Montefiero | Natrona
Homesteading in Pratt County
Natrona
Immigrants from Saxony (Germany) began
purchasing land in the north-east part of Pratt, County, Kansas,
in the middle of the 1870's. Having survived the Franco-Prusian
War many wished to leave such conflicts, and upon reaching the
West, settled first at Ellsworth, Kansas. The migrating birds
feasting near the Cheyenne Bottoms destroyed their crops, so they
moved south into Pratt County. Additional families soon followed,
and the community organized and centered their lives, their German
language, and culture around the St. Paul's Lutheran Church. From
the beginning of the settlement the church established a school
for their children to maintain their faith and religion. A special
building was erected in 1910 to house this parochial school with
its full curriculum for grades one through eight. For many years
the Catechism, Bible lessons and class lessons were taught in
the German language. During World War I, to keep a lower profile,
the language teaching was discontinued, and the school closed.
Re-opening in 1924, it continued until 1968.
In 1887 two men from Pratt plated the
town of Natrona (for a short time re-named Olympia from 1903 to
1914), and the church is located there. The town never developed
beyond a few frame buildings. The exact location was "the
North-East quarter of Section Seven, Township 27 and Range 12
West of the Sixth P.M., and part of the North-West quarter Section
Eight, the said Township" Pratt County, Kansas. The Post
Office was with-drawn in 1914.
%20(Natrona).jpg)
St. Paul Lutheran Church dedication in
1901
%20(Natrona).jpg)
St. Paul Lutheran School
.jpg)
House & Miskimen Store
Natrona Depot
.jpg)
Natrona in 1984
%20(Natrona).jpg)
St. Paul Lutheran Church in 2000
Sources
Information from Dorotha Giannangelo
Pratt County Historical
Society Photo Archives
|