The teachers and students at O’Loughlin Elementary School have long thought of themselves as trailblazers, but long before the school honored her name, Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy was blazing trails of her own for women and the disenfranchised.
O’Loughlin McCarthy, a Hays resident, was most noted as being the first woman from Kansas elected to Congress, but she was breaking barriers and making a name for herself in politics long before she was elected to Congress in 1932.
She was born on April 4, 1894, in Ellis County. She lived with her family on their ranch outside of Hays until she was 9 and the family moved into the city of Hays, where her father owned an auto dealership and garage.
The initial move to the city from her country school was difficult. She was bashful, and the other children taunted her, calling her “country jake.” However, when O’Loughlin McCarthy entered the Fort Hays Normal School, which is now Fort Hays State University, to study education, she found her fire. She quickly earned honors as an accomplished debater and speaker.
After completing her bachelor’s degree in 1917, she enrolled at University of Chicago School of Law. Her father opposed Kathryn’s decision, but she persisted and was only one of three women in her graduating class. After law school, she clerked for the Kansas House Judiciary Committee for a year.
Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy, far right, campaigns with Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 in Colby. Photo courtesy of the Ellis County Historical Society
O’Loughlin McCarthy returned to Chicago where she became very active in politics during the 1920s. She campaigned on behalf of the Illinois League of Women Voters for eight-hour work days for women, maternity and infant care, and for women to be allowed to serve on juries.
O’Loughlin McCarthy told a reporter in 1932 how her years in Chicago readied her for her run for Congress.
“I had been well-trained in political tactics and debate and in rough-and tumble street speaking in political campaigns in Chicago and rural Illinois. … I spoke from the tail of a truck a thousand times to street meetings, through Chicago and towns nearby. I had learned to think rapidly while on my feet, even before a hostile audience. The heckler was meat for me. I organized the business women of Chicago into Democratic clubs, I had organized thousands of Negro women into Democratic clubs.”
Also while in Chicago, she served as an executive for an insurance company, but left that work for lower pay to assist the less fortunate. She worked as an attorney for Chicago Legal Aide and was an attorney for the Cook County Board of Public Welfare.
O’Loughlin McCarthy came back to Kansas in 1930, and ran for and won a seat in the Kansas House. She was the first woman from the area to earn a seat in the Legislature. While in the Legislature, O’Loughlin McCarthy helped establish what would become the Fort Hays State Historic Site.
When she decided to run for Congress in 1932, she faced an uphill battle. She was a single, female, Irish-Catholic, running against a two-time Republican incumbent in a primarily Protestant district. She beat nine men in the primary to advance. During her campaign, she wrote thousands of personal letters and crisscrossed the district, one of the largest in the nation, putting more than 30,000 miles on her car.
Right before she took her seat in Congress, she married fellow attorney Dan McCarthy. They were the first couple to be certified to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court.
While in Congress, she supported Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal. She fought to assist farmers and rural residents in her district who were suffering during the Depression. Key accomplishments included wheat allotment payments, government loans to farms, federal home loans, and getting one of the Kansas Civilian Conservation Corps stations in Hays.
She served only one term in Congress, as she was defeated in 1934 by Republican Frank Carlson.
She returned home and worked as an attorney in Hays, but her years of service did not end.
O’Loughlin McCarthy pushed to integrate FHSU. She offered African-American students a place to stay in her own home and even paid some needy students’ tuitions. She lost political clout with her fellow Democrats when she fought to stop the forced sterilization of institutionalized girls in Beloit and campaigned for better living conditions for both boys and girls in state custody.
She also campaigned for funding for a hot school lunch program at Jefferson School in Hays.
She died of cancer at the age of 57 on Jan. 10, 1952.
In a news story announcing her death, a friend said, “I think a better woman never lived in Hays. She gave almost to the point of sacrifice to make the burden a little easier for others. Of herself she never thought. She was impatient of her last illness because it hampered her in work she had cut out to do for others. She was a selfless person, generous to a fault and sincere in all she did.”
