Fencing seated upon an outcrop of the Fencepost limestone. (1873) On the early open ranges of the Kansas frontier, typically, the burden was on the farmers to protect their crops from free-range and driven cattle. Common practice of earlier frontier farmers in the East and the in
Old Northwest Territory was to use the timber cleared from the new fields for
split-rail fencing. But, at the time of American settlement, Kansas was largely treeless. Owing to the intensive grazing of millions of buffalo, as well as to the particular land management of the 19th century
Plains Indians, the small amount of timber that was available was confined to river banks. In eastern Kansas, abundant, large, flinty stones could be collected from the hills and fields to build long stone walls. However, in several counties in central Kansas, where most of the rock was soft shale or chalk, a practical alternative was available; one particular bed of stone had ideal properties to substitute for wood fenceposts. Forming the posts required some labor and the posts are heavy – – but, with the recent invention of
barbed wire, only one post was needed every or so. Fresh exposed slabs are soft and easy to work; the stone hardens only after removal from the shale and drying out in the open air. Curiously, the natural bed is not
jointed; Lines of the oldest stone posts have stood in place for well over a hundred years. But in the 1920s, rural labor costs had increased to the point that stone posts could no longer be made and installed as cheaply as mass-produced steel and treated wood post. As stone post fences are removed or are replaced with steel or wood post fences, the stone posts are usually collected for reuse, often in landscaping, but, because of their greater weight and strength, they are also used as corner posts in new fences. Currently, the Permian top-ledge
Cottonwood Limestone is commercially split and shaped to superficially resemble the Kansas Stone Posts. Examples are seen in the Kansas Veterans' Cemetery at Wakeeny. These "faux" post rocks (such as seen on the left in the cited image) can be detected by their all-white color, presence of
fusulinids, larger drill size, absence of iron staining, and absence of Cretaceous mollusks. {{Gallery
Quarrying Kansas' stone fenceposts were manufactured from bluffs that had been cut by regional rivers through the Blue Hills. On these hills, the unweathered limestone bed can be exposed by removing shallow overburden. Quarrying leaves a long trench from in width in which water can collect after a rain. The posts were generally used with the rough quarry face finish; so the drilled holes usually remain visible. After farmers began making these Stone Posts, building blocks for construction were quarried from the bed in the same way, so the drill holes the quarry faces are often visible in buildings unless removed by hammered or pitched face finishing. Traditional hole splitting can still be used in Fencepost limestone quarries remaining today, especially if the rustic finish is desired; however, saw cutting of the limestone in-place is also done, depending on the product finish desired. {{Gallery
Construction stone (known informally as the "Cathedral of the Plains"). Parishioner farmers hauled 17 million pounds (7.7 million kg) of Fencepost limestone in horse-drawn wagons to build it. A regional construction material, Fencepost limestone appears yellowish to buff with orange to brown tinted streaking, sometimes weathering to nearly white in color when openly exposed for many decades. Use of this particular limestone bed of for construction slightly preceded the realization that it could be used for fenceposts. First homes for settler farmers on the treeless prairie were typically dugouts and
sod houses. Commercial
dimensional lumber was an expense ill-afforded by settler farmers, even more so where it had to be shipped in from out-of-state. The Greenhorn Formation has many limestone beds, but most are too thin, too soft, or too fragile to be used in permanent buildings. The Fencepost bed, however, has convenient thickness and is easily worked into tough, durable, and decorative building blocks. Its resistance to erosion compared to the overlying Carlile Shale results in it forming broad bluffs or plateaus; so, it is abundant and relatively easy to quarry. In an age of
kerosene lamps and coal stoves, it was a fireproof alternative to scarce timber. Fencepost limestone displaying
Baculites yokoyamai and other fossils on the exterior of the First United Methodist Church of Hays. It was normal to lay the Fencepost limestone with its bedding plane horizontal; so, fossils can only be seen in thin cross section in the walls of almost all buildings built with Fencepost limestone. However, when laid in this stretcher fashion, the characteristic red-orange or brown lines are displayed. Many buildings have the limestone left with quarry face, many showing the holes drilled for splitting. Some buildings may have hammered finish, others pitched. It is uncommon to see this stone set in walls in vertical
"shiner" orientation, but such an orientation can show off the fossil content. was cut into slabs and set vertically; and its index fossil,
Collignoniceras woollgari, is displayed in well-preserved cross sections in a few places. Use of Post Rock in buildings declined in the 1920s as concrete came into greater use. Resurgence occurred in the use of the stone in public buildings in the 1930s as these were built as WPA projects. Use of the Fencepost limestone continued to later times through very few examples, more likely to use sawn and shiner-laid stone than the historic buildings. Later examples include the Guaranty State Bank, Beloit, 1958, and the Gross Field House and Coliseum,
FHSU, 1960s and 1975.
Landscaping Nostalgia for the stone post fencing, as well as the unique coloration and rustic quarry facing of the stone, finds the posts and the source limestone used in modern landscaping in locations as far away from the
outcrop as people are willing to haul it. Commonly, original posts removed from demolished or replaced stone post fences are repurposed. Also, blocks of Fencepost limestone are recovered from collapsed or demolished buildings. Fresh stone is also quarried for landscaping and novelty products.
Sculpture Roughly only a foot thick, fine-grained Fencepost limestone has seen limited use in public sculpture. However, the ability to make large stone slabs has seen the adaptation of the bed to
bas-relief. The bas-relief technique permits the artist to manipulate the variations of tone within the slab. Past Victoria sculptor John Linenberger used this technique in a carving on the convent adjoining the
St. Fidelis Church, carving through the brown layer to expose the lighter interior stone. Hays sculptor Peter "Fritz" Felten, Jr., used the same technique in plaques mounted in the sloping pedestal of his
Monarch of the Plains at the
Fort Hays State Historic Site. More recent Pete Felten sculptures,
Train Hwy (1995) and
Pteranodon (2000), demonstrate use of the tones of the Post Rock, which locally can have outer brown layers with a lighter inner core. In
Pteranodon, displayed at Exit 161 on Interstate 70, the head is carved from brown Fencepost limestone, oriented so that the dinosaur's crest and bill are the exposed lighter-shade inner core of the limestone. The multi-tone effect is also seen in Stone Post slab sculptures displayed at the Fossil Station Convenience Store at
Russell, adjacent to exit 184 of I-70. The weathered Post Rock used here is particularly white, but with a blackened top layer and red-toned inner core. One bas-relief carving is of a
Buffalo, the shallow cut into the blackened layer meant to suggest the dark hide of the bison. The other carving is of the
Hereford breed of cattle, a breed with red body and white face; the stone is carved so as to reveal the redness in contrast to white face and horns. California sculptor Fred Whitman has carved several sculptures from antique Stone Posts. Near
Lucas, Fred has carved faces of four Lucas residents into four Stone Posts standing in fences along the
Post Rock Scenic Byway.
Hydrocarbon exploration The Fencepost limestone has a particular usefulness in
hydrocarbon exploration. While it is certainly too thin to be a viable hydrocarbon reserve, even for
fracking, the Fencepost is located close to known producing layers, and has a particular quality that is useful in locating them. The Fencepost shows a unique "double-peak" or "prolonged kick" in electric
well logs, and can be used to locate reserve formations in several states north and west of Kansas. Consequently, the Fencepost bed has been used as a datum (a fixed reference point) in charting subterranean sections of rock lying under the
High Plains. == Lithology ==