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         Nebraska History:     more books (103)
  1. History of Hall County, Nebraska: A Narrative of the Past with Special Emphasis Upon the Pioneer Period of the County's History, and Chronological Presentation ... and Civic Development from the Early Days to by Anonymous, 2010-06-07
  2. Nebraska Moments, New Edition by Donald R. Hickey, Susan A Wunder, et all 2007-12-01
  3. Wild Towns of Nebraska by Wayne C. Lee, 1988-09-01
  4. Rights in the Balance: Free Press, Fair Trial, and Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart (Plains Histories) by Mark R. Scherer, 2008-07-18
  5. A history of Nebraska Methodism, first half-century, 1854-1904 by David Marquette, 2010-09-11
  6. Outpost of the Sioux Wars: A History of Fort Robinson by Frank N. Schubert, 1995-03-28
  7. Nebraska's Militia: The History of the Army and Air National Guard, 1854-1991 by Douglas R. Hartman, 1994-06
  8. The Kansas-Nebraska Bill: Party, Section, and the Coming of the Civil War (Studies in nineteenth century American history) by Gerald W. Wolff, 1977-06
  9. The History of Nebraska Law (Law Society & Politics in the Midwest)
  10. Nebraska: A Pictorial History: Bicentennial Edition (Revised and Enlarged) by Bruce H. Nicoll, 1975-11-01
  11. History of Italian Immigration in Nebraska by Alphonse Thomas Fiore, 1938
  12. Glimpses of Our Past: A Pictorial History of Dodge County, Nebraska by William E. Christensen, 1994-09
  13. Nebraska History: An Annotated Bibliography (Bibliographies of the States of the United States) by Michael L. Tate, 1995-08-22
  14. The condition of the western farmer as illustrated by the economic history of a Nebraska township; by Arthur Fisher Bentley, 2010-08-28

21. Saint Mark's Episcopal Pro-Cathedral
The Episcopal Cathedral of Western Nebraska provides the history and other information about the Cathedral and parish, Worship Times, a photo tour, the people of the parish, related links and contact information.
http://www.stmarkcathedral.org/stm-home.htm
S AINT M ARK'S P RO- C ATHEDRAL
Hastings, Nebraska Our Mission is to be the Body of Christ in our community. We strive to reflect the love and grace of Christ by being faithful stewards of our time, our treasure, and our gifts for ministry, living in a welcoming Parish family open to, and sharing of, God's love and work in a changing world. 422 N. Burlington Ave. • Hastings, Nebraska 68901 • (402) 462-4126 • stmark@inebraska.com

22. Blizzard « Nebraska History Blog
How bad does it have to be before a locomotive snowplow gets stuck? A crew near Chadron on the Chicago and North Western line resorted to hand shovels to dig out a snowplow during
http://blog.nebraskahistory.org/?tag=blizzard

23. Welcome To Nemaha County, Nebraska History
Welcome to Nemaha County, Nebraska History Auburn, Nebraska History (St. George, Calvert, Sheridan) Home History. Auburn, one of the newest cities in Nemaha County
http://www.visitnemahacounty.org/history/auburn.cfm
History
Cities/Towns
Auburn

