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World War II

Even before the United States was dragged into World War II on December 7, 1941 food was always something that could be sold on a large scale, a strategic commodity. Through the Lend-Lease program established in March of 1941, the United States was already providing critical food to Allied Nations like England, France, China, and the Soviet Union. The Russians particularly enjoyed a canned beef specialty, tushonka millions of which were created at the Omaha Cudahy Plant.

Read ... Read more

Web Page

Front Lines & the Home Front

The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor changed the lives of all Nebraskans. They became united in a common goal of achieving total victory, no matter what the sacrifice. Most Nebraskans did not serve in the armed forces. As civilians, however, they faced many challenges on the home front, and they did their part to help win the war. The Uncle Sam recruiting poster and the events at Pearl Harbor helped motivate a great number of young men to enlist and ... Read more

Web Page

Reactions at Home: War Changes Everything

"My Aunt Rose was listening to the radio, and I wasn’t paying much attention until they kept hearing the word ’war’. . . . I had never heard that word before, so finally I got up there and said, ’Well, what is it? What is it?’ They tried to explain to me what war was, and I was appalled! Because up until then, I thought all the grown-ups knew what they were doing, and I could not believe that grown-ups ... Read more

Web Page

Nebraskans Pitch In

"Of course, there was the big ordnance (bombs and ammunition) plant in Grand Island and the one in Hastings . . . . I’ll never forget that because they had a lot of people working there. . . . There was something about the powder they worked in out there that turned their skin kind of yellowish-green, and their hair a kind of yellowish-green. . . . Some of the weirdest looking colored hairdos would come in there."

—Fred Merriman, Loup ... Read more

Web Page

Japanese Americans

What is it like to be born and raised an American, but to be considered an enemy because of where your parents were born? That’s what happened to many Japanese Americans in World War II.

Racism and war hysteria motivated the U.S. government to forcibly move more than 120,000 Japanese citizens and Japanese Americans from their homes on the west coast to internment camps between 1942 and 1945. Nebraska’s central location kept its Japanese American citizens comparably safe from this process, ... Read more

Web Page

Atom Bomb: Japan Surrenders

"I used to think in my head, just before I dropped (a bomb), if I wait two more seconds, who is it going to affect? Whose lives? This is what you think about."
—Edward Sellz, Omaha, NE

Truman gravely made the decision to drop the atomic bomb in Japan, first on Hiroshima on August 6th, and then on Nagasaki on August 9th, 1945. Those are the only two events of an atom bomb being used in times of war. In an instant, ... Read more

Web Page

Roads & Cars

During World War II, the rationing of gasoline meant that families on the home front could not travel the way they might have wanted to. After the war, the end of rationing and higher salaries put Nebraskans on the road in record numbers. America’s love affair with the automobile was renewed, as family cars and hot rods became indispensable parts of 50s life and culture. The car culture spawned businesses, like drive-in restaurants and movie theatres.

With more people on the ... Read more

Web Page

Early TV

Television developed quickly in Nebraska during the 1950s and ’60s.
From the 1992 NET Television program, Changing Channels.

When KFOR Television station began operations, they hired UNL to document the event on film in TV Comes to Town.
Produced circa 1953 by the University of Nebraska for KFOR-TV.

Television, more than anything else, changed the way Nebraskans viewed the world and spent their free time. As more and more television sets were purchased, the entire country could watch the same event or entertainment show. ... Read more

Web Page

Nebraska’s Response

Initially, most Nebraska politicians were cautious about voicing their opinions of Sen. McCarthy. However, in 1952, former Nebraska Governor Dwight Griswold said it was a "thrilling experience" to hear McCarthy speak in Chicago. He was particularly impressed when Senator McCarthy said,

"There is no such thing as being a little disloyal." McCarthy’s ideas, if not his attacking style, hit a nerve, and legislative bodies tried to respond to the perceived threat.

The Nebraska Unicameral was one of the bodies that tried to ... Read more

Web Page

Organized Labor & the Red Scare

The fear of communism also affected the labor union movement in Nebraska during the 1950s. In the early 1900s, some national unions, like the IWW, Industrial Workers of the World, had adopted communists ideals in struggling to get better pay and working conditions. And so, during the Red Scare of the 50s, many assumed that unions would be full of communists who would disrupt national and local economies by encouraging strikes and violence against large companies.

In fact, Nebraska unions were ... Read more

Web Page

Rural Shelters

Did farm homes in Nebraska need fallout shelters, even if they were located far away from the supposed targets of nuclear bombs?