5th graders learn to embroider on “Colonial and Native American Days’ at O’Loughlin. File photo
The building that would become O’Loughlin Elementary School opened as Marian High School, a girl’s Catholic School, in 1961. The Catholic Diocese closed the school when the girl’s and boy’s Catholic high schools merged into Thomas More Prep-Marian in 1981.
Hays USD 489 acquired the former Catholic high school in 1989 with the help of a school bond. After the school was extensively remodeled, it was opened as O’Loughlin Elementary School in 1990.
Nancy Harman, O’Loughlin principal from 1998 to 2015, taught kindergarten and first grade when O’Loughlin opened as a public school.
“O’Loughlin school has always been a leader in educational research and looking at what makes learning successful for students,” Harman said.
O’Loughlin was a “choice school” at the time of its opening. In 1990, when many schools were still offering half-day kindergarten, O’Loughlin had an all-day kindergarten program.
O’Loughlin implemented “looping,” a practice in which a teacher kept a group of students for two grades. O’Loughlin also eliminated grades in favor of portfolios and parent-teacher conferences, which meant the sky was the limit for student academic achievement, Harman said.
O’Loughlin school exterior today
Cooperative learning and hands-on science education were included in the curriculum, which were new strategies in education at the time. Instead of studying primarily from textbooks and workbooks, teachers were more actively involved in curriculum development and reading, writing and social studies were integrated programs.
“We really did a lot of research on what was working in education and what would help students be successful,” Harman said. “Then we tried to implement those research-based practices into our classrooms.”
For their innovative approaches the school was recognized with a number of awards in its first 10 years. Some of these included Bank IV Better Schools Award in 1996; Kansas Exemplary Reading Award in 1993, ’95 and ’96; America’s Best Schools Award from Redbook magazine in 1995; Kansas Elementary Principal of the Year, Tanya Channell in 1995; and national Blue Ribbon School in 1997.
“It was an exciting, fun place to work,” Harman said.
Today, O’Loughlin is open to all students and continues to provide quality education to children kindergarten through fifth grades. A bust of Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy, carved by Hays artist Pete Felten, watches over the students as they come and go through the school’s main entrance.
However, the future of the building is unclear. O’Loughlin is not the oldest building in the Hays public school system, but it has not had significant upgrades or renovations in years. A failed school bond posed to voters in November would have remodeled the school into a center for the Early Childhood Education program, Westside program and Learning Center.
Bust of Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy carved by artist Pete Felten that sits in entryway to the O’Loughlin school.
The school board continues to discuss elementary schools in its long-range facility plans, but how O’Loughlin will factor into the plan has yet to be decided.
“I would be sad to see it go,” Harman said. “I have so many wonderful memories there. It was my home base for many, many years. My heart would be sad, but I think our district needs to go forward. Whatever makes that possible, we will have to adjust and accommodate.”
Whatever happens to the building, Harman, who still volunteers at the school, said she hopes students will keep the spirit of Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy alive.
“She believed in what was right and she followed that belief,” Harman said. “That was her guiding light. I think as long as you have in your heart what is true and right and you follow that, it will take you many amazing places.”
Special thanks to the Hays Public Library, O’Loughlin Elementary School, Ellis County Historical Society and USD 489 for assistance with research for this story.
THOMAS COUNTY — Two people were injured in an accident just before 2p.m. Saturday in Thomas County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Chevy pickup towing a high-profile RV camper trailer and driven by Christine Ramseyer, 61, Drummond, OK., was eastbound on Interstate 70 just west of County Road K.
The trailer began to fish-tail due to the wind. It jack-knifed and overturned in the median.
Ramseyer and a passenger Lorenz T. Ramseyer, 57, Drummond, OK., were transported to the hospital in Colby.
Both were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Commerce announces Wade Wiebe has been appointed as the agency’s Director of Workforce Innovation. The agency also announces the appointments of Susan NeuPoth Cadoret as Director of Business and Community Development, Kevin Doel as Director of Marketing and Communications, and Sherry Rentfro as Chief Fiscal Officer.