Brock

Howe

Johnson
...
Other

People
Samuel Daily

Gov. Furnas

T. J. Majors
The Minicks
Auburn, Nebraska History (St. George, Calvert, Sheridan)
Home History Auburn, one of the newest cities in Nemaha County, includes within its city limits the former towns of St. George, Sheridan, and Calvert. St. George, a 40 acre plot of land in Northeast Auburn was platted in the 1850's. It was on the road from Brownville to Marshall's Trading Point near the Blue River. It must have been a progressive community. As early as 1858 there was an attempt to move the county seat from Brownville to a more central location in the county. When the election was held on August 28, 1858, Brownville received 206 votes and St. George 164. This was apparently the last note worthy event to take place in St. George, for by 1882, it was recorded in Andreas' History of Nemaha County that the town Site was farm ground. At the same time, the Burlington and Missouri Railroad in Nebraska was being built west through Nemaha County from Nemaha City. The B & M RR and the MP RR crossed about two and one-half miles southeast of Sheridan. An attempt was made by John L. Carson, of Brownville, and others, to establish the new town of "Carson" at that point. However, the railroad refused to build a depot at Carson, and instead, selected a site south of Sheridan for the depot. In 1881. the Lincoln Land Company, a subsidiary of the B & M RR, purchased the land and platted the town site, naming it Calvert, in honor of Thomas F. Calvert, a railroad official. This was the beginning of a rivalry between the two railroad towns.

24. Nebraska History & Record Of Pioneer Days, Vol I, 7
Editor, ADDISON E. SHELDON Associate Editors The Staffs of the Nebraska State Historical Society and Legislative Reference Bureau
http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ne/topic/resources/OLLibrary/Journals/HPR/Vol01/nhrv
NEBRASKA HISTORY
AND RECORD OF PIONEER DAYS
Published Monthly by the Nebraska State Historical Society Editor, ADDISON E. SHELDON
Associate Editors
The Staffs of the Nebraska State Historical Society and
Legislative Reference Bureau Subscription $2.00 Per Year q All sustaining members of the Nebraska State Historical
Society receive Nebraska History without further payment.
q Entered as second class mail matter, under act of July 16,
1894, at Lincoln, Nebraska, April 2, 1918. VOLUME I. NOVEMBER, 1918 NUMBER 7 SECRETARY SHELDON IN EUROPE.
Addition E. Sheldon, secretary of the Historical Society, is now in France, his mission being to study on the western front the part Nebraska is taking in the war. Mr. Sheldon went as a press representative, which gives him the opportunity to get near the front lines. He sailed from New York on October 4, landing at Liverpool October 18 and reaching France October 22. A number of journalists were on board the boat going to England, and an organization was there formed and a paper issued to which Mr. Sheldon was one of the contributors. It was his intention when he left Lincoln to return before the legislature convenes in January.
FATHER CHRISTIAN HOECKEN.

25. Nebraska History
CHIEF Alastair Ivor Gilbert Boyd 7th Baron Kilmarnock Richard G. Boyd. NEW EMAIL ADDRESS. RichBoyd (at sign) Charter.net
http://www.clanboyd.info/state/nebraska/history/
CHIEF: Alastair Ivor Gilbert Boyd 7th Baron Kilmarnock Richard G. Boyd NEW EMAIL ADDRESS RichBoyd (at sign) Charter.net Welcome To www.clanboyd.info The Boyd Family Information Center Kilmarnock Boyds Services About Clan Boyd Newsletter Info. Join Mailing List Message Boards ... Family Reunions Search CBSI Search Site State Region Native American ... Famous People Organizations Masonic Lodge IOOF Lodge Publications Herringshaw's Newspapers Magazines Boyd History History Peerage Coats of Arms Septs ... Boyd Business's Resource Links Boyd Database Boyd Websites United States Ring of Boyds ... Bibliography Research Help Research Info House of Boyd My Boyd Line My Harris Line ... Domke Nebraska History I ndex to Biographies and Portraits of:
HISTORY OF GAGE COUNTY, NEBRASKA By HUGH J. DOBBS LINCOLN

