Located in Pawnee County, Burdett, Kansas, is home to 232 souls. It’s approximately 43 miles northeast of Dodge City as the crow flies.
Like so many small towns in western Kansas, Burdett reached it’s peak years ago – maybe a century ago. During the last couple years the John Deere dealership folded on the south side of Highway 156. A farm supply service now operates from the same building.
This wasn’t the first business to shut its doors and residents of the little Kansas village know it won’t be the last.
Still, Burdett sports a handful of businesses on Main Street. They include the post office, bank, insurance agency, beauty parlor and senior center.
Judy Wasko runs the post office and serves as postmaster although postmistress would be politically correct. She’s been at the helm in Burdett since Jan. 20, 2007. She started working for the postal service in 1996. Her first postal employment was part time in nearby Hanston.
Wasko also farms with her husband Paul 13 miles west of Burdett. Three daughters help them run an 82 head cow/calf operation. They farm approximately 950 acres and raise, corn, silage, soybeans, milo and wheat.
Like so many of her peers across the Sunflower State, Wasko works outside the farm to help pay the bills and subsidize the family income.
Delivering and sending out the mail is her main mission. The post office building is the familiar blond-brick structure seen throughout Kansas. Standard silver government issued letters read: UNITED STATES POST OFFICE BURDETT KANSAS 67523. It’s located on the east side of Main.
Wasko opens the doors every morning at 8 a.m. and closes them at 4:15 p.m. Monday through Friday. The post office is open for one hour on Saturdays.
A part time-clerk helps mainly during lunch and vacation. The Burdett facility also serves as the supply center for other small offices in western Kansas.
When the supplies arrive, they are shipped out to the other post offices.
The Hodgeman County farm wife loves her vocation.
“I’m really at home here and I love the people,” Wasko says. “I give them their mail with a smile.”
That mail amounts to approximately three feet of letters each day and another two feet of flat mail that includes mainly larger envelopes. Some days she sells an additional $100 in stamps.
Approximately 80 people receive their mail in small rectangular metal boxes that line the right wall coming into the post office. These old timers come complete with brass-plated combination locks.