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Hickory Township, Butler County, Kansas

Coordinates: 37°36′25″N 096°37′26″W / 37.60694°N 96.62389°W / 37.60694; -96.62389
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Hickory Township
Location in Butler County
Location in Butler County
Coordinates: 37°36′25″N 096°37′26″W / 37.60694°N 96.62389°W / 37.60694; -96.62389
CountryUnited States
StateKansas
CountyButler
Area
 • Total62.87 sq mi (162.83 km2)
 • Land62.45 sq mi (161.74 km2)
 • Water0.42 sq mi (1.09 km2)  0.67%
Elevation
1,460 ft (450 m)
Population
 (2000)
 • Total90
 • Density1.4/sq mi (0.6/km2)
GNIS ID474846

Hickory Township is a township in Butler County, Kansas, United States. As of the 2000 census, its population was 90.

History

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Hickory Township was organized in 1875.[1] Its early history is retold by J.O. Evertson, an early settler, in Vol. P. Mooney's, History of Butler County Kansas, Standard Publishing Company, 1916.[2]

According to Evertson, the first settler was a man by the name of Myers. He and his two wives settled at the forks of two branches of Hickory Creek. Subsequently, in 1868, Dr. J. A. McGinnis and his brother A. F. McGinnis and family established their claims in the township. J.A. Armstrong then arrived and took up Myers claim, compelling him to move on, along with his two wives. Armstrong would establish a general store at a location called Old Brownlow, which since has disappeared with the exception of Brownlow Cemetery which rests on a rise in the hill.

On June 16, 1871, a cyclone, having destroyed the city of El Dorado, touched down in Hickory Township and did damage to the timber. In the fall of 1873, a prairie fire, originating near El Dorado, driven by a northwest wind swept across the land, driving "coyotes, deer and other wild inhabitants of the prairie scurrying before it, leaping streams as it came to them and leaving desolation in its wake, surging on toward the Indian Territory." In July 1874, following a prolonged drought, an invasion of millions of grasshoppers began in the eastern part of Kansas and Hickory Township, causing great loss to crops.[3] In the early days, law enforcement was rare, law abiding citizens including Dr. McGinnis formed groups, some called vigilantes, to keep offenders in check.[4]

A township being formed in 1875, on April 6, 1875, an election was held at J. A. McGinnis' home, with the first officers chosen: W. S. Dubois, trustee; J. F. Comstock, treasurer; A. F. McGinnis, clerk; Thomas Campbell and W. H. Baxter, justices of the peace; R. Joiner and J. W. Hearne, constables; Z. T. Huston, road overseer.[5]

Geography

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Hickory Township covers an area of 62.87 square miles (162.8 km2) and contains no incorporated settlements. According to the USGS, it contains one cemetery, Brownlow.

The streams of Honey Creek, North Branch Hickory Creek, South Branch Hickory Creek and Stony Branch run through this township.

Further reading

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References

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  1. ^ Mooney, Vol. P. (1916). History of Butler County Kansas. Standard Publishing Company. pp. 162.
  2. ^ "History of Butler County Kansas". 1916.
  3. ^ "Grasshopper Plague of 1874 - Kansapedia - Kansas Historical Society".
  4. ^ "History of Butler County Kansas". 1916.
  5. ^ "History of Butler County Kansas". 1916.
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