Custer,
Dawson, Frontier, Furnas,
Gosper, Lincoln & Red Willow
New 67
Page Illustrated
Booklet
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Early days in seven
central Nebraska counties are recalled through colorful tales
of the old west, factual data and individual biographies in this
67-page spiral bound booklet excerpted from the rare 1882 book:
History of the State of Nebraska, originally published by
the Western Historical Co. of Chicago, and Nebraska, a Guide
to the Cornhusker State, a 1939 project of the Federal Writers
of the Works Progress Administration. The booklet is printed on
60# paper. A vinyl sheet has been added to protect the
full-color front cover.
Each county is addressed
separately. These were comparatively new counties
in 1882, when most of this material was written. Dawson and Lincoln
were 22 years old, the others less than ten. Common to most of the
individual histories are geographical descriptions, early settlers
and settlements, county organizations and early officials, agriculture,
and progress.
Additional subjects
by county include: CUSTER:
The cowboys versus the homesteaders, cattle thieves, the murder
of Luther Mitchell and Ami Ketchum and the trial of L.P. Olive and
Fred Fisher. Broken Bow, the county seat, and other small towns
are barely mentioned. DAWSON:
Indian troubles along the stage route and other Indian scares; Grasshoppers;
Criminal cases; Storms and
floods; and the towns of Plum Creek (which when it crossed the river
became Lexington, the county seat), Overton, Cozad and Willow Island.
FRONTIER:
First events, such as the first marriage; Stockville, the county
seat. FURNAS: Crimes and Criminals;
an Indian Scare; Beaver City, the county seat, Cambridge, Oxford,
and Arapahoe; GOSPER: No additional
subjects; LINCOLN: Overland
travel and its signifigance; Hunting Buffalo; Fort McPhearson; the
Indian War and other Indian troubles; Visit of the Grand Duke Alexis
of Russa in 1872; the town of North Platte -- it's early infamous
reputation, permanent improvements; RED
WILLOW: Dispute between settlements on Red Willow Creek
and Coon Creek; "Firsts"; Indianola, McCook (the county
seat).
Attention Genealogists:
In addition to the numerous names mentioned throughout the booklet,
there are biographies of a number of county residents of the late
1800s. Some of these are brief, but others include family members,
affiliations, war records, and business activities, in the course
of which they often shed light on area businesses, churches, professions
and institutions, and on news events. Those listed are:
CUSTER:
L.D. George; DAWSON: Anton Abel,
A.S. Baldwin, Dr. William M. Bancroft, F.L. Bradley, James P. Carr,
Dr. A.T. Gatewood, S.O. Hall, H.T. Hedges, John Heron, Thomas J.
Hewitt, Dr. Hosea Hudson, R.F. James, Benjamin F. Krier, John F.
Kutz, George Little, C.L. Long, Hugh Maclean, R.B. Peirce, H.O.
Smith, T.W. Smith, John S. Stuckey, J.S. Thomas, J.M, Tipton, T.L.
Warrington; FRONTIER: Everett
G. Nesbitt; FURNAS: C.S. Albee,
Thomas R. Armstrong, N.M. Ayers, C.F. Bennett, Alcinous T. Bratton,
Everard S. Child, Lewis Clute, Crutcher & Jones, Delatour &
Babcock, W.H. Faling, R.J. Finch, Hadley Brothers, Lucius Kinsman,
John H. McKee, Frank H. Nicholson, Peak & Pettit, W. Howard
Phelps, John W. Pickle, F.M. Rathbun, H.P. Rowley, D.M. Tomblin,
W.E. Winslow; LINCOLN: H.W.
Babb, D.W. Baker, Judge J.W. Bixler, George W. Boyden, John Bratt,
Alonzo H. Church, P.J. Cohn, Albert Coolidge, C.L. Cooper, Edwin
M. Day, Orren G. Dodge, Dr. N.F. Donaldson, T.J. Foley, Edwin R.
Griffin, C.F. Groner, A.B. Hall, E.W. Hammond, Fred Hanlon, William
Hurbartt, Beach I. Hinman, J.D. Jackson, S.P. Laing, Dr. F.H. Longley,
J.H. McConnell, Joseph Mackle, A.J. Miller, William Neville, H.N.
Nichols, John H. Owen, Thomas C. Patterson, William J. Patterson,
John M. Randolph, James M. Ray, Anthony Ries, Joseph Schatz, Judge
George T. Snelling, H.L. Swarthout, L. Thoelecke, Robert D. Thomson,
Irving Van Doran, George W. Vroman, Major Leicester Walker, Henry
Wilkinson, John R. Worthley.
No bios were included for Red Willow and Gosper
counties.
The final part of
the booklet contains a brief tour of the area from Nebraska,
a Guide to the Cornhusker State, including a separate section
on North Platte with a map an five points of interest. Tour stops
include the towns of Sargent, Westerville, Lexington, Cozad, Gothenburg,
Brady, Maxwell, O'Fallons, Sutherland, Maywood, Curtis, Stockville,
McCook, and Broken Bow.
We've
also included a small map of these counties from the 1882 book and
some current statistics.
Wouldn't this
make a unique gift?
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