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Konza Prairie


category : Nature Preserves
Konza Prairie In the heart of the Flint Hills, the 8,616-acre Konza Prairie is a rare opportunity to experience the Prairie as the pioneers did during their trek westward. Once a part of the Dewey Ranch, Chicago Industrialist C.P. Dewey acquired the prairie piece by piece during the last quarter of the 1800s.


It is the largest protected tallgrass prairie in the United States. The prairie is owned by the Nature Conservancy and is managed by Kansas state University as a long-term ecological research site. Honoring a request that an Indian name be used to designate the area, Konza was chosen from 100 spelling variations of the name of the Indian tribe who lived in the area in the 1700s.


Because the Prairie must be left undisturbed for research purposes, public access is restricted to the self-guided, three-mile nature trail. A self- guided walking tour brochure is available at the Konza Prairie entrance. Once every two years the Konza Prairie holds its Fall Visitors Day, filled with special tours and presentations.


Hours: Nature Trail is open year-round during daylight hours.
Address: North of I-70, Exit 313
Phone: 785-539-1961
Group tours and activities by special arrangement only.

Konza Prairie Headquarters
100 Konza Prairie Lane

Come visit us in Manhattan, Kansas

Attractions and Upcoming Events

Riley County Historical Museum

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Harold M. Freund American Museum of Baking

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First National Bank Building

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This building and its twin building next door were built by J.N. Limbocker and are now part of the Manhattan Town Center structure.

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Wareham Hotel

Harry P. Wareham moved with his family from Flush, Kansas in 1868, when he was two years old and when he was nine and his brother, William, was eleven, their father died. Mrs. Wareham, Sarah, established the Wareham Millinery Company, which she ran for many years.

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