26. History Of NE
1859 was an eventful year in Nebraska history. The first corn was shipped to market. Through all that season, steamboats transported the golden grain from the towns along the Missouri
http://www.tcdne.org/HistoryofNE.htm
2620 College Park
Scottsbluff, NE 69361
(308) 635-6710 phone
(877) 635-6710 toll free
(308) 635-6704 fax
twincitiesdev@wncc.net
Community Profile (pdf file - requires Adobe Acrobat Reader) Community Map
NEBRASKA HISTORY Ancient Land Early Banks Early Government Explorers ... Naming of Nebraska ANCIENT LAND: North American Continent The area of the United States that became known as " Nebraska " had its earliest beginnings under water, in the bottom of a great inland sea. Skeletons of millions of animals and plants were embedded in mud that hardened into rock and became the limestone that appears today on the sides of ravines and along the streams in Eastern Nebraska . As the sea bottom slowly rose, a land of marshes and forests appeared. After many thousand years, the land became drier, and trees of all kinds grew, including oak, maple, beech, and willow. Leaves from these ancient trees can be found today pressed and printed in the red sandstone rocks. Illustration - Mastedon Then the sea covered the land again, bringing new shells and fish. When the land rose this time, it was covered with grass and trees. The bones of animals such as camels, tapirs, monkeys, tigers, rhinos, elephants, and tiny horses are still found today beneath our soil.

27. Nebraska History Schools - FastWeb.com
Find Nebraska history schools practical advice and scholarship information at FastWeb.com.
http://www.fastweb.com/colleges-by-location/nebraska-schools/nebraska-history-sc
Login or Register Now!
Nebraska history schools
College Directory College University Colleges by Location Nebraska schools When looking for Nebraska history schools, you only need to make one stop for your college search: FastWeb. FastWeb is the leading scholarship search service on the Web and helps students make the decisions that shape their lives: choosing a college, paying for college, and finding jobs and internships. Our college search will help you find the best Nebraska history schools for you. Recommended by more than 16,000 high schools and 3,600 colleges, FastWeb is the most trusted online college resource. Last year, one out of three college-bound high school seniors used FastWeb, many searched for Nebraska history schools, just like you and others came to find scholarships. More than 34 million students have created FastWeb accounts since launching in 1995. FastWeb's enhanced college search is the only place where you can research and compare Nebraska history schools based on the relevant scholarship matches at each school. Our dedicated research team continuously updates FastWeb's database. They keep our college search up-to-date with Nebraska history schools and are constantly adding to the more than 1.3 million scholarships worth over $3 billion available on FastWeb. In addition to information on Nebraska history schools, our online tools help students stay organized with a dynamic calendar, email reminders, favorites lists, and personalized content to help them succeed.

28. NEBRASKA HISTORY
NEBRASKA STATE HISTORY. American Explorers. The first American expedition to visit Nebraska in 1804 to 1806 was led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, who traveled up the
http://www.minerland.net/nebraska.htm
NEBRASKA STATE HISTORY
American Explorers
The first American expedition to visit Nebraska in 1804 to 1806 was led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, who traveled up the Missouri River and explored the state's eastern edge. In 1806, Lt. Zebulon Pike visited south-central Nebraska as part of a U.S. government program to explore the Louisiana Purchase. The Spanish-American trader Manuel Lisa established trading posts along the Missouri River between 1807 and 1820. One established in 1812 was near the site where Lewis and Clark held council with the Indians, in present-day Washington County. In 1811, the Hunt party of Astorians skirted Nebraska on its way to Oregon. The following year, fur agent Robert Stuart set out for New York City from the Astoria trading post in Oregon, entering Nebraska early in 1813. Stuart's seven-man party followed the North Platte River to its junction with the South Platte, then along the Platte to the Missouri River. This route later came to be known as the Oregon Trail. In 1819, the U.S. Army established Nebraska's first military post, Fort Atkinson (located near the present-day community of Fort Calhoun in Washington County) to protect the frontier. The fort, with more than 1,000 people, also became the site of Nebraska's first school, library, grist mill and brickyard before it was abandoned in 1827. The village of Bellevue, founded on the Missouri River in 1823, became Nebraska's first permanent white settlement.

