Cover image of show Per Aspera: A Kansas History Podcast

Per Aspera: A Kansas History Podcast

Podcast by Kansas 250 Commission

English

History & religion

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About Per Aspera: A Kansas History Podcast

Welcome to Per Aspera, a Kansas history podcast. In season 1, to commemorate the 250th anniversary of American independence, we’re telling stories about the people and places of Kansas that connect the ideas at the heart of the Declaration of Independence. Each episode brings you a story from Kansas history that reveals what these promises have meant, how we’ve navigated the moments when these principles come into conflict, and what they continue to demand of us today.The Per Aspera podcast is a project of the Kansas 250th Commission, made possible by generous support from America 250, Creative One, and Walmart. Original show content licensed CC BY-NC 4.0. Select third-party historical excerpts may appear under fair use or separate rights.

All episodes

5 episodes

episode Twelve to Freedom: The Winter Escape with John Brown artwork

Twelve to Freedom: The Winter Escape with John Brown

In the winter of 1858–59, eleven people enslaved on Missouri farms made a dangerous choice. Facing the threat of sale, separation, and continued bondage, Jim Daniels crossed into Kansas and sought help from John Brown and his abolitionist allies. Soon, the Daniels family, the Harper family, Samuel Hamilton, and Jane Barton were traveling through Kansas in search of freedom. Their eighty-two-day journey took them from Missouri into Kansas, where they sheltered with abolitionist families, hid at Grover Barn in Lawrence, and traveled the Lane Trail through Topeka and Holton. Along the way, they faced bounty hunters, federal pursuit, and the confrontation remembered as the Battle of the Spurs. During the journey, Narcissa Daniels gave birth, and the eleven became twelve. John Brown helped guide the group to Detroit, where they crossed into Windsor, Canada. But the heart of this episode is the freedom seekers’ journey: their decisions, their courage, their families, and the lives they built after slavery. Drawing on the words of Sam and Jane Harper, the writings and recollections of John Brown and his abolitionist allies, historians’ insights, and the reflections of a descendant, this episode asks what the Declaration’s promises of equality, liberty, and consent meant to people the law treated as property - and what it meant for them to claim those promises for themselves. Original content © Per Aspera and licensed CC BY-NC 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Some archival excerpts are used under fair use for commentary, criticism, and education.

26 May 2026 - 43 min
episode Petticoat Governments and the Pursuit of Progress artwork

Petticoat Governments and the Pursuit of Progress

In the late 1880s, Kansas voters did something almost no other state was doing: they elected women to local office. This episode follows three of those elections - Susanna Salter's 1887 win in Argonia, where she became the first woman mayor in the United States after being nominated as a joke; Mary Lowman's 1888 win in Oskaloosa, where she led the all-women "Oskaloosa Improvement Ticket"; and Lucy Sullivan's 1889 win in Baldwin City, where her "petticoat council" won 179 votes to 39. These weren't symbolic victories. Lowman's administration cleared a budget deficit, lit streets, paved sidewalks, and enforced Sunday closing laws. Sullivan's council passed dozens of ordinances regulating public life and built the still-standing Women's Bridge. These women challenged traditional gender norms and redefined what it meant to pursue liberty and happiness in civic life. But their terms sparked complications: most of Sullivan's ordinances were overturned, and the wave of women's elections subsided within a decade. From Argonia to Oskaloosa to Baldwin City, we explore how Kansas women took up the Declaration's promises - that all are created equal, and that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed - and what it took to put them into practice. Original content © Per Aspera and licensed CC BY-NC 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Some archival excerpts are used under fair use for commentary, criticism, and education.

