Goal: $20,000.00
Specific Need
The Museum building located at 530 N. Adams was built in 1903 as one of the first High Schools in the County. It is one of the beautiful examples of limestone buildings built at the turn of the 20th century in the Flint Hills and is now the home to the three-story museum building and the Geary County Historical Society offices.
As one the iconic historic buildings in our community, it is important to keep it looking its best and so the Historical Society is looking to repaint all 111 windows in 2025. This includes stone repair along the lower windows, where iron bars will need to be removed and repainted as well. The current estimate for this project is $90,000.
Match Day funds can help us reach this goal.
Mission
The mission of the Geary County Historical Society, Inc. (GCHS) is:
- To preserve and collect the history of Geary County, Kansas
- To disseminate historical information using all appropriate media
- To provide community education on local history and culture
- To preserve historic landmarks
- To recognize exceptional historic preservation
- To promote public participation in preservation and commemoration of regional, state and national history
- To operate museums/ historic sites that preserve objects of value to the Geary County story
Profile
Geary County Historical Society's home is the three-story limestone building at 6th & Adams that once served the community as Junction City High School. Now a museum, the building houses three floors of exhibits all about our community's history. Our upcoming exhibit Businesses, Then and Now will explore the evolution of Geary County businesses, from the Rockwell Merchantile of the 1890s to Duckwall's of the 1950s to the Dillon's we shop at today.
But how do we help the community? Here are three examples:
Meet Shelby, a 4th grade student at Washington Elementary. She saw "the museum lady" during Kansas Day and was so excited by what she learned that she made her mom take her to the museum's Kansas Day event the very next day. While at the museum, she took her mom through the entirety of the children's chores trunk she had seen the day before, teaching her mom about the history she had absorbed. Children like Shelby are learning how to learn. They are learning how to be a community member. Engaging with museum programs like the Traveling Trunks helps them understand that learning about their community, and their history, can be fun. The Geary County Historical Society sees approximately 3,500 children throughout the year through school programs, Traveling Trunk presentations, Hands on History and S.T.E.A.M. Saturday events.
Meet the Cole family. They are visiting their son stationed at Fort Riley and when they googled what there is to do in Junction City, the Geary County Museum was the first search result, so they stopped in. While in the museum, they met one of our friendly docents who welcome them to the museum and to the community. They are encouraged to look around and learn about the community with the enthusiastic and knowledgeable docent to provide answers or a guided tour. For hundreds of military families and tourists, we are the first experience people have with Junction City. We create the first impression of our community. 1500 visitors from Fort Riley, to California, to Germany and beyond visit our musuem annually before exploring other parts of the community.
Meet Max Regelman and Clarence Erichsen, best friends, brothers-in-law and World War II veterans, donated their uniforms to the museum many years ago. In 2017, the museum put up a Year of the Soldier display, which included Max's Marine uniform. Max had passed away, but when Clarence learned that his friend's uniform was on display, he visited every year to see it. When he visited, he would sit in front of the case--his own uniform pulled from storage for him to see as well--and he would share his stories. He told stories about Max "Regy," about their time together before the war and after, about how they were brothers-in-arms who became brothers-in-law. He would hold his uniform and he would cry as he shared their stories. Clarence has now passed away, but those stories are preserved because he shared them with us at the Historical Society. The stories of the community, what it was in the past, what it is now, and what it will be in the future are all kept safe in the museum through our archives and our Memories at the Museum oral history program.
We are now asking you to help us continue preserving and sharing Geary County history, for little kids like Shelby who are learning how to learn, for families like the Coles who are just hoping their son has found a good community while serving and for Clarence and Max, so we can remember them.