Kansas State University

search

Kansas Profile

Tag: Now That’s Rural

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Clyde Cessna

The world’s most popular airplanes. That’s one description of the planes built by the Cessna Aircraft Company, maker of more light aircraft than any company in the world. It was all started by a rural Kansas farm boy. And he’s the subject of today’s Kansas Profile.

Clyde Cessna was born in Iowa. When he was one year old, his family moved to Kansas and lived on a farm near the rural community of Rago in Kingman County. Rago is unincorporated.  It’s located east of the town of Spivey, population 79 people. Now, that’s rural.

Clyde Cessna grew up in the rural community of Rago (Kingman County)  Kansas.
Clyde Cessna grew up in the rural community of Rago (Kingman County) Kansas.

As a farmboy, Clyde learned to be a good mechanic and handyman. He helped area farmers with their equipment and then branched out into working on automobiles. He became an auto mechanic and then a car salesman in Enid, Oklahoma.

One day in 1910, he went to Oklahoma City and saw what was called an “air circus”: An exhibition by a group of touring stunt pilots. He was so intrigued by the airplanes that he quit his job and moved to New York to take a job in aircraft construction.

He learned the craft of airplane manufacturing and then moved back to Oklahoma to build his own planes. Cessna crashed on his first flight attempt but made his first successful flight in 1911, eight years after the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk. With that flight, he became the first person to build and fly a powered aircraft in the heartland of America, between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Clyde Cessna”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Dean Wade

What is more All-American than growing up and playing ball in small town Kansas? Today we’ll meet a young man who experienced such an upbringing. He came from rural Kansas and is making an impact in big-time college basketball.

Kansas State University basketball player, Dean Wade, of St. John, Kansas, was named a Parade All-American.
Kansas State University basketball player, Dean Wade, of St. John, Kansas, was named a Parade All-American.

Dean Wade is a freshman forward for the Kansas State basketball team. He had what might be considered an All-American upbringing, growing up in a small central Kansas town.

Dean is the son of Jay and Trish Wade. Jay and Trish are originally from small town Kansas also.  Jay grew up at Haviland. Trish’s dad was in the Navy so they moved around a lot. Trish came to Haviland when she was in the sixth grade.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Dean Wade”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Jerry Hall – Extension Districts

How do institutions serving rural America deal with change? In the face of changing demands and demographics, how do those institutions respond? Some will choose to do nothing, to hunker down and try to ride out the status quo. Others faced with declining resources will decide they must close offices and mandate consolidation. But perhaps there is a third way: To encourage voluntary collaboration while improving program quality. Today in Kansas Profile, we’ll learn about a rural Kansas leader who has firsthand experience in facing those alternatives.

Wildcat Extension DistrictJerry Hall is an agribusinessman and extension volunteer in southeast Kansas. He was raised near the rural community of Elk City, population 311 people. Now, that’s rural.

Jerry was active in 4-H and FFA. After receiving an ag scholarship, he went to Coffeyville Community College and on to K-State where he met his wife Stephanie. He got a hog feeding job in southeast Kansas and now manages a feed mill for Springer Family Foods in Montgomery County.

Stephanie and Jerry have a daughter named Jerica. Jerica was also active in 4-H, serving as club president, county council president, and on a national livestock skill-a-thon team among many other activities. “The best part (for her) was mentoring other kids,” Jerry said. “In her last year at the state fair, a lamb which she had sold to another family ranked higher than she did in the class, but she was happy for the other kid.”

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Jerry Hall – Extension Districts”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Martin and Cheryl Rude – Treehouse

The decision to stay at this bed and breakfast left me up a tree….and I mean that literally. Today we will meet an innovative couple in rural Kansas whose bed and breakfast now includes a treehouse for lodging.

Cheryl and Martin Rude are the owners of Barns @ Timber  Creek Bed & Breakfast in Cowley County, Kansas. One of their "rooms" is the Treehouse.
Cheryl and Martin Rude are the owners of Barns @ Timber Creek Bed & Breakfast in Cowley County, Kansas. One of their “rooms” is the Treehouse.

Martin and Cheryl Rude are the owners of this special b and b called the Barns at Timber Creek, which we have previously profiled. Martin and Cheryl are faculty members at Southwestern College in Winfield.

Martin grew up at Wichita and spent time at his grandparent’s farm near the rural community of Rose Hill, population 3,525 people. Now, that’s rural.

Martin played in a Christian band which toured for 10 years. He met and married Cheryl who was serving as youth director of a church in Wichita. After more work for the church in Texas, they moved to Winfield to take faculty positions at Southwestern College.

Cheryl worked in leadership education and Martin worked in student services, but his interest in music again came to the forefront. He started working on the musical elements of church life and today is director of worship outreach at the college. “Our students study worship, leadership, music theory, and their individual emphasis,” Martin said. “All of our projects are linked to community.”

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Martin and Cheryl Rude – Treehouse”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Loren and Regena Lance – Mildred Store

Peanut clusters. Coconut bon bons. Peanut brittle. Chocolate cream fudge. Those delicious old-fashioned candies used to be a hallmark of the Christmas season. They still are, at a remarkable store in rural Kansas. This store offers those candies and much, much more as a special holiday edition of Kansas Profile.

Loren and Regena Lance are the owners of the Mildred Store in Mildred, Kansas. Mildred is in Allen County. The post office in Mildred has closed, so the mailing address is the nearby town of Moran.

