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Monday, June 22, 2026
More like an episode
Saturday, June 20, 2026
Summary of Memorial to James A. McClure (Judge McClure) Full Transcription of the Memorial to James A. McClure
James Austin McClure (1882–1954) was a prominent Topeka, Kansas, attorney and judge known for his integrity, fairness, legal acumen, and community service.
Early Life and Education
- Born December 14, 1882, in Clinton, Iowa, to Samuel T. McClure (Presbyterian minister) and Alta Case McClure.
- Family moved to Topeka in 1890.
- Attended Topeka public schools and Washburn University (then Washburn College) starting in 1902, combining law and college courses.
- Worked as a stenographer at Santa Fe Offices while attending law school at night; later served as secretary to Chief Justice William A. Johnston of the Kansas Supreme Court.
Legal Career
- Admitted to the Kansas Bar in 1909 and began private practice.
- Served as Assistant County Attorney of Shawnee County (1911–1913).
- Joined the law firm headed by Judge Monroe (with Lee Monroe, Cyrus M. Monroe, and W. S. Roark).
- Appointed in 1919 by Governor Henry J. Allen as Judge of the First Division of the District Court of Shawnee County to fill an unexpired term. Elected in 1920 and re-elected in 1924; served nine years on the bench until resigning in 1928.
- Praised for keen perception of the law, sound judgment, fairness, impartiality, patience, and kindness — especially toward first offenders and the inexperienced. Known for listening attentively and tempering justice with understanding.
- Resumed private practice in 1928 as a member of Stone, McClure, Webb, Johnson & Oman (later McClure, Webb & Oman), where he became the senior member. Regarded as a “lawyer’s lawyer” who counseled many attorneys.
Public Service and Community Involvement
- Elected to the Topeka Board of Education (1929), serving 12 years.
- Instructor at Washburn University School of Law.
- President of the Topeka Bar Association (1926); member of the American Bar Association, Kansas Bar Association, Topeka Bar Association, Masonic bodies, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Alpha Delta, First Presbyterian Church, Kansas Children’s Service League, and Capper Foundation for Crippled Children.
- Active in political affairs and public service; described as a tireless, thorough, modest, and delightful colleague who never sought personal glory.
Personal Life
- Married Louise Allison of Topeka in 1915. They had two sons: Dr. James A. McClure and Robert A. McClure (a practicing lawyer in Topeka).
- Enjoyed a happy marriage until Louise’s death in 1951.
- At his death on June 8, 1954, he was survived by his sons, five grandchildren, and a sister (Mrs. Victor G. Kropf of Chicago, Illinois).
The memorial was respectfully submitted on May 27, 1955, by a committee chaired by Robert L. Webb (with Marlin S. Casey, T. M. Lillard, Harry W. Colmery, and John E. DuMars).
This document highlights Judge McClure as a dedicated legal figure deeply rooted in Topeka’s institutions and a model of professional integrity. It aligns well with your family heritage interests in the McClure line in Kansas. Let me know if you'd like a cleaned-up full transcription, family tree notes, or anything else!
Full Transcription of the Memorial to James A. McClure
MEMORIAL TO JAMES A. McCLURE
JAMES AUSTIN McCLURE died at Topeka, Kansas, on June 8, 1954. His death resulted in great loss to his associates, to the Topeka Bar Association and to the Bar of the State of Kansas, as well, not only because of his outstanding ability as a lawyer but also because of his high sense of integrity and fairness.
James A. McClure was born at Clinton, Iowa, on December 14, 1882, the son of Samuel T. and Alta Case McClure. His father was a minister of the Presbyterian Church who moved to Topeka in 1890.
Mr. McClure attended the public schools of Topeka and entered Washburn University (then Washburn College) in 1902, combining law and college courses. In 1907, he became a stenographer in the Santa Fe Offices and attended law school at night. Later, he became secretary to William A. Johnston, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Kansas, remaining in that position until he finished his law course.
He was admitted to the bar in 1909 when he began the private practice of the law. From 1911 to 1913, he served as Assistant County Attorney of Shawnee County. He then joined the law firm headed by Judge Monroe and consisting of Lee Monroe, Cyrus M. Monroe and W. S. Roark.
In 1919, Mr. McClure was appointed by Governor Henry J. Allen as Judge of the First Division of the District Court of Shawnee County, to fill the unexpired term of Judge Robert D. Garver. Judge McClure was elected to that office in 1920 and re-elected in 1924. During his nine years on the bench, he distinguished himself not only by his keen perception of the law and his sound judgment but also by his fairness and impartiality, and his patience and kindness. Judge McClure took a great deal of interest in first-offenders and those inexperienced who came before him, and he tried always to temper justice with understanding. He always found time to listen to the complaints and troubles of a juror, a witness, a bailiff and perhaps even a lawyer, and to give them such help as was proper under the circumstances.
Judge McClure resigned the judgeship in 1928 to resume the private practice of law and became a member of the firm of Stone, McClure, Webb, Johnson & Oman. In 1929, he was elected as a member of the Topeka Board of Education in which position he served for twelve years. For a number of years, he was an instructor at Washburn University School of Law.
