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The Black Market

This tangle of economics resulted in a shortage of beef. That, in turn, created a lucrative black market for beef.

The black market avoided price controls at every level of production. Unscrupulous cattle buyers paid ranchers more for cattle that they bought straight from the fields, thus avoiding public sales and inevitable price ceilings. Packers bought the extra cattle, butchered them, and then offered them to meat markets with empty shelves. They asked for the ceiling price plus some extra money ... Read more

Web Page

Nebraska’s Army Air Fields, Boom Times & Celebrities

Nebraska’s geography was responsible for one of the major economic and social developments of the war. From border to border, the Army built a dozen air bases — far from the coasts. Ainsworth, Alliance, Bruning, Fairmont, Fort Crook, Grand Island, Harvard, Kearney, Lincoln, McCook, Scottsbluff, and Scribner all got air bases or satellite airfields during World War II.

Even before the war, in September 1940, President Roosevelt’s Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense (NDAC) was looking for possible army ... Read more

Web Page

Propaganda

Throughout the war, Nebraskans were constantly bombarded with propaganda to help keep morale high, and those on the front lines were bombarded with propaganda intended to beat morale down.

"We were all the good guys. We did everything right and the Germans and the Japs, they looked awful and they sneered and they said lousy things. They were bad! It was really propaganda. I just accepted it. What else did I know?"
— Rose Marie Murphy Christensen, Columbus, grade school student.

Our ... Read more

Web Page

Minority Experiences: African Americans

"It was something different to see minority people. . . . their presence was a little uncomfortable for some residents in the community."
—Elaine Hatten, Hastings, NE

Rick Wallace interviews Willie Trip about his experiences at the Hastings Naval Ammunition Depot during World War II. An NET Television’s THE WAR: NEBRASKA STORIES interstitial,excerpted from NET Television’s series, Next Exit. Courtesy 2007 NET Foundation for Television

Racism was a serious problem in World War II. The defense factories needed more workers than small towns ... Read more

Web Page

Mexican Americans

"Ironically, at home, the soldier’s mothers, wives, and daughters were being told, ‘Go home to Mexico, where you came from.’"One mother is reported to have said, ‘Send my son home from Germany first.’ "
—From Our Treasures, A Celebration of Nebraska’s Mexican Heritage by Dr. Emilia González-Clements

In the early 1900s, Mexicans migrated to Nebraska in large numbers for many reasons. Some left Mexico to escape the Mexican Revolution. Some came here to better their economic condition. Nebraska offered work in the ... Read more

Web Page

Revenge, Justice, Forgiveness

"I remember once in a difficult part of the war that these MPs made the patients (German prisoners of war) think that they were not going to give them food from the carts. . . . I cried and said, ‘Oh, you can’t deprive them.’ This (guard) said, ‘Oh, we’re just kidding.’ But I know they weren’t. They were angry with the Germans."
—Barbara Gier, Seward, NE
Nurse, 203 General Hospital in Paris

World War II lasted over three and a half years ... Read more

Web Page

McCarthyism & his Trip to Nebraska

Across the country, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin had become the most vocal hunter of communists within the U.S. government. He was an ambitious politician who seized on the growing fear of communism as his political crusade.

In February, 1950, McCarthy was slated to speak before the Republican Women’s Club in Wheeling, West Virginia. During the weeks before, China had fallen to the communists and Russia had tested an atomic bomb. Two years before, an official in the State Department, ... Read more

Web Page

Nebraska’s Loyalty Oath

In an attempt to ensure the patriotism of their employees, many cities and states enacted "loyalty legislation" during the late 1940s and early 1950s. Nebraska followed the example of many other states and passed a loyalty oath law that went into effect in August, 1951.

Basically, the law required all state employees to sign a loyalty oath in order to keep their jobs. That included teachers and staff in public schools and at the state university and state colleges. The oath ... Read more

Web Page

Gen. LeMay & Bomber Deterrence

When Gen. Curtis E. LeMay became commander of the Strategic Air Command in 1948 he was appalled at the lack of professionalism in his bomber crews. LeMay rebuilt SAC and, in the process, presided over a huge change in the life of Omaha and Bellevue.

Gen. Curtis LeMay was a dynamic leader of the young Strategic Air Command, an integral part of its deterrence role through the arms race and Cuban missile crisis.
From the 1990 NET Television program, Cold Warriors Never ... Read more

Web Page

The "Underground Capitol"

Concerns about nuclear war also had an effect on government. There was a rush in the 1950s and 60s to provide shelters for governmental agencies and bodies.