Mildred storeRegena grew up here at Mildred, and Loren grew up 30 miles south. He is a self-taught musician and farmer. He was trained as a diesel mechanic and now has played country music all over southeast Kansas. Regena is a teacher and administrator. After earning her master’s degree online, she is dean of instruction at Fort Scott Community College.

Lance and Regena live near the community of Mildred. Brown’s Grocery, owned by a man named Charles Brown, was a mainstay in the community for many years. His wife’s name, by the way, was Lucille – sounds like Peanuts.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Loren and Regena Lance – Mildred Store”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Heidi and Charles Anderson – Livestock Photography

Fresno, California. A California cattle ranch is preparing for a livestock sale, complete with taking pictures of the animals to be sold. Who do you suppose was taking these high quality photos? Would you believe, a professional photographer from half a continent away in Kansas?

Heidi and Charles Anderson are the owners of Legacy Livestock Imaging, the company which took those California photos. Heidi was a city girl and self-described Air Force brat. Her father served all over the nation, and she had visited 48 of the 50 states before she got out of high school. While her dad was serving at the Air Force base in Topeka, Heidi started at Washburn University.

Charles and Heidi Anderson
Charles and Heidi Anderson

“I thought I’d be gone in six months,” Heidi said. “Now it’s been 22 years.”

As a kid, Heidi came to appreciate photography. “We moved around so much that we valued capturing images of where we’d been,” she said. “It was how we learned to communicate.”

She earned degrees in finance and accounting, but she followed her interest into becoming a professional portrait photographer. For example, she photographed ballet companies as far away as Seattle and Atlanta.

One day at church in Topeka, she met a guy named Charles Anderson. Their interests could not seem to have been farther apart: City girl versus farm boy. She was a dancer and art photographer. His background? Cattle. But something clicked between them.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Heidi and Charles Anderson – Livestock Photography”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Morganville – Feves

What can you and I do to promote world peace? That may sound like a question in the Miss America pageant, but today we’ll learn about a rural Kansas community which took specific action to help a war-torn community halfway around the globe. That initiative began more than a half-century ago, and the relationship is being renewed again.

Brent and Charlotte Rundell live at Morganville, Kansas. They met at K-State and he went to work for a grain business in Morganville. While eating at the Morganville Cafe, he noticed a wooden picture carving with the words Feves & Morganville inscribed on the bottom. Older friends in his Bible study explained that it came from the time when Morganville adopted a city in France.

The city of Feves, France sent this carving to Morganville, Kansas as a thank you for its help after World War II.
The city of Feves, France sent this carving to Morganville, Kansas as a thank you for its help after World War II.

After World War II, a Methodist minister in Morganville encouraged the town to reach out to those in need overseas. The citizens of Morganville decided to adopt a European community which had been severely damaged by the war. A local woman named Velma Carson took up the cause.

In 1948, a vote of the citizens was conducted. The community they chose was Feves, France.  There was no prior personal connection between the towns, but there was definitely a need.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Morganville – Feves”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Bob Fisher – World Record Holder

Not one, not two, but fourteen world records. That is an amazing accomplishment by one man.  All of these records have to do with basketball free throws, and they were all set by a man from rural Kansas.

Basketball free throw record holder Bob Fisher of Centralia, Kansas appeared on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
Basketball free throw record holder Bob Fisher of Centralia, Kansas appeared on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

Bob Fisher is the man who set these world records. He grew up at Vermillion in northeast Kansas and moved to Centralia. After living in Dallas for six years, he moved back to Centralia where he and his wife Connie live today. Bob is a technician for USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. He also serves as a shooting coach for basketball players.

“Twenty-seven years ago I got the advice to become a true expert in something,” Bob said. He decided to become an expert in shooting a basketball.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Bob Fisher – World Record Holder”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Don White – Can-Coctions

Don White's company Can-Coctions, based in Garnett, Kansas, makes Can-panions.
Don White’s company Can-Coctions, based in Garnett, Kansas, makes Can-panions.

Can rural Kansas survive? Can rural Kansas compete? Can rural Kansas grow? In order to do so, rural Kansas will need entrepreneurs and community leaders to find and implement creative ideas. In fact, it might even require a concoction of things.

Don White is owner of an innovative business in eastern Kansas. He grew up in the Kansas City area and became a specialist in creating dental devices. He builds dental bridges, crowns and dentures.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Don White – Can-Coctions”

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Brad Hamilton

“God, family, America, and freedom.” Those are the priorities that rural entertainer Brad Hamilton believes in living, celebrating, and promoting. He also believes in public service, both in civic life and in the military.

Brad Hamilton of Hoyt, Kansas, is keeping cowboy and Western heritage alive through his music.
Brad Hamilton of Hoyt, Kansas, is keeping cowboy and Western heritage alive through his music.

Brad Hamilton is an educator and entertainer in northeast Kansas. His family came from Jewell County originally. Part of his ancestry is Native American Indian. Brad’s father played football, ran track, and was on the wrestling team at Kansas State. Brad’s dad went on to become the superintendent at Lovewell Reservoir.

Brad grew up with a love of music and of cowboy life. His grandfather had a farm and Brad rode whenever he could. “I grew up in the Roy Rogers era and those good guys were your heroes,” Brad said. He learned to spin guns and do rope tricks. His grandfather also loved the song “Wings of a Dove” and he asked Brad to sing along with it every chance he could.

Brad’s father served in the National Guard and then was transferred to Salina when Brad was nine.

Continue reading “Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Brad Hamilton”