The Kansas City Star (Sunday)

Santa Fe Trail left its mark in Kansas City area. It’s been a journey to preserve it

- BY DAN KELLY dkelly@kcstar.com

loves making TV and movie dramas where the hero, usually an older adult with a healthy disdain for authority, stands up to The Man by planting himself or herself in front of heavy machinery that is about to wipe out a piece of history.

Well, that happened in Kansas City in 1998.

The man was trails historian Walter Cook, and the piece of history he sought to save was a remnant of the Santa Fe Trail in eastern Kansas City. As in all these scenarios, an intractabl­e villain claimed our hero was standing in the way of progress.

In this case, however, the villain wasn’t a greedy corporatio­n. It was a church — Blue Ridge Bible Church, to be precise, which wanted to plow under nearly 200-year-old Sante Fe Trail swales (ruts left by the wheels of freight wagons) and replace them with a soccer field.

Although Cook’s stand failed and the soccer field was built, nearby swales — now called the Wieduwilt Swales — survived. They are part of a web of remnants that trace the path of the Santa Fe Trail, which operated between 1821 and 1880, from Independen­ce through Kansas City and into Kansas.

Which leads us to a question to “What’s Your KCQ?,” The Star’s ongoing series with the Kansas City Public Library that answers readers’ queries about our region:

Jennifer Franz of Greenwood asked, “Where did the name Wieduwilt come from for the Wieduwilt Swales?”

The answer is simple: They were named after Paul Wieduwilt and his wife, Sharon, who live on land adjoining the site.

But the backstory is complicate­d.

It turns out that Paul Wieduwilt, then headmaster of Blue Ridge Christian School, was among the voices opposing Cook’s heroic efforts in 1998.

“The land was unusable, just sitting there,” Wieduwilt told The Star at the time. “The school is growing, and we needed the room. We’ve got 500 students, and we needed another soccer field.”

He said that what Cook claimed was a Santa Fe Trail swale looked more like a drainage gully.

A quarter-century has changed Wieduwilt’s perspectiv­e, however. He regrets the stand he and Blue Ridge Christian took in 1998 and has even become something of a swale hero himself.

“We didn’t realize at that point what was there,” he said. “And it was done before we could do anything about it. We were in sort of an awkward place.

“We should have known better.”

The Wieduwilts still live on a 1-acre property adjoining the Wieduwilt Swales at 85th and Manchester, just west of Blue Ridge Boulevard. In fact, swales run through their front yard.

“We get people who come by and look at it quite often,” Wieduwilt said. “It’s not like they’re knocking down the door to see it, but there will be people come through and look at it.”

The site is technicall­y a Kansas City park, although the city’s Parks and Recreation website makes no mention of it. Thanks in part to an agreement with the National Park Service, it features a stone marker and interpreti­ve sign.

The Missouri River Outfitters Chapter of Santa Fe Trails Associatio­n sponsored a dedication ceremony in 2014 to officially name the site, which had been referred to simply as “85th and Manchester.”

“They asked if they could use our name,” Wieduwilt said, “and we said, ‘Yeah. That would be fine.’”

The Blue Ridge Bible Church and Christian School have been replaced by Grace Baptist

Church and Carver Baptist

Bible College, but the soccer field remains.

Wieduwilt mows his namesake site, saying the city does little maintenanc­e there. But as a fan of the Santa Fe Trail, he doesn’t mind.

“We’ve got the books and maps and stuff,” he said. “We’ve thought about … followHoll­ywood ing the trail all the way to Santa Fe by car and stopping at some of these places. And just experience the whole thing, since it’s been such a neat thing for us to have it right here.”

Cook has died, but fellow trails activist Larry Short, past president of the Santa Fe Trail Associatio­n and now chairman of its mapping and marking

Ask The

Star and the Kansas City Public Library. committee, recalls the 1998 incident.

“That Bible church there decided that soccer fields were much more important than preserving history,” he said. “We tried everything we could to work with them and negotiate, and even buy the land from them. They absolutely refused. They didn’t care about history of the swales or anything else.”

While not blaming Wieduwilt for the soccer-field decision, saying it was out of his control, he bemoans the loss.

“That was just a beautiful site,” he said. “You could stand up at the top and look down through the Wieduwilt Swales and across all the swales.”

