|
Home Page
City of Argonia
City Map
Places to Visit
Argonia History
Museum
Organizations
Banking
Businesses
Shopping
Dining
Industry
Airport
Telephone & Internet
Newspaper
Emergency
Services
Health Care
Recycling
School District
Post Office
Library
Churches
Housing
Site Map
|
|
Salter House Museum
Susanna
Madora
Salter was a member of the Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
and a young mother of 27 years when she was
elected the first woman mayor in
the United States. Her home,
now the Salter House Museum,
was built in 1884
by Mrs. Salter's father, Oliver
Kinsey, Argonia's first mayor, with
bricks fabricated on site.
The two-story red-brick house has seven gables and nine rooms. A frame
lean-to was added at one time to the northwest corner.
In
1933 a bronze plaque, given by the Woman's Kansas Day Club, was unveiled in
Argonia in honor of the "First Woman Mayor in the United States." Mrs.
Salter was the guest of honor for the ceremony. The plaque was mounted and
placed in front of the old township hall. Later it was moved and placed in
front of the museum.
In 1963 the Salter House Museum was
opened to the public. The home has been restored with furnishings of
that time period. A second building, formerly the First Baptist Church of
Mayfield, Kansas, was moved north of the house in 1967. This building now
houses an interesting collection of historical articles. The Salter House
was placed on the National Register of Historic Places
in September 1971. 1984 saw an exterior renovation of the Salter House. The
work was funded by Argonia's
Historical Society, friends in the community and a federal grant.
Located
on the corner of Osage & Garfield in
Argonia, the Salter House
is open to the public by appointment. Contact
Mary
Beth Bookless or the City of Argonia to
make arrangements. |