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1915 it was moved to the
Memorial Building; however, the job was done so incompetently that much of its value was destroyed. Over the next couple of years, the remaining specimens were dispersed, and the museum ceased to exist. About 1920 the remaining display cases were sent to the Kansas University art department. Efforts to reestablish the museum were unsuccessful.
83:. In Lawrence the volumes were eventually moved into the Watson Library, although they were kept as a separate collection. At this point, the academy had, for several years, lacked funds to bind their journals, and the collection was not being kept up. So, in 1930, it was sold for $ 5,000 to various colleges and universities in Kansas.
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Members of the society assiduously collected geological and biological specimens, and the collections were stored in the offices of the State Board of
Agriculture. Then they were moved to the basement of the Capitol Building, and about 1912 the museum was moved to the fourth floor of the Capitol. In
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The library of the academy was kept in the
Capitol Building until 1915 when it was moved along with the library of the Kansas Historical Society into the new Memorial Building with the collections to be managed together. At that time it numbered over 6,000 volumes, most of which were bound journals.
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replaced Mudge as president, and suggested that the
Society broaden its scope to include all science, and not just natural science. The next year, the Society changed its name to the "Kansas Academy of Science". In 1873 the Society was incorporated by the legislature as a state institution. The
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legislature placed the academy under the state department of agriculture and charged them with the creation of a science library and the collection of scientific specimens.
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That management regime ended up less than satisfactory, and in 1922 the legislature ordered the academy's library to be moved from Topeka to the
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Wooster, Lyman C. (1937) "Some of the
Founders and Workers of the Kansas Natural History Society and the Kansas Academy of Science"
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to increase and diffuse a knowledge of science, particularly in its relation to the state of Kansas.
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is a public organization for the promotion and promulgation of scientific research in the state of
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Everhart, M. J. (2006) "Kansas
Academy of Science one hundred years ago: The museum"
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Schoewe, W. H. (1938) "The Kansas
Academy of Science: Past, Present and Future"
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Skelton, Lawrence H. (1998) "A Brief
History of the Kansas Academy of Science"
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Bonwell, C. C. (1968) "The
Founding of the Kansas Academy of Sciences"
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Volume 1, Standard
Publishing Company, Chicago, pp. 22–23
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Kansas State Agricultural College (now Kansas State University)
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218:Scientific organizations established in 1873
203:Science and technology in the United States
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129:Kansas: A Cyclopedia of State History
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213:Science and technology in Kansas
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16:American scientific organization
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208:1873 establishments in Kansas
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108:As its constitution put it:
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50:. The first president was
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193:Public education in Kansas
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38:. It was created as the
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52:Benjamin Franklin Mudge
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198:Academies of sciences
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179:Official homepage
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61:In 1870
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87:Museum
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32:Kansas
96:Notes
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