Compendium of history, reminiscence, and biography of Nebraska : containing a history of the state of Nebraska also a compendium of reminiscence and biography containing biographical sketches of hundreds of prominent old settlers and representative citizens of Nebraska, Part 3

Author: Alden Publishing Company
Publication date: 1912
Publisher: Chicago : Alden Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 1402


USA > Nebraska > Compendium of history, reminiscence, and biography of Nebraska : containing a history of the state of Nebraska also a compendium of reminiscence and biography containing biographical sketches of hundreds of prominent old settlers and representative citizens of Nebraska > Part 3


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121 | Part 122 | Part 123 | Part 124 | Part 125 | Part 126 | Part 127 | Part 128 | Part 129 | Part 130 | Part 131 | Part 132 | Part 133 | Part 134 | Part 135 | Part 136 | Part 137 | Part 138 | Part 139 | Part 140 | Part 141 | Part 142 | Part 143 | Part 144 | Part 145 | Part 146 | Part 147 | Part 148 | Part 149 | Part 150 | Part 151 | Part 152 | Part 153 | Part 154 | Part 155 | Part 156 | Part 157 | Part 158 | Part 159 | Part 160 | Part 161 | Part 162 | Part 163 | Part 164 | Part 165 | Part 166 | Part 167 | Part 168 | Part 169 | Part 170 | Part 171 | Part 172 | Part 173 | Part 174 | Part 175 | Part 176 | Part 177 | Part 178 | Part 179 | Part 180 | Part 181 | Part 182 | Part 183 | Part 184 | Part 185 | Part 186 | Part 187 | Part 188 | Part 189 | Part 190 | Part 191 | Part 192 | Part 193 | Part 194 | Part 195 | Part 196 | Part 197 | Part 198 | Part 199 | Part 200 | Part 201 | Part 202 | Part 203 | Part 204 | Part 205 | Part 206 | Part 207 | Part 208 | Part 209 | Part 210 | Part 211 | Part 212 | Part 213 | Part 214 | Part 215 | Part 216 | Part 217 | Part 218 | Part 219 | Part 220 | Part 221 | Part 222 | Part 223 | Part 224 | Part 225 | Part 226 | Part 227 | Part 228 | Part 229 | Part 230 | Part 231 | Part 232 | Part 233 | Part 234 | Part 235 | Part 236 | Part 237 | Part 238


TOPOGRAPHY.


Nebraska has an extremely varied surface. Although there are no elevations high enough to be called mountains, yet in the northern and western parts of the state there are lofty hills of varied character. In the eastern states the ridges are generally the result of elevations and subsi- dences of the earth's crust, modified by subse- quent aquaeous agencies, but in Nebraska the roll- ing lands and hills are caused mostly by erosion. In the east massive rocks mainly make up the hody of the hills, while here they are to a certain extent composed of drift materials, loosely com- pacted, but chiefly of loess. The bottom lands


18


COMPENDIUM OF HISTORY, REMINISCENCE AND BIOGRAPHY.


are met with every few miles crossing the state. They are huge and in general shallow troughs; in breadth, proportionate to the size of the stream. In width they range from a quarter of a mile to twenty-three miles on the Platte and the Missouri. Quite often we find them terraced. These terraces, like broad steps, lead gradually to the bordering bluffs. Sometimes the edges of the low terraces on the bottoms are so worn away that their character is concealed. What was


once a terrace has become a gentle slope. The slopes on the bottoms between Crete and Beatrice and Ashland and Lincoln are good examples of this character.


In regard to the surface, the curve is the pre- dominating geometrical form-streams, terraces, bluffs, valleys, all follow curves. "The curve is the line of beauty." This law is exemplified here.


There is an amazing number of valley or bot- tom lands. By the thousand they must be num- bered. As an example take the region of the Re- publican river. On the average of every two miles a tributary valley comes into the bottom from the north side. Counting the small tribu- taries with their narrow bottoms, not less than twenty-five per cent. of the entire surface of the state is made up of bottom lands.


