NEBRASKA, a state just N. of the centre of the
U.S.A., lying approximately between 40° and 43° N. and between 18°
18' W., and 27° W. from
Washington. It is bounded on the N. by
South Dakota, on the
E. by
Iowa and a corner of
Missouri, on the S. by
Kansas, on the S. and W. by a
corner of
Colorado, and on
the W. by
Wyoming. The
Missouri river
extends along the eastern and north-eastern border. The extreme
length of the state is about 430 m., and extreme breadth about 210
m. The area is 77,520 sq. m., of which 712 are water surface.
Physical Features
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There
are three physiographic subdivisions; the foot-hills (and Bad
Lands), the
sand-hills and the
prairie - all three being portions of three great corresponding
regions of the Great Plains and Prairie Plains provinces.
The western portion of the state lies in the foot-hills of the
Rocky Mountain system, and is much rougher than western Kansas. The
surface of western Nebraska is characterized by high, barren table
lands, broken by canyons, dotted with buttes, and dominated by some
bold and lofty ridges.
Pine Ridge,
a picturesque escarpment of the Great Plains, cuts across the N.W.
corner of Nebraska from Wyoming into South Dakota. A ridge of low
hills and bluffs, often precipitous, marked by buttes and deeply
cut in places by Canons, it is the most striking surface feature of
the state. The
altitude in
this region varies from 3500 to 5000 ft. In the
fork of the North and South
Platte are the Wild
Cat Mountains with contours rising to 53 00 ft., in
which Wild Cat Mountain, long reported as the highest point in the
state, attains 5038 ft., Hogback Mountain 5082 ft., and various
other hills - Gabe Rock (5006), Big
Horn Mountain (4718), Coliseum Rock (5050), Scotts
Bluff (4662) &c. - rise to
heights of 45 00 to 5000 ft. In the extreme N.W. the White river
and
Hat Creek have carved canyons in deep lacustrine
deposits, creating fantastic cliffs and buttes, bare of vegetation,
gashed with drainage channels, and baked by the sun. The buttes -
bare, pyramidal or conical, flat-topped, precipitous hills, and
often fantastic, towering pinnacles - are rather widely distributed
through the foot-hill region. They are never more than 600 to 1000
ft. above the surrounding country. Nature is not grand in any part
of Nebraska, but the Bad Lands are imposing, and in the wooded
foot-hills there is an abundance of bold and attractive scenery,
particularly in Sioux county, and in Cherry county around
Valentine and on the
canyon of the Snake river. East
of the Bad Lands is the sand-hill region, which includes an area of
possibly 20,000 sq. m. The sand-hills proper are scattered over an
area of perhaps 15,000 sq. m., between the meridians of 98° and
103° W. long., lying mainly N. of the Platte; though there are some
along the Republican river. In places they rise in tiers, one above
another, like
miniature
mountains, and are 200 to 300 ft. high; but in general they are
very low (25-50 ft. high) and are scattered over a plain. Their
present contours are wholly the result of wind action. Save in rare
instances, however, they have long ceased to be shifting
dunes; for, with the cessation of
prairie fires and the increase of settlement, they have become well
grassed over and
stable;
although sand-draws, and even occasional " blow-outs" scooped by
the winds in the summits or sides of the hills are still
characteristic landmarks. All about and inter-penetrating the
foothill and sand-hill regions are the prairies, which include
three-fourths of the state. They are sometimes characteristically
flat over wide areas, but are usually gently rolling. Stream
valleys and bottom lands are the conspicuous modifying feature of
the prairie region; but in general, owing to the gentle slope of
the streams and the great breadth of the plains, erosion has been
slight; and indeed the streams, overloaded in seasonal freshets,
are building up their valley floors. The water-partings are
characteristically level uplands, often with shallow depressions,
once lakes, and some of them still so. The valleys of the greatest
streams are huge shallow troughs. The valley floor of the North
Platte in the foot-hills, the
flood-plain of an older river, is in places
700 ft or more below the bounding tableland, and
10 to 15 m. wide; the present flood-plain being
from I to 4 m. in width. Hundreds of small tributaries to the
greater streams (especially along the Republican and the Logan)
complicate and beautify the landscape. No farming country is richer
in quiet and diversified scenic
charm than the prairies of the eastern half of
the state. The Missouri is noteworthy for high bluffs cut by
ravines, which border it almost continuously on at least one side.
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Rivers
The Missouri skirts the eastern border for perhaps 500 m. It is
not navigated, and save at
Sioux City and
Omaha serves practically no economic purposes,
irrigation being
unnecessary in the counties on which it borders. Its bluffs, cut
for the most part in the
loess
but at places in the rock, are frequently from Too to 200 ft. high.
At
Vermilion, South
Dakota, its alluvial plain, 1131 ft. above the sea, is 330 ft.
above the mouth of the Nemaha. The current is always rapid and
heavily loaded with sediment,' and its axis is forever shifting.
Large areas of soil are thus shifted back and forth between
Nebraska and the bordering states, to the encouragement of border
lawlessness and uncertainty of titles; some portions E. of the
thread and apparently well within
Iowa remain under the jurisdiction of Nebraska, or vice versa; and
Yankton has been seriously
threatened with a sudden transfer from the South Dakota to the
Nebraska side. The Platte system is also heavily loaded with
sediment in Nebraska. The North and South forks both rise in
Colorado; each, especially the latter, has a rapid primary descent,
and a very gradual fall down the foot-hills of the Great Plains.'
Across Nebraska it maintains a remarkably straight course and an
extraordinarily even gradient (about 6 ft. per mile). In the spring
freshets it is a magnificent stream, but in summer its volume
greatly shrinks, and it is normally a broad, shallow, sluggish,
stream, flowing through interlacing channels among the sand-bars it
heaps athwart its course. The underflow is probably much greater
than the summer ' About 52 grains per
gallon at low water, 404 at high.
2 The North Platte falls 3700 ft. in 510 m., the South. 7200 ft.
in 427 m., above their junction; the latter falling 2692 ft. in 308
m. after leaving its canyon in the Rockies.
surface flow in volume. The Loup system is remarkable for the
even
dip of its parallel feeders,
which once joined the Platte separately, until the latter banked up
its deposits across the mouths of their more sluggish currents. The
Republican and South Platte - the former an intermittent stream -
suffer in their flow from the drain made upon their waters in
Colorado for irrigation. The upper course of the Niobrara above the
Keya Paha is in a narrow
gorge.
Its immediate bluffs and the shores of some of its tributaries,
notably the Snake, are modified by canons. This system is also
notable among Nebraska streams for a number of pretty water-falls.
The White river, heading on Pine Ridge, falls t too ft. in 20 m.
Some streams wholly dry up in the dry seasons, and in the
foot-hills and sand-hills there are a few that disappear by sinking
or evaporation.
Surface Water. - Swamps and bogs, apart from purely
temporary weather ponds, are confined to a few restricted regions
of the Missouri river bottoms and the prairies of the S.E. There
are some cut-offs or oxbow lakes along the Missouri, and many
lakelets originally such are scattered along the Platte, Elkhorn,
Big Blue and other rivers. Scores of lakes are scattered about the
heads of streams rising in the sand-hills, especially in Cherry
county. Some of them are fresh and some alkaline. Springs also are
numerous in the sandhills, where they form considerable streams.
They often flow with force and are known locally from this
peculiarity as " artesian " springs, or sometimes, from this and
their large size, as "
mound "
springs. The state
fish-hatchery
is on springs at
South
Bend; at Long Pine springs of large flow supply the town and
railway shops with water, and
led to the establishment here of
Chautauqua grounds.
Underground Water
The so-called blowing-
wells
are peculiar. They occur over much of the state, but most
frequently S. of the Platte, and are evidently sensitive to
barometric conditions; alternately " blowing " or sucking " as
these vary; so that, in cold weather water-pipes may be frozen too
or more feet below the surface of the ground.
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Nearly all counties
have a practically inexhaustible supply of ground water.
Well-depths vary from 15 to 20 ft. in the stream valleys and from
30 to 35 ft. on the loess prairies to 100-400 ft. in the western
foot-hill region and isolated prairie areas. Artesian water is also
available in many parts of the state. At Niobrara, in Knox county,
a well 656 ft. deep, drilled in 1896, yielded for a time 2500
gallons per minute at 95-lb pressure (in 1903 1900 gallons at 65-lb
pressure), and furnishes power for a
flour-
mill and
municipal water and electric
lighting works; the pressure forces the water
about 210 ft. above the mouth of the well,
i.e. to a
height of 1450 ft. Another (1430 ft. deep), in the environs of
Omaha, supplies a daily flow of 1,100,000 gallons under a pressure
of 15 lb. In some small and exceptional regions the water is very
alkaline, and in the counties of the south-east it is so generally
saline that it is difficult, below 150 ft., to avoid an inflow of
salt water. Saline wells at
Lincoln (2463, 1050 and 570 ft.
deep) and at
Beatrice
(1260 ft.) are notable in this regard.
