
Rago and Duquoin anchor this rural landscape in south-central Kansas, where the township lines of Kingman and Harper counties meet. The area is defined by a dendritic network of prairie streams including Red Creek, Rose Bud Creek, and Blue Stem Creek, which drain the gently rolling plains. These watercourses likely dictated the early settlement patterns and road placements, such as S State Rd 14, which bisects the quadrangle vertically. For those tracing local heritage, the map identifies the Rago Cem and Duquoin Cem, alongside the centralized Benningtons Lake. The grid-based road system, with numbered avenues like SE 10 Ave and SE 60 Ave, illustrates the enduring structure of the Public Land Survey System that organized the Kansas wheat belt.
45 named features on this map. Tap any name to fly to it.
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This is the sole edition of this map. No revisions or reprints were ever made.
18 maps found

1965 Cheney SE
Kingman County, KS

1965 Waterloo
Kingman County, KS

1966 St Leo
Kingman County, KS

1967 Alameda
Kingman County, KS

1967 Cleveland
Kingman County, KS

1967 Kingman NW
Kingman County, KS

1967 Willowdale
Kingman County, KS

1971 Adams
Kingman County, KS

1973 Rago
Kingman County, KS

2022 Adams
Kingman County, KS

2022 Alameda
Kingman County, KS

2022 Cheney SE
Kingman County, KS

2022 Cleveland
Kingman County, KS

2022 Kingman NW
Kingman County, KS

2022 Rago
Kingman County, KS

2022 Saint Leo
Kingman County, KS

2022 Waterloo
Kingman County, KS

2022 Willowdale
Kingman County, KS