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    Recommended Reviews - Independence Square

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    Harry Truman House - His house

    Harry Truman House

    (7 reviews)

    The Truman House is a great demonstration of how a T33 lived his life during and after his…read morepresidency. Short and sweet. You'll want to go to Independence Square's Main Street to get tickets to visit the house first. There you'll watch a video about President Truman and his family. You'll find out about how he was a family man, humble with a sense of humor. Tours are available every 15min until 4pm, Wednesdays thru Sundays. You can park across the street from the Truman house, in front of the Noland house... but there is also parking on the off streets. The tour size per group is limited to eight (8) folks per group, first come first serve... so, planning ahead is best, but if you're a small group, you can drop in - like I did. No pictures of the inside. The tour is limited to the porch, where the former President and his family hung out most; the kitchen, the dining room, and the first floor living areas. Considering the amount of wealth presidents have access to, the home is a great demonstration of a long lost value - dedication and service. Truman believed he could go back to a simple life in his own hometown... and he did his very best to keep it so. The tour also gives a time warp feel as the home is shown as it was back in 1982, when Bess Truman passed away. Ranger Jeff was friendly and super knowledgeable, he posited all kinds of questions to us. We were in an out within 30min. Afterwards, I was able to look at the Noland House across the street. It had additional artifacts from the Truman family. It's small, and is paired well with the Truman Library and Museum to get the totality of Truman and his life.

    Here's a suggestion: If you have the time; if you're going to visit the Harry S Truman Presidential…read moreLibrary & Museum, try to visit the "Truman Home" as well. But plan ahead. This venue is closed on Monday and Tuesday. I suggest you first secure your tickets for the house tour, and then go tour the Presidential Library. To tour the house, you have to go into town and "get tickets". The park visitor center is located at 223 N. Main St. Tours are limited in size to no more than eight, and tickets are issued on a first come, first serve basis. Tours are available Wednesday through Sundays. The website says the tour is about 30 minutes--but my tour took an hour, and I have heard from others that an hour is really the norm. At the appointed time of your tour, you meet the park ranger in front of the house. Margaret Truman didn't want the house to look or feel like a museum. So the house is basically the way it was at the death of Bess Truman. For this reason, tour groups are small, so the ranger can more easily supervise. The ranger who led my tour was really informative. The house is really a time capsule.

    Sauer Castle - My great great grand Fathers home ...

    Sauer Castle

    (6 reviews)

    Would be nice if this was passed down within the family of those that would take care of this…read moreplace. Being part of Sauer, sadly most of my mom's side of the family is still racist. Wasn't able to take part of both my grandparents funerals due to my race. Mostly the men in the family but regardless of the facts. This castle isn't being taken care of and up for sale with an ridiculous price. We also have a Castle located in Germany, along with family crest. Kind of unique to be apart of a family history but not really accepted.

    Sauer Castle is in the National Register of Historic Places, it's a Kansas City must-see if you've…read morenever taken the haunting trip to the top of the bluff where this mansion sits undisturbed for decades. In high school, from Miege to St. Teresa's Academy, crossing state lines, the rumors about Sauer were EPIC and very popular to tell around Halloween. Sauer castle is haunted, according to the ghostly experts and as the story goes... During the Civil War a man leaves his wife to go fight. She waits for him for years, longing for his return and reading his infrequent letters home. Towards wars end, she receives his final letter stating that he is coming home on a certain day on a certain ferry and requesting that she wait for him. When he never arrived, she believed he was dead and frenzied, she hung herself in the infamous bell tower. Her husband, alive, missed his ferry home and later arrived to find his wife dead. It is said that in the front yard he shot himself. Sauer Castle was built by the German immigrant Anton Sauer and has remained in the family for 5 generations - in which the castle has seen many more deaths of natural and unnatural causes. Legend has it that treasure is buried here (however sources say this rumor began from the original fact that the house was built over an antique storage of wine.) Other legends include there is a secret tunnel leading to the Kaw River (others distort this rumor to make it a slave tunnel), or that the ghost of Mary Sauer stands in the windows of the fourth floor looking out onto her property at night. There was a man who died of tuberculosis here, a baby died as well within these walls, and a child was drown. Perhaps what solidified its eerie persona is the foreboding sign in the front that reads: PRIVATE PROPERTY, TRESPASSERS WILL BE PROSECUTED! BEWARE OF DOGS! Here's where I come into the story: I was young and stupid, it was a boring Friday night and my friends and I thought it would be something to talk about on Monday if we somehow got into Sauer Castle and checked out if it were haunted for ourselves. With my two other good friends, we set out on the property while two other friends waited in the car for our return. What we weren't aware of was that three guard dogs that could have well ripped me apart were stationed around the house. I was only cognizant of one, chained to a large radius of land towards the front of the house, but in truth there were two more. We steered clear of this one dog and kept to the side of the house until we came upon the old slave quarters behind the property. It was here we saw a small window opening to the basement of Sauer Castle...STUPID, STUPID me...I went in (after my two friends.) And what we saw was no different than the last scene of the Blair Witch Project, an empty stone basement with nothing in it but AN ACTUAL STONE WELL in the very center...creepy as all hell. That's when we saw the caretaker with a flashlight and rifle coming towards us. My two dear 'friends' climbed out of there first leaving me with no cell phone light, no knee to climb on. I had to scratch my way up with them pulling on my arms as I had been entirely alone in Sauer Castle. Finally, the three of us hauled ass to the car and sped off before we were caught as trespassers and prosecuted!!! Oh, what a night...something I will NEVER do again and a story I will NEVER forget. Is Sauer Castle haunted? From the fright of feeling trapped in the stone basement with nothing beside me but an old well...I would say yes.

    Harry S Truman National Historic Site

    Harry S Truman National Historic Site

    (26 reviews)

    Quick snapshot of the man from Independence, MO…read more If you're interested in visiting the Truman house at 219 Delaware, you will need to stop here for tickets and a time slot. This site on Main will put you in touch with the NPS Rangers who will have you watch a short film about the 33rd President, his rise to the Presidency, and his rise attempt to normalize after leaving office. After the film you will have the opportunity to head over to Delaware and visit the Noland House (which belonged to his aunt and uncle), which houses a small assortment of Truman artifacts, or you can stroll from Independence Square (5 blocks to the house), along the same streets that President Truman walked before, during, and after his presidency. The house itself is as it was when Bess Truman passed away in the 1980s. Inside you will find a very unassuming life that her husband attempted to keep. He tried his best to not let his role as leader of the free world get to his head. Despite that, the former president was a point of interest for folks passing through Kansas City and Independence, Missouri. During the 30-ish minutes, Ranger led tour, you can't take photos, but you can certainly understand the Trumans did their best to live a peaceful and "normal" life and that's the way they lived the entire time. It's surprising how many generations of Trumans lived in that tiny little home, but they made the most of it. This site adds another touch to the life of the 33rd POTUS, and adds another layer to the exhibits you can see at the Truman Library and Museum down the road.

    The people who work here are super helpful and knowledgeable about Truman. They know the sites…read more They saved me lots of time with their tips. They were great in giving you the necessary information you needed to explore this area that is rich with the history of the 33rd President. I highly recommend them.

    Independence Square - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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