Geology
The eastern part of the state is covered with a thick
mantle of
Quaternary (Pleistocene), and the greatest
part of the western portion with very thick deposits of
Miocene and
Pliocene (Tertiary) To the
Pleistocene belong the
alluvium, loess and
glacial
drift, and in part the
sand-hills. The drift covers the eastern fifth of the state. In
striking contrast to Iowa, the Nebraska
deposit is very thin, seldom thicker than I or
2 ft. Above the drift there is usually a heavy covering of loess or
" bluff deposit " (particularly typical in the neighbourhood of
Omaha and
Council
Bluffs). Though thin and worn out in places, it averages
probably too ft., and is often as much as 200 ft. in thickness, and
runs diagonally across the state from the N.E. to the Colorado
inset. The opinion that it is of aqueous origin (and probably dates
from the close of the glacial time) has the weight of authority. It
was spread by the rivers: some evidences of wind action may be
attributed to a later period. The sand-hills, which overlap the
loess N. of the Platte, are probably mainly derived from the
Arikaree, but probably also in part from the early Pleistocene.
West of 102° long. there are beds several hundred feet thick of
late
Tertiary sands and
clays. The Arikaree (Miocene) and Ogallala (Pliocene) formations of
the North Loup beds are superficial over much of the western half
of the state, the former to the N., the latter to the S. The buttes
are characteristically Arikaree or Gering formations topping Brule
clay. The same is true of at least
considerable parts of Pine Ridge. In the Bad Lands there are scanty
outcrops of the Chadron formation (known also as " Titanotherium
beds "), the oldest of the Tertiary beds. The thick superficial
coverings over the state make difficult the determination of the
underlying strata. There are only very scanty outcrops except along
the rivers. No Archean rocks are exposed in Nebraska, and the
sedimentary formations are undisturbed
in situ. The
Palaeozoic era is
represented only by the Pennsylvanian series of the Upper
Carboniferous and a scanty
strip of Kansas-Nebraska
Permian, and is confined to the
S.E. counties. But, though small in area, the Carboniferous is by
far the most important formation as regards mineral resources
within the state. It is buried probably 2000 or 3000 ft. in central
Nebraska, outcropping again only in the Rocky Mountains. Upon it,
in the trough thus formed, rest conformably the basal strata of the
Cretaceous; the
Jurassic and
Triassic being wholly absent (unless in
the extreme north-west). The E. limit of the Cretaceous extends
across the state from N. to S. between 98° and 99° W. long. Its
groups include the Dakota formation, characterized by a very
peculiar rusty
sandstone, and the Benton, both of which are
rather widely accessible and heavy; the Niobrara; the Pierre
shales, which apparently underlie about three-quarters of the state
in a deep and heavy
bed; and, in the
extreme west, the
Laramie.
There are almost no Cretaceous outcrops except on the streams,
especially the Niobrara, Republican and Platte rivers - and in the
Bad Lands. The superficial Miocene and Pliocene deposits in the
west, above referred to, are underlaid by the White river groups of
the
Oligocene, whose outcrops of Brule
clay and Chadron formation also have been mentioned. The Bad Lands
are essentially nothing but fresh-water mud excessively weathered
and eroded. They are often intersected by dikes of
chalcedony, formerly
mistaken for
lava. The Bad Lands
and the Arikaree are famous fossil fields, the latter being the
source of the
Daemonelix, or " Devil's
cork-
screw," a
large
spiral fossil,
apparently a lacustrine alga. It was once generally supposed that
the Pliocene epoch in Nebraska was distinguished by the activity of
geysers; but the so-called geyserite " now known commonly and
correctly as " natural
pumice
" and " volcanic
ash," which is
found in the Oligocene and later formations, has no connexion
whatever with geysers, but is produced by the shattering of
volcanic rock. It occurs widely in Nebraska and adjoining
states.
Minerals
Mineral resources are decidedly limited; the total value of the
mineral output (excluding coal) in 1907 was $1,383,916, of which
$953,432 was the value of clay products, $324,239 of stone, and
$54,227 of sand and
gravel.
The state, however, is particularly rich in good clays, which are
probably its greatest mineral resource.
Calcite of excellent quality is the commonest
mineral. Gravel is widely obtainable, and sand of the finest
quality is available in inexhaustible quantities, and is an
important article of export.
Flint (valuable for railway ballast) occurs in
immense quantities about Wymore and Blue Springs. The underground
salt water flow promised once to be a resource of value, especially
in the vicinity of Lincoln, but has proved of little or no value in
comparison with the
great salt-beds of Kansas. A native
plaster is yielded by the
Arikaree and Ogallala rocks, but though otherwise of excellent
qualities it is ruined by slight exposure to the water. A
diatomaceous earth in central Nebraska, occurring especially in the
region of Loup, is a good polishing
powder, and is used for packing
steam pipes.
Limonite in the form of ochre occurs in
considerable quantity.
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The Dakota formation,
though its sand-stones are in general coarse or otherwise inferior,
yields some of splendid quality. Its clays which are of all
colours, are the most valuable of the state. The finest building
stone is a beautiful green
quartzite rock of dense, fine texture and
lasting quality. It is related to the Ogallala beds and occurs only
in small areas. The quarries and clay pits of the state are mainly
in the Carboniferous region of the S.E. Cretaceous
lignite occurs in small
quantities in the N.E., and
peat
more widely.
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Flora
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The most marked characteristic of Nebraskan
vegetation is its immigrant character, and the state has been
called " one of the finest illustrations of the commingling of
contiguous species to be found anywhere in
America " (C. E. Bessey). Immigrant species
have even come from
Texas and
New Mexico, from the
Dakotas and the Rockies. From the last-named various species have
crept two-thirds of the way across the state, one (the
buffalo berry) wholly covers
it, and some have barely crossed into the border foot-hills from
Wyoming. A very few trees and shrubs, and some
grasses, are strictly endemic to the plains and
to Nebraska. Four floral regions lying in north to south belts
across the state, and closely corresponding to - though in
boundaries by no means coinciding with - its great topographic
divisions are distinguished in the regions of the Missouri border,
the prairies, sand-hills and foot-hills. In 1896 some 3196, and by
1905 fully 3300 species had been listed, " representing every
branch and nearly every class of the
vegetable kingdom " (C. E. Bessey). There are
at least 64 trees and at least 77 shrubs growing native in the
state; but of their joint number a mere half-dozen or so can be
classed as strictly endemic. Small woods of broad-
leaf trees (and red cedars) grow very generally
along all the water-courses of the state; and coniferous species
grow along Pine Ridge and the Wild Cat Mountains. In the East,
various trees are readily grown on the uplands; in the West the
honey-locust, the
Osage orange and
Russian mulberry for windbreaks; the
green ash, and red
cedar are
perhaps the most valuable drought resisting species. The conifers
are spreading naturally. In the sand-hills the sand-
bar willow of
the rivers and the cottonwood growing naturally, evidence the good
conditions of moisture; and the forestation of much of the region
is undoubtedly possible. Forest reserves were established on the
Dismal river in 1902 and millions
of seedlings had been grown by 1906 for transplantation in Nebraska
and other states t. A
Seneca
Beloit mbeilin a
0 n
p lank into English Miles
County Seats County Boundaries.....
Railways Indian Reserves °??
Smith Center
Belle. °
arvsville Washington
Hill Hill 0E0,0' Center Hot Sprin n of the Great Plains.
Arbor Day (the 10th of
April) was instituted by the Nebraska State
Board of
Agriculture in 1872 at the instance of J.
Sterling Morton, later secretary of
agriculture of the
United States (see
Arbor
Day). It has been yearly observed by the public schools of the
state, and no state has done more than Nebraska for the forestation
of its waste and prairie lands. In such a purely agricultural state
a large wooded area is not desired. Plums, grapes and the
dwarf " sand-cherry " (
Prunus
demissa) of the sand-hills are prominent among many wild
fruits. The flora is decidedly rich in species as compared with
other states, but less so in the number of individuals. Grasses are
perhaps the most noteworthy vegetable forms. Nebraska claims a
greater variety of native
hay and
forage species than grow in any
other state of the Union. No less than 200 grasses, at least 154
being wild or commonly cultivated, had been listed in 1904. Of the
total 200 species 150 (130 indigenous) are valuable for forage, 34
(20 indigenous) are classed economically as weeds, 10 are
non-indigenous cereals and 6 are ornamental. The short buffalo-
grass
was originally everywhere abundant, but it had practically
disappeared by 1890 from the eastern half of the state, and since
then has steadily become more restricted in
habitat. The native prairie grasses have been
in considerable part displaced by grasses introduced from more
humid regions. Weeds are very numerous (about 125); and some,
notably the sand-
bur (
Solanum
rostratum) cockle-bur,
and tumble-weeds among indigenous, and the Russian
thistle (
Salsola
tragus) and
purslane
among non-indigenous species, are agricultural pests. Nothing can
surpass in beauty the rank grasses and bright flowers that grow on
the lowlands and rolling uplands of a virgin prairie - now hardly
to be found in the state. The common
sunflower (the most conspicuous weed of the
state) and allied flowers, which spring up in myriads even in the
midst of unbroken prairie wherever this is disturbed, line the
roads with yellow bands from
horizon to horizon, enclose the broken fields
and choke waste places.
