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Royals Radio Affiliate Profile: Winfield, Kansas [1550 KKLE-AM]

The Royals Radio Network is comprised of 86 affiliates and stretches across eight states. In this recurring series (previous features listed below) Royals Review attempts to give each affiliate its proper airing, celebrating the regional heritage of Royals baseball. In a sporting era corrupted by the endless quest for the big money, baseball on the radio is a decidedly low-stakes, low-tech venture. Let it always lay hidden like a strength in the backyards of the mind.

Population: 11,861
Miles from Kansas City: 215
Affiliate: 1550 KKLE-AM

The county seat of Cowley County and the fictional home of fictional Mary Ann Summers, Winfield, Kansas is one of the more unique cities in the Royals Radio Network. Winfield weighs in with a healthy population of 11,861, just larger than its Cowley County rival, Arkansas City's 11,581. (We'll all watch this population battle in coming years with great interest. Overall, Cowley County is home to roughly 36,291 Kansans, barely more than the number that called the place home in 1890, when over 34,000 were already there. Kansas, give us a century and change and we'll incrementally grow!

It was the westward migration to California, and later the railroads that spurred the dramatic growth of Winfield in the second-half of the nineteenth century, leading to a period "national acclaim", according to the town's official site. Just as the older trails and telegrams era was fading in the early twentieth century, Winfield was revived again. First by the discovery of oil in southeastern Kansas, then by the sweet sweet manna of government monies - although I'm sure Winfieldians remained staunch conservatives - in the form of Strother Field and a strong military presence in Winfield until the end of WWII. To this day, Stroher Field fuels the Cowley County economy.

Since then, there's been a certain leveling off, which is nevertheless preferable to an all-out decline and fall. Every year, Winfield proudly celebrates its history with the KANZA Days festival. Strangely enough, this festival named after a mistranslation of the indigenous group which was pushed off the land in the nineteenth century, only glancingly refers to the Kansas/Kanza/Kaw people, instead focusing more on the Car Show side of things. The whole thing is rather like the a group of Englishmen celebrating St. Patrick's Day by eating pizza, but when you see the morning sun rising over a vintage ash gold El Camino, you get it.

Winfield also hosts the Walnut Valley Festival (link here) a folk/bluegrass/etc gathering of some history, as the 2008 edition will be the 37th. The WV Fest features performances by a whole array of professional artists, as well as a number of contests in categories like "Mountain Dulcimer", "Old Time Fiddle", "Flatpick Guitar" and the like. As you might expect, you can also camp out at/during the event, and prizes are also given to the best decorated campsite. According to the official website, the campground features wireless internet, at leaving open the theoretical possibility of yours truly live-blogging from on site next September, while preparing to perform my rendition of "Greensleeves" on the mandolin. Somewhat amazingly, the Dixie Chicks played the fest in 1990, 1991, 1992. I say amazingly not because the fest is beneath them, but because this raises horrifying implications regarding the Chicks' ages. Band member Martie Ewin - I have no idea which one this is, and I'm not looking it up - also participated in the Fiddle competition in 1987 and 1989. For more on the Chicks at Winfield, click here.

The Dixie Chicks twangled and picked their way into the hearts of Winfield back in the early 90s.

Winfield really does seem to be something of an arty town, as the music festival is complemented by an annual "Arts in the Park" festival, as well as a thriving Community Theatre scene, which takes full advantage of a renovated Meyer Hall and the generous support of the citizens of Cowley County. Still, it was hard moving out of The Barn for many two years ago, but alas, as Queen Elizabeth has so gracefully put it, "grief is the price we pay for love". Winfield also boasts the Cowley County Museum, which offers the visitor a wonderful chance to view numerous rooms done up in nineteenth century fashion. In one room you can find pictures of the Dixie Chicks welcoming the troops home from the Spanish-American War.

No trip to Winfield would be complete without taking advantage of its gastronomical delights, and those delights might begin with breakfast at Braum's (or better yet, the local Daylight Donuts), continue onto lunch at College Hill Café (the perfect place to read RR while pretending to work on your novel), before wrapping up with a relaxed dinner at The Ridge. At the College Hill Café you'll also find the work of local artists featured on the walls, and frequent performances by local musicians. Seriously, on second thought, never leave College Hill Café, not with this menu.

The Black Cats listen to the Royals constantly on KKLE-AM.