29. Bibliography - Nebraska History - Primary Sources And Bibliography
Bibliography of Nebraska History compiled by Ann Tschetter. Nebraska History By Ann Tschetter See county information — short histories, newspapers, books, and personal papers
http://cehs.unl.edu/ushistory/bibliographies/nebraska.html
N EBRASKA P ARTNERSHIP F OR
A MERICAN H ISTORY E DUCATION Home About Us Events Resources ... Bibliographies Nebraska History
Nebraska History
By Ann Tschetter
See county information

Primary Sources
Harrison Johnson. . Omaha, Nebraska: Herald Printing House, 1880.
Great source for early history of Nebraska. Has listing by counties and some specifics of early settlement. This is a strong primary source since it was being written shortly after the founding of several of the counties in this study.
Curley, Edwin A. Nebraska, its Advantages, Resources, and Drawbacks . London: Samson Low, Marston, Low and Searle, 1875.
Good source on what people first found when they settled the state. This was published for a British audience and is geared toward the positive, but does have unusual information.
History of the State of Nebraska; Counties, Cities, Towns and Villages . Evansville, Indiana: Unigraphic Inc., 1975, reprint of the 1882 edition. Bibliography Bartels, Michael M. Historic Railroads of Nebraska . Arcadia. A thematically constructed history of the railroad on the plains.

30. Nebraska History - History Of Nebraska - Facts About Nebraska
Nebraska History. Read up on the history of Nebraska, including the story of how it came to be officially recognized as the 37th state of America.
http://www.destination360.com/north-america/us/nebraska/history

31. Nebraska History & Record Of Pioneer Days, Vol I, 5
Editor, ADDISON E. SHELDON Associate Editors The Staffs of the Nebraska State Historical Society and Legislative Reference Bureau
http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ne/topic/resources/OLLibrary/Journals/HPR/Vol01/nhrv
NEBRASKA HISTORY
AND RECORD OF PIONEER DAYS
Published Monthly by the Nebraska State Historical Society Editor, ADDISON E. SHELDON
Associate Editors
The Staffs of the Nebraska State Historical Society and
Legislative Reference Bureau Subscription $2.00 Per Year
q All sustaining members of the Nebraska State Historical
Society receive Nebraska History without further payment.
q Entered as second class matter, under act of July 16, 1894 at
Lincoln, Nebraska, April 2, 1918. VOLUME I. SEPTEMBER, 1918 NUMBER 5 ANNOUNCEMENT The June, July and August numbers of the Nebraska History have been omitted. The publication has been effected by the war activities, and we ask the consideration of readers on this account. THE TRIBAL RELATION OF LOGAN FONTENELLE.
The following letter and newspaper clipping deal in an interesting way with persons intimately connected with the early history of Nebraska. The letter is addressed to the historian of the Historical Society and the clipping is from the Omaha World-Herald. "Some time ago Mrs. Mary Mitchell, Omaha Indian interpreter, visited me here (at Omaha) and showed me a letter which you had written to Mrs. Henry Fontenelle in regard to some article you were getting out touching the right of Logan Fontenelle to be called chief of the Omaha.

32. University Of Nebraska–Lincoln - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
The University of Nebraska–Lincoln (Nebraska, UNL or NU) is a public research university located in Lincoln, Nebraska in the United States It is the flagship campus of the University
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Nebraska–Lincoln
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation search University of Nebraska–Lincoln Motto Literis Dedicata et Omnibus Artibus Motto in English Dedicated to Letters and All the Arts Established Type Flagship
Public

Land grant
Endowment ... Chancellor Harvey Perlman Academic staff Students Undergraduates Postgraduates Location Lincoln Nebraska US
40°49′03″N
... 40.8175°N 96.70139°W Campus 613 acres (2.5 km
42,562 acres (172.2 km ) total throughout state Colors Scarlet and Cream
Athletics NCAA Division I FBS Big Ten ... Big 12
21 varsity teams Nickname Cornhuskers Mascot Herbie Husker and Lil' Red Website unl.edu The University of Nebraska–Lincoln Nebraska UNL or NU ) is a public research university located in Lincoln, Nebraska in the United States It is the flagship campus of the University of Nebraska system , which includes other satellite campuses in Omaha and Kearney , and is the largest university in the state. The university was founded in 1869 as a land-grant university under the 1862 Morrill Act , two years after Nebraska's statehood. Around the turn of the century, the university began to expand significantly, hiring professors from eastern schools to teach in the newly organized professional colleges while also producing groundbreaking research in agricultural sciences. The "Nebraska method" of ecological study developed here during this time, which pioneered grassland ecology and laid the foundation for research in theoretical ecology for the rest of the 20th century.

