There is a sign along 75 highway telling the location of the "Battle of the Spurs". This location was 5 1/2 miles north of Holton, Ks where the Jim Lane road crossed Sraight Creek. The abolitionist John Brown was going north with some slaves on January 29, 1859 when came to Staight Creek. It swollen with flood waters so he and the slaves stayed at Albert Fuller's cabin. Fuller's cabin was a regular stop on the underground railroad. Governor Samuel Medary of the Kansas Territory asked the commander at Fort Leavenworth to assist in capturing John Brown. Brown sent a local farmer to get some help. By January 31, 1859 Brown had 21 men ready to fight and the posse arrived with 30 men. Brown told the posse "I have set out on the Jim Lane road and I intend to travel it straight through, and there is no use to talk of turning aside. Those who are afraid may turn back, but I will cross at the Fuller Crossing. The Lord marked out a path for me and I intend to follow it. We are ready to move" When the posse saw the size of John Brown's group and their apparent determination and, as John Brown advanced, the posse fled one by one, putting spurs to their horses so speedily that the incident was called the "The Battle of the Spurs." Not a shot was fire by either side.
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Today's Featured Article - Talk of the Town: The Saga of Grandpa's Tractor - by The following saga is from the Tractor Talk Discussion Forum. Someone. The saga starts with the following message: Hey guys I have a decision to make. I know what you all will probably suggest and it will probably agree with me way down inside, but here it is. I have a picture blown up and framed in my "tractor room" of a Farmall M. It was my Grandpa's tractor, of which whom I never got to meet. He froze to death getting this tractor out of the barn to pull a truck out of the ditch before I was born. Anyway my dad and aunt had to sell it at the auction,
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