looting was rampant and torches were set to fields
and homes. The area came to be known as the "Burnt District"
and for 18 months was largely uninhabited.
Carry
Nation
When Carry started swinging her hatchet across Kansas, the
anti-saloon movement was a mere weakling. She transformed
it into a militant giant that eventually put the 18th Amendment
into the Constitution. Born in Kentucky in November 1846,
she and her family moved to a farm east of Peculiar, MO. in
1855. The family moved to Texas during the Civil War. On their
way back after the war they crossed the Pea Ridge battlefield
in Arkansas shortly after that battle. All the bedding and
pillows they could spare were given to the wounded.
In 1867
Carry married Dr. Charles Gloyd, who became an incurable drunkard
and died within a couple of years. She married David Nation
in 1877. He was a lawyer, editor and self-styled minister
of the Christian Church. That marriage ended in divorce in
1901.
The "cyclone
in petticoats" launched her campaign against tobacco
and liquor from Medicine Lodge, Kansas. Kansas voters in 1880
outlawed saloons. Since they were illegal, Carry thought she
could destroy the property and not be sued for damages. Her
10 year crusade was filled with fury and personal sacrifice.
She was jailed at least 33 times, egged, stoned, beaten and
on at least one occasion hit over the head with a chair. Carry
Nation died on June 9, 1911 in Leavenworth, Kansas. She was
brought to Belton for burial in the family plot next to her
parents. In 1991 the Belton Historical Society purchased an
antique hearse reported to be the one which brought Carry
to Belton. It is on display in a carriage house located next
to the Old City Hall, 512 Main St.
The
Dalton Gang
The Dalton farm southwest of Belton was purchased by the father
in 1866, after coming here from Kentucky. Of 15 children born
to the couple, 13 survived. It was the younger sons who became
outlaws. The parents were devout people and the mother often
gathered her brood about the piano to sing religious hymns.
After
several financial setbacks, the Daltons moved to Coffeyville,
Kansas in 1882. It is claimed that because of the hard times,
some of the boys first became lawmen, then turned to crime.
Jesse James had been killed in 1882 and Cole Younger was in
prison before the Daltons took up their lives as outlaws.
It lasted just 18 months. After serving 14 years in prison,
Emmett Dalton was paroled in 1907. He wrote a book and publicized
it by traveling about the country. One of his stops was Belton
in 1931.
Dale
Carnegie
For some 45 years, Dale Carnegie was a frequent visitor to
Belton and called it his hometown. Born in Maryville, MO.,
in November, 1888, he got his start as a business manager
for Lowell Thomas in 1919. He spent several years traveling
in Europe, Africa and the Arctic.
Carnegie
then started teaching public speaking, writing his own texts.
He had a radio program and a syndicated column which appeared
in 71 newspapers. His formulas for success were broadened
to include all phases of human relations. His most famous
book, "How to Win Friends and Influence People,"
was published in 1936. Carnegie changed the spelling of his
name because friends in the east constantly misspelled it
and Carnegie said he wanted to spare them the embarrassment
of repeated corrections.
His parents,
Elizabeth and J.W. Carnagey, bought a farm on the outskirts
of Belton in 1910. The house still stands today on Carnegie
Street just west of the railroad tracks. Mrs. Carnagey was
a member of the Methodist Church and active in its Missionary
Society. She organized Belton's first Sunday School class.
Dale Carnegie married in 1940 and died in 1955. He and his
parents are buried in the Belton Cemetery.
Visit
the Belton Museum of History
512 Main Street, Belton, Missouri
Open Tues., & Thurs., 1-4 p.m., Sat., 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.
Closed January & February
816.331.8044 or 331.2255
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