North Topeka

Steamboats passed through North Topeka in the 1850s and the Union Pacific arrived in the following decade.

Topeka's history has a foundation in North Topeka. It was the crossroads for the trail that linked Fort Riley with Fort Leavenworth. The Oregon and California roads also traversed the mostly unexplored countryside.

The area was established as the town of Eugene in 1867, but was quickly annexed by Topeka. The section of the city north of the Kansas River is dotted with Victorian homes and has its own downtown area.

North Topeka is one of the city's oldest area, but history is alive across the region.

The city flourished when pioneer families who arrived in the 1850s called Topeka their home. North Topeka was also home to Charles Curtis, who served as vice president under Herbert Hoover from 1929 to 1933. Of part Native American ancestry, Curtis also served as a U.S. congressman from Kansas.

North Topeka is perhaps the oldest section of the city that remains in tact, although growth has largely bypassed the area in favor of expanding the city's west side.

US-24 highway crosses through north Topeka and meets US-75 near the city's western edge. Access to the rest of the city is provided by four bridges < the Westgate bridge, the Topeka Boulevard bridge, the Kansas Avenue bridge and the Sardou bridge < that span the Kansas River.

Topeka Civic Theatre and Garfield Park also are found north of the river. The area is served by the Seaman school district.
    

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