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239 results for ‘--j4’

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Web Page

The Fur Traders: Manuel Lisa

Fur traders and trappers followed the explorers to exploit the natural resources of the trans-Mississippi West.
From the 1991 NET Television program, Platte River Road

In the early 1800s, the economic reality of what would become Nebraska was based on trade between the Europeans and Indians for furs and skins. Trading companies gambled fortunes in this high-risk enterprise, but the day-to-day business of the fur trade was done in Indian camps or at far-flung posts.

The fur trade was an international business ... Read more

Web Page

The Mormon Trail

Religious freedom is a right guaranteed to Americans by the United States Constitution. However, some groups in history have been denied this right. Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day-Saints (Mormons) were one of these groups. Mormon leader Brigham Young and his followers were forced to leave Nauvoo, Illinois. Young led the first migration of Mormons up the Platte River Valley in 1847 to what is now the state of Utah. They followed the Platte River on the ... Read more

Web Page

Dividing the Land: How the Land was Divided

Settlers on the Great Plains had to contend, both physically and psychologically, with what to them was a wilderness. They faced a featureless land that many described as "a sea of grass."

Read how one homesteader couple described the plains of Nebraska

Europeans and Americans brought their own way of thinking about land with them, based on a system of longitude and latitude developed in the 18th century. Property lines were drawn on pieces of paper — maps — dividing one ... Read more

Web Page

How Do I Get My Free Land?

Getting free land from the government was amazingly simple. The first thing you had to do was fill out an application form that stated several facts:

  • You were twenty-one years of age or the head of a family.
  • You were a U.S. citizen, or stated that you planned to become a citizen, and had never fought against the U.S. (Confederate soldiers could not apply.)
  • You stated that you did not already own over 320 acres of land within the U.S., or that you ... Read more

Web Page

The Civil War & Texas Beef

Because of the Civil War, two things happened that created the American beef industry:

  1. The development of industrial meat processing and
  2. The Union’s blockage of Texas trade from the rest of the U.S. as well as other markets.

Birth of Industrial Meat Processing

The Union had a huge army that needed food. To meet this demand, innovative butchers in Chicago with names like Gustavus Swift and P. D. Armour acquired large buildings, hired every butcher they could find, and bought every head of livestock ... Read more

Web Page

Land Grants and the Decline of the Railroads

At the same time that homesteaders were getting free land from the government, large tracts of land were granted to railroads by both the states and the federal government. The goal was to encourage the railroads to build their tracks where few people lived, and to help settle the country. The federal government was especially interested in creating a transportation system that would link the eastern and western coasts. Not only would a transcontinental railroad help populate the Great Plains, ... Read more

Web Page

Standing Bear Arrested

The Ponca were very unhappy with the land and living conditions on the Quapaw Reservation. Much of the land was not suitable for cultivation; sanitation conditions were deplorable. Government agents refused to provide adequate farming equipment, and many of the people died from malaria. Since leaving Nebraska, nearly one-third of the tribe had died. In January 1879, Standing Bear’s son, Bear Shield, died. The distraught chief decided to return to his tribal lands in Nebraska to bury his son. It ... Read more

Web Page

Growing Your Ranch

Because of the Blizzards of 1886 & ’87 and other reasons, these large ranches and their owners began to fade from the Nebraska landscape. Bartlett Richards was an exception.
From the 2008 NET Television production Beef State


Although Richards acted as if he lived in Nebraska all by himself, he definitely did not. In the 1870s, more and more people came here to take advantage of the Homestead Act of 1862. They took 160 acre tracts of land and turned ... Read more

Web Page

Public Land: Whose Land is It?

In the later years of the nineteenth century, the number of homesteaders who mostly were farmers (also called "grangers") grew. This put pressure on the ranchers who were using large areas of public lands to graze their cattle. Not only were homesteaders taking the land, but they were taking the land with access to water, which the ranchers’ cattle needed.

This conflict between homesteaders and cattlemen was rooted deeply in two very different traditions of land use. The ranchers were mostly ... Read more

Web Page

Cattle Barons v. Grangers

In other western states like Wyoming, the collision of the visions of land use between cattle barons and grangers erupted into range wars. In Nebraska, these wars were waged in the legislature and courtrooms.

