Smithsonian Exhibit and Events Coming to FCHS August 19-October 1

Men and women study a chalkboard covered in the names of candidates and votes totals during an election. Logos for the Smithsonian Institution and Humanities Kansas. Logo for the Voices and Votes: Democracy in America exhibit.

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How far would you go to exercise your right to vote? In 1858, a group of Franklin County Free Staters were so determined to cast their ballots against the pro-slavery LeCompton Constitution in the August 2, 1858, election that they let nothing—not even a high creek or lack of clothing—get in their way.

The story of the Naked Voters of 1858 is one of local stories that will be explored during the Smithsonian’s traveling exhibit Voices and Votes: Democracy in America, which will be on display at the Old Depot Museum in Ottawa, Kansas, August 19 through October 1. The Old Depot Museum is one of only six exhibit host sites across the state and the only host site in northeast Kansas.

“Who has the right to vote? Who gets to participate in the democratic process? These are big questions we still grapple with today,” said Diana Staresinic-Deane, director of the Franklin County Historical Society, which includes the Old Depot Museum. “We all have strong feelings about these questions, which makes voting and democracy hard to talk about. This exhibit gives us non-partisan historical context around which to frame meaningful conversations, something we desperately need at a time when so many of our conversations quickly become polarized.”

In addition to the Smithsonian exhibit, Franklin County Historical Society will host a local companion exhibited called “Barely Made It: The Naked Voters and Other Franklin County Stories of Democracy” and a countywide outdoor exhibit called “They Raised Their Voices: Rabble Rousers and History Makers,” both made possible thanks to a grant from Humanities Kansas.

Special Museum Hours During Smithsonian Exhibit

The Old Depot Museum, located at 135 West Tecumseh Street in Ottawa, will offer extended hours from August 19 through October 1.

The museum will be open Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sundays 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. The museum will also be open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Labor Day (September 4). Admission is free, though donations are always appreciated.

Grand Opening August 19, 10 a.m.

The exhibit kicks off with the grand opening at the Old Depot Museum on Saturday, August 19, at 10 a.m. with live music from Ottawa Brass and remarks from the person responsible for all aspects of a democratic and legal election process in Franklin County—County Clerk Janet Paddock.

Events

FCHS will also host six programs related to the exhibit. Unless otherwise noted, all programs will be held at the FCHS Archives & Research Center at 2011 East Logan Street in Ottawa and online via Zoom. All programs are free and open to the public.

Text reads: We The People of Kansas...The Story of Kansas's Founding Documents, 1820-2020. Sunday August 27, 2023, 2 p.m. In-Person and Online. Background Image: Original handwritten manuscript of the Constitution of the State of Kansas. Inset: Image of man with white beard and glasses. Logos for the Smithsonian Institution and Humanities Kansas. Logo for the Voices and Votes: Democracy in America exhibit.

“We the People of Kansas…” The Story of Kansas’s Founding Documents, 1820-2020
presented by Virgil Dean

Sunday, August 27, 2 p.m.
In Person: FCHS Archives and Research Center, 2011 East Logan Street, Ottawa, Kansas
Online: Zoom or Facebook Live

A nation or state’s founding documents speak to the values and aspirations of its people, and at a functional level, provide the functions of government. For Kansas, this was the 1859 Wyandotte Constitution.

Virgil Dean was editor of “Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains,” the quarterly publication of the Kansas State Historical Society, for more than twenty years. He now acts as a consulting editor for the publication.

Text reads: The Governor Next Door: elected Officials From Franklin County. Tuesday, September 5, 7 p.m. Online and In-Person. Images of three men. Logos for the Smithsonian Institution and Humanities Kansas. Logo for the Voices and Votes: Democracy in America exhibit.