Judge McClure was a consistent member of one of the major political parties and always maintained an active interest in political affairs. He also maintained an active interest in other public affairs, and for many years prior to his death he
served on the governing bodies of The Kansas Children’s Service League and The Capper Foundation for Crippled Children. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church, the Masonic bodies, The American Bar Association, the Bar Association of the State of Kansas, and the Topeka Bar Association, and served as President of the Topeka Association in 1926. He was also a member of Phi Delta Theta and Phi Alpha Delta.
Judge McClure was a tireless worker, and no suggestion was too small to enlist on his part a thorough investigation before calling the job “done.” He was never satisfied with the meager facts given to him in the first instance but delved and searched for all facts that might bear on his problem. He searched for the law in the same manner. He almost never quit. Until ten years before his death, he seldom closed his office before six o’clock. Despite his close attention to duty, he was a delightful person with whom to work, and he never sought personal glory. He was in fact a very modest person. In his twenty-six years of practice after leaving the bench, he counselled many lawyers who sought his aid, and he could very properly be called a lawyer’s lawyer. He was known to many of his acquaintances as Judge McClure although to most of his friends he was just plain “Jim.”
At the time of his death, he was the senior member of the firm of McClure, Webb & Oman.
In 1915, Judge McClure was married to Louise Allison, of Topeka, and to them were born two sons. Judge and Mrs. McClure enjoyed a happy and congenial life together until Mrs. McClure’s death in 1951. Surviving Judge McClure are his sons, Dr. James A. McClure, of Topeka, and Robert A. McClure, a practicing lawyer of Topeka, five grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Victor G. Kropf, of Chicago, Illinois.
Memorial Committee.
This is a complete, clean transcription of the four-page memorial document. It preserves the original wording, spelling, and structure as closely as possible. Let me know if you would like it formatted as a Word document, PDF, or with any annotations (such as potential family connections
Friday, June 19, 2026
Topeka Needs More Retail — And Here’s Why It’s Good for All of Us
We all want a stronger city with more jobs, better services, and money to fix our streets and parks without raising property taxes every year. One of the smartest, most practical things we can do right now is focus on attracting more quality retail to our community.
Here’s why it makes simple sense:
This isn’t something to feel guilty about — it’s smart. It grows our sales tax base, which pays for police, fire, roads, parks, and city services. The more of these “outside” sales we capture, the less pressure there is on local property taxpayers. Successful cities do this all the time. We should too.
Right now, Topeka needs stronger sales tax revenue. Focusing on retail development — by making it easier for good projects to happen, updating zoning where it makes sense, and supporting businesses that serve both locals and the bigger region — is one of the best tools we have.
The more of us who speak up, the clearer the message becomes. Topeka can be a place where people want to stop, shop, stay longer, and invest. It starts with recognizing that our opportunity is bigger than our city limits.
Let’s get to work.
Jason Tryon - Let's support Jason.....staff says nice things.
Topeka Public Works Retention: A 20-Year Perspective (2006–2026)
Looking back two decades reveals a recurring pattern of leadership churn in Topeka’s Public Works Department that has likely contributed to inconsistent infrastructure progress, lost momentum on capital projects, and challenges in supporting private development. While specific tenure lengths vary and full historical lists are not always publicized, public records, news archives, and city announcements show frequent transitions at the director level and reliance on interims — a symptom of broader retention difficulties in key municipal roles.
Notable Leadership Transitions (Approximate Timeline)
- Mid-2010s: Jason Peek served as Public Works Director (visible in 2017 discussions on street paving and infrastructure needs). He was a longer-term figure compared to recent directors, involved in efforts to address worsening street conditions.
- ~2019–2020s: Braxton Copley (now Assistant City Manager) served in Public Works/oversight roles, including as interim director at times. Internal promotions helped provide continuity during transitions.
- 2021–2024 period: Additional shifts occurred, with internal staff filling gaps. Budgets frequently noted vacancies and the strain on remaining employees.
- 2024–2025: Steve Groen hired from out-of-state (Minnehaha County) with strong credentials; departed after ~11 months in November 2025 alongside another department head (IT Director). Jason Tryon stepped in as interim and was later made permanent.
- 2026: Tryon continues leading Public Works, with positive notes on department recognition (e.g., accreditation achievements dating back to 2005 for Public Works/Utilities).
Over 20 years, the department has seen a mix of internal promotions (e.g., Tryon, Copley) and external hires (e.g., Groen), but short-to-medium tenures at the top appear common. This aligns with city-wide vacancy challenges documented in budgets, where departments rely on staff “wearing multiple hats” and vacancy credits to balance finances.
Patterns and Impacts Over Two Decades
- Disrupted Continuity: Public Works handles long-term assets (streets, drainage systems, facilities). Frequent changes make it harder to maintain multi-year strategies for pavement management, CIP planning, or infrastructure readiness — issues you’ve highlighted in projects involving sidewalks, erosion control, and development agreements.