  • The U.S. Senate and House had a luxurious, secret bunker built under a golf resort in West Virginia. [It was compromised by an investigative reporter in 1993, and the bunker is now open to the public.]
  • NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, is built in the middle of a mountain.
  • SAC (became USSTRATCOM) ... Read more

Web Page

Strike Moves to DC

The year after the first strike, the American Agriculture Movement decided to take their demands and their tractors to Washington DC. They were demanding a revision of the 1977 Farm Bill. They argued that the bill encouraged large scale production, but did not guarantee of high enough prices to keep small farms in business. The AAM emphasized rallies and protests against the political system.

A protest rally in the nation’s capital was planned for January, 1978, which would bring a nationwide ... Read more

Web Page

Advanced Communications

The new Internet economy ran over telecommunication lines that reached all the way around the world. Most of those lines were made of fiber-optic cables — glass fibers that carry light waves that transmit digital signals. One of the largest owners of these fiber-optic networks was a Nebraska-born company — Level 3.

By the end of the 20th century, Level 3 Communications Inc. operated a 16,000-mile network of fiber-optic cable that connected more than ... Read more

Web Page

"Will the Internet Survive?"

The Internet traces its beginnings back to a U.S. Defense Department project during the Cold War. The system was supposed to be a way to let computer users, attached to different networks, exchange data with each other.

The key questions were:

  • How useful would the Internet be in case of a nuclear attack?
  • If a bomb in the Midwest took out the shortest path between New York and Los Angeles, for example, could information be routed around the damaged section?
  • Could the system continue ... Read more

Web Page

"Sane" Cows

In December of 2003, a dairy cow in Washington State was found to have bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). Because this illness may cause an animal to behave strangely and lose muscle control, consumers knew the disease by another disturbing nickname, "Mad Cow Disease." As of 2017, there have been no cases of Mad Cow Disease in cattle in Nebraska.

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) took a number of steps to insure the quality of American ... Read more

Web Page

Sites Reveal Changing Ways

Lime Creek Site: A Glimpse of Early Native Americans on Nebraska's Landscape

Lesson Plan & Activities: Pre-1500: Lime Creek Site: A Glimpse of Early Native Americans - Grade Level [4-8]

9000 to 7000 Years Ago: Nebraska’s First People

The objects from this site were made by some of Nebraska’s first known people: the Paleo-Indian people.

The site is located in southern Nebraska’s Frontier County. Learn more about them in the Activities and Resources.

Read more

Web Page

Villasur Sent to Nebraska

In the early 1700s, Spain claimed as their exclusive territory most of the Central Plains including Nebraska. They were very concerned with protecting their rights to what they saw as a potentially enormous trade with the Native Americans on the plains. But it had been a Frenchman, Bourgmont, who had reached the Platte first and who named it. And the Spanish in New Mexico were seeing more and more evidence of French trade with tribes like the Apache, ... Read more

Web Page

Railroads and Settlement

Lesson Plans & Activities: 1850-1874: Railroads & Settlement - Grade Level [3-12]

Union Pacific Railroad Chartered 1862

Imagine yourself as a farmer living in Europe in the mid-19th century. You own little or no land, have a large debt, and your taxes are due to the government. Then one day a friend comes to your door carrying a brochure printed by the "Union Pacific Railroad." The brochure says that the Union Pacific owns millions of acres in a place called Nebraska. ... Read more

Web Page

Arsenal for Democracy

Activities: 1925-1949: Arsenal for Democracy - Grade Level [4-12]

Even before America entered the war, production for it had begun. In Omaha, for instance, the Martin Bomber Plant was commissioned in September 1940 — well over a year before Pearl Harbor. Other plants were commissioned across the country to build bombs, tanks, rifles, and other weapons, some for sale or "loan" to other countries and some for our own stockpiles.

Although many Americans felt that we were isolated from the war, ... Read more

Web Page

Living in an Atomic Age

Activities: 1950-1974: The Cold War & Living In The Atomic Age - Grade Level [4-12]

As World War II ended, a new age began — the Atomic Age. The first atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, ended World War II and created a new, more nervous age. Very quickly, the Soviet Union also developed atomic bombs. Countries that had been allies against the Nazis were now enemies, each pledged to outdo the other in the battle for ... Read more

Web Page

The Red Menace

Activities: 1950-1974: The Red Menace - Grade Level [4-12]

The 1950s and early 60s was a time of political change, and the political debate was dominated by one central fact — the communists had changed from allies during WWII to sworn enemies during the Cold War. People were afraid that communists, or "reds," would take over America and the world, especially since they also had atomic weapons. For many, the Korean War was proof that communist regimes would try to ... Read more

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