The Governor Next Door: Elected Officials From Franklin County 
presented by FCHS
Tuesday, September 5, 7 p.m. 
In-Person: FCHS Archives & Research Center, 2011 East Logan Street, Ottawa, Kansas
Online: Zoom or Facebook Live

Everyone who has ever served in public office–from school board members to county commissioners, governors to U.S. senators–is also a coworker, neighbor, family member, or friend. This program will dive into some of the Franklin County personalities who put their names on ballots and the impact they had locally and beyond.

Text reads: Madame Mayor: The First Women Mayors of Kansas presented by Sarah Bell. Tuesday, September 12, 7 p.m. Online and In-Person. Image o a woman in Victorian dress in an old ornate gold frame. Logos for the Smithsonian Institution and Humanities Kansas. Logo for the Voices and Votes: Democracy in America exhibit.

Madame Mayor: The First Women Mayors of Kansas
presented by Sarah Bell
Tuesday, September 12, 7 p.m.
In-Person: FCHS Archives & Research Center, 2011 East Logan Street, Ottawa, Kansas
Online: Zoom and Facebook Live

Did you know that for a brief time in Kansas, women leaders dominated local elections? The passage of the 1887 municipal suffrage bill allowed women to vote and stand for local elections. Women mayors were elected in several cities, and in Argonia, Mayor Susanna Salter became the first elected woman mayor in Kansas and the country. Other cities followed. This progress did not include women of color, who, despite being involved in civil and social affairs, did not have entry into elected roles. Yet, by the end of the 19th century, men again dominated the political landscape. Although short-lived, the influence of these early women civic leaders laid important groundwork. This talk weaves the chronology of women’s suffrage in the state with the stories of women elected leaders.

Sarah Bell is the director of the museum and education division at the Kansas Historical Society. She holds a PhD in history from the University of Kansas.

Text reads The Pig in the Swimming Pool: Voices During the Creation of USD 288. Tuesday, September 19, 2023, 7 p.m. In-Person and Online. Image of drawing of proposed Central Heights School, which is made up of three circular buildings. Logos for the Smithsonian Institution and Humanities Kansas. Logo for the Voices and Votes: Democracy in America exhibit.

The Pig In the Swimming Pool: Voices During the Creation of USD 288 
presented by FCHS in partnership with Richmond Community Museum
Tuesday, September 19, 7 p.m.
In Person: FCHS Archives & Research Center, 2011 East Logan Street
Online: Zoom and Facebook Live

For nearly a century, rural and small-town schools served students all of Kansas, and these schools were very much at the heart of these small communities. After the Kansas Legislature passed the Unification Law in 1963, many citizens engaged in public meetings and civil discourse regarding what would happen to their local schools, but few were as passionate as the families in what is now the region served by USD 288 Central Heights. Presented by FCHS staff in collaboration with Richmond Community Museum.

Text reads Charles Curtis: The First Native American Vice President presented by Erin Pouppirt, Sunday, September 24, 2023, 2 p.m. Image of man wearing suit, tie, hat. Has a moustache. Holding papers. Standing in front of a grand government building. Logos for the Smithsonian Institution and Humanities Kansas. Logo for the Voices and Votes: Democracy in America exhibit.

Charles Curtis: The First Native American Vice President
presented by Erin Pouppirt
Sunday, September 24, 2 p.m.
In Person Only: FCHS Archives & Research Center, 2011 East Logan Street, Ottawa, Kansas

Charles Curtis was the 31st vice president of the United States and the first member of an Indigenous tribe to hold this position. This presentation will explore Curtis’s Kaw heritage and political rise from Topeka lawyer to Hoover’s running mate.

Erin Pouppirt is an independent scholar and a member of the Kaw Nation. She has researched extensively Kanza (Kaw) history and the histories of other Plains Indians.

Voices and Votes: Democracy in America has been made possible in Kansas by Humanities Kansas.

Voices and Votes: Democracy in America is part of Museum on Main Street, a collaboration between the Smithsonian Institution and Humanities Kansas.

For more information about the exhibits or programs at the Old Depot Museum and Franklin County Historical Society, please call (785) 242-1250 or contact Diana Staresinic-Deane.

 

 

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