Category Archives: Fort Osage News & Updates

Jackson County Parks + Rec’s Fort Osage National Landmark and Education Center scheduled to re-open KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The Fort Osage National Historic Landmark and Education Center will re-open to the public on February 27 under normal operating hours of 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday. Owned and operated by Jackson County Parks + Rec, the Fort and Education Center have been closed after sustaining damage in a grass fire on the evening of February…

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We are happy to report that Fort Osage National Historic Landmark will re-open to the public on Tuesday, February 27th, after a fire last Sunday caused its temporary closing while damages could be assessed. Fort Osage National Historic Landmark, owned and operated by Jackson County Parks + Rec, will be closed indefinitely after sustaining damage from a grass fire. Fire crews from multiple agencies, including Ft. Osage, Independence, Sni Valley, Central Jackson County, Liberty, and…

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John Peterson, Fort Osage Curator, and Archaeologist, has left Fort Osage National Historic Landmark for a job at the Missouri State Museum in Jefferson City, Missouri. Michele Newman, Jackson County Parks + Rec Director, thanked John for all of his archaeological work at both Fort Osage, the Little Blue Trace Hiking and Biking Trail, and other Jackson County Parks. John was also responsible for the curation of artifacts at Fort Osage National Historic Landmark, and…

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We would like to congratulate Gordon Julich, Superintendent of Jackson County Parks + Rec Historic Sites Division, on his retirement!

The Friends have submitted our final paperwork to the IRS for our non profit status. Hopefully that will soon be approved and we can start fundraising for some of the projects we’d like to do. The Society of Friends of Fort Osage would like to congratulate Heather Campbell on being named the new site administrator for Fort Osage.

The Society of Friends of Fort Osage purchased these garters in the Grand Festival of Chez les Canses auction and donated them to the fort. The garters were made by Clarence Warfield and are copied from a pair in the Peabody Museum at Harvard. William Clark had received a pair as a gift from the Osage.John Peterson, the Museum Curator at Fort Osage National Historic Landmark, said that they will be added to the Osage…

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William Clark was appointed as US Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Saint Louis after the famous Lewis & Clark expedition. In a letter written in 1810, he requested cloth similar to the five fabric samples he had enclosed to be used as gifts for the tribes of Upper Missouri. The original fabrics now reside at the Museum of the Fur Trade, but two reprints of this fabric have just been donated to Fort Osage! Be…

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The curator and site administrator just finished installing a new temporary exhibit on Native Americans with ties to Fort Osage. Featured are original prints from the McKenney-Hall Portrait Gallery, one of the original “coffee table books,” that brought western tribes to east coast parlors. The exhibit is up now through November 2014! Be sure to check it out!

Congratulations to Sally Bennett on receiving the 2013 Volunteer of the year award!The award was presented to Sally by Kate Warfield, Fort Osage National Historic Landmark Site Administrator, at the Jackson County Parks + Rec Volunteer Awards dinner.

Congratulations to Patty Plummer who received the 2012 Fort Osage  Volunteer of the year award.  The award was presented to her during the Bicentennial of the War of 1812 event.

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