Photo gallery: Kansas history: 1861-1891

photo by: Wichita Eagle

Trooper F.L. Balldwin.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

Jesse Chisholm, founder of the Chisholm Trail, was born in Tennessee in 1806.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

Cyrus Kurtz Holliday, one of the founders of Topeka, his wife, Mary Dillon Holliday.

photo by: Library of Congress | The Wichita Eagle

This photograph shows George Armstrong Custer, his wife, Elizabeth Bacon Custer, and his brother Thomas W. Custer, standing, in a photograph taken between 1861 and 1876.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

A tintype showing members of the 8th Kansas Volunteer Infantry. Company E. soldiers in the tintype are, back row from left, Elisha D. Rose, James Hunter, Volney Brown and Henry Davidson; front row from left, Lewis V. Bryan, Richard Russell, William Wendall and Cyrus Grant.

photo by: Library of Congress | The Wichita Eagle

A young Lt. George A. Custer reclining with a dog for a portrait with fellow staff members of General Fitz-John Porter, during the Civil War in Virginia. Years before leading his vastly outnumbered troops to their doom at Little Bighorn, a young George Armstrong Custer was described as accurate in math.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

Images of Fort Dodge showing the offices and barracks.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

Fort Harker, located in Kanopolis.

photo by: Alexander Gardner | The Wichita Eagle

Walnut Street in Ellsworth, circa 1867.

photo by: Alexander Gardner | The Wichita Eagle

Laying track 600 miles west of St. Louis in 1867.

photo by: Associated Press | The Wichita Eagle

George Armstrong Custer and his wife, Elizabeth Clift Bacon, at their quarters in Fort Lincudy, Dakota Territory, June 25, 1876.

photo by: Special Collections and University Archives, Wichita State University Libraries | The Wichita Eagle

View of Main Street 1870 in Wichita, looking north from Douglas Avenue.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

Portrait of James Butler (Wild Bill) Hickok in buckskins.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

View of a dug-out sod house in Norton.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

Six members of a family standing in front of a sod house in Finney County.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

Wichita citizens posed in front of church building in Wichita, built around 1870 and used by the Protestant Episcopal Church (now St. John's Episcopal Church). The location was north of Third Street on east side of Main Street.

photo by: Associated Press | The Wichita Eagle

General George Custer poses for an undated photo in Binghamton, N.Y.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

A studio portrait of two cowboys, possibly taken in Dodge City.

En route to Kansas, fleeing from the yellow fever.

photo by: J. R. Riddle | The Wichita Eagle

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Depot, Topeka, 1880.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

The Kansas State Capitol under construction in 1880.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

An unidentified family stands in front of their sod house near Norcatur. The windmill was used to get water from the ground.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

William Clarke Quantrill (July 31, 1837 – June 6, 1865), was a Confederate guerrilla leader during the American Civil War. Quantrill led a Confederate bushwhacker unit along the Missouri-Kansas border in the early 1860s, including the infamous raid and sacking of Lawrence in 1863.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

Kansas Troops in the Civil War.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

Original photograph of the "Dodge City Peace Commission" in June 1883. Front row from left, Chas. E. Bassett, Wyatt S. Earp, Frank McLain and Neil Brown; back row from left, W. H. Harris, Luke Short, W. B. Bat Masterson and W. F. Petillon.

photo by: U.S. Army | The Wichita Eagle

Soldiers gather for a photo at Fort Riley's Main Post in 1861. Now, 150 years after its birth, Fort Riley remains part of the nation's defense and is intertwined in the economic and social fabric of Kansas. But historians and past commanders warn that the post's future depends on not resting upon the past.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

Cyrus K. Holliday, one of the founders of Topeka.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

John Ritchie, Kansas abolitionist.

photo by: Kansas State Historical Society | The Wichita Eagle

Charles Robinson, Kansas' first governor.

photo by: The Wichita Eagle

This photo shows how much snow fell during a blizzard in 1886.

photo by: Wichita-Sedgwick County Historical Museum | The Wichita Eagle

View of the original Wichita City Hall, known popularly as the "City Building," located on the southeast corner of Main and William streets. The words "Mayor's Office" were painted on third floor window. The building now houses the Wichita-Sedgwick County Historical Museum.

photo by: Wichita-Sedgwick County Historical Museum | The Wichita Eagle

Mike Zimmerly, of Wichita, was in the process of building the Zimmerly building when he died in 1887. His wife saw his dream fulfilled by overseeing the completion of the building. It was completed in 1888. Architects were Dumont and Hayward. This building later became known as the Winnie Building.

photo by: Wichita-Sedgwick County Historical Museum | The Wichita Eagle

This building — for a Wichita watch-making business — was never completed because of the end of the economic boom of the 1880s. The business failed, no watches were ever manufactured and the building was later abandoned.

photo by: Wichita-Sedgwick County Historical Museum | The Wichita Eagle

The Franklin School, located at 214 South Elizabeth St. in Wichita. It was named for Benjamin Franklin.

photo by: Wichita-Sedgwick County Historical Museum | The Wichita Eagle

A young boy, identified as John Reed, posing with a high-wheel bicycle. Note that the pedals are attached directly to the front wheel. The wheels became larger as manufacturers realized that the larger the wheel, the farther the cyclist could travel with one rotation.

photo by: Wichita Public Library | The Wichita Eagle

An 1884 parade in Wichita.