A river rising in eastern Colorado and flowing about 901 km (560 mi) eastward across central Kansas to join the Republican River and form the Kansas River.
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Smok·y Hill River (smō'kē) ![]() |
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| Smoky Hill River | |
| River | |
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Cattle crossing the Smoky Hill River at Ellsworth (photo by A. Gardner, 1867).
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| Country | |
|---|---|
| States | Kansas, Colorado |
| Tributaries | |
| - left | Saline River, Solomon River |
| Source | |
| - location | Cheyenne County, Colorado |
| - coordinates | 38°57′1″N 102°34′49″W / 38.95028°N 102.58028°W [1] |
| Mouth | Kansas River |
| - location | Geary County, Kansas |
| - coordinates | 39°3′36″N 96°48′4″W / 39.06°N 96.80111°W [1] |
| Length | 560 mi (901 km) |
The Smoky Hill River is a 560-mile (900 km) river in the central Great Plains of North America, running through the U.S. states of Colorado and Kansas.[2]
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The Smoky Hill gets its name from the Smoky Hills region of north-central Kansas through which it flows. Natives living along the Smoky Hill considered it and the Kansas River to be the same river, and their names for it included Chetolah and Okesee-sebo. Early maps of European explorers called the river (also in combination with the Kansas River) the River of the Padoucas as its source is located in what was then Padouca (Comanche) territory.[3]
The USGS lists a number of other variant names for the Smoky Hill River, including Chitolah River, Fork of the Hill Buckaneuse, La Fourche de la Cote Boucaniere, La Touche de la Cote Bucanieus, Manoiyohe, Pe P'a, Sand River, Shallow River, Smoky Creek, Branche de la Montagne a la Fumee, Ka-i-urs-kuta, Oke-see-sebo River, and Rahota katit hibaru, among others.[1]
The Smoky Hill River originates in the High Plains of eastern Colorado and flows east. Both the main course of the river and its north fork rise in northern Cheyenne County, Colorado.[1][4] The two streams converge roughly 5 miles west of Russell Springs in Logan County, Kansas.[4] From there, the river continues generally eastward through the Smoky Hills region. The Saline River, one of the Smoky Hill's two main tributaries, joins the river in eastern Saline County.[5] The other major tributary, the Solomon River, joins the Smoky Hill in western Dickinson County.[6] The Smoky Hill joins the Republican River at Junction City, Kansas to form the Kansas River.[1]
The Smoky Hill River directly drains an area of 8,810 square miles (22,818 km2). The combined Smoky Hill-Saline Basin drains 12,229 square miles (31,673 km2).[7] The entire Smoky Hill drainage basin covers approximately 20,000 square miles, including most of north-central and northwestern Kansas.[8] Via the Kansas and Missouri Rivers, the Smoky Hill is part of the Mississippi River watershed.
The Smoky Hill feeds two reservoirs: Cedar Bluff Reservoir in Trego County and Kanopolis Lake in Ellsworth County.[7]
The largest city along the Smoky Hill River is Salina. Besides Junction City, other Kansas towns along the river are Ellsworth, Marquette and Abilene.
The earliest known reference to the river was on a 1732 map by French cartographer d'Anville who labeled it the River of the Padoucas. A 1758 map referred to it as the Padoucas River. An early reference to the river as the Smoky Hill was by American explorer Zebulon Pike during his 1806 expedition to visit the Pawnee.[3] The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 established Kansas Territory, which included the entire length of the Smoky Hill River.[9]
With the onset of the Pike's Peak Gold Rush in 1858, an ancient Native trail along the Smoky Hill River provided the shortest, fastest route west across Kansas, becoming known as the Smoky Hill Trail.[10][11] Beginning in 1865, the trail served as the route for the short-lived Butterfield Overland Despatch.[3] To protect travelers, the U.S. Army established several forts along the trail, including Fort Downer, Fort Harker, Fort Hays, Fort Monument, and Fort Wallace.[12] Before American colonization, the land along the Smoky Hill River was favored hunting ground for the Plains Indians. In 1867, the Comanche and the Kiowa, and in 1868, the Sioux and the Arapaho signed treaties withdrawing their opposition to the construction of a railroad along the Smoky Hill River.[3] The Kansas Pacific Railway was completed in 1870, rendering the Smoky Hill Trail obsolete.[13]
In 1948, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers finished construction of a dam on the Smoky Hill for flood control in southeastern Ellsworth County, Kansas, creating Kanopolis Lake.[14] In 1951, the United States Bureau of Reclamation completed another dam on the river, this one for irrigation as well as flood control, in southeastern Trego County, creating Cedar Bluff Reservoir.[15]
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| Republican River | |
| Salina (city, Kansas) | |
| Abilene (city, Kansas) |
| Who goes to smoky hill high school? | |
| Who goes to Smoky Hill Hih school? | |
| What river runs through the great smoky mountains? |
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/. Read more | |
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