
“Watch Wichita Win”
The Wichita Union Terminal Station
The Concourse and Ticket Offices of the Wichita Union Terminal Station
Main Waiting Room, Wichita Union Terminal Station
Dining Room of the Wichita Terminal Station
Concourse, Wichita Union Terminal Station
Ladies’ Retiring Room, Wichita Union Terminal Station
A Twilight View of the New Union Terminal Station, Wichita, Kansas
“Watch Wichita Win”—The Motto of an Aggressive Community
Looking North on Main Street, Wichita
Wichita lives up to its motto, “Watch Wichita Win,” with a population that has more than doubled since the turn of the century and a future that looks set for another surge. The city’s prime spot at the meeting of the Arkansas and Little Arkansas Rivers made it a natural gathering place for native peoples long before settlers arrived, and later it became a key hub for cattle drives from Oklahoma and Texas. When the first railroad reached Wichita in 1872, the town instantly transformed into a distribution center for the Southwest.
By the early 1900s Wichita had become a bustling crossroads, with six trunk lines stretching into Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas and even Mexico. Its livestock and grain markets swelled dramatically—thousands of railcars of cattle and wheat passed through the Union Stockyards and grain elevators each year, feeding a nation hungry for food. The city’s factories, from broom‑corn processors to flour mills and door manufacturers, employed hundreds and turned Wichita into a regional manufacturing powerhouse.
Language
en
Duration
~23 minutes (22K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2018-08-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

A pioneering railroad restaurateur, he helped change travel in the American West by bringing dependable meals, hotels, and service to passengers along major rail lines. His Harvey House empire became so influential that he is often remembered as an early architect of modern American hospitality.
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