Wichita, Kansas Attractions attractions | events | facts | kids | overview | Hotels | City List
Wichita KS - Attractions
Cotillion Ballroom
11120 W. Kellogg
Wichita, KS
316-722-4201
Opened January 1, 1887 as the
Carey House, this early landmark was considered to be the finest, most luxurious
hotel between Kansas City and Denver, Colorado.
One of the hotel's most famous
visitors was prohibition crusader Carrie Nation, who on December 27, 1900,
smashed the hotel's swank basement level Carey Annex bar. The bar was removed
during later year renovations.. The six story hotel is located near the newly
restored Old Town area of shops and restaurants and is listed on the National
Register of Historic Places.
Old Town
Douglas &Washington Streets
Wichita KS 67212
316-262-3555
Free parking. Trolley service.
Store and restaurant hours vary.
This revitalized historic
warehouse district features the charm of turn-of-the-century buildings, brick
streets, street lights and boardwalks. Over 200 businesses concentrated in a
one-block area create a shopping, dining and entertainment center. Old Town
features antique shops, specialty retail shops, restaurants, night clubs and
dinner theatres.
Great Plains Nature Center
6232 E 29th St North
Wichita , KS 67220
316-683-5499
Monday to Saturday, 9 - 5
Closed Sundays and Holidays.
Chisholm Creek Park is open
every day from dawn to dusk.
Learn about the beauty and
diversity of the North American prairie at the Great Plains Nature Center.
Conveniently located at the corner of 29th Street north and Woodlawn in
northeast Wichita - just 1/2 mile south of the K-96 bypass.
Kansas
has woodlands, wetlands,
rivers, streams and lakes. these environments are featured in the Koch
Habitat Hall. State-of-the-art interactive displays and a 2,000 gallon aquarium
featuring native fish are highlights of the exhibits.
Just outside the front door is
a paved trail system over 2 miles long that allows you to explore the 200+ acres
of Chisholm Creek Park
Botanica,
The Wichita Garden
701 Amidon
Wichita, KS
316-264-0448
www.botanica.org
The Wichita Botanical Gardens
is a beautiful and peaceful place. There are fountains, gazebos, ponds and
thousands of flowering plants. The garden is divided into several areas,
including the Shakespearean Garden, the Rose Garden, the Aquatic Collection,
etc. Recently a butterfly house was opened which operates seasonally.
Omnisphere and Science Center
220 S. Main
Wichita, KS 67202
Admission charged.
316-337-9174
The Omnisphere & Science Center
is a delight. Choose from a variety of hands on experiences, from live science
shows to the science museum. The Science Museum has exhibits dealing with
perception, electricity, chemistry, astronomy, and physics to help students
discover the magic of science.
Wichita
Air Heritage Tour
Wichita, KS 67202
800-288-9424
The Past, Present and Future of
Aviation in Wichita, Kansas "The Air Capital of the World!" Visit Boeing
Wichita, and go inside Bombardier-Learjet or Raytheon Aircraft factories! See
the building of the finest commercial and general aviation aircraft in the
world!
Old
Cowtown Museum
1871 Sim Park Drive
Wichita , KS 67203
316-264-6398
daily March - October. Monday -
Saturday, 10 am - 5 pm; Sunday, noon - 5
Experience the Old West at Old
Cowtown, a seventeen-acre living history museum near downtown Wichita. See how
nineteenth-century residents lived and worked in early Sedgwick County. Stroll
wooden sidewalks and visit over thirty exhibit areas including Wichita's first
jail, a one room school, six historic homes, a pioneer church, railroad depot,
working blacksmith shop, 1870's newspaper office, saddlery and harness shop,
general store, grain elevator, saloon, drug store, law office, and numerous
other nineteenth century businesses. Texas Longhorn cattle, horses, and chickens
add to the frontier atmosphere.
Lake Afton
Public Observatory
MacArthur Road at 247th Street
West
across from Lake Afton Park
Wichita , KS
316-WSU-STAR
Telescopes and micro teaching
tools provide a means of exploring the galaxies and the mysteries beyond.
The huge silver dome opens up
to 13 degrees above the horizon and up.
