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This Kansas Town Advertised the World’s Largest Well. It Wasn’t.

This Kansas Town Advertised the World’s Largest Well. It Wasn’t.

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Baudelaire: The city of Greensburg is a city in the southwest part of Kansas. It’s pretty small, less than twice the size of New York’s Central Park, and it’s a hundred miles west of Wichita. In the late 1800s, Greensburg was a small town in a relatively new state that needed to establish some building blocks. But it had two problems. The first was: The city didn’t have a reliable water source. Second: Greensburg had little to attract visitors. Its dusty streets and wooden storefronts didn’t really offer a compelling enough reason for travelers to stop by.

Heather Bailey: They really wanted to get Greensburg out there. They really wanted to make a name for Greensburg, and they really wanted to attract people and businesses here.

Baudelaire: To ultimately solve both problems, the town government chose to think big when it came to the well. Enormous, in fact. Their big idea: a big well. And it was massive. I’m talking a well over 100 feet deep and more than 30 feet wide. To put that into perspective, it was large enough to hold the biggest animal on earth: the blue whale. Greensburg got its water and the attention that came with claiming to have the world’s largest hand-dug well.