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Do you have difficulty in imagining what life must have been like
in Kansas Territory during 1854 through 1861 when all the conflicts that
would later erupt into our Civil War were developing on a neighbor to
neighbor basis?
If you do, then witnessing a performance by the Lecompton Reenactors
may aid you in understanding this most confusing period in
American history. The Lecompton Reenactors is a volunteer group into a
love affair with making Kansas territorial history come alive for
entertainment and education. In concept, it is a hobby for people who
are both talented actors and historians. The reenactors enjoy the
respite from their usual vocations of preacher, lawyer, retail sales
clerk, newspaper columnist, bank president, administrative judge, fire
captain, engineer, dentist, farmer, college history instructor, college
history professor, governmental administrator, disability caretaker, and
museum administrator. More than thirty performances of three original
plays written by J. Howard Duncan: Prelude to Civil War, Kansas
Territory and Bleeding Kansas, are given each year by the Lecompton
Reenactors, nearly all of them open to the public without charge. Most
shows are given to schools, historical groups, or at community
celebrations. Our current schedule of appearances is listed on this
website.
Even though the tumultuous history of Kansas territory is
recorded in various surviving documents, it is hard for the modern
person to feel the intensity of this struggle. The surviving words and
statements when read seem devoid of the passion and high political
rhetoric that must have accompanied their original utterance.
In their plays about the Kansas territorial period, the Lecompton
Reenactors breathe life and vitality into that history.
It becomes easier for the
viewer to image the passion and intensity of the emotional, political,
and moral chasm which was splitting our nation and catapulting the union
in the 1850s towards Civil War. The authentic costuming and
accoutrements of the Lecompton Reenactors and their theatrical efforts
do much to aid the viewer's imagination.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 opening the territory to settlement
resulted in a race between the free staters and abolitionists of the
North and the slave holders of the South to see who could bring in the
most voters to determine whether Kansas would be a free or slave state.
Not content with voting fraud and intimidation, the partisans turned to
violence, murder, and the destruction of homes. Lecompton, Lawrence,
and Topeka in the north and Osawatomie, Fort Scott, and Linn and
Franklin counties to the south, as well as the rest of Kansas Territory,
became the focal point for national and international news, thus earning
the territory the moniker, "Bleeding Kansas."
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