The Wieduwilt site is among dozens of venues in the Kansas City area commemorat­ing the Santa Fe Trail as well as the California and Oregon trails, which also began in Independen­ce. Unlike those two, which primarily carried settlers heading west, the Santa Fe was a trade route, so the wagons drawn by oxen, mules and horses carried heavier loads and left the deep ruts that remain visible in many areas.

Short, who lives in Independen­ce, is confident all the Santa Fe swales in the area have been identified, but you never know.

“We continuall­y get calls from people claiming they’ve got swales going through their backyard,” he said. “Ninetynine percent of the time they’re not actually swales. Most of the time they’ve been where they put a drainage pipe or something through.”

In any case, the Santa Fe, California and Oregon trails — celebrated with the annual Santa-Cali-Gon Festival in Independen­ce — as well as the Lewis and Clark river route, make this area the nation’s hot spot for such things.

“That gives us more national historic trails than any other major metropolit­an area in the country,” Short said. “I get a little bit excited talking about all the trails here. I love the trail history. And the impact it had on this area is just incredible. A lot of these things around here wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for the trails.”

Short provided a brief area trails history:

The first Santa Fe Trail left from Franklin, Missouri, in 1821. Later, it left from Independen­ce. The original Oregon and California trails left from Independen­ce, following the same route to Gardner Junction in Kansas. Once Westport Landing opened in the 1840s, all three trails followed the Westport route to Gardner Junction. Later routes to Oregon and California would leave from Leavenwort­h and St. Joseph. These routes are not part of the routes approved by Congress as National Historic Trails.

FOLLOW THE TRAILS’ SWALES

●Independen­ce Courthouse Square, Lexington Avenue and Liberty Street: Marker commemorat­ing the starting point of the Oregon Trail.

National Frontier Trails Museum, Truman Memorial Building, 416 W. Maple, Independen­ce: Tells the stories of the Oregon, Santa Fe and California trails.

Rice-Tremonti Home, 8801 E. 66th St., Raytown: A homestead and campsite on the Santa Fe Trail dating to 1844.

3 Trails Greenway, 9000 Old Santa Fe Road: This 2,000foot trail segment is on the property of the Hickman Mills School District; no swales visible.

Schumacher Park, 6601 E. 93rd St.: A short part of the trail route has been marked; interpreti­ve exhibits but no visible swales.

Trailside Center, 9901 Holmes: Includes cultural and historical exhibits, programs and research resources.

Hart Grove Creek Campground and Crossing, Marion Park, U.S. 71 (Bruce R. Watkins Drive) and East Bannister Road: Campsite of the infamous 1846 Donner Party and thousands of others.

Shawnee Indian Mission State Historic Site, 3403 W. 53rd St., Fairway: A popular campground on the California, Oregon and Santa Fe trails.

Flat Rock Creek Park, 13120 W. 103rd St., Lenexa: Ten-acre park includes interpreti­ve signs and original creek crossing at a campground used by trail travelers.

Parting of the Trails-Gardner Junction, U.S. 56 and 183rd Street, Gardner: Site where the Oregon and Santa Fe trails split is indicated by a historical marker; no indication­s of the junction remain.

●●●●●●●●●●ROAD TRIPS TO SEE SWALES

Santa Fe Trails Swales, Riverside Drive and Scott Avenue, Fort Leavenwort­h

Black Jack Ruts, 2011 N. 200 Road, Douglas County (outside Lawrence)

Swanson’s Swales, in pasture south of Windom, Rice County, Kansas (privately owned)

Ralph’s Ruts, west of Chase on Kansas 56, Rice County

Santa Fe Trail Ruts, Fort Larned National Historic Site, six miles west of Larned on U.S. 156

Santa Fe Trail Tracks (Dodge City Ruts), 11 miles west of Dodge City on U.S. 50

●●●●●●

 ?? File photo ?? The swales left by wagons on the Santa Fe Trail after they crossed the Blue River are visible at this site in Minor Park.
File photo The swales left by wagons on the Santa Fe Trail after they crossed the Blue River are visible at this site in Minor Park.
 ?? PAUL WIEDUWILT ?? The Wieduwilt Swales run along the large trees on the left.
PAUL WIEDUWILT The Wieduwilt Swales run along the large trees on the left.
 ?? ??

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