Also located behind the
Observatory building are stands where amateurs can set up their own telescopes.
Indian
Center
Museum open Monday - Saturday
10am - 5pm; Sunday 1 - 5pm
Closed Monday, January - March
Special rates for ages 6-12,
Children under 6 free
Distant drums still call Native
Americans to this special meeting place. Located in the Mid-America -Indian
Center, this museum preserves and showcases the heritage of the many native
tribes of North America.
Permanent and rotating exhibits
of art and artifacts depict the joy, hardship and determination of Native
Americans before, during and after the coming of the European settlers. Also
located in the building is a unique and colorful display of Native American
tribal flags called the "Gallery of Nations". Gift shop features authentic
Native American arts and crafts.
A Prairie
Garden
Open Tuesday - Saturday, 10am -
5pm; Sunday, 12 noon to 5pm.
Lunch served Tuesday - Friday,
11:30am - 1:30pm.
Sunday brunch, 12 noon - 2pm.
Free admission, except to
selected traveling shows.
A total of 26 original
paintings, watercolors, drawings and bronzes by the frontier's most famous
artist are included in the outstanding M.C. Naftzger collection. In an era
before photography was common this "old master of the old west" captured both
the romance and the detail of his time.
The museum also contains the
famous Frederic Remington "Bronco Buster" bronze. Prints and related books
available in the museum gift store.
Chisholm Trail Exhibit
Open Tuesday - Friday, 11am -
4pm
Saturday & Sunday, 1 - 5pm
Children under 6 free
Jesse Chisholm was the very
embodiment of the collision of two great societies. Born in 1805 as the son of a
Scottish father and Cherokee Indian mother, Jesse was an in-law of Sam Houston
and ancestor of Will Rogers. He established a trading post near present day
downtown Wichita. His ancestry enabled him to blaze a trail south to Mexico
through the Indian Territory of what is now Oklahoma. The "Chisholm Trail" would
make possible the great longhorn cattle drives from Texas to the railroads in
Kansas. ( A marker on the grounds of the Metropolitan Baptist Church at Douglas
and McLean Boulevard indicates where the trail crossed the Arkansas River).
Buffalo Bill Monument and
Gravesite
His home, at the time of his
death, is located at 1047 North Market. (The home is a private residence and is
not open to the public)
An impressive monument, on the
high ground of this pioneer cemetery, marks the final resting place of William
Mathewson, the original Buffalo Bill and last of the old scouts.
Born January 1, 1830 in Broome
County, New York, Mathewson was an adventurer, entrepreneur, sharpshooter,
linguist (he spoke 14 Indian languages) Indian fighter, hero and ultimately
Indian peacemaker. (A marker at 61st N. & Seneca streets commemorates the Little
River Peace Treaty, one of his peacemaking efforts.)
Chisholm Trail Historical
Marker
Douglas & McLean
Blvd
Wichita, KS 67202
Marker indicates
where the trail crossed the Arkansas River.
This weathered limestone
monument marks the spot on the Chisholm Trail where the "walking river" of Texas
Longhorn cattle met the Arkansas River, the final natural barrier on their epic
journey. The inscription notes that between the years 1865 and 1874 over
3,000,000 Texas Longhorns were driven up the trail. For the saddle weary
drovers, many 100 days and 1,000 miles from home, crossing the river signaled
that the end of the trail was near. At trails end lay payday and the legendary
cow towns.
Keeper of
the Plains Statue
Created by Wichita artist
Blackbear Bosin this 44 foot tall, 50 ton metal sculpture stands in silent
tribute to the native Americans who lived and hunted here. Symbolically located
at the confluence of the Big and Little Arkansas Rivers, the "Keeper" reminds us
all that history, like the flow of the waters, is never ending.
Exploration Place
300 North McLean Boulevard
Wichita , KS 67203
1-877-904-1444
Exploration Place, located on
the scenic banks of the Arkansas River in downtown Wichita, stimulates
exploration in people of all ages and interests in an informal, enjoyable
environment. unique sweeping architecture with its indoor and outdoor
interactive exhibits and theaters, all contained in a 20-acre park setting.
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