Fauna
The fauna of the state is not known with the same thoroughness
and detail as the flora, but it too is varied. This is notably true
of birds and of insects. Of the latter there are probably 12,000 to
15,000 species, including 140 butterflies, at least 180
grasshoppers, several hundred bees, &c. The so-called " grass
hoppers," true locusts, have done great damage at times in
Nebraska.
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There were
locust
plagues in 1874, 1876 and 1877. Fungus parasites have been used
with some, but on the whole rather slight, success, and mechanical
appliances with perhaps greater success, in combating these pests.
Birds are more effective. As in the case of plants, western,
eastern, northern and southern avian species meet in Nebraska.
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The lakes of the sandhills are the breeding-place - less so
as settlement increases - of myriads of water-
fowl. Before the
advent of the white man Nebraska was full of
wild mammals, the buffalo,
elk,
black and white tailed
deer,
antelope, bears,
timber wolves, panthers (pumas),
lynx,
otter and
mink
being common. Almost all that remain are black bears, foxes,
coyotes (prairie wolves), mink,
musk-rats, raccoons and prairie dogs (or gophers).
Antelope were not uncommon in the west and northwest until after
1890. The
coyote is still so
common even in the east as to be a
nuisance to the farmer; in 1907 a
bounty law was in force which
provided for the payment of a state bounty of $5, on every grey
wolf, $1.25 on every coyote and $1 on
every lynx (wild cat). A few rodents have increased in numbers; the
prairie
dog especially is a pest in
the alfalfa fields of the arid lands (as are
pocket-gophers at places in the east).
Climate
The climate of Nebraska is typically inland or continental;
i.e. it is characterized by " winters of considerable
severity, summers of unusual warmth, rainfall in limited
quantities, marked and sudden changes of temperature, large
seasonal and daily temperature ranges, and dry, salubrious
atmosphere, with a small
percentage of cloudiness, and a large percentage of
sunshine."' The average wind
velocity for the High Plains of Nebraska and adjoining states is
about 10 to 12 m.; 25 m. is not uncommon; and a velocity of 40 m.
and over is recorded a half-dozen or more times every year. In
spring velocities of 15 to 20 m. are common. The average velocity
of winds for the entire state for it years preceding 1906 was 9.8
m. per hour. The prevailing directions are those common to a large
part of the western
Mississippi valley. The prevailing wind of
the year is N.W.; but in the spring, the summer and much of the
autumn its predominance is greatly reduced or overcome by S. and
S.W. winds blowing from the
Gulf of Mexico (but deflected by the
rotation of the earth). Sometimes these winds blow in the winter -
causing the curious
phenomenon of melting snows on the coldest
days of the year; in the summer in seasons of drought, especially
in the western part of the state, this wind from the Gulf sometimes
reaches Nebraska 1
Senate
Executive Document 11.5 (vol. to), 51 Congress, t
Session (1890),
Climate of
Nebraska. wrung dry of its moisture and so hot that in a day
or two it shrivels and ruins the crops in its path. Such calamities
are, however, uncommon, and the belief that Nebraska is often
visited by tornadoes is erroneous.
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But there is a considerable difference in the averages for
different months - the normal means of January and July through 30
years being 20.9° and 74.6° F. and the means of spring, summer,
autumn and winter respectively about 48°, 72°, 53° and 23.5° F.
Thus there is for any particular locality a wide range in absolute
temperature through the year, which averages for the state probably
about 120° (1897-1905). Similarly, the range is large through the
day, especially in the higher altitudes, where the nights are
almost invariably cool and refreshing after even the hottest day.
The number of continuous days with a mean temperature above 50° F.,
averages probably about 175 for the state. The actual
growing-season between frosts is, however, not so great.
Temperature is of course lower as one moves to the N. and N.W., the
initial planting and harvesting of each
crop progressing
wave-like across the state in from one to two
weeks. Especially in the W. and N.W. there are in some winters
occasional anti-cyclonic or high-area storms known as blizzards -
wind-storms preceded or accompanied by
snow-fall - which are very severe. They continue
from one to three days, and are habitually followed by very low
temperature. They are the cause of great loss to the
cattle owners. Such storms are,
however, rare. In the S.E. portion of the state the winters are
characteristically mild and open. Temperatures below
zero are rare for any locality; and
the same may be said of temperatures above 95° in summer.
The normal mean-annual precipitation for the whole state is
about 23.84 in. in
rain and melted
snow, the actual yearly fall varying through 30 years between 13.30
and 31.65 in.
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But aridity is a matter of the
efficiency rather than of the mere quantity of rainfall, and in
this regard Nebraska is very fortunately situated. Rain is most
plenteous in the critical months of the year. Seven-tenths of all
precipitation falls in the growing season, giving the state,
especially in the east, a greater amount at this time than many
other states whose aggregate yearly rainfall is greater; so that
Nebraska has an abundance for the safest cultivation. Moreover,
nine-tenths of the rainfall is absorbed by the loess and sandy
soils, only one-tenth being " run-off." It is a widely spread but
unfounded belief in Nebraska that the rainfall has been increasing
since the settlement of the state. That its storage has very
greatly increased as cultivation has been extended (the prairie sod
sheds water like a roof) is true; moreover, the spread of
scientific principles of farming has increased the advantage
derived from the ground-water stored. Efficient rainfall has thus
been greatly increased. Intermittent streamlets may well become
perennial, and many are probably, as reported, becoming so. It is
even conceivable that the settlement of the state may affect the
seasonal distribution of precipitation; and that an advantageous
alteration has in fact resulted is believed by many.
The climate of Nebraska is exceptionally healthy. Its beneficial
qualities must be attributed to the state's inland situation, its
dry and pure
air, constant winds and
splendid drainage, to which its even slope and peculiar soil alike
contribute. In some people, however, nervousness is induced; and
the winds, in particular, often have this effect. Autumn is perhaps
the finest season; the fields are green into the winter, the air is
pure and fresh, though dry and warm, and the long season is
delightfully mild and beautiful. The arid portion, as compared with
the eastern portion, of the state has alike the advantages and
disadvantages of a climate more sharply characterized.
Soil
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The basis of the soils is sands (coarse,
fine or silt); clay beds, though economically important, are in
quantity relatively scant. In the eastern half silt, and in the
western fine sand, form the bulk of the soil. There are five
well-defined soil regiotis corresponding to the
geologic-topographic divisions already indicated of drift loess,
sand-hills, foot-hills and Bad Lands. The loess is a " salt, fine
sandy
loam with a large percentage
of sand or silt, and considerable calcareous matter, and usually a
small amount of clay." It contains considerable humic matter,
discolouring rapidly in the air (when exposed it is
characteristically a bright
buff).
It is of extraordinary fertility, and its great depth (in Lincoln
and Dawson counties bluffs 200 ft. thick are found) is a
guarantee of almost
inexhaustible resources. The glacial drift is also a useful
deposit, coarse ingredients in it being of small amount (rare
boulders, and some gravel). The superficial soil over most of the
state, and everywhere in the E. except rarely where the loess or
drift is bare, is a rich, black vegetable
mould, I to 5 ft. thick on the uplands. The
sand-hills are not inherently infertile; the soil never bakes, is
always receptive of moisture, absorbing water like a sponge and
holding it well. There is a great amount of fertile valley land,
adequately watered. Alfalfa and other cultivated grasses are
encroaching on the whole region, and even the natural arid-land
bunch grasses make excellent grazing. The "
butte " soil of the W. is a fine sandy soil,
characteristically calcareous, derived from the Arikaree. With it
also moisture is a great factor in its productivity. The Bad Lands
are by no means infertile (their name, it should be noted, was
originally
Mauvaises terres a traverser); but they are
almost destitute of ground water, though containing many green "
pockets " where surface water can be stored. They contain much clay
and marls, non-absorbent and subject to such excessive wash that
vegetation cannot gain a foothold. In various parts of the west are
small tracts of so-called
gumbo
" soil; they are due to the Pierre shale, are poorly drained and
characteristically alkaline. Small alkaline areas also occur about
lakes in the sand-hills. Where surface water is adequate the
regions of the Pierre shale make splendid grazing lands; but in
general they are not very useful for agriculture. Salt lands occur
about Salt Creek notably around Lincoln. The stream bottoms of
alluvium are modified by loess and humic deposits, and are of
course very fertile; but hardly more so than the loess of the
uplands.
