February 2001
Photos for February 28, 2001
Dee Ketchum, right, talks Monday night to Tonganoxie City Council members in a packed room. Ketchum, chief of the Delaware Tribe of Indians, discussed the Delawares' hopes for a casino in the area.
Mike Andrews, THS senior, manhandles Chanute's Matt Weldon during the consulation round of the Class 4A State Wrestling tournament in Wichita Andrews won the match.
Kyle Rodell, THS senior, gets fouled on his way to the hoop in the fourth quarter of Tonganoxie's Monday night first round, Sub-State loss to Topeka Hayden. The Chieftains lost, 37-63.
It is believed that this marker designates the burial site of Chief Tonganoxie, his wife and sister. This is located about seven miles southeast of Tonganoxie.
This cabin, about 18 feet wide by 20 feet long, is said to have been built by the government for Delaware Indians in the early 1840s. About the only original part of the cabin is just below the roofline, where the horizontal, hand hewn timbers with champer cuts fit together. The cabin, on property belonging to John Lisson, is about six miles southeast of Tonganoxie near Stranger Creek. Kerry Holton, pictured, who farms the property, checks out the cabin.
Dee Ketchum, right, talks Monday night to Tonganoxie City Council members in a packed room. Ketchum, chief of the Delaware Tribe of Indians, discussed the Delawares' hopes for a casino in the area.
Mike Andrews, THS senior, manhandles Chanute's Matt Weldon during the consulation round of the Class 4A State Wrestling tournament in Wichita Andrews won the match.
Kyle Rodell, THS senior, gets fouled on his way to the hoop in the fourth quarter of Tonganoxie's Monday night first round, Sub-State loss to Topeka Hayden. The Chieftains lost, 37-63.
It is believed that this marker designates the burial site of Chief Tonganoxie, his wife and sister. This is located about seven miles southeast of Tonganoxie.
This cabin, about 18 feet wide by 20 feet long, is said to have been built by the government for Delaware Indians in the early 1840s. About the only original part of the cabin is just below the roofline, where the horizontal, hand hewn timbers with champer cuts fit together. The cabin, on property belonging to John Lisson, is about six miles southeast of Tonganoxie near Stranger Creek. Kerry Holton, pictured, who farms the property, checks out the cabin.
Dee Ketchum, right, talks Monday night to Tonganoxie City Council members in a packed room. Ketchum, chief of the Delaware Tribe of Indians, discussed the Delawares' hopes for a casino in the area.
Mike Andrews, THS senior, manhandles Chanute's Matt Weldon during the consulation round of the Class 4A State Wrestling tournament in Wichita Andrews won the match.
Kyle Rodell, THS senior, gets fouled on his way to the hoop in the fourth quarter of Tonganoxie's Monday night first round, Sub-State loss to Topeka Hayden. The Chieftains lost, 37-63.
It is believed that this marker designates the burial site of Chief Tonganoxie, his wife and sister. This is located about seven miles southeast of Tonganoxie.
This cabin, about 18 feet wide by 20 feet long, is said to have been built by the government for Delaware Indians in the early 1840s. About the only original part of the cabin is just below the roofline, where the horizontal, hand hewn timbers with champer cuts fit together. The cabin, on property belonging to John Lisson, is about six miles southeast of Tonganoxie near Stranger Creek. Kerry Holton, pictured, who farms the property, checks out the cabin.