18 May 2026 - 45 min
episode Rolling for Redress: Kansas and the 1979 Tractorcade artwork

Rolling for Redress: Kansas and the 1979 Tractorcade

In February 1979, American farmers drove their tractors into Washington, D.C. - not as a spectacle, but as a demand. Facing falling crop prices, rising debt, and a growing wave of foreclosures, they brought the machinery of rural life to the center of political power, determined to be seen and heard. Among them were Kansas farmers, including a group from Edwards County whose experiences were later preserved through oral histories at the Kinsley Public Library. They were not seasoned protestors or political insiders. They were farmers who believed that the system meant to represent them was no longer responding… and that something more than voting was required to make their voices count. In this episode, we follow their journey from the plains to the nation’s capital: an 18-day winter caravan marked by mechanical breakdowns, snowstorms, and unexpected moments of community along the way. In Washington, their protest became something more complicated - at times confrontational, at times cooperative - as farmers clashed with authorities, navigated public opinion, and even helped the city they had come to challenge. The Tractorcade raises a fundamental question at the heart of the Declaration of Independence: what does it mean for government to derive its power from the consent of the governed? And what happens when people believe that consent is no longer being heard? Original content © Per Aspera and licensed CC BY-NC 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Some archival excerpts are used under fair use for commentary, criticism, and education.

14 Apr 2026 - 33 min
episode The People's House: The Legislative War of 1893 artwork

The People's House: The Legislative War of 1893

In January 1893, a disputed election in Kansas triggered one of the most unusual constitutional crises in American history. What came to be known, only half-jokingly, as the Legislative War began with competing claims to control the Kansas House of Representatives, escalating into a standoff between rival legislatures operating under the same roof - complete with locked doors, armed guards, and dueling assertions of democratic legitimacy. Set against the backdrop of Gilded Age inequality and the rise of the Populist movement, the conflict reflected deep frustrations over who government was meant to serve, and who had the right to claim its authority. As tensions mounted, the crisis moved from procedural deadlock to physical confrontation. An attempted arrest inside the Statehouse led to scuffles. The chamber was barricaded. Doors were beaten down with sledgehammers. Armed men filled the Capitol. The governor called up the militia. But in a pivotal moment, both a militia commander and a county sheriff declined to intervene, unwilling to decide which side held legitimate authority. For several days in February 1893, Kansas stood on the edge of political violence, with crowds gathering and no clear authority recognized by all sides. At its core, the Legislative War was a crisis over a foundational principle of American democracy: the consent of the governed. What happens when that consent is claimed by opposing sides, and the institutions meant to measure it fail? In 1893, Kansas came close to finding out. The system held - but only just. Original content © Per Aspera and licensed CC BY-NC 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Some archival excerpts are used under fair use for commentary, criticism, and education.

24 Mar 2026 - 33 min
episode Before the Curtain Falls: Eisenhower’s Farewell Address artwork

Before the Curtain Falls: Eisenhower’s Farewell Address

Beginning in 1959, Dwight D. Eisenhower and a small circle of advisers began shaping a speech that would become one of the most famous warnings in American political history. Delivered on January 17, 1961, his Farewell Address cautioned against the rise of a “military-industrial complex,” a phrase that has since become shorthand for the powerful relationship linking government, the military, and the defense industry. The address evolved over more than a year of drafting and revision, and Eisenhower personally oversaw the crafting of nearly every word. This episode explores how Eisenhower - the Supreme Allied Commander turned president - came to use his final message not to celebrate his achievements, but to reflect on the challenges facing American democracy in the Cold War. We examine how the speech grew from a policy summary into a broader civic meditation on the dangers posed by new concentrations of power in modern society, including the permanent defense industry and the expanding influence of science and technology. Set against the backdrop of nuclear anxiety, the space race, and the ideological struggle with the Soviet Union, the episode also revisits what Eisenhower actually meant by the “military-industrial complex” - and why that warning is often misunderstood. Ultimately, Eisenhower’s farewell was not simply advice to a new president, but a reminder that the democratic ideals first articulated in 1776 depend on an alert and informed citizenry capable of safeguarding liberty and the consent of the governed. Original content © Per Aspera and licensed CC BY-NC 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Some archival excerpts are used under fair use for commentary, criticism, and education.

5 Mar 2026 - 32 min
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