The founding of Kansas City is attributed to men, such as François Chouteau, Gabriel Prudhomme, John McCoy, and the 14 investors who formed the Town Company in 1838. However, the role of women in the city’s early development is often overlooked.
While Chouteau established a fur trading outpost for his family’s business, it was his wife Bérénice who encouraged other French-speaking families, primarily fur trappers and their Native American wives, to settle in the area. Among them was Gabriel Prudhomme, whose lands would be purchased by the Town Company to establish the City of Kansas – but only after his widow, Josephine, and oldest daughter petitioned Jackson County Circuit Court to settle the estate.
In this edition of Night of Ideas, Kathy Krause, Emerita Professor of French at the University of Missouri Kansas City, examines how the French-speaking women who lived in “Chez les Canses” (village of the Kanza) – those of European ancestry, Native Americans, métis women, and enslaved African Americans – transformed the land at the confluence of the Kaw and Missouri rivers into a vibrant francophone community during the early decades of 19thcentury.
The event is free and open to the public.
This program is co-presented by the Alliance Francaise de Kansas City and Kansas City Athenaeum in honor of Women’s History Month.