- Recruitment and Retention Strain: External talent like Groen brings fresh expertise but often doesn’t stick. Internal leaders provide stability but may lack the broadest external perspective. Factors likely include compensation gaps versus private sector (or nearby KC metro opportunities), bureaucratic hurdles, political dynamics, and workplace culture. City efforts at recruitment exist, but leadership-level exits suggest they haven’t fully resolved underlying issues.
- Broader Context: Topeka has faced infrastructure backlogs (e.g., street conditions noted in 2017). While departments earn accreditations and complete projects, turnover adds friction to delivering consistent results. Compare this to Shawnee County Public Works, which has shown more stability under leaders like Curt Niehaus.
- Economic Development Angle: Unstable Public Works leadership complicates coordination on zoning, platting, TIF/CID projects, utilities, and “shovel-ready” sites — directly affecting developers and growth goals. Your advocacy for transparent, efficient processes is especially relevant here.
Why Has This Persisted?
- Public Sector Realities: Government pay, political oversight, and regulatory complexity can lead to burnout or better opportunities elsewhere.
- Local Factors: Topeka’s challenges with economic rankings, population trends, and past critiques of bureaucracy/incentives may contribute to a less attractive environment for long-term leaders.
- Positive Notes: The department has delivered (e.g., ongoing projects, recognitions). Internal promotions like Tryon’s show resilience.
Path Forward: Stronger retention strategies — competitive total compensation, professional development, reduced red tape, and a culture that values experienced operators — could break the cycle. Learning from cases like Groen’s (quick exit but success elsewhere) highlights the need to make Topeka a place where top talent wants to stay and build a legacy.
Steve Groen: The One That Got Away – What Topeka Lost When It Let a Proven Public Works Leader Walk
I ran into Steve Groen the other day. He looked genuinely happy — the kind of settled, purposeful look a man gets when he’s landed in the right place. We talked briefly, and it struck me how Topeka’s loss became his (and the broader region’s) gain.
Steve Groen brought more than 40 years of hands-on public works experience when the City of Topeka hired him as Public Works Director in late 2024. He came from Minnehaha County, South Dakota, where he served as Highway Superintendent after rising through the ranks in Hennepin County, Minnesota — including work on iconic infrastructure like the Father Hennepin suspension bridge. He understood streets, construction management, budgeting, capital improvement programs, and how to support frontline crews while getting projects out the door on time.
When he arrived in Topeka, he hit the ground running. His early priorities were clear and practical: support staff with the resources they need, improve road surfaces, and move projects to bid earlier so construction seasons aren’t wasted. In a city that constantly wrestles with aging infrastructure, sidewalk issues, drainage challenges, and the need for shovel-ready development sites, that kind of steady, experienced leadership should have been a major asset.
Topeka needs people who know how to deliver results on the ground — not just talk about them. Someone with Steve’s background could have been a bridge between city operations and the development community. He understood both the public-sector realities and the practical needs of getting projects built. For someone like me, who spends a lot of time on site feasibility, drainage studies, sidewalk coordination, erosion control, and working through city processes on projects like Eveningside, having a knowledgeable, responsive Public Works Director in place makes a real difference.
Instead, less than a year later — right around November 2025 — he was gone. The city called it a personnel matter and offered no further explanation. Interim leadership stepped in. Another chapter of institutional knowledge walked out the door.
Here’s the part that bothers me most: Topeka didn’t just lose a director. It lost continuity, relationships, and momentum at a time when we need every bit of experienced leadership we can get. Short tenures like this send a signal to other talented professionals: “Don’t get too comfortable.” It wastes the time and money spent recruiting and onboarding. And it reinforces the very perception problems that make it harder to attract and keep good people in the first place.
The good news? Steve landed on his feet — actually, he landed in a stronger position. He’s now Associate Director and Central Region Leader at Braun Intertec, the employee-owned geotechnical, environmental, and materials testing firm with a Lenexa office right in our backyard. Braun Intertec does exactly the kind of work that supports smart development: soil and foundation analysis, environmental compliance, construction materials testing, and risk reduction on complex sites. Steve is now helping lead that work across the Central U.S. — putting his decades of public-sector insight to work for clients who actually value and reward competence.
I’m genuinely happy for him. Topeka essentially helped him move into a better chapter — one where his experience is appreciated and he’s not fighting an environment that didn’t seem to value what he brought. That’s not a failure on his part. That’s Topeka getting shortchanged.
We talk a lot around here about economic development, infrastructure readiness, and putting Shawnee County first. None of that happens without solid public works leadership and a city government that knows how to keep talent once it finds it. Steve Groen was exactly the kind of steady, experienced professional this community could have used for the long haul.
Instead, he’s thriving elsewhere — and we’re left wondering what might have been if Topeka had been a place that appreciated and retained people like him.
To Steve: Thank you for your service here, however brief. You brought real expertise and a professional approach. I’m glad you’re in a better spot now. The Central Region (and developers who work with Braun) are lucky to have you. Topeka missed out.