Agriculture
Agriculture is not only the chief industry but is also the
foundation of the commerce and manufactures of the state. In 1900,
of the total area 60.8% was reported as included in farms, and
37.5% as actually improved. The rank of the state in the Union was
13th in value of
farm property,
and 10th in value of farm products. The farm value was
$747,950,057, an increase since 1890 of 46.1%; while the total
product-value was $162,696,386 - an increase (partly factitious) of
1 43.4% in the same period. A greater part of the state was
reported improved in 1890 than in 1900; the change was due to the
increase of stock-raising in the West. Similarly, the size of the
average farm increased from 156.9 acres in 1880 to 190.1 in 1890,
and 246.1 in 1900, although in eastern Nebraska there was a
contrary tendency. Under the Kincaid law, which permits entire
sections instead of quarter sections (160 acres) to be homesteaded,
this movement has been fostered. In the years 1880-1900 the number
of farms operated by
cash tenants
rose from 3.1 to 9.6%; of share
tenants from 14.9 to 27.3% of the total. There is no appreciable
tendency toward management for absentee owners.
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Other crops were
unimportant sources of revenue. Sugar-beet culture has developed
since about 1889; it is localized largely in Lincoln county, near
North Platte, though beets are raised over a large part (especially
the western part) of the state. In 1907 about 11,000 acres were
planted to sugar beets. The principal factory for the slicing of
the beets is one built at
Grand Island, Hall county, in 1890. The
dairy interest is rapidly growing,
but is still exceeded in other states. Omaha is a great dairy
market. Nebraska ranks very high in the production of cattle and
hogs. A fourth of all animal products are represented by
milk,
butter and
cheese, eggs and
poultry; the rest by
animals killed on the farm or sold for slaughter, most of them
going to supply the
meat-packing
industry of
South
Omaha. Wild, salt and prairie grasses make up the bulk of the
forage acreage, but the cultivated crops - especially
millet and Hungarian grasses and
alfalfa - are more important. Holt county in the Elkhorn valley,
and Sheridan county in the foot-hills, produce more than half the
hay-crop of the state. Alfalfa can be grown with more or less
success in every county of the state, not excepting areas where
clay or sand form the sub-soil; but on the uplands of the central
part of the state it is produced with the greatest success and in
the greatest quantities. In 1908, according to the reports of the
state Board of Agriculture, the crop of Custer, Dawson and Buffalo
counties was about 15% of the total crop (1,846,703 tons) of the
state. The product was quintupled between 1899 and 1905, and
between 1905 and 1908 the increase was about 40 °A. It has been a
great aid to western Nebraska as to other portions of the Great
Plains.
Sorghum and kafir
corn are also excellent, and
broom-corn fairly good, as
drought-resistant crops; the last, which is of lessening
importance, is localized in Cass, Saunders and Polk counties.
Cereals are by far the most important crops, representing in 1899
four-fifths of farmed land and crop values. Allowing for variations
in " off years," but speaking with as much exactness as is
possible, Nebraska has established her position since about 1900 in
the third, fourth and fifth rank respectively among the states of
the Union, in the production of Indian corn,
wheat and oats. Of these, Indian corn is by far
the most important, representing normally about two-thirds of the
total crop value; while wheat and oats each represented in 1906
about oneseventh of the total crop, and
rye,
barley,
kafir-corn and
buckwheat
make up the small remainder. Indian corn is grown to some extent
all over the state, except in the north-west, but the great bulk of
the crop is produced east of the 99th
meridian. It is rarely cut, but is left to
mature and dry on the stalk in the field. The yearly yield in the
decade 1895-1904, according to the most conservative state
statistics, varied from
298,599,638 to 72,445,227 bushels, and the average was 178,941,084
bushels, or 190,773,957, omitting the failure of 1901; the yield
per
acre
being similarly 26.35 or 27.9 bushels (12.4 in 1901); 1 in 1906 the
crop was 249,782,500 bushels, and the average yield per acre 34.1
bushels; in 1907 the crop was 179,328,000 bushels, and the average
yield only 24 bushels per acre, According to the report of the
state Board of Agriculture, Custer,
Lancaster and Saunders counties produced the
largest amounts (each more than 5,000,000 bushels) of Indian corn
in 1908. Since 1900 Nebraska has become one of the foremost winter
wheat states, second only to Kansas. Little spring wheat is now
sown except in the northern counties, the state being on the
northern edge of the winter wheat
belt. From 1880 to 1890 the acreage devoted to
wheat greatly diminished, because the spring variety was not
relatively remunerative, but the acreage trebled in the next decade
as autumn planting increased. The winter varieties have the
advantages of larger yield, earlier ripening and lesser loss from
insects, and afford protection to the soil. The growth of durum
(macaroni) wheat is also increasing, but is hampered by the
uncertainty of market, which is for the most part foreign. The
wheat crops of the decade 18 951904 averaged 33,208,805 bushels a
year; or ranged from a minimum of 9.8 to a maximum of 20.9,
averaging 15.8 bushels to the acre; in 1906 the crop was 52,288,692
bushels, and the average yield 22 bushels per acre; and in 1907 the
crop was 45911,000 bushels, and the average yield 18.1 bushels per
acre. In 1908 Clay,
Adams and
Hamilton were the principal
wheat-growing counties in the state. The corresponding figures for
oats were: average yield for the decade, 48,145,185 (range,
28,287,707 in 1901 to 66,810,065 in 1904); range of yield per acre,
17.9 to 34.0, and average 27.6 bushels per acre; in 1906 the crop
was 72,275,000 bushels and the average yield per acre 29.5 bushels;
in 1907 the crop was 51,490,000 bushels, and the average yield 20.4
bushels per acre. In the decade1890-1900the state did not rise
above the 10th rank in the Union; after 1900 her rise was rapid.
The same is even more markedly true of rye; in 1907 the crop was
1,502,000 bushels (from 88,400 acres), a yield exceeded in only
five states in the country. Apples are raised in the N.E. and S.E.
sections of the state, and are much the most important
fruit grown. Peaches are next in
importance, and horticultural enthusiasts believe that the
possibilities of this crop are very great. Other fruits are raised
with much success, and in 1904 at St Louis the horticultural
exhibit of the state led those of all other states in the medals
received for excellence; but nevertheless its relative rank in the
Union as a fruit-producing state is still low.
In a period of 30 years (1869-1898) there were, according to the
state Board of Agriculture, four seasons whose crops could
reasonably be classed as failures, three more as " short," one as
fair, eighteen as good, and four as great. Compared with adjoining
states - Iowa,
Minnesota, South Dakota, Kansas, Missouri -
none shows a greater, if indeed any shows so great an average value
per acre in the yield of Indian corn, wheat, oats, barley and rye;
and this despite the assumed
handicap of the western half of the state. In
fact the yield of this section relatively to cultivated acreage is
normally fully equal to that of the eastern section; a result quite
consistent with the scientifically proven fertility of semi-arid
lands. The real handicap of the western counties would be shown in
comparing aggregate yields per given area; for much land is
normally inarable. Alfalfa, stock raising and dairying,
afforestation, " dry-farming " and irrigation are, however, proving
that the West can maintain prosperity by not relying upon ordinary
agriculture. Alfalfa is not easily started, however, on the uplands
of the extreme western part of the state; and dry-farming (the
Campbell
dust-mulch system) has
the expensiveness in labour of intensive cultivation. The
above-mentioned delusion that climate is changing and adapting
itself to agriculture, thus relieving the farmer of accommodating
his methods to the climate, has considerably handicapped him in
progress.
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Irrigation
Water for the western part of the state is a resource of primary
importance, and irrigation therewith a fundamental problem. Very
generally, especially in the butte regions, the country lends
itself to the impounding of surface water. The lakes are of great
importance for the stock ranges -of the sand-hills. It is commonly
believed that of underground water, and generally of artesian
water, even the driest counties have an abundance. This is great
exaggeration.
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.^ U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Division of Occupational Employment Statistics Suite 2135, 2 Massachusetts Avenue, NE Washington, DC 20212-0001 .- Nebraska - May 2008 OES State Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates 15 January 2010 7:26 UTC www.bls.gov [Source type: Reference]
The
yearly average given by the Board of Agriculture for1895-1904is
219,196,000 bushels. The statistics for 1906 and 1907 are taken
from the
Year-books of the Department of Agriculture.
irrigable.
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iii. p. 144).
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of canals, and the
reclamation of 107,000 acres in Nebraska; it was 74% completed in
1909. The work of the national service began in Nebraska in 1902.
Some farmers on
tile uplands
between the valleys in western Nebraska irrigate by means of
wind-mills, and although the underground water is 175 ft. or more
below the surface one wind-mill often supplies sufficient water to
irrigate ten acres. The extent of irrigated acreage increased about
thirteen-
fold from 1889 to 1899.
In the latter year there were 1701 m. of ditch costing about
$751.00 per m., irrigating 148,538 acres, which yielded crops
averaging $6.61 per acre in value. The greatest part of the
irrigated acreage is in the valley of the North Platte and the
Upper Platte - probably nine-tenths in 1906 - in Scotts Bluff,
Lincoln,
Cheyenne, Dawson,
Keith and
Deuel counties. There is, however, a large ditch in Platte county -
the farthest E. of any large ditch in the country; and though
agriculture is normally quite " successful " here without
irrigation, nevertheless it is more profitable with it. In fact, in
1899 about a quarter of the irrigated acreage lay E. of the section
classed as arid.