Wade Wiebe
As Director of Workforce Innovation, Mr. Wiebe will oversee strategic direction and implementation of workforce development solutions such as the agency’s Workforce Aligned with Industry Demand (AID) program, an employer-driven training system that matches the skills needed for a company’s workforce with education providers who deliver the training. He previously served with the Department of Commerce as Manager of the Innovation Growth Program before joining the Kansas Department of Transportation as its Director of Administration. He served in that role for the past six years. He earned a B.S. degree in Business from The University of Kansas.
Susan NeuPoth Cadoret
Ms. NeuPoth Cadoret has been serving as Acting Director of the Business & Community Development Division for over a year before being appointed as the permanent Director. She has served with the Department of Commerce for 19 years, including over six years as the Assistance Manager for the Business and Community Development Division. Prior to working for Commerce, NeuPoth Cadoret worked 15 years in economic development at the local level. She earned a B.A. degree in Communications from Fort Hays State University.
Kevin Doel
Mr. Doel joined the Department of Commerce in 2017 as Director of Communications and has also served as Interim Director of Marketing since January 2018. Before joining Kansas Commerce, he served as Communications Manager for the State Fire Marshal. Previously, he served as Director of Marketing for Brewster Place, Topeka’s largest non-profit senior health and living organization, and owned and operated Talon360, a publicity firm for mobile technology companies, for 15 years. He earned his B.S. degree in Management and Ethics from Dallas Christian College.
Sherry Rentfro
Ms. Rentfro joined Commerce in June of 2014 as Fiscal Analyst and has been serving as the Acting Chief Fiscal Officer since February 2018. Prior to Commerce, she worked for over 10 years managing the accounting and finances of a non-profit association that serves the telecommunications industry in Kansas. She earned a BBA in Finance from Washburn University and MBA from Baker University.
About Kansas Department of Commerce
As the state’s lead economic development agency, the Kansas Department of Commerce strives to empower individuals, businesses and communities to achieve prosperity in Kansas. Under the leadership of Interim Secretary of Commerce Robert North, the department comprises a variety of programs and services that create jobs, attract new investment, provide workforce training, encourage community development and promote the state as a wonderful place to live, work and play. For more information on the Kansas Department of Commerce, visit www.KansasCommerce.gov.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 28-year-old man has been sentenced to life in prison for a drive-by shooting in Topeka that killed man who had been linked to an earlier fatal shooting.
Timley- photo Shawne Co
Cortez Tyrell Timley must serve at least 25 years in prison before being eligible for parole.
He was convicted in March of first-degree murder in the June 2014 death of 26-year-old Jermel Ramond Robbins Sr.
Investigators say Robbins’ was suspected of being the third man involved in a May 2014 shooting that left Tiffany Davenport-Ray dead. His name surfaced during the trials of two other men, Thomas Earl Brown Jr. and Awnterio Lowery, in July 2016. Brown and Lowery were convicted in Davenport-Ray’s death.
Robbins was killed about three weeks after Davenport-Ray was killed.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say the search for a 5-year-old boy who’s been missing for three months is “very challenging” and are encouraging the public to keep looking and providing tips.
Police discussed the search Thursday, one day after Lucas Hernandez’ stepmother, Emily Glass, was acquitted of child endangerment. Prosecutors alleged she drove her 1-year-old daughter to a restaurant while high on marijuana on Feb. 16. Lucas was reported missing the next day.
Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett says Glass is a “person of interest” and a witness in Lucas’ disappearance.
Capt. Brent Allred says police are “disappointed” that Lucas hasn’t been found and will follow up on any leads that the public provides. He says police “don’t have any information to follow up on right now.”
Eleven Hays High School business students taught by Lindsay Hart were able to take the Word MOS Certification exam this May. Seven of the 11 passed the exam and are officially certified in Word MOS. This was the first time for all eleven students to take the certification exam.
CODELL, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas town where a tornado struck three straight years is dedicating a steel cyclone sculpture to remember the triple tragedies.
Tobias Flores and Danielle Robinson are faculty members at Fort Hays State University who created a sculpture to commemorate tornadoes that hit Codell, Kansas three consecutive years in a row on the same date-photo courtesy Ron Wilson KSU Research and Extension
The dedication ceremony is planned for Sunday in the tiny town of Codell, which is about 25 miles northeast of Hays. The tornados struck on May 20 of the years 1916, 1917 and 1918.
