Marysville
Map
Frank Marshall’s trading post and ferry across the Blue River, established in 1852, were the
start of the town of Marysville. In 1854 Marshall
opened a post office and
named it for his wife. This is the oldest civilian
post office in continual operation in the state. Today
Marysville is on two federal highways and one of the
busiest railroad lines in the country. A $50 million
railroad relocation and overpass project, completed in
2006, moved the tracks outside of town and provided
two new bridges.
DOWNTOWN
1. The ‘short block.’ In the 1850's the two towns of
Marysville and Palmetto were laid out side by side,
resulting in just half a block between Broadway and
Center (Highway 36). Marysville was south of Center
Street and Palmetto was north. Sometimes visitors are told
that one town was pro-slavery and the other against.
Actually both towns were founded by pro-slavery settlers, but the Palmetto men soon lost interest in their town and
Palmetto merged with Marysville. When the Civil War started most Marysville residents supported the Union.
The ‘short block’ is easy to see outside the tourist
information office at 10th and Center Streets
(Highways 77 and 36). Visitors can also pick up a
brochure and map there for a walking tour of downtown
Marysville.
2. Charles Koester House (1876). National Register of Historic Places. Now a museum with many original
furnishings and in the garden a collection of
unusual white bronze statuary. Laura Ingalls
Wilder and her family passed this house on the way to Missouri in 1894 and she
described the lion and dog gates in her journal. Open
in summer Mon.-Sat., 10-4:30, Sun. 1-4. 919 Broadway,
785-562-2417.
Koester Block, bounded by Broadway, Elm, 9th and 10th
Streets. National Register of Historic Places.
The house at 10th and Elm was built in 1906 for Charles
Koester’s son and is now a restaurant, Las Cabanas. The building where Reflections is now located (corner 9th and Broadway) was one of the earliest Montgomery Ward retail stores in the nation.
Koester House summer kitchen
3. Pusch House, elegant residence built by cigar maker Charles Pusch in
1904. National Register of Historic Places. Private property; drive-by only. 10th and Elm Streets. The cigar
factory at 10th and Broadway is now the home
of the Marysville Mutual Insurance Co.
4. Lee Dam Center for Fine Art. 1903 brick and
limestone building, formerly a Methodist church.
Restored in the 1990s, original tin ceilings. Art
shows and classes, scrapbooking classes, rug hooking
workshops, family reunions. S. 9th and Elm Streets.
Contact for tours and hours: 785-562-3087.
5. Pony Express Home Station No. 1. National Register
of Historic Places. This 1859 stone barn was used to
stable the ponies during the 18 months of the Pony
Express, 1860-61. Marysville was the first ‘home
station’ west of St. Joseph (a station where riders as
well as horses changed). Museum open April-October
Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-4. 106 S. 8th Street,
785-562-3825.
6. Pony Express statue. Sculpted by Richard Berger in
1984. Moved from its original site west of
town, the
statue is now the centerpiece of a new park where the railroad tracks used to be. 7th Street between Broadway and Hwy 36.
7. 9th Street steps. A WPA project in the 1930s. East
side of 9th Street at Carolina.
8. Doll Museum. Dolls from 18th century to the
present, also a collection of authentic Otoe-Missouria
Indian artifacts. Open by appointment. 785-562-3029 or
562-3103. 912 Broadway.
 9.
Historic Courthouse (1891). Built after a previous
courthouse on the same site was destroyed in a
suspicious fire. National Register of Historic Places.
The local historical society has a county history
museum and genealogical research library here. Open
year-round Mon.-Fri. 1-4 p.m.; also Sat.-Sun. 1-4 p.m.
in summer. 1207 Broadway, 785-562-5012,
mchs@bluevalley.net
10. City Park and environs. West side of South 10th
Street.
Bommer School. Moved to Marysville from a rural site.
Originally painted white. Open in summer.
Steam engine. Engines like this brought trains into
Marysville until the 1950's.
Playground. Built by local volunteers in 2001.
Contains play-sized versions of three historic
Marysville buildings.
High school stadium, across 10th Street. Built in 1936
as a WPA project, still in use.
OUTLYING AREAS
11. Hutchinson House (1872). National Register of
Historic Places. French Second Empire house built by
mill owner Perry Hutchinson, whose mill was just
across the highway. In the 1920's the house was used
by the Marysville Country Club, which replaced the
front porch with a veranda for open-air dancing. In
2006 the current owners rebuilt the porch to match the
original. Private property. Drive-by only. West out of
Marysville on Hwy 36, north on Hwy 77 ½ mile.
12. Trails Park, with a full-sized replica of a
rope ferry like the one Frank Marshall used in the
1850's to carry emigrants, soldiers and stagecoach
travelers across the Blue River. Eight trails crossed
the river here: the Oregon, Pike’s Peak and Mormon
Trails, the St. Joe Road, the stagecoach, military and
Pony Express routes, and the trail followed by Otoe
Indians being sent to a reservation in Oklahoma. Take U.S.
77 south out of Marysville. Turn left immediately
after the south overpass onto the levee road and go
1.4 miles. Turn left into park before the west overpass.
13. Marysville Cemetery. The main gate and chapel are WPA
projects from the 1930s, using local limestone. The
chapel was dedicated in 1942 and intended for funeral
services, but has never been used. Union soldier
statue in center of cemetery was the first such monument
in Kansas (1885). 16th Street between Debbie
Lane and Park Street.
14. Vering’s Pumpkin Farm. Melons, pumpkins (miniature
to giant), squash, Indian corn, straw, mums, honey.
Open August-October, also in the spring for asparagus.
1278 Pony Express Hwy, about 2 miles east of
Marysville on north side of highway. 785-562-5273. |