I also had a lot of fun visiting two smaller National Park Service sites: Brown vs. Board of Education and Homestead. Brown vs. Board is located in an old school building in Topeka, KS. They have some excellent multi-media displays that discuss discrimination of all kinds from the 1600's to present. It served to remind me of how far we've come, but also how recently we've really changed as a country with respect to civil rights. It also gave me some hope that the discrimination we see today (LGBT rights, religious beliefs, and racial tensions) may someday be a thing of the past as well.
Brown vs. Board of Education National Historic Site
Homestead National Monument celebrates the very first 160-acre farm patent issued by the Homestead Act of 1862. This is the legislation that allowed you to stake out a claim in the vast openness of the United States, live on the land, and eventually be given that land for free. Seems like a good, non-controversial idea, right? Wrong! The very interesting video and displays in the museum did a good job of pointing out how this affected the native populations. It was also a pretty difficult thing to do as 60% of the families who initially staked claims, never proved up on the land (i.e. stayed long enough to take ownership of their farm). The best part of this site is the beautiful prairie outside and the brochure and demonstration area about all of the different kinds of barbed wire. Wow! My life would NOT have been complete without this knowledge.
An example of 1 of the 500 types of barbed wire
On our trip, Kansas and Nebraska were being, well, Kansas and Nebraska by giving us major crosswinds to contend with on the drive up, allowing tumbleweeds and corn husks to collect in the bumper. On the way home we saw not one, but two trucks carrying goats.
Not that I don't find this hilarious, but I am really looking forward to moving to North Dakota later this month. That's right, braving perilous snowdrifts sounds more fun than hanging out alone in Larned. Go figure!
Photo of a Homestead in North Dakota
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