The gently rolling lands of three-fourths of the state appear very much like billows of the ocean. Sometimes extensive stretches are met with which appear to be level, but even these on closer obser- vation show to he gently undulating. From these last mentioned forms to the few isolated sections of limited extent, broken by canons with precipi- tous sides, the transition is gradual. It is alto- gether a prairie state, with rich alluvial valleys and table lands stretching away into extensive level plains, with a gradual ascent from the Mis- souri river westward, reaching an altitude on its western horder of between five and six thousand feet ahove the sea level, and yet the incline is so gradual that in the construction of the Union Pacific railroad up the Platte valley, not a tunnel, trestle or fill of any importance was required, nor a single difficulty encountered from the Missouri river to the west line of the state. Take the state as a whole, it slopes mainly toward the east and in minor degree toward the south. The ascent west from Omaha is at the rate of five and a half feet to the mile for one hundred miles. The sec- ond hundred miles increases the ascent to seven feet; the third hundred, seven and a half feet; the fourth hundred to ten and a half feet to the mile, and the ascent of the last fifty miles at the west end of the state is eighteen feet to the mile. The figures are approximately correct. A similar gradual ascent characterizes the south and north lines of the state. The southeastern corner of the state, which is the lowest part of the state, has an elevation of 878 feet. Here the ascent is only one and a quarter feet to the mile. Even less than


this is the fall going northward to Dakota City. In western Nebraska the difference in elevation between the Union Pacific railroad and the Re- publican valley on the south side is approximate- ly 352 feet. From the Union Pacific, on the west line, going northward, the elevation increases until Scott's Bluff is reached, where the elevation of 6,051 feet is the highest point in the state. From here to the valley of the Niobrara, toward the north line, there is a gradual descent. As the elevation at Pine Bluffs, on the extreme western line of the state, on the Union Pacific, is 5,061 feet, the ascent from this point northward is 635 feet, against a corresponding difference of less than 200 feet on the east line of the state. Taking the data, obtained principally by a reduction of railroad surveys in various parts of the state, the average elevation of the whole state is about 2,312 feet.


Although there are no large lakes in Nebraska, there are many small ones. Besides the lakes of fresh water, there are a few saline or alkaline. In southeastern Nebraska many springs appear on top of limestone strata that underlie loosely- compacted sandy rocks or shales. In most parts of the state, by sinking a shaft down from fifteen to fifty feet, fresh water can be had in abundance. In Fillmore, Clay, Adams and Phelps counties, and in some other portions of the state we find excep- tions to this rule, where there is a great thickness of loess and drift to be penetrated before imper- vious strata capable of holding water are reached. Some artesian wells have been bored.


Among the rivers of Nebraska, the deep and rapid Missouri is the principal one. At least five hundred miles of this river are on the eastern and northern borders of the state. It is a highway to the commerce and markets of the world. Had it not been for the Missouri, the settlement of this region would have been indefinitely delayed. As the river is navigable for two thousand miles ahove Omaha, it was a great highway for traffic with the mountain regions of Idaho, Dakota and Montana in early days. However, with the build- ing of railroads the business has fallen off. The Missouri river is the only navigable river in Ne- braska, and has always been described as an "ex- ceedingly crooked, treacherous stream." Its source is in latitude forty-five north, and longi- tude 110:30 west, high up in the Rocky moun- tains, and the distance it flows from the Great Falls to its junction with the Mississippi river is 2,575 miles. The Missouri seems to hold a mort- gage on the lands that flank it on either side, and it often takes such lands by force, only to return them when some other change in its ever shifting course is developed. Previous to the exploration made by Lewis and Clark, the impression pre- vailed among the Spanish and French residents in what was then known as the Northwestern Territory, that the source of the Missouri was near a point where it joins the Niobrara, and most of the maps in use previous to the exploration re-


19


COMPENDIUM OF HISTORY, REMINISCENCE AND BIOGRAPHY.


ferred to locate its source at or near the point mentioned.


Having referred to the Missouri as being the only navigable river touching Nebraska, it will doubtless be of interest in this connection to men- tion the first steamer on the Missouri. It was built at Pittsburg by the United Sates govern- ment in 1818, and named the "Western Engin- eer." She left her moorings at Pittsburg May 3, 1819, having on board an exploring expedition sent out by order of the government to explore the Missouri river and the country west of the Rocky mountains. The expedition was under the command of Major S. H. Long, and arrived at St. Louis on June 20, one month and seventeen days after starting. The mouth of the Platte was reached on the 17th of September following, and on the 19th of the same month the expedition cast anchor near the mouth of Boyer river, on the Iowa side, about five miles below Council Bluffs, where it went into winter quarters. The point of encampment was known as Fort Lisa, and was occupied by the Missouri Fur Company as a trad- ing post. Here the explorers remained during the winter of 1819-20, Major Long in the mean- time returning to Philadelphia, the then seat of government, with reports of the expedition. June 20, 1820, Major Long returned to Fort Lisa with orders for the expedition to proceed overland to the head waters of the Arkansas and Red rivers, for the purpose of exploring said streams and the country contiguous to them, and, in accordance therewith, the expedition left the boat at this point and proceeded up the valley of the Platte, holding councils with the numerous Indian tribes through which they passed. The "Western En- gineer," after the departure of the expedition, received a new commander, and was employed for many years thereafter in transporting gov- ernment supplies to forts and trading posts along the Missouri river.


