![]() ![]() Minneapolis: Northwest Publishing Co., 1902. 1 Standard Atlas of Barber County, Kansas, Including a Plat Book. 6 Standard Atlas of Barber County, Kansas. Oversize K/978.1/-At2/T739 Atlas of Atchison County, Kansas, Containing Maps, Plats of the KL Townships, Alphabetical Rural Directory, Histories of Churches, etc., Families, Farms. Harlan, Iowa: (R.C.) Booth Enterprises, 1949. Atlas of Atchison County, Kansas, with Township Plats Corrected to December 30, 1948. 4 Standard Atlas of Atchison County, Kansas. Minneapolis: Northwest Publishing Company, 1901. 2 Atlas and Plat Book of Allen County, Kansas, Including History of the World War and Allen County Honor Roll. Des Moines: Northwest Publishing Company, 1906. If the map has been digitized, there is a link to it on Kansas Memory. These maps are listed alphabetically by county. Some early Kansas county maps also show landowners. For help, read how to locate the family farm in a Kansas plat atlas. Sometimes there are pictures and a directory of county residents at the end. Plats of cities are included but city lot owners are not listed. They also include the locations of rural churches, cemeteries, and schools. We're here to help.County atlases or plat books contain township maps that show rural landowners. These days, the main Bonneville event is called Speed Week and the volume of SCTA car classes is staggering, and quite confounding to the ever-growing volume of first-time racers and spectators. (Oddly, we've found that vintage issues of HOT ROD rarely, if ever, provide details about the various classes within any of the race coverage, be it Bonneville, the drags, Pikes Peak, or even NASCAR). At that first Bonneville Nationals hosted by the Southern California Timing Association (SCTA), the racing classes were very simple: there was Streamliner, Lakester, Roadster, Modified Roadster, Coupe, and Modified Coupe. The location was famous worldwide, thanks to the land-speed-racing battles of Brits Sir Malcomb Campbell (the first to 300 mph at Bonneville in 1935), George Eyston, and John Cobb, and American racer (and one-time mayor of Salt Lake City) Ab Jenkins. In 1949, HOT ROD helped create the Bonneville National Speed Trials for hot rodders. ![]()
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