Winfield is also home to Southwestern College, a holdover from the town's fin de siecle glory. Established in 1885, Southwestern College is affiliated with the United Methodist Church, and offers 37 majors mostly in education and the natural sciences. The school operates a 10-watt Fm radio station (KSWC), and features an active campus ministry. The school's English Department page also helpfully lists the careers available to English majors, but I can't find Blogger listed. Southwestern athletes also participate inter-collegiate sports (Go Moundbuilders!), and are spirited to victory by both cheer (squad reflections here) and dance squads. The dance team is known as the Black Cats and are reportedly rabid Royals fans.

Maybe the school's most distinctive feature is the large rockpile/Rock Mound on campus, a tradition started in the mid-1920s, and now home to numerous commemorative rocks. Each year campus groups are encouraged to add their rock to the pile. It is for this reason that the school's teams are known as the Mound Builders, not because the school founders were massive fans of the bizarre 1839 Cornelius Mathews novel Behemoth- A Legend of the Mound Builders. As you'll recall, there was a brief period in our history in which people were convinced the elaborate and mysterious mound formations across the Midwest had to have been the work of some long-lost civilization, (i.e. white people). In Behemoth, the vaguely Atlantean mound-builders were tormented by a gigantic mammoth-like thing that eventually destroyed their society. Anyway, none of this has anything to do with the S.C. mascot.

Of course, by pop culture law, all prolonged discussions of Winfield are required to include the tale of Mary Ann Summers, an ingénue who left on a three-hour tour and ended up stranded on Gilligan's Island. At press time, I have emailed the Mary Ann on GiligansIsle.com asking about her ties to Winfield, and will let you know if the correspondence comes to anything.

If hands could free you heart...

Of the 202 Kansas-born Big Leaguers, none found a way to have their mothers give birth in Winfield, although the city has found its way, on a darker note, into the annals of the game. On August 14, 1960, Hall of Famer Fred Clarke, died in Winfield, at the age of 87. Clarke was a 1945 Veteran's Committee enshrinee, and is also a member of the Iowa Sports Hall of Fame. Clarke's career line of .312/.386/.429 is augmented by the fact that he was a prolific base-stealer and a key member - and manager -- of four pennant winning teams in Pittsburgh (1901-1903, 1909). A look at Clarke's page on baseball-reference, reveals that he truly was one of the most dominant players of the turn-of-the-century, especially from 1897-1903. As manager, in 1901, Clarke famously moved Honus Wagner from the outfield to shortstop. In a 2000 article at Baseball Prospectus which argued that Tim Raines should be in the HOF, our own Rany Jazayerli pointed out that Raines' profile was somewhat similar to Clarke's.

Fred Clarke is buried at St. Mary's Cemetery in Winfield.

Previous Affiliate Profiles:

York, Nebraska
Conway, Arkansas
Waynesville, Missouri
Topeka, Kansas
Storm Lake, Iowa
Vinita, Oklahoma
California, Missouri
Garden City, Kansas
Belle Fourche, South Dakota
Ulysses, Kansas
Trenton, Missouri
Fairbury, Nebraska
Nebraska City, Nebraska

0 recs | Comment 31 comments

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Can't let Winfield get all the pub
I lived for two years in Ark City.  Go Bulldogs!

by BrRoyal on Dec 18, 2007 10:00 AM EST   0 recs

I always love this profiles.
Interestingly enough, or perhaps better referred to as "equally unsurprising," when European explorers started to move in from the African coastline and came across historic sites their first thoughts inevitably also were, "What great now tragically lost white civilization have we discovered here!?!"  

Anyway, here is the "official" account of Southwest College's mascot coronation:

"The nickname Moundbuilders originated in 1910 when students wanted to be called something other than "Preachers" or "Methodists."  Editorials toyed with various suggestions surrounding the fact that Southwestern students lived and breathed on "the hill."  "Cliff dwellers" was suggested but was scrapped for "Moundbuilders" when student Harry Hart wrote "anybody could just dwell there, but 'builders' shows action."  The Moundbuilding ceremony was instituted by Dean Leroy Allen in 1927 for "Nobody but Moundbuilders can build mounds.  So no other college has now, or ever is likely to have such a custom."

I do like the name.  Unique and one that inspires action, at least for one day a year.  I went to Dayton.  During moments of great excitement at football games my friends and I would stretch out our arms and wave them about stiffly.  Don't mess with the Flyers.

by James Quinn on Dec 18, 2007 10:29 AM EST   0 recs

As long as we are on the topic,
why did Long Beach State go with "Dirtbags?"

