The Shawnee Indian Mission, from 1839 to 1862, was a manual training school for children from the Shawnee, Delaware, and other American Indian tribes, and is now a state historic site. Its founder was Thomas Johnson, the namesake of Johnson County, who held at least seven enslaved individuals at the mission in the 1850s. (Max McCoy/Kansas Reflector) |
The hidden history of Kansas is the story of enslaved people. Let’s say their names.
Max McCoy, August 15, 2021, Kansas Reflector
Shawnee Indian Mission is a bit of the 1850s frontier in the midst of
one of the richest suburban neighborhoods in the country. Just a block
away is the buzz of traffic on Shawnee Mission Parkway, and the homes in
the area cost more than most of us can afford. But for $5, Wednesday
through Saturday, you can visit the historic site with its three
original brick buildings and its 12 pastoral acres and imagine what life
might have been like for the missionaries, the Shawnee and Delaware
children who boarded at the school, and travelers on the Santa Fe
Trail, which ran just a few hundred yards north.
What you can’t do, unless you already know about them, is imagine what
life must have been like for the enslaved persons who helped build the
mission and were bound to Thomas Johnson, the Methodist preacher and
pro-slavery advocate who founded the school.
These enslaved persons aren’t mentioned in the 2015 video shown
to visitors. Only one of the interpretive displays mentions them. By one
account, it says, Johnson “owned at least six slaves at the
mission,” with perhaps another 10 who were children of the enslaved.
The display includes a reproduction of an 1856 bill of sale, from David
Burge to Johnson, at Westport, Missouri, of an enslaved girl named
Martha, of about 15 years, “sound in body and mind and a slave for
life.”
...
In addition to 2020’s summer of George Floyd, there have been discoveries this year at boarding schools in the United States and Canada of hundreds of unmarked graves
of First Peoples children. The Shawnee Indian Mission is attempting to
address the latter, at the urging of tribal leaders, with a ground-penetrating radar
survey of the mission’s cemetery. The cemetery is separated by a few
blocks from the historic site and is locally known as Johnson Cemetery,
because that’s where Johnson and some of his family are buried.
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