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In this video, I’m exploring Fort Larned National Historic Site, photographing one of the best-preserved frontier military posts in the American West and unpacking the layered, often uncomfortable history written into its stone walls and surrounding prairie. Located about 6 miles west of Larned, Kansas, along Highway 156, Fort Larned sits on more than 700 acres overlooking the Pawnee River. When the Army arrived in the late 1850s, this landscape looked very different—lined with hardwood trees, roaming bison herds, and expansive mixed-grass prairie. Soldiers, settlers, and the military presence would permanently reshape both the land and the people connected to it. Established in 1859 (first as Camp on Pawnee Fork, then Camp Alert), Fort Larned became a key post for protecting traffic along the Santa Fe Trail, which ran directly through the traditional hunting grounds of the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Kiowa, and Comanche. The fort quickly became a focal point for treaty enforcement, annuity distribution, and tense relations between tribes, settlers, and the U.S. government. Most of the stone buildings you see today were constructed in 1867–1868 and include enlisted men’s barracks, officers’ quarters, commissary and quartermaster storehouses, workshops, and the commanding officer’s residence. After the Army abandoned the fort in 1878, civilian owners heavily altered many of the structures, using barracks as barns and reshaping the site until it eventually became a ranch. Restoration efforts by the National Park Service have worked to return both the buildings and the surrounding vegetation closer to their historic appearance. Check out my website: https://mcclaryphotography.com/ Video research sources: National Park Service app National Registry of Historic Places Nomination--https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAss... Hancock’s War https://www.nps.gov/fols/learn/histor... Sand Creek Massacre https://www.nps.gov/sand/learn/histor...