The Platte is the second great river in Nebras- ka. It is nearly 1,200 miles in length. Its head waters originate in the mountains, and some of them in lakelets, fed by the everlasting snows. By the time it reaches Nebraska it is a broad, shallow, sandy, but rapid current. Flowing from west to east through the state, it divides it, leaving the larger part on the north. It is not navigable. Flood time is about the same for both rivers. Sometimes for the Platte it is a few days or weeks earlier.


Among other important rivers and creeks are the Republican, Niobrara, Keya Paha, White, Elkhorn, Logan, the Bow rivers, the Nemahas, the Blues, the Loups, Salt Creek, Weeping Water, the Wahoo, Elk Creek, South and West Iowa creeks, and others.


SOIL, AGRICULTURE AND STOCK RAISING.


The elements found in the soil of the greater part of Nebraska forms one of the richest and


most tillable soils in the world, and the unrivaled fertility of her soil places Nebraska in the front rank among the great grain producing states of the union. The soil of the table and upland is composed of what is known as loess or lacustrine deposit, most valuable of all for agricultural pur- poses, and this deposit, of uniform color, prevails over nearly three-fourths of the area of the state. In some places in the northeastern counties it is claimed to be nearly two hundred feet thick, but in the balance of the state it ranges from five to one hundred and fifty feet in thickness. One of the former state geologists, Prof. Samuel Aughey, after a careful analysis of this soil from samples taken in different portions of the state, incorpor- ated the following in one of his reports: "From my examination I find that over eighty per cent. of this formation is silicious matter, and so finely comminuted is it that the grains can only be seen under a good microscope. So abundant are the carbonates and phosphates of lime that in many places they form peculiar rounded and oval con- cretions. Vast numbers of these concretions from the size of a shot to a walnut are found almost everywhere by turning over the sod and in excava- tions. The analysis shows the presence of a com- paratively large amount of iron, besides alumina, soda, potash, etc. These elements form one of the richest soils in the world. In fact, in its chemical and physical properties and the mode of its origin, it comes nearest to the loess of the Rhine and the valley of Egypt. It can never be exhausted until every hill and valley which composes it is entire- ly worn away. Owing to the wonderfully finely comminuted silica of which the bulk of the depos- its consist, it possesses natural drainage in the highest degree. However great the floods of water that fall, it soon percolates through this soil, which in its lowest depths retains it like a sponge. When drouths come, by capillary attraction, the moisture comes up from below, supplying the needs of vegetation in the dryest seasons. This is the reason why all over this region where this deposit prevails, the native vegetation and culti- vated crops are seldom either dried out or drowned out. This is especially the case on old breaking where deep plowing is practiced."


Next in importance after the loess or lacustrine are the alluvium deposits. From an analysis made of the bottom lands it appears that, chemi- cally, alluvium differs from the loess chiefly in having more organic matter and alumina, and less silica. The soil of the bottom lands is rich in or- ganic matter. The depth of this soil varies greatly, it often being twenty feet or more in thickness, and then the sand of the subsoil is reached at a depth of two or three feet.


The alkali lands are to be found in different sections of the state, but chiefly in the western portion. In the east half there are scarcely any such lands, the majority of counties having none at all, while in others are small spots. These alkali lands are renovated and made very produc-


20


COMPENDIUM OF HISTORY, REMINISCENCE AND BIOGRAPHY.


tive by irrigation, cultivation and drainage. The time is rapidly approaching when these lands will become the most valuable farming sections of the world. They are not confined to any one geo- logical formation, but are found some times on the drift, alluvium or the loess. They increase in number from the eastern to the western portions of the state, and where they have been closely examined they have been found to vary a great deal in chemical constituents. Generally, how- ever, the alkali is largely composed of soda com- pounds, with an occasional excess of lime and magnesia or potash. Much of the alkali origin- ated by the accumulation of water in low places. The escape of the water by evaporation left the saline matter behind, and in case of salt (sodi- um chloride), which all waters contain in at least minute quantities, the chloride, by chemical reactions, separated from the sodium, the latter uniting with oxygen and carbonic acid formed the soda compounds. The alkali that exists far down in the soil is also brought up during dry weather by escaping moisture, and is left on the surface when the water is evaporated.


