Arts and music Two galleries support an arts community in the city. Located in the original public library building, The Carnegie Center for the Arts provides gallery space to local artists and houses the Dodge City Arts Council. The second gallery, the Second Avenue Art Guild, exhibits the work of regional artists in ceramics, photography, and other media. The Depot Theater Company, based in the former Santa Fe Railroad Depot, puts on theatrical productions throughout the year. Founded in 1984, the group performs in both the old depot and the Occident Theater.
Events Each summer, the Dodge City Chamber of Commerce holds Dodge City Days, the city's annual community festival. Lasting ten days, it includes the Dodge City Roundup Rodeo, a parade, a beauty pageant, music concerts, a golf tournament, arts and craft shows, and other activities. Several other community events are held throughout the year. In early May, the city's sizable
Mexican community celebrates
Cinco de Mayo in Wright Park with live music, folk dance performances, and traditional
Mexican cuisine. To celebrate
Independence Day, the city holds its Old-Fashioned Fourth of July, which includes a fireworks display and children's activities at Boot Hill. Christmas in Old Dodge City, the city's winter holiday festival, starts in late November and lasts until
Christmas. Two other annual events reflect the central role of agriculture in the local economy. The Ford County Fair is held in July and includes
4-H and
FFA exhibits, competitions, and shows, as well as other activities. Also in July, the Western Kansas Manufacturers Association (WKMA) holds the 3i Show, an
agri-business expo of agricultural products, technology, and services.
Points of interest (2010) Located in and around the city are a number of historical sites, museums, and landmarks dedicated to Dodge City's Old West heritage. The
Boot Hill Museum, located downtown, contains thousands of artifacts and a variety of exhibits portraying the culture of the city's early years. The museum's larger exhibits include: Front Street, a partial reconstruction of downtown Dodge City as it existed in 1876; the
Long Branch Saloon and the
Long Branch Variety Show; the Saratoga Saloon; the Hardesty House, a period-typical home built in 1879; the city's original
Boot Hill Cemetery; the
Mexican Village, a number of artifacts from the Santa Fe railroad workers settlement; and the
Kansas Cowboy Hall of Fame. The
Santa Fe Trail Remains, located west of the city, are preserved wagon tracks from a section of the Santa Fe Trail. Other historical landmarks include: El Capitan, a life-sized bronze sculpture of a
Texas Longhorn steer built to commemorate the cattle drives that once ended in the city; a bronze statue of famous Dodge City lawman Wyatt Earp; and the Santa Fe Depot, the largest extant train depot in Kansas. To capitalize on this heritage, the city promotes its downtown business district as historic Old Dodge City complete with Western-themed tourist attractions, shops, and restaurants. Visitors can tour the district by
trolley or by taking the Dodge City Trail of Fame walking tour. The
state of Kansas operates the similarly themed Boot Hill Casino & Resort on the west side of the city – when it opened for business in December 2009, Boot Hill became the first state-owned casino in the United States.
Dodge City Civic Center and
United Wireless Arena are the city's two main indoor event venues. The Civic Center, built in 1954, is a 2,800-seat multipurpose facility that has hosted a variety of events, including concerts and sporting events. United Wireless Arena, opened in 2011, is a 5,500-seat multipurpose arena located next to the Boot Hill Casino on the west side of the city. Owned by the City of Dodge City and Ford County, the arena complex includes the Magouirk Conference Center. Other sites of interest in the city include the Dodge City Zoo and the Kansas Teachers' Hall of Fame. The Zoo is located in Wright Park and is home to more than 45 animals. Located downtown, the Kansas Teachers' Hall of Fame hosts exhibits on education in Kansas and claims to be the first of its kind in the United States.
Religion There are 33
Christian churches in and around Dodge City. The
Roman Catholic Diocese of Dodge City is based in the city. Established in 1951, it comprises 28 Kansas counties, roughly the southwestern quarter of the state. The city is home to the diocese's current cathedral as well as its former cathedral, the
Cathedral of Our Lady of Guadalupe and
Sacred Heart Cathedral, respectively. Also headquartered in the city is the Dodge City District of the
United Methodist Church, which consists of 22 counties in southwestern Kansas.
