Pottawatomie Baptist Mission Building | |
Location | Off W. 6th St., 0.5 mi. W of Wanamaker Rd., Topeka, Kansas |
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Coordinates | 39°03′23″N95°46′29″W / 39.05641°N 95.77467°W Coordinates: 39°03′23″N95°46′29″W / 39.05641°N 95.77467°W |
Area | 2 acres (0.81 ha) |
Built | 1849 |
NRHP reference No. | 71001089 [1] |
Added to NRHP | September 3, 1971 |
The Pottawatomie Baptist Mission Building is a historic mission off W 6th Street, one-half mile west of Wanamaker Road in Topeka, Kansas. It was built in 1849 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.
It served Pottawatomie Native Americans who had been forcibly removed along the Potawatomi Trail of Death in 1847 from the Ohio region to a reservation on the Kansas River west of Topeka. Baptist missionaries Robert Simerwell and Reverend Johnston Lykins came to the reservation in 1848. [2]
As a school, it was a three-story building made of ashlar stone 85 by 35 feet (26 m × 11 m) in plan, with 12 rooms and 60 windows and doors. [2]
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