Manufactures
The rank of Nebraska among the states of the Union in 1900 in
population, in value of agricultural products, and in value of
manufactured products, was respectively twenty-seventh, tenth and
nineteenth. In the decade1890-1900the state increased the value of
its manufactures somewhat more than half. The per
capita
product-values for agriculture and manufactures in 1900 were $153
and $135 (as compared with $63 and $88 in 1890). Only 2.3% of the
population were engaged in manufacturing in 1900. Of the total
factory product (in 1900, $130,302,453; in 1905, $ 1 54,9 18, 220),
84.7%were urban (i.e. were for the three cities which in 1900 had a
population of at least 8000) in 1900, and 81.7 in 1905; the
percentage for these cities being 53.3 in 1900 and 43.5 in 1905 for
South Omaha, 29.2 in 1900 and 34.9 in 1905 for Omaha, and 2.1 in
1900 and 3.4 in 1905 for
Lincoln; Nebraska City,
Fremont, Grand Island,
Beatrice,
Hastings,
Plattsmouth and
Kearney were the only other
manufacturing centres of any importance.
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As yet manufactures are insignificant
except in lines immediately dependent upon agriculture, the
combined output of the packing, flour and grist mill, dairy and
malt-liquor establishments
constituting in 1900 nine-tenths of the total state output.
Meat-packing is by far the most important single interest, South
Omaha being the third greatest packing centre of the country,
employing in 1900 and in 1905 a quarter of all wageearners and
yielding nearly one-half the total product-value of the state ($71;
018,339 in 1900; $69,243,468 in 1905).
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Many co-operative dairies have
persisted since the early days of farmers' granges. The value of
cheese, butter and other dairy products was $ 2, 2 53, 8 93 in 1900
and $3,326,1 1 0 in 1905. Of manufactures not dependent upon
agriculture perhaps the most promising is that of brick and tile
products (valued at $839,815 in 1900 and at $1,131,913 in 1905),
and the largest in 1905 was the manufacture and repair of steam
railway cars (valued at $2,624,461 in 1900 and at $4,394,685 in
1905).
Communications
There is no longer any river navigation. There were 6,101.5 m.
of railway in the state at the end of 1907; the great period of
railway building was 1870-1890, the mileage in 1870 being 705, in
1880, 1953, and in 1890, 5407. The eastern half of the state is
much better covered by railways than the western. Six great east
and west
trunk-lines connecting
the Rocky Mountain region and
Chicago enter the state at Omaha (q.v.), and
two others, giving rather an outlet southward, enter the same city
and serve the eastern part of the state. In 1908 all but 5 counties
out of 90 had railway outlets. A marked tendency toward north and
south railway lines is of great promise to the state, as outlets
towards the Gulf of
Mexico are
important, especially for local
freight. Omaha and Lincoln are Federal ports of
entry for customs.
Population
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The latter came mainly from the
north-central states. Of the foreigners, Germans, Scandinavians and
British (including English Canadians) made up four-fifths of the
total. The most numerous individual races were Germans (65,506),
Swedes (24,693), Bohemians (16,138), Danes (12,531), Irish
(11,127), English (9757), Russians (8083) and English Canadians
(801o). In 1900 three cities had a population above 25,000 - Omaha,
102,555; Lincoln, 40,169; South Omaha, 26,001 - and seven others
had a population between
8000 and 8000 - Beatrice, Grand
Island, Nebraska City, Fremont, Hastings, Kearney and
York. The population of Nebraska was
28,841 in 1860, 122,993 in 1870, 452,402 in 1880 and 1,062,656 in
1890. The increases of population by decades following 1860 were
326.5, 267.8, 134.1, 0.3, and 1 1 8%. From1880-1890the absolute
increase was exceeded in only four states, and was greater than in
any state W. of the Mississippi except the enormous state of Texas;
from1890-1900it was less than in any state of the Union except
Nevada (whose population
decreased). In this decade 35 counties out of 90 in the state
showed a decrease: the shrinkage was mainly in the first half of
the decade, and was due to the cumulative effects of national hard
times, a reaction from an extraordinarily inflated land "
boom " of the late 'eighties, and a
remarkable succession of drought years, and consequent crop failure
in the West. Between 1885 and 1895 Kansas and Colorado went through
much the same experience, due to a too rapid settlement of their
arid areas before the conditions of successful agriculture were
properly understood.
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In the case of some cities that showed a great decrease
(e.g. Lincoln 27.2%, and Omaha 27%) notoriously " padded " censuses
in 1890 were in part responsible for the bad showing ten years
later.
In 1906 there were in the state 345,803 communicants of various
religious denominations; of these 100,763 were Roman Catholics,
64,352 Methodists, 59,485
Lutherans, 23,862 Presbyterians, 19,121
Disciples
of Christ, 17,939
Baptists and 15,247 Congregationalists.
In 1890 there were in the state 2893 untaxed and 3538 taxed
Indians, the latter being citizens; in 1900 there were 3,322
altogether, all of them taxed; and in 1908 there were 3720, of whom
1270 were Omaha, 1116 Santee Sioux, 1060 Winnebago and 274
Ponca.
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The Caddoan family was represented by the Middle or
Pawnee Confederacy; the Siouan
family by its Dakota, Thegiha, Chiwere and Winnebago branches.
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Other tribes were of
less importance; and tribes of other families - with the exception
of the Cheyennes and Arapahoes of the Algonquian family, whose
permanent
hunting grounds
embraced the foot-hill country of the West - were of negligible
importance, being only roamers within the borders of the state. The
Pawnees contested the plains against the Sioux with undying enmity.
Before the Civil War there were no very general troubles between
Indians and whites, despite constant frontier difficulties, except
the bloodless " Pawnee War " of 1859-60; but in 186364 the Indians
rose rather generally along the frontier, and many settlers were
killed.
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In dealings with the Indians
there have been in Nebraska the usual discreditable features of
administration. The maltreatment of the Poncas, a fine and
peaceable tribe, was peculiarly and inexcusably harsh. Segregation
on reservations was generally accomplished in 1870-1880. There were
in 1900 small reservations for
Omahas and Winnebagoes in Thurston county and
for the Sioux in Sheridan county, and an agency for the Santees and
Poncas near the mouth of the Niobrara; and at
Genoa, where the Pawnee agency and
reservation had been
located, there was in 1908 an Indian school maintained by the
United States government with 350 boarding pupils. In 1908,
however, almost all the tribal lands had been distributed in
severalty: the Niobrara Reservation (under the Santee government
boarding school for the Santee Sioux and the Ponca) had only
1130 . 7 acres reserved for agency, school and
mission purposes; the Ponca Reservation (under the same school) had
only 160 acres reserved for agency and school buildings; the Omaha
Reservation (under the Omaha School) had 12,421 acres unallotted;
the Sioux Reservation (under the Pine Ridge Agency) for Oglala
Sioux had 640 acres; and the Winnebago Reservation (under the
Winnebago School) had 1710.8 acres unallotted and 480 reserved for
agency, &c.
Government
The present constitution, adopted in 1875, replaced one adopted
in 1866. In 1871 a convention framed a constitution that was
rejected by the people. It provided for compulsory education, and
for the
taxation of church
property; prohibited the grant by counties or cities of financial
aid to railway or other corporations, and enjoined that railways
should have an
easement
only in their right of way. The last two provisions were mainly
responsible for the defeat of the constitution. The instrument of
1875 presents a few variations from the normal type, and under it a
few interesting problems have arisen. The constitution provides two
methods for
amendment. A
convention for revising or amending the constitution is to be held
in case a recommendation to that effect made by the legislature (a
three-fifths vote of all the members of each house being required)
is accepted by a majority of the
electors voting at the next election for
members of the legislature, but no amendment agreed upon by the
convention is to take effect until approved by a majority of
electors voting on it. Without calling a convention, however, the
legislature may, by a threefifths vote of all the members of each
house, adopt an amendment, which is to come into effect only if
approved by a majority of electors voting at the next election of
senators and representatives - the publication of the proposed
amendment in some newspaper in each county once a week for three
months before the election being required. This has been
interpreted by the courts as requiring a majority of the votes
actually cast for senators and representatives. As there is less
interest in amendments than in the election of members of the
legislature, only two out of a large number of amendments proposed
from time to time by three-fifths of the members elected to each
house have been adopted. The first of these, increasing the pay per
day to the members of the legislature and providing for longer
sessions,' was declared lost by the official canvassers, but when
(1886) the ballots had been recounted by the legislature it was
declared adopted. The second (1906), creating a railway commission,
was endorsed by a political party in state convention, was printed
on the same
ballot-paper with
the names of the party candidates for office in order to secure for
it all " straight " party votes, and by this procedure, which was
upheld by the state
supreme court in 1907, it
was adopted.
