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Check out these four unique Airbnb experiences in western Kansas
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New Kansas brewery uses food trucks, local beer to entice customers
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Dodge City Daily Globe
On Friday, June 25, the Final Friday downtown Dodge City event will be held for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic shut down activities in 2020.
The last Final Friday was held in February 2020.
This year, according to organizers, will see some new downtown Dodge City locations taking part in the festivities.
Kicking off the day will be Boot Hill Distillery (501 W. Spruce St.), with live music and cocktails at $6 running from 3 to 11 p.m.
From 4 to 6 p.m. and from 4 to 10 p.m., the new Ford County Legacy Center (310 Gunsmoke St.), will feature motorsports legends and snacks and 2nd Ave. Art Guild (608 N. 2nd Ave.), will have refreshments and local artists on hand, respectively.
Dodge City, Kansas: Once a wicked little town
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A small town dragged its feet on COVID-19 mask mandates. Now residents are paying the price. Andrea Ball, Jayme Fraser and Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY © Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY NETWORK A water tower gleams in the afternoon sun in Dodge City, Kansas.
DODGE CITY In the midst of a worsening pandemic, as coronavirus cases climbed, elected leaders in a former frontier town famous for its gunfights faced a choice.
They could pass a mask mandate at the urging of health experts, or reject the measure blasted by some as a violation of their personal freedoms.
The five commissioners of Dodge City, Kansas, a politically red cattle community of some 27,000 people, had resisted such measures all summer and into fall. Like other parts of rural and small-city America, Dodge City had mostly returned to normal after shaking off the pandemic’s first wave.