History of Paola

The first
inhabitants of Paola were the Indians who established communities
throughout the area. They were followed by the Spanish
explorer, Francisco Vasquez de Coronado in 1541. The French
Jesuit missionary explorers, Marquette and Joliet ca me in
1673. Next was the western expansion of the United States
with settlers following the Santa Fe, the Oregon or the
Mormon Trails.
Forced resettlement of the Confederate Indian Tribes: The
Kaskaskia, Peoria, Wea and Piankishaw people came to the
area between 1827 and 1832. The displaced Indian tribes who
settled in the Paola area called their home "Peoria
Village." The Piankishaw and Wea Tribes were granted
250 sections of land within the boundaries of Miami County. Christmas Daganett
was their chief. He was
well-educated in Terre Haute, Indiana where he was born. He
spoke three or four Indian dialects as well as English,
French and Spanish. At 16 he was an interpreter for the U.
S. Government. The tribes formed the Confederated
Allied Tribes led by Baptiste Peoria. Baptiste Peoria,
of French and Indian ethnicity spoke six or seven Indian
languages as well as English and French. Baptiste
Peoria along with the Paola Town Company are recognized as
being very influential in the founding and development of
Paola.
Paola is the county seat for Miami County. At first the
county was named Lykins County after Dr. David Lykins, the first white
settler and a member of the Territorial Council. Lykins came
from Vigo County, Indiana in 1844. Lykins, a Baptist missionary,
started an Indian school one mile east of Paola in 1848. He
continued the school until the onset of the Civil War. His
sympathies were with the South, so he went to Colorado where
he died in 1861. Before Lykins, other missionaries worked in
the area. They were Fr. De la Crox and Fr. Hoecken followed
by Fr. Paul M. Ponsiglione. Father Paul M. Ponziglione,
an Italian Priest, move to the area in 1851, and he is given
credit for naming Paola. A consensus developed that he
named Paola after a town on the western coast of Italy.
The Peoria Indians who greatly respected the priest,
continued to call the area Paola.
There was a large influx of settlers
starting in 1854. The town plat for Paola was laid out early in 1855.
On the 16th day of August, 1855, the First Territorial
Legislature passed an act incorporating the Paola Town
company. Members of the Paola Town Company were
Baptiste Peoria, Isaac Jacobs, A. M. Coffey, and Reverend
David Lykin, teacher and founder of the Wea Baptist Mission
in Paola.
The Paola Park Square was given to the Town Company by
Baptiste Peoria as he went into forced exile with his tribe
to Oklahoma. The Town Company gave the Square to the City
with the provision that no building be built upon it.
Kansas was admitted to the Union in 1861. With admission
the county was renamed Miami County. Part of the Civil War
was played out here. William Quantrill was a guest of the
local jail, charged with grand larceny in April 1861. After
his infamous raid on Lawrence, Kansas, he came back by way
of Paola to settle up for that earlier indignity. He
bypassed the town when he heard of a force of Union soldiers
waiting for him.
The first school was started in 1857 by
Mrs. Cyrus Shaw. Also, a Kansas Normal School, a training
school for teachers, was established in Paola. The Ursuline
Sisters came next. They arrived from Louisville, Kentucky in
1895 to set up a boarding school for Indians. In 1924, the
nuns added a junior college that was closed in 1958. The
Ursuline Campus is still in use today by the Ursuline
Sisters.
The first oil well west of the Mississippi River was
discovered north of the Lykins Mission site in 1888. A small
refinery was built to handle the oil in the early 1890's.
The railroads changed Paola's way of life. The Kansas
City-Fort Scott and Gulf Railroad was begun in 1870. It ran
north and south connecting Hillsdale, Paola and Fontana with
Kansas City, Fort Scott and points beyond.
In 1911, James Patterson and his wife came to Paola for
their home and winter quarters for the Patterson Circus. The circus
traveled from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic seaboard
and even went into Canada.
OTHER HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS
- 1854 - Treaty approved: U. S. and allied tribes
- 1866 - Miami Republican paper started
- 1868 - First jail built
- 1872 - First school built
- 1876 - Miami County National Bank (TeamBank N.A.)
- 1905 - Paola water plant purchased
- 1908 - Paola City Hall built
- 1920 - Paola Chamber of Commerce began
- 1937 - Paola sewage disposal plant built
- 1949 - First Kansas city with industrial promotion
levy
- 1954 - KCPL opens service center
- 1969 - Taylor Forge components used in Apollo 11
- 1979 - Excavation for Hillsdale Dam begins
|