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Women who have either children or
taxable property may vote on questions relating to schools. The
general election of state and local officers is held annually on
the first Tuesday succeeding the first
Monday in November, but municipal and school
district elections may be held at other times. The secret ballot
was adopted in 1891; the use of the
voting machines was authorized in 1899;
and the nomination of candidates by primaries was made mandatory in
1907. By a provision unique in 1875, the constitution authorized
the legislature to provide that the electors might express their
preferences for United States senators; but this was not treated as
mandatory on the legislature, and though votes were at times taken
(1886, 1894), they were not officially canvassed, nor were any
senatorial The amendment increased the pay of members from three
dollars to five dollars a day " during their sitting," and provided
that sessions should last at least sixty days, and that members
should not receive pay " for more than sixty days at any one
sitting"; the original constitution had provided that they should "
not receive pay for more than forty days at any one session " and
had prescribed no minimum length for a session.
elections materially affected by them. In 1907, under a direct
primary law, the nomination of candidates for United States senator
was transferred from the party convention directly to the people;
and in 1909 the "
Oregon plan
" was adopted, whereby each candidate for the legislature must go
on record as promising, or not, always to vote for the people's
choice for United States senator; on the ballot which bears the
name of each candidate for the legislature there appears a
statement that he " promises," or that he " will not promise," to
vote for the " people's choice." In the same year the state enacted
a law providing for the non-
partisan nomination of all judges, of all
superintendents of public instruction and of regents of the state
university; nominations are by
petition, and there is a separate " official
non-partisan ballot " bearing the names and addresses of the
nominees and the titles of the office for which they are nominated.
The legislature of 1909 also provided for open election primaries
and for the framing of state party platforms by convention before
the time of the primary.
The governor is the chief executive officer of the state, but
quite independent of him are a lieutenant-governor, a
secretary of
state, an auditor of public accounts, a treasurer, a
superintendent of
public instruction, an
attorney-general and a commissioner of
public lands and buildings, who, as well`as the governor, are
elected for a term of two years. The governor's appointing power is
almost entirely limited to
officers of state institutions,
and for every appointment he makes the approval of the Senate is
required; but he need not ask the consent of that body to remove
for incompetency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office " any
officer whom he may appoint." His constitutional power to
pardon is regulated by an act of
the legislature (1907) which requires that he shall in no instance
grant a pardon until the attorney-general shall have investigated
the case and conducted a public
hearing. His
veto power extends to items in
appropriation
bills, but any bill or
item may be
passed over his veto by three-fifths of the members elected to each
house of the legislature. The most` important board of which he is
chairman is the state board of equalization. As the present
constitution was adopted in the year after a
grasshopper plague, which had caused great financial loss,
it limited the
salary of the
governor, auditor of public accounts and treasurer, as well as that
of the judges of the supreme and district courts, to $2500 each and
that of other important officers (including the secretary of state,
the attorney-general and the superintendent of public instruction)
to $2000. This economy has somewhat hampered the growing state.
Salaries have been too low to attract the ablest men; and as the
constitution forbade the creation of new offices, and no amendment
of this clause could be secured, resort was had to the creation of
additional " secretaries " and of boards constituted of existing
state officials or their secretaries. The legislature consists of a
Senate of 33 members and a House of Representatives of 100 members,
and meets in regular session on the first Tuesday in January of
every
odd-numbered year at Lincoln,
the capital. Both senators and representatives are apportioned
according to population, and are elected by districts in November
of each even-numbered year for a term of two years. They are paid
at the rate of five dollars a day during 60 days of a regular
session and not exceeding 100 days during their entire term. No
bill or joint
resolution may be introduced at a regular
session after its fortieth day except at the request of the
governor. Special legislation of various kinds is expressly
prohibited, and in the
bill of rights it is declared that " all
powers not herein delegated remain with the people." This clause
would seem to leave the state government with no powers not
expressly granted, and to make the rule for interpreting the
Nebraska constitution similar to that for interpreting the Federal
constitution; but in their practice the Nebraska courts have been
little influenced by it, and it is chiefly of historical interest.2
The administration of justice is vested in a supreme court, 15
district courts, county courts and courts of justices of the peace
and
police magistrates. The
supreme court consists of three judges elected for a term of six
years, one retiring every two years; each district court consists
of one to seven judges elected for a term of four years, and each
county court
consists of one
judge elected
for a term of two years. The county courts have exclusive original
jurisdiction in the
probate
of wills and the administration of estates, concurrent jurisdiction
with the district courts in civil suits for sums not exceeding
$1000, and important jurisdiction in criminal cases. Perhaps the
most unique provision of the Nebraska constitution is that 2 An
almost identical clause was inserted in the
Ohio constitution of 1802, and one in exactly the
same language appears in the present (1851) constitution of that
state; it appears also in the Kansas constitutions of 1855, 1858
and 18J9 (present), in the Nebraska constitution of 1866, in the
North Carolina
and
South
Carolina constitutions of 1868, and was retained in the present
constitution of North Carolina as amended in 1876.
relating to appeals; it appears in the bill of rights and reads
as follows: " The right to be heard in all civil cases in the court
of last resort, by appeal, error or otherwise, shall not be
denied." Regardless of this provision, however, the civil code
denies the right of an appeal from an inferior court in cases that
have been tried by a
jury, and in
which the amount claimed does not exceed $20, and the courts have
decided that this denial is not in conflict with the constitution;
but in at least one instance an appeal was allowed because of the
constitutional guaranty, and that guaranty has doubtless had much
influence on judicial legislation.
County government exists under both the district-commissioner
system and the township supervisor system, the latter being rare.
Cities are governed in classes according to population.
Except in Omaha there is no great field for social economic
legislation; but the record of the state has been normally good in
this respect. Railways have given rise to the most notable laws.
Regulation has been a burning political question since 1876, the
constitution making it the duty of the legislature to " correct
abuses and prevent un j ust discriminations and extortions in all
charges of express,
telegraph and railroad companies " within the
state. The influence of the railways has been very great, and a
constant
drag on just taxation and
other legislative reforms.
.^ Secretaries, Except Legal, Medical, and Executive .- Nebraska - May 2008 OES State Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates 15 January 2010 7:26 UTC www.bls.gov [Source type: Reference]
The Board was eventually declared
unconstitutional by the state supreme court. In 1893 a maximum
freight-rate Act was passed, but the rates thus fixed were declared
by the United States Supreme Court to conflict with the Fourteenth
Amendment, being " unreasonable." The right of the state to fix "
reasonable " rates remained unquestioned, but American experience
has not found such laws efficacious. In 1906 all political parties
conducted campaigns on promises of radical legislation on railway
rates, passenger and freight; and a constitutional amendment
creating a railway commission was adopted in the manner above
described. A result of this campaign was a remarkable series of
enactments in 1907 for the regulation of railways. The legislature
framed a stringent anti-pass law, reduced passenger fares and
express and freight charges, provided for equitable local taxation
of railway terminals, regulated railway labour in the interest of
safe travel, fixed upon railways the responsibility for the death
or injury of their employes, and gave to the newly-created railway
commission complete jurisdiction over all steam-railways in the
state, over the street railways of the cities, and over express
companies, telegraph companies,
telephone companies and all other common
carriers. In 1909 provision was made for an annual corporation
licence tax and for the
physical
valuation of railways. In the
same year, following the example of
Oklahoma, Nebraska passed a law guaranteeing
bank deposits
from a fund created by an
assessment on the basis of total deposits.
Useful child-labour and pure-food laws were enacted in 1907.
Prohibition of the
liquor traffic had been established in the Territory in 1855, but
liquor licences were introduced in 1858; in 1909 the licence
fee was fixed at $1000. A law enacted
in 1907 made it illegal for breweries to own
retail liquor houses, and one of 1909 required
all saloons to close from 8 P.M. to 7 A.M. A
homestead law exempts from judgment liens and
forced sale a homestead not exceeding $2000 in value and consisting
either of a farm not exceeding 160 acres or of property not
exceeding two lots in a city or village; the exemption, however,
does not extend to
mechanics', labourers' or vendors' liens upon
said homestead or to a
mortgage upon it that has been signed by both
husband and wife or by
an unmarried claimant. A woman's rights to her property are not
affected by marriage, except that it becomes liable for payment of
debts contracted for necessaries to the family when a judgment
against the husband for the payment of the same cannot be
satisfied. The rights of
dower
and
courtesy have been
abolished, and husband and wife have instead equal rights to
inherit property from the other; but the portion of the property of
a deceased
spouse that
descends to the survivor varies from one-fourth to all according to
whose and how many are the children concerned. The grounds for a
divorce are
adultery, incompetency at the time of
marriage, sentence to imprisonment for a term of three years or
more,
abandonment
without just cause for two years, habitual
drunkenness, extreme
cruelty, and refusal or neglect of the husband
to provide a suitable maintenance for his wife. The period of
residence in the state required to secure a divorce was formerly
six months, but in 1909 it was made two years.