33. Nebraska - History
Nebraska's first inhabitants, from about 10,000 BC, were nomadic PaleoIndians. Successive groups were more sedentary, cultivating corn and beans.
http://www.city-data.com/states/Nebraska-History.html
// nothing @import "css/default.css"; All US cities
Nebraska bigger cities
Nebraska smaller cities Nebraska small cities ...
Nebraska detailed state guide
Nebraska - History
The Indian Intercourse Act of 1834 forbade white settlement west of the Mississippi River, reserving the Great Plains as Indian Territory. Nothing prevented whites from traversing Nebraska, however, and from 1840 to 1866, some 350,000 persons crossed the area on the Oregon, California, and Mormon trails, following the Platte River Valley, a natural highway to the West. Military forts were established in the 1840s to protect travelers from Indian attack. The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 established Nebraska Territory, which stretched from Kansas to Canada and from the Missouri River to the Rockies. The territory assumed its present shape in 1861. Still sparsely populated, Nebraska escaped the violence over the slavery issue that afflicted Kansas. The creation of Nebraska Territory heightened conflict between Indians and white settlers, however, as Indians were forced to cede more and more of their land. From mid-1860 to the late 1870s, western Nebraska was a battleground for Indians and US soldiers. By 1890, the Indians were defeated and moved onto reservations in Nebraska, South Dakota, and Oklahoma. World War I created a rift among Nebraskans as excessive patriotic zeal was directed against residents of German descent. German-language newspapers were censored, ministers were ordered to preach only in English (often to congregations that understood only German), and three university professors of German origin were fired. A Nebraska law (1919) that prohibited the teaching of any foreign language until high school was later declared unconstitutional by the US Supreme Court.

34. Nebraska History - Research And Read Books, Journals, Articles At
Nebraska History Scholarly books, journals and articles Nebraska History at Questia, world's largest online library and research service. Subscribe now and do better research
http://www.questia.com/library/history/nebraska-history.jsp

35. The US50 - A Guide To The State Of Nebraska - History
The US50 Nebraska is a extensive guide to the history and historic events from the state of Nebraska.
http://www.theus50.com/nebraska/history.php
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State of Nebraska
History
General Nebraska State History
As the United States expanded to the west, the Platte Valley trails of Nebraska became the major highways. Gold seekers, Mormons and migrants on their way to California and Oregon were among the thousands of pioneers using the overland trails between 1840 and 1860. Fort Kearny was established along the route to protect these travelers. Nebraska City and other towns on the Missouri River became shipping centers and supplied both the military outposts and the new settlers. From April 3, 1860 to October 24, 1861, Pony Express riders carried their mail across the area.
In 1854, the Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed by Congress, organizing the Nebraska Territory. This act opened lands west of the Missouri, previously reserved for the Indians, to settlement. The Homestead Act of 1862 allowed settlers to claim 160 acres of land free in eastern Nebraska and statehood was granted on March 1, 1867, in a proclamation signed by President Andrew Johnson.
The railroads contributed greatly to the early development of the site. The Union Pacific was completed across Nebraska in 1867, and the lines of the Burlington system crisscrossed most of the state by the mid- 1880s. Many early railroads received land grants from the state and federal governments to offset the cost of construction. These lands were sold to settlers through extensive advertising campaigns, with some companies sending representatives to Europe to encourage immigrants to come to Nebraska.

