top of page

Murals

Stop by the “Welcome to Osawatomie” mural at the corner of 5th and Main and strike a pose inside the Mile Zero bike rack sculpture. 

 

This mural is large-scale, nearly 40 feet high and 40 feet long, and features Kansas iconography along the bottom — Osawatomie is a Kansas border war town after all! Amber waves of grain (hello from the Wheat State), save the bees (the State insect), plant sunflowers (the State flower), and wave to the trains that still roll through town!

Mile Zero Mural.png

The City of Osawatomie applied for a grant through the Kansas Department of Commerce’s Office of Rural Prosperity and the “Rural Mural” program — a pilot program designed to bring public art into rural communities. The City received $15,000 for the project.

 

The mural design was by Hunter Sinclair Myers of Wichita’s Brickmob. They have a team of artists and designers who tag-team on murals of all sizes and styles, and a proven track record of great projects and professional experience.

If you are coming into town, from the North on 8th Street or from the South on 6th street, you are sure to receive a colorful greeting on the wing walls of the dike. The project was funded through a grant by the Allen W. and Gladys Hawkins Charitable Foundation.

Bee The Good 1.jpg
Bee The Good 2.jpg

Art on the 8th Street wing wall by Art by Lynnsey

Find the friendly tree painted in the heart of downtown and grab a photo while “sitting” on its swings. 

Tree Mural.jpeg

Art by Eye Cough Art.      Watch his video of the transformation.

Don’t forget the two historical murals in the courtyard of the Osawatomie Railroad Museum

20250425_111742.jpg

"Big Boy" engines were first built in 1941. Each is 133 feet long and weigh about 1.2 million pounds. Eight remain in existence and one is the world's largest operational steam engine

President "Teddy" Roosevelt addressing the Osawatomie crowd on August 31, 1910, for the dedication of the John Brown Memorial Park

bottom of page