The first two merely damaged properties outside town. But the third killed 10 people and injured dozens in and around the community of fewer than 100 residents.
Seventy-seven-year-old Codell native Sharolyn Lamb-Gramm says May 20 will always be known as “Cyclone Day.” Two siblings who lived through the three tornadoes plan to attend the ceremony.
Fort Hays State University associate professor Tobias Flores and adjunct professor Danielle Robinson constructed it.
Listen to Mike Cooper interviewing Tiffany Dewitt and Cammi Williby; from The Convenient Care Clinic at HaysMed by clicking the link above and then clicking the play button
NESS CITY – Walnut Creek Extension District will hold three Wheat Plot Variety Demonstration Tours on Wed., May 30.
Plant Pathologist Erick DeWolf will discuss wheat diseases, while Lucas Haag, Northwest Area Agronomist and Romulo Lollato, K-State Wheat Specialist, will discuss varieties and management.
Kansas Wheat Alliance and local grain elevators will provide refreshments for all three tours.
The May 30 schedule:
8:30 a.m. in Rush County, located west of LaCrosse
1:00 p.m. in Ness County, located south of Ness City
6:00 pm in Lane County, located west of Dighton
For directions and more information, call Chris Long, Walnut Creek Extension Dist. Agriculture and Natural Resources Extension Agent at 1-877-798-3921.
This month, schools and students are receiving a total of $99,760 in grants from the ABC Program that supports education in Sunflower Bank and First National 1870’s communities. Since the start of the ABC Program in 2001, Sunflower Bank has given away more than $1,238,000 in support of education. $8,336 of the funds raised this year are being donated to schools and students in Hays.
“It is exciting to bring the possibilities of the ABC Program to all our Sunflower Bank and First National 1870 communities,” said Mollie Carter, Chairman of Sunflower Bank. “We hear every year from schools that the ABC Program provides much needed support to the schools that are helping shape the future of our communities. Sunflower Bank is committed to making an impact on our communities for today, tomorrow, and life. There is no better way to do that than to contribute to the education of our youth. That’s why we continue the ABC Program annually and also emphasize contributing to local educational and financial literacy initiatives everywhere we serve.”
From January 2 through March 31, 2018, new and current bank customers raised money for their K-12 school of choice by opening a Spend & Sign & Save account or swiping their debit card. In addition, the “Pay for A’s” drawing was open to all K-12 students who brought report cards to a local branch, no banking relationship necessary. Five report cards were drawn at each branch, and the student winners receive $10 for every “A” up to $100.
Plans are underway to bring the ABC Program back to Sunflower Bank and First National 1870 for an 18th year. Visit a local branch, SunflowerBank.com or FirstNational1870.com to learn more about the bank’s support for its communities.
BUNKER HILL – The Dane G. Hansen Foundation has awarded Smoky Hills Public Television with a grant for $160,000 to support the station’s general programming and station operations.
The grant funds will specifically support the production of local Kansas programs including Doctors on Call, Real Ag, and Traveling Kansas, as well as, public affairs and high school sports presentations. Educational programs and children’s educational outreach initiatives also benefit from this grant. In addition, these funds help with the equipment necessary to broadcast to northwest Kansas.
This year the foundation gifted an additional $50,000 to assist with a specific equipment replacement need. That amount is included in the $160,000 total.
“The Dane G. Hansen Foundation’s generous support of Smoky Hills Public Television provides funds that are vital to the operation of the station,” said Callie Kolacny, Smoky Hills Public Television Marketing Director. “We greatly appreciate the foundation and the work that it does for Northwest Kansas.”
Smoky Hills Public Television serves 71 counties in central and western Kansas and has been named the Kansas Association of Broadcasters Non-Metro Station of the Year.
The Dane G. Hansen Foundation is committed to providing opportunities for the people of Northwest Kansas to enjoy the highest possible quality of life. The foundation advances its mission by investing in the areas of education, health care, economic development, community social services and security, conservation and environment, arts and culture and community beautification.