36. Nebraska: Encyclopedia II - Nebraska - History
The KansasNebraska Act became law on May 30, 1854; it established the U.S. territories of Nebraska and Kansas. The territorial capital of Nebraska was Omaha. In the 1860s, the
http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Nebraska_-_History/id/1793892

37. National History Day: Nebraska
Your privacy is important to us. If you do not wish to receive mailings, check the box to opt out.
http://ne.nhd.org/
Skip to Content Home History Day 101 District Competitions ... Online Registration
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Click here
to download the 2011 Rule Book with new web site instructions, including separate categories for individual and group web sites.
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to download the 2011 Theme Page.
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to download the 2011 Sample Topics.
National History Day is not just a day, but every day! The National History Day program is a year-long education program that culminates in a national contest every June. For more than twenty-five years the National History Day program has promoted systemic educational reform related to the teaching and learning of history in America's schools. The combination of creativity and scholarship built into the NHD program anticipated current educational reforms, making National History Day a leading model of performance-based learning. NHD is a year-long education program that engages students in grades 6-12 in the process of discovery and interpretation of historical topics. Students produce dramatic performances, imaginative exhibits, multimedia documentaries, interactive web sites, and research papers based on research related to an annual theme. These projects are then evaluated at local, state, and national competitions.

38. Kearney, Nebraska: History
Page 1 of 2 HOME Long before early French explorers named it the Platte River, for flat water, this heartland oasis was a crossroads.
http://www.kearney.net/history.html
Page 1 of HOME Long before early French explorers named it the Platte River, for "flat water," this heartland oasis was a crossroads. Migratory birds, abundant wildlife and native Americans were in residence for centuries when the confluence of the Oregon and Mormon Trails led pioneers to the site that would become Kearney. Bound for points further west, some hardy, yet visionary souls saw opportunities along the Platte and they stayed laying the foundation for what would become the Mid-western "work ethic." Now, at the very center of the country, as this great, braided river cuts an arc across the plains, Kearney, Nebraska faces a brilliant future. For more history of Kearney, please read the next document
The Platte River
Fort Kearny State Historical Park
Fort Kearny State Historical Park
I.S.D.N.
Contact info@kearney.net More Kearney Related Links Home Quick Facts Economy Sports Communications Medical Education Churches Lodging County Gov't Central Nebraska Air Travel Planner Central Nebraska Air Transportation Presentation Nebraska Unicameral Have Information on a Crime? E-Mail

39. Nebraska - History
A selection of articles related to Nebraska History Nebraska, Nebraska - Climate, Nebraska - Colleges and universities, Nebraska - Demographics, Nebraska - Economy
http://www.experiencefestival.com/nebraska_-_history

40. Nebraska: History — FactMonster.com
Encyclopedia — Nebraska History Hunters, Explorers, and Fur Traders. Nebraska's soil has been farmed since prehistoric times, but the Native Americans of the plains—notably
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/us/A0859914.html
Sponsored Links TripAdvisor Encyclopedia Nebraska
History
Hunters, Explorers, and Fur Traders
Pawnee The French also came and in the 18th cent. engaged in fur trading, but development began only after the area passed from France to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. The Lewis and Clark expedition (1804) and the explorations of Zebulon M. Pike (1806) increased knowledge of the country, but the activities of the fur traders were more immediately valuable in terms of settlement. Manuel Lisa, a fur trader, probably established the first trading post in the Nebraska area in 1813. Bellevue, the first permanent settlement in Nebraska, first developed as a trading post.
Steamboats and Wagon Trains
Steamboating on the Missouri River, initiated in 1819, brought business to the river ports of Omaha and Brownville. The natural highway formed by the Platte valley was used extensively by pioneers going west over the Oregon Trail and also the California Trail and the Mormon Trail. Nebraska settlers made money supplying the wagon trains with fresh mounts and pack animals as well as food. Nebraska became a territory after passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act
Railroads, Ranches, and the Growth of Populism

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