And why is Stanford "The Cardinal," instead of just the "Cardinals?"

by James Quinn on Dec 18, 2007 10:37 AM EST to parent up   0 recs

They Had To
Change from the Indian motif, so instead of calling themselves "The Eggheads", they went with a color "Cardinal", which is properly singular. This, they felt, adequately denoted their eggheadedness.
I'm not getting older....oh, wait, yes I am....and slower.... and weaker. God, this is great!

by philofthenorth on Dec 18, 2007 12:47 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

Cardinal is a color?
If so, that is a fact of which only an egghead would be aware.

by James Quinn on Dec 18, 2007 12:54 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

I Forget How
I found out about that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_(color)
I'm not getting older....oh, wait, yes I am....and slower.... and weaker. God, this is great!

by philofthenorth on Dec 18, 2007 1:52 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

Stanford
The color cardinal (red) is the "mascot" of Stanford University.  Well, not really the mascot, but when they refer to a Stanford athletics team as the "Stanford Cardinal," they're not talking about the bird; they're talking about the color.  That's why there is no "s" on the end.
I probably disagree with you.

by NYRoyal on Dec 18, 2007 2:09 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

isn't their mascot an evergreen tree?
Success is counted sweetest by those who ne'er succeed. - Emily Dickinson

by buddyball on Dec 18, 2007 2:30 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

It is
...and that has always puzzled me, somebody get on that please.

by MileHighKCfan on Dec 18, 2007 2:40 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

Battle Creek, Wyoming
Is missing from the previous profiles.  Once again, great work Will.
"I'm tired of all these stupid a$$ questions every day. Why the f**k would I hit Brett for Miller?" The rest is history.

by DC Royal on Dec 18, 2007 10:51 AM EST   0 recs

you mean Grass Creek?
I've kept that out because it isn't technically a radio location...

by royalsreview on Dec 18, 2007 11:36 AM EST to parent up   0 recs

Hey, my Bible U. played them in men's
basketball.  Glad to see that they are still in existence unlike my esteemed college.  Too sad....oh well, I think I will go chip ice off the sidewalk.

by grudz69 on Dec 18, 2007 10:55 AM EST   0 recs

more on Clarke
In 1909 Clarke guided Pittsburgh to a club-record 110 wins and hit two homers against Detroit in the WS, which the Pirates won in seven games. That was Clarke's last great achievement. He had just completed four straight sub-.300 seasons as a hitter, after having hit over .300 ten times in his first 13 campaigns. Pushing sore, aging legs, Cap hit .324 in 1911, then virtually stopped playing, though he appeared in 12 games in 1913-15. After the 1915 season, he quit baseball and returned to his Kansas ranch.

http://www.baseballlibrary.com/ballplayers/player.php?name=Fred_Clarke_1872

by royalsreview on Dec 18, 2007 11:29 AM EST   0 recs

All I know about Winfield, KS
Is that we (Derby High School) beat the hell out of them regularly in football, back in the old days of the Ark Valley League.
I probably disagree with you.

by NYRoyal on Dec 18, 2007 2:10 PM EST   0 recs

memories of Winfield
A good friend of mine moved to Winfield after graduate school and we would go visit in the fall for the Blue Grass festival.  It was an amazing experience for an East Coaster like me.  At that time, three stages going at the same time, unknowns and well knowns (Doc Watson), and lots of adult beverages.  We would walk thru the campgrounds and there were all sorts of people playing instruments and drinking adult beverages.  My t-shirts finally bit the dust, but the memories prevail.
Success is counted sweetest by those who ne'er succeed. - Emily Dickinson

by buddyball on Dec 18, 2007 2:33 PM EST   0 recs

ummmm, sort of
just as seedy, but different
more bluegrass, less Grateful Dead
Success is counted sweetest by those who ne'er succeed. - Emily Dickinson

by buddyball on Dec 18, 2007 10:58 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

It's much more of a family atmosphere
Its a time to focus on enjoying life with music... and beer and whisky. definitely alot of awesome musicians.  
over the line smokey

by saintalfonzo on Dec 19, 2007 1:19 AM EST to parent up   0 recs

that picture of maryann is capitivating as hell
maybe its just the technicolor or something...

by LeoBloom on Dec 18, 2007 3:32 PM EST   0 recs

It's the picture
...of the Dixie Chicks that gets me. I would have never guessed that.

by MileHighKCfan on Dec 18, 2007 4:10 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

It's Not The
Technicolor; she was hot. I always was a Mary Ann guy. Ginger seemed very high-maintenance.
I'm not getting older....oh, wait, yes I am....and slower.... and weaker. God, this is great!

by philofthenorth on Dec 19, 2007 11:43 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

Hometown
Hey, this is really cool to see my hometown profiled.  

by pinetarredincident on Dec 20, 2007 2:50 PM EST   0 recs

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