In 1885, the federal government passed legislation outlawing the enclosure of public lands. That law, without enforcement, was toothless and widely ignored until the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt. President Roosevelt ordered that fences around public lands had to be removed, and took particular aim at Read more

Web Page

1906 Kidnapping

One strange story related to the Progressive Movement involved one of the most sensational crimes in Nebraska history. In Omaha, petty crook Pat Crowe’s small butchering business had been wiped out by the mega-industrialist, meatpacking business tycoon Edward Cudahy, Sr. Later, Crowe was also fired from a job in a Cudahy store for allegedly stealing store funds. Crowe’s resulting grudge against Cudahy led him to kidnap Cudahy’s son, 16-year-old Edward Cudahy, Jr. The boy was seized as he returned home ... Read more

Web Page

The Struggle

The work of the Seneca Falls Convention on women’s rights did not go unnoticed in Nebraska. From the earliest days of statehood, there was a progressive contingent that argued women should be allowed to vote since the laws representatives wrote applied to women as well as men.

So when delegates gathered in 1871 to write a new constitution for the state, votes for women was one of five proposals submitted separately to the voters. There was at least enough support to ... Read more

Web Page

Religious & Male Opposition

There were also religious figures who joined the fight to keep women out of the voting booths. After all, some of them argued, women did not belong in the political arena because their place was the:

". . . realm of sentiment and love, gentler, kinder and holier attributes, that make the name of wife, mother, and sister next to the name of God himself."

The Roman Catholic Church was the religious group that most consistently opposed women’s suffrage. In 1906 more ... Read more

Web Page

A Horrible Lynching

From May through September 1919, over 25 race riots rocked cities from Texas to Illinois, Nebraska to Georgia. In Omaha, the trouble began on September 25, when a white woman, Agnes Loebeck, reported that she was assaulted by a black man.

The next morning, the Bee reached new lows reporting the event. The headline was: "Black Beast First Stick-up Couple."

"The most daring attack on a white woman ever perpetrated in Omaha occurred one block south of Bancroft street near Scenic Avenue ... Read more

Web Page

Learning to Farm with Irrigation

When the Central District first delivered water through the Tri-County Project, most farmers had no experience with irrigation. Irrigation methods, such as simply flooding a field with water or the use of canvas dams and lath boxes in small ditches next to the fields, were crude and inefficient. But irrigation — no matter how labor intensive or imperfect — often made the difference between harvesting a good crop or a poor crop (or none at all).

Making use of a temporary ... Read more

Web Page

The Great Depression

The Great Depression and the coincidental drought ruined farmers across America. But in Nebraska, many ranchers seemed to get along just fine. Why?

In fact, during the Depression, Christopher J. Abbot, Sr., a rancher and banker in Hyannis made so much money that he was considered by many to be the richest man in Nebraska. He owned seven ranches and was president of nine banks. In February of 1944, the Sunday Lincoln Journal and Star ran an ... Read more

Web Page

Raw Recruits

In the early days of World War II there was eagerness and dedication to the war effort. Thousands of young men answered the call to join the military. But the services found that sometimes their recruits needed a lot of training. The young recruits were needed badly so the military would not refuse to accept them. If the new recruits could not read well enough to understand training materials and instructions, other servicemen had to teach them. But if those ... Read more

Web Page

Women Join the Military

The idea of women in uniform was new during World War II. Approximately 1,800 Nebraska women joined the special military organizations created for women.

A multitude of female military units were created, each with acronyms that were remarkably similar:

  • WASPs, the Women’s Airforce Service Pilots.
  • WAFS, the Army Air Corps’ Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron.
  • WAACs, the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps.
  • WACs, the Women’s Army Corps.
  • WAVES, the women’s branch of the Navy.
  • SPARS, the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve for Women.

The American Women’s Voluntary Services (AWVS) was also ... Read more

Web Page

Conscientious Objectors

The personal beliefs of some healthy men kept them from using weapons. Some men objected on religious and moral grounds to participating in violence. Some belonged to churches that have historically objected to war. In World War I, these conscientious objectors (COs) were jailed.

There have always been conscientious objectors to war, but it was not until World War II that the U.S. legally recognized the right of an individual to fight.
From the 1993 NET program A Matter of Conscience

But as ... Read more

Web Page

John Falter Painting for Victory

John Falter was a Nebraska artist who applied his talents to the war effort, producing numerous recruiting and incentive posters while on active duty with the U.S. Naval Reserve.

Born in Plattsmouth and raised in Falls City, Falter gained fame for his cover illustrations for the Saturday Evening Post. Throughout the war, he continued to work as a free-lance commercial artist, though most of his commercial works also addressed patriotic themes.

Between 1942 and 1946, Falter produced a body of work impressive ... Read more

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