Finance.-The
constitution limited the debt that the state might contract to meet
casual deficits to $100,000, unless in time of war, and required
taxes to be laid to maintain interest on such debt (bonds). These
provisions were construed to mean that not more than $100,000 of
debt could be contracted in addition to appropriations made by the
legislature. There was from the beginning a constant issue of state
" warrants " on the general fund, dependent on taxation. These
warrants when issued and presented for payment were paid by the
state treasurer, were sold to the permanent school fund, and drew
4% interest until cancelled from the general fund. The floating
debt of warrants was practically cancelled in 1909, after a
one-mill
levy for four years for
this purpose. Since 1900 there has been no bonded debt whatever.
The constitution also prohibited state aid to railways and other
corporations, leaving this to cities and counties under
limitations. In 1903 the assessed valuation of property was
$188,458,379; in 1905, $3 0 4,47 0 ,9 61; in 1906, $313,060,301; in
1907, $328,757,578, and in 1908, $391,529,673. The increase was due
largely to a new revenue law of 1903 ordering property to be
assessed at one-fifth of its actual value. The average tax-rate in
the year 1904 was 61 mills; in 1905, 1906 and 1907, 7 mills; and in
1908, 61 mills.
Education.-The public schools have been endowed by the
United States, beginning in 1854, and by the state; in 1909 the
permanent school funds derived from the sale of educational lands
amounted to $ 8 ,45 0 ,557, invested in state securities, county,
school district and municipal bonds. The percentage of illiterate
population (i.e. population unable to write) above Jo years of age
was in 1880 and 1890 smaller than that in any other state in the
Union, and in 1900, when it was 2.3% (for native whites, foreign
whites and negroes respectively o 8, 6.8 and 11.8), was smaller
than that in any other state except Iowa (whose percentage was also
2.3); the percentage for males of voting age (2.5%) being the least
in the Union.
.^ Today, there are several websites available that provide information regarding the state, Nebraska.- ThinkRentals.com - Nebraska rentals in NE - Think Rentals 15 January 2010 7:26 UTC www.thinkrentals.com [Source type: General]
The university of Nebraska at
Lincoln was established in 1869 by an act of the state legislature,
and was opened in 1871. The university is governed by a board of
six regents, elected by the electors of the state at large, each
for six years, two going out of office each year. The revenue of
the university is from the income of Congressional land grants
under the Morrill Acts and from a one mill per one
dollar tax on the current
assessment roll of the state.' Connected with it and governed by
the same regents are the State College of Agriculture (including
the School of Agriculture) and the Agricultural Experiment Station,
on the university farm of 320 acres, 21 m. E. of the university,
which receive support from the United States government, and an
experimental sub-station at North Platte. The botanical and
geological surveys of the state are carried on by the university;
the former has been largely under the supervision of
Charles
Edwin Bessey (b. 1845), professor of
botany. The university as reorganized in 1909
embraces a college of arts and sciences, a
graduate college, a college of agriculture, a
college of engineering, a teachers' college (1908), a college of
law (1891), a college of
medicine, a school of
pharmacy, a school of
fine arts, an affiliated school of
music and a summer session. The
medical school is in Omaha. The university has no preparatory
department. Its library in 1909 had about 85,000 volumes.
In1908-1909the university had an enrolment of 3611 students (2077
men and 1534 women). The granting of university degrees is
conditioned by a " credit-hour " system; 125 credit hours are
required for a bachelor's degree.
Elisha Benjamin Andrews 2 (b. 1844) became
chancellor of the university in 1900; in 1909 he was succeeded by
Samuel Avery (b. 1865). Most
of the educational institutions of the state are coeducational.
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State penal and charitable institutions include soldiers' and
sailors' homes at Grand Island and
Milford, an Institute for the Blind at Nebraska
City (1875), an Institute for the
Deaf and Dumb at Omaha (1867), an
Institute for Feeble Minded Youth at Beatrice (1885), an
Industrial
School for Juvenile Delinquents (boys) at Kearney (1879), a
Girls' Industrial School at
Geneva (1881), an Industrial Home at Milford
(1887) for unfortunate and homeless girls guilty of a first
offence, asylums or hospitals for the insane at Lincoln (1869),
Norfolk (1886) and Hastings
(1887), an Orthopedic
Hospital (1905) for crippled, ruptured and
deformed children and a state
penitentiary (1867), both at Lincoln. A
Home for the Friendless, at Lincoln, incorporated in 1876, was
taken over by the state in 1897; admission was restricted to
children, and in 1909 its name was changed to the State Public
School.
' In 1909 the state legislature refused to accept for the
university the
Carnegie
education pensions.
2 He was born in Hinsdale,
New Hampshire, on the Loth of January
1844; served in the Union army during the Civil War; graduated at
Brown University in 1870 and at
Newton Theological Institution in 1874; taught
homiletics at Newton
in 1879-1882, history and economics at Brown in 1882-1888, and
political economy and finance at Cornell in 1888-1889; and was
president of Brown University in 1889-1898. He was an ardent
bi-metallist, and in 1892 was a member of the International
Monetary Conference at
Brussels. He wrote on the currency question,
and published a
History of the United States in our Own
Times (1904) and other works on American history and
economics.
XIX. I I a History. - Local pride has prompted some
Nebraskans to begin the history of the white race in their state
with the march of Coronado, in 1541, across the buffalo plains to "
Quivira," N. of the
Arkansas river in Kansas; but the claim
is not warranted by the evidence.
Marquette mapped the Platte from hearsay in
1673; French explorers followed it to the Forks in 1739; and, after
Nebraska passed to the United States in 1803 as part of the
Louisiana
Purchase, successive American exploring expeditions left traces
in its history.
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Meanwhile,
fur traders who drew their goods
from the country of the Platte had long been active on the
Missouri. Trading posts were probably established in Nebraska in
1795, 1802, 1807 and 1812; the last two near the present towns of
Ft. Calhoun (about 20 m. N. by W. from Omaha) and Bellevue. Manuel
de Lisa, a noted Cuban trader and plainsman, was probably the first
white settler (1807). In 1823 Bellevue became an Indian agency, and
in 1849 the first United States post-office in Nebraska. Ft.
Atkinson was maintained near the present town of Ft. Calhoun in
1819-1827; in 1825 the government acquired the first Indian lands,
and in the 'thirties of the 19th century missionaries began to
settle among the tribes; the
first Ft. Kearney was maintained where Nebraska City now stands in
1847-1848, and in the latter year was re-established on the Platte,
some 175 m. inland from the Missouri. Meanwhile there had begun the
passage of the
Mormons
across the state (1845-1857), marked by important temporary
settlements near Omaha (q.v.) and elsewhere, the travel to Oregon,
and to
California, for
which depots of supplies were established at Bellevue, Plattsmouth,
Nebraska City and old Ft. Kearney, or Dobey Town.' Thus the country
was well and favourably known before Congress organized it as a
Territory in 1854.
Movements in Congress for the creation of a new Territory on the
Platte began in 1844, several attempts at organization failing in
the succeeding decade.
.^ Nebraska is located in north- central part of US. It is bounded by Dakota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas and Colorado.- ThinkRentals.com - Nebraska rentals in NE - Think Rentals 15 January 2010 7:26 UTC www.thinkrentals.com [Source type: General]
A provisional Territorial
government formed by
Wyandot
Indians and licensed white residents on Indian lands in Kansas
(q.v.) forced Congress to take action.
.^ Nebraska is located in north- central part of US. It is bounded by Dakota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas and Colorado.- ThinkRentals.com - Nebraska rentals in NE - Think Rentals 15 January 2010 7:26 UTC www.thinkrentals.com [Source type: General]
In the outcome Nebraska was one of the two Territories
created by the Kansas-Nebraska Bill of 1854. This creative act bore
evident traces of the proslavery sentiments of the Congress that
passed it in the limitation of the suffrage to whites, and the
explicit application of the national
fugitive-slave laws for the last
time in a federal statute. Under the provision of " popular-
sovereignty " it was
thought that Nebraska, as the more northerly Territory, would
become a " free " state, if not a free Territory. There were slaves
within its borders from the beginning, and anti-slavery ideas were
embodied in several legislative bills, until a territorial law of
1861 excluded slavery. But the future of slavery was settled in
Kansas, and events in Nebraska throw only a small side-light on
that struggle.
John
Brown and James H. Lane spent considerable time in the
south-eastern counties, and across these an " underground railroad
" ran, by which slaves were conducted from Kansas to Iowa and
freedom.