What You Should Know about Biological Warfare
During the Cold War, civil defense officials thought that the U.S.S.R. might attack our farms with biological agents, 1955.
Produced by the Federal Civil Defense Administration

"Shelters make good sense," declared Mrs. Lorraine Still, Custer County home agent, "even though farm families may live hundreds of miles from military targets or large population centers." In ... Read more

Web Page

Bank Failure in David City

The David City Bank failed in 1984. It was the 55th commercial bank in the United States to fail that year. In this case, the Nebraska State Banking Director declared that the bank was no longer solvent. The bank’s assets were turned over to the FDIC, which began to liquidate the assets of the loans.

Farmers in the surrounding area were facing a new crisis with the failure. Borrowers were sure that there would be foreclosures, and that farmers would be ... Read more

Web Page

Native Americans & Settlers

Lesson Plan & Activities: 1850-1874: Native Americans and Settlers - Grade Level [4-12]

Tribes in Nebraska Give Up Lands in Treaties 1854 - 1857

Select a tribe and year to read the text of each treaty or a law summary that ceded land to the U.S.

NET Learning Services
Based on an original Map of Native American land cessions via treaties in what became Nebraska
Courtesy Bureau of American Ethnologies, Smithsonian Libraries, 1899

Native American tribes, including the Omaha, Oto, Missouri, Pawnee, Arapaho and ... Read more

Web Page

African American Settlers

Lesson Plan & Activities: 1850-1874: African American Settlers - Grade Level [4-12]

First African American Settler 1855 - Where did they Live?

In the first Nebraska territorial census of 1854, there were only four slaves listed. In 1855, Sally Bayne arrived in Omaha and is counted as the first free African American to settle in the Nebraska Territory. Before that, both slaves and free blacks had traveled through on the Oregon Trail and settled on the west coast. Gradually, along with ... Read more

Web Page

Who Were the Settlers? Who was Daniel Freeman?

Lesson Plans & Activities: 1850-1874: Homestead Act Signed: Who were the Settlers? - Grade Level [3-12]

The homesteaders came from all over the globe, from all walks of life. They were newly arrived immigrants. They were American farmers without land of their own in the east. They were families with young kids. They were single women. They were former slaves, freed during and after the Civil War.

What united this diverse group of people was the desire to own their own ... Read more

Web Page

Racial Tensions in Nebraska after World War I

Lesson Plan & Activities: 1900-1924: Racial Tensions - Grade Level [8-12]

On November 11, 1918, World War I ended and America emerged victorious. But as thousands of soldiers returned from Europe ready to forget the terrible carnage they had seen, they arrived in a country with serious social and political problems that the war had simply swept under the surface.

There have always been racial divides in America. People tend to identify themselves as members of one group or another. Tensions ... Read more

Web Page

POWs Far from the Battleground

Activities: 1925-1949: POWs Far From The Battleground - Grade Level [4-12]

Over three million prisoners of war were captured by Allied forces during World War II. Of these, 370,000 Germans and 50,000 Italians were transferred from the battlefront to the United States at the request of our European allies, who were holding all the prisoners they could. Prisoner-of-war troops were typically referred to as P.W. or POWs.

Prisoners were brought to the U.S. to be safely confined and to supplement a ... Read more

Web Page

Recording the Massacre

There is a remarkable record of Villasur’s defeat in 1720 still in existence. An unknown artist recorded the battle scene on three large buffalo hides based on descriptions provided by the survivors of the defeat. The artist was expertly trained in the Spanish style of painting, but we don’t know if he or she was Spanish or Indian. Scenes were first drawn in pencil, then traced in ink, and later the intense watercolors were added on a yellow ground.

The ... Read more

Web Page

Stephen H. Long

Stephen H. Long dubbed the Great Plains the "Great American Desert".
From the 1991 NET Television program Platte River Road.

The trappers, fur traders, and river men are generally given credit for exploring the West and opening it to settlement. The Army Corps of Engineers should also be credited. Stephen H. Long was a member of this group. Like most engineers, Long was college-trained and was willing to work with the modern technology of the time. Engineers were different from the ... Read more

Web Page

The Mighty Mo

Steamboats from St. Louis provided most of the supplies for the West during the 1840s and ’50s.
From the 1980 NET Television program Hidden Places, Where History Lives: Two Routes West

The first routes west were the rivers, and "the Mighty Missouri" was very popular. Travelers who were coming from St. Louis or points south used the Missouri River. Communities along the Missouri River like Bellevue and Nebraska City became starting points for pioneers moving westward to California or Oregon.

The Missouri River ... Read more

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History Timeline
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