Sports Dodge City Community College's athletic teams, the Dodge City Conquistadors (or "Conqs" for short), compete in several sports in the
Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference (KJCCC). Beyond DCCC sports, Dodge City also hosts amateur baseball and professional motorsports. The Dodge City Athletics, nicknamed the "A's", are a collegiate summer baseball team in the
Jayhawk Collegiate League of the
National Baseball Congress. Both the A's and the DCCC Conquistadors baseball team use Cavalier Field, located on the former St. Mary of the Plains College campus, as their home field. Dodge City Raceway Park, located immediately south of the city, is a 3/8-mile dirt track that hosts
midget and
sprint car racing from April through October. Past events at the park have included
National Sprint Tour and
World of Outlaws races. The Western Kansas Dirt Riders, a
motocross team, race at Tumbleweed Raceway adjacent to the Raceway Park. In the past, Dodge City hosted college football and professional basketball as well. From 1970 to 1980, the annual
Boot Hill Bowl post-season
college football game was played in Dodge City. The bowl was sanctioned by the
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and featured schools such as
Washburn University and
Emporia State University. The last game was played on November 21, 1980. From 2000 to 2007, the city was home to a minor league professional basketball team, the
Dodge City Legend of the
United States Basketball League.
In popular culture Starting in the 1870s, the violent episodes of early Dodge City history, particularly the exploits of Wyatt Earp, attracted national media attention. National news coverage of the 1883
Dodge City War civil strife fueled public perceptions of frontier turmoil and established Dodge City as the "Sodom of the West" in the public consciousness. Gunfighters and lawmen such as Earp and his brothers and partners became celebrities, and sensationalized versions of their activities entered period popular culture as the subject of
dime novels. Over time, the level and scale of the violence in early Dodge City were significantly embellished, becoming the stuff of legend. This trend continued into the 20th century, particularly after the 1931 publication of
Stuart N. Lake's book
Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal. Regarded in
American folklore as the quintessential rough and rowdy Old West frontier town, Dodge City served as the setting for numerous works of
Western-themed media, including later popular films and television series. Dodge City was the setting of the long-running radio and television series
Gunsmoke. The series followed the adventures of fictional
U.S. Marshal Matt Dillon portrayed on radio by
William Conrad and then on television by
James Arness, as he dealt with gunfighters, cattle rustlers, gamblers and other criminals while enforcing the law in the frontier town. The radio lasted from 1952 to 1961 while the television series ran from 1955 to 1975, on the
CBS television network, and was one of the longest-running prime-time TV dramas in American history. The show proved to be culturally influential and promoted the legend of Dodge City's Old West era. It also served as the source of the idiom "get [the hell] out of Dodge", which means to leave a dangerous area quickly. In honor of the series, the city government changed the name of Walnut Street, one of its downtown streets, to Gunsmoke Street, in 1959. The city has also been a setting for a number of films and television series dramatizing the career of Wyatt Earp. These include several seasons of the series
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp starring
Hugh O'Brian from 1955 to 1961, and the films ''
Winchester '73 (1950), with James Stewart; Masterson of Kansas (1954), with George Montgomery; Cheyenne Autumn (1964), featuring Stewart, Richard Widmark, and Edward G. Robinson; and Wyatt Earp (1994) with Kevin Costner and Gene Hackman. In the 1939 film Dodge City'', the fictional lawman Wade Hatton, played by
Errol Flynn, was modeled on Earp. The area officially called
West Brewarrina, part of
Brewarrina, New South Wales, Australia, was dubbed "Dodge City" by its
Aboriginal residents, after they had been moved there in 1965 from the
Aboriginal reserve known as
Brewarrina Aboriginal Mission. The name reflects the racial segregation practised in the town. In the television series
Smallville, Metropolis is said to be southwest of Dodge City with
Smallville, "
Superman" /
Clark Kent's childhood and adolescent residence, located west of Wichita. More recently, Dodge City served as a setting for the 2005 multi-platform video game
Gun. The
Bruce Springsteen song "If I Was the Priest", from his 2020 album
Letter to You, has a lyric where one character tells another "We need you, son, tonight up in Dodge City". In 2022, Country Singer
Charley Crockett released his song "Black Sedan" from his 2022 album
The Man From Waco, which includes the line "Hello, Dodge City, tell me how do you do?". Dodge City is prominently featured in
Ken Burns PBS documentary
The American Buffalo, which premiered on October 16, 2023. ==Notable people==