As organized in 1854 Nebraska extended from 40° N. lat. to
British America, and from the Missouri and White Earth rivers to
the " summit " of the Rockies; but in 1861 and 1863 it was reduced,
by the creation of other Territories, to its present boundaries. By
1860 settlement had spread 150 m. W. from 1 In 18 months
of1849-1850it was officially reported that 8000 wagons, with 80,000
draught-animals and 30,000
people, passed Ft. Kearney on the way to Oregon, California or
Utah.
the Missouri, following the river valleys and the freighting
routes. Many who had migrated to
Pike's Peak in 18J9, stopped in Nebraska on
their return eastward; and settlement was stimulated by the
national Homestead Act of 1862 (one of the first
patents granted thereunder, on the 1st of
January 1863, was for a claim near Beatrice, Nebraska), and by the
building and land-sales of the Union Pacific and
Burlington railways
following 1863. Thus in 186:: there were probably 30,000
inhabitants in the Territory, and 3300 men were sent into the field
for the Union army in the Civil War. Until well into the 'sixties
freighting across the plains was a great business.
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^ From natural beauty to ample recreation to various vineyards to a number of museums, Nebraska vacation packages have some excitement for all sorts of travelers.- ThinkRentals.com - Nebraska rentals in NE - Think Rentals 15 January 2010 7:26 UTC www.thinkrentals.com [Source type: General]
Kearney. The Oregon and
California
migration was
of large magnitude by 1846. St
Joseph, Leavenworth and Nebraska City (q.v.)
were the great freighting terminals of the West. Over these roads
was run in1860-1861the famous "
pony express " whose service ended with the
completion of the overland telegraph in the latter year; it covered
the distance from St Joseph, Missouri, to
Sacramento, California, in eight days, and
even less. Freighting ended when the Union Pacific was extended
across Nebraska between 1863 and 1867.
Political interest in the Territorial period centred mainly in a
fight for the capital, waged between the towns of the Missouri
river front, Bellevue, Brownville, Nebraska City, Plattsmouth,
Omaha and
Florence, those
of the North Platte interior, and of the South Platte. This
struggle engendered extraordinary bitterness, since success might
mean continued life, and defeat prompt
demise, to competing towns. As population
increased the question of the capital was complicated by the
question of statehood. Both were involved in the agitation
in1858-1859for the
annexation of the South Platte to Kansas
(q.v.), which gained considerable strength; annexation promising to
the former much earlier statehood than continued union with the
backward region of the North Platte, and to northern Kansas also
promising earlier statehood, and an advantage in the sectional
struggle with southern Kansas. As the expenses of Territorial
government were partly borne by the United States, statehood was
voted against in 1860, and again (virtually) in 1864 after Congress
had passed an Enabling Act; but in 1866 a constitution framed by
the legislature was declared carried by the people by a majority of
loo votes in 7776, and Nebraska was admitted as a state (in spite
of President Johnson's veto) in 1867, after her legislature had
accepted a fundamental condition imposed by Congress removing the
limitation of the suffrage to whites by the new constitution.
Fraud was charged in the
Territorial election. At any rate the
Republican party had worked for
admission because it needed senators in Congress, and it got them.
During part of1866-1867there were two
de facto
governments, the Territorial and the state.
The capital of the Territory remained always at Omaha, although
in 1858 a majority of the legislature removed to Florence leaving
the governor and a legislative rump at Omaha. In 1867 the South
Platte region, having obtained a predominance in population capable
of overcoming a
gerrymander that had favoured the North
Platte (and incidentally the Democrats), secured the appointment of
a legislative committee to locate the state capital S. of the
Platte. Several of the old Missouri river contestants had as
representatives of their previous claims young towns located at
strategic points in the interior. The committee avoided these and
selected the site of Lincoln. Just ten years earlier the
legislature had considered removal to another site on the Salt, to
be called " Douglas " in honour of Stephen A. Douglas, then still
in the heyday of his popularity.
The decade1870-1880was marked by the work of the two
constitutional conventions described above. The first legislature
under the constitution of 1875 met in 1877. The following decade
was marked by a tremendous growth in population, by a feverish
activity in railway construction (the mileage in the state being
increased from 1953 to 5407 m. in the ten years), and by an
extraordinary rise in land values, urban and rural. Farm-land
prices were raised to a basis of maximum productiveness when the
best interests, especially of the western section, demanded steady
growth based on average crop results under average conditions. The
early 'nineties were marked by an economic collapse of false
values, and succeeding years by a painful recovery of stable
conditions.
The Democratic and Republican parties were first effectively
organized in opposition, as parts of national bodies, in the
territorial campaigns of 1858. Till then there were practically
only Democratic factions; after 1861 the Republicans held the state
securely until 1890. After about 1890 the national tendencies
towards a re-
alignment
of political parties on socialeconomic issues were sharply
displayed in Nebraska. This was in the main only an indication of
the general
Farmers' Movement,' but this found in
Nebraska special stimulus in large losses (almost $900,000)
suffered by the state from the
negligence and defalcation of certain
Republican officeholders. Following 1890 the "
Fusion " movement - the fusion, that is, of
Populists, Democrats and (after 1896) of
Silver Republicans - was of great importance.
The only year in which these elements carried the state against the
Republicans for presidential electors was in 1896, when William J.
Bryan of Lincoln was their presidential candidate; although the
state delegation of representatives and senators in Congress was
for a time divided. The Fusionists practically controlled the state
government from 1897-1899; they held the legislature
from1891-1895and from 1897-1899, the supreme court from 18 991901,
and the governorship and executive departments from 1895-1901; they
elected a Democratic governor also for 1891-1893; but he was not of
the true Fusion type, and vetoed a maximum railway freight-rate
bill, although his Republican successor approved one. The year 1891
was the most feverish political year of this period. Apart from
these temporary Fusion successes the Republicans have always
controlled the state.
The governors of Nebraska have been as follows: -
Territorial Period. Francis Burt. Thomas B.Cuming (secretary,
acting governor)
Mark W. Izard.
Thomas B.Cuming (secretary, acting governor) William A. Richardson
.
J. Sterling Morton (secretary, acting governor) Samuel W. Black
.
Alvin Saunders. Algernon S. Paddock (secretary, several times
acting governor, 1861-1867).
State. David
Butler (impeached and removed from office 1871).
.
W. H. James (lieut.-governor, succeeding) Robert W. Furnas .
Albinus Nance James W. Dawes
John M. Thayer James E. Boyd 2. .
John M. Thayer (acting governor) James E. Boyd. Lorenzo Crounse
.
Silas A. Holcombe .
William A. Poynter Charles H. Dietrich (elected U.S. Senator)
Ezra P.
Savage (lieut.-governor, succeeding) John H.
Mickey.. George L. Sheldon A. C. Shallenberger
Chester H. Aldrich 1 Nebraska was one of the
states in which the collapse of the cooperative enterprises of the
Grange was particularly
severe. The Farmers' Alliance was organized for the state in 1887,
became a secret organization in 1889, and, as in other states, was
a power by 2890. The membership of Grange, Alliance and Knights of
Labour went over generally speaking into the People's party.
Removed by decision of state supreme court on grounds of
noncitizenship, 5th of May 1891; reinstated by decision of U.S.
Supreme Court, 1st of February 1892.
Bibliography. H. Darton, Professional Paper No. 17 (in U.S.
Geological Survey) (1903),
Geology and Water Resources of
(western) Nebraska, and No. 32 (1905),
Geology and
Underground Water Resources of the Central Great Plains; G. E.
Condra,
Geology and Water Resources of the Republican River
Valley and Adjacent Areas (Washington, 1907), being
Water Supply and
Irrigation Paper No. 216 of the United States Geological Survey;
id., Water Supply Paper No. 215,
Geology and Water
Resources of a Portion of the Missouri River Valley in
North-Eastern Nebraska (Washington, 1908); J. C. Stevens,
Surface Water Supply of Nebraska (Washington, 1909) Water
Supply Paper 230; E. H. Barbour,
Nebraska Geological
Survey (Lincoln, 1903); G. E. Condra,
Geography of Nebraska (Lincoln, 1906);
R.
Pound and F. C. Clements,
Phytogeography of Nebraska, vol. i. (Lincoln, 1898);
general scientific sketches by C. E. Bessey, L. Bruner and G. A.
Loveland in the Morton history and agricultural and horticultural
reports;
Annual Reports of the State Board of Agriculture
and State Horticultural Society; Publications of the State Bureau
of Statistics and Labor; and
Bulletins 52 (1904) and 66
(1905) of the United States Bureau of Forestry. For government
consult the biennial legislative
Public Documents,
embracing reports of state officers and boards; also J. A. Barrett,
History and Government of Nebraska (Lincoln, 1891),
Nebraska and the Nation (Chicago, 1898); and C. S.
Lobinger, " The Nebraska Constitution, some of its Original and
Peculiar Features," in
Proceedings and Collections of the
Nebraska State Historical Society, Series 2, vol. v. (Lincoln,
1902). For early history see bibliography under article
Kansas. See especially the
publications (since 1885) of the Nebraska State Historical Society;
and J. Sterling Morton,
Albert Watkins and others,
Illustrated History of
Nebraska (3 vols., Lincoln, 1905 sqq.), which has superseded
H. Johnson,
History of Nebraska (Omaha, 1880).