One of the most interesting features of the topography of southern Nebraska is the salt bas- ins stretching along the west side of Salt Creek from Lincoln five or six miles to the north. An early writer said of these: "In ordinary sunny days, of which the climate of Nebraska is so prodigal, these basins, some of which are a mile in diameter, exactly resemble at a distance, bod- ies of limpid water, and it is difficult for a strang- er to realize that what he sees reflecting the rays of the sun from a mirrorlike surface is a level floor of compact earth, covered with a layer of saline crystals and intersected with tiny rivers of brine flowing into the creek that obtains from them its name and character." The discovery of these basins was made by the government surveyors in 1856, and at that time great wealth was anticipat- ed for those who would erect suitable works for the manufacture of salt. Several companies were organized to manufacture salt, and a great deal of litigation resulted over the rival claims to the various basins.


In certain sections of the western portion of the state are found the "sand hills." Sometimes these hills are comparatively barren, but in most places they are fertile enough to sustain a cover- ing of nutritious grasses, and these regions are now famous stock-raising areas. In many places in the sandy regions the soil has a mixture of drift and loss which makes it highly fertile when supplied with sufficient moisture.'


Irrigation, which is treated of in another part of this volume, has already begun in the western portion of the state on an extensive scale, and the wonderful future of this line of development is surely foretold in the success that has been attained along the Platte river by irrigating the lands. This great work as yet is in its infancy, but enough is already proven along this line to


safely predict a most marvelous growth and de- velopment of the wealth and resources of western Nebraska by scientific and practical irrigation.


Nebraska is essentially an agricultural state. The bountiful soil and mildness of climate are especially favorable to cereal crops, and in fact to all the products of the temperate zone, nearly all of which are grown here to perfection, and attain a size and quality rarely found in older states. It is also one of the most favored and important stock-raising countries in the world-in fact, the state of Nebraska, and more especially its north- western and western portions, is fairly entitled to the first position among the western states and territories as a stock-producing and stock-sustain- ing region. Its vast prairies, abundant, luxuriant and nutritious grasses; its rivers, creeks and springs of clear, sparkling water, and still more, its uniform and delightful climate-these are a few of the more substantial reasons why Nebras- ka excels as a stock-raising country. But even in the far western counties mixed farming is fast gaining headway, and the general rule of the moderate farmer is to raise grain along with stock, and the growth in wealth and productive- ness of that region has been marvelously rapid and substantial.


All of the factors which enter into the deter- mination of an ideal climate are found in Nebras- ka-temperature, forms of belief, condition of the atmosphere, geographical position and rainfall- all combine to make this a climate as satisfactory as can be found anywhere in the union. Long and mild autumns are characteristic here. During these months excessive rains seldom fall. Occa- sionally there is a rough spell in October, but almost invariably it is followed by mild weather which is generally prolonged into December and in some years into January. The climate is par- ticularly healthful. No spot on the globe is abso- lutely free from disease, but this state is singular- ly exempt from its severest forms. Fever and ague are more rarely met with here than in most states. Where they do occur it is owing to lim- ited local causes or extraordinary exposure, and they are generally successfully treated by the simplest remedies. Many of these cases con- tracted elsewhere come here in hopes of having the disease cured by this climate, and they are rarely disappointed if nature is given a chance to exert its full health-making power. The cause of the general exemption from this class of diseases and malarial poisons is found in the peculiar cli- mate and surface conditions of the state.


An early writer, in speaking enthusiastically of this climate, said: "Nearly every one who comes to the state feels a general quickening and elas- ticity of spirits. The appetite and digestion im- prove wonderfully. Mind and body are lifted up. It must originate from our peculiarities of cli- mate. I have myself felt in this state as I have never felt it elsewhere, especially when camping out far away from settlements and alone with


21


COMPENDIUM OF HISTORY, REMINISCENCE AND BIOGRAPHY.


nature and God, how luxurious existence was and how pleasant life was intended to be."


Western Nebraska as a whole has been what might be called semi-arid, though not in an ex- treme sense, as many sections have been produc- tive since early settlement. During the last ten years moisture conditions in the entire section have been improving, and the productivity has, therefore, been increasing, which has consequent- ly caused a general and gradual increase in land values which is continuing at the present time. Two things in early days caused western Nebras- ka to be semi-arid: first, lack of sufficient pre- cipitation, and, second, hot winds. There have been years when the annual rainfall was suffi- cient, but at the time when the crops were nearing maturity the hot winds from the south and south- west would blast them. During the past few years innumerable irrigation projects, both gov- ernment and private, have been turning hundreds and thousands of acres in Kansas, Colorado and Wyoming under irrigation. This great trans- formation in the southwest will result in elimin- ating forever any furher visitations of hot winds which originated in that territory ; at least under no conditions will they again visit this region with such destroying effect as in the past. This vast irrigated district surrounding Nebraska on the west, southwest and south will result in giv- ing western Nebraska increased precipitation from the great evaporation occurring there.


IRRIGATION IN NEBRASKA.


Irrigation in Nebraska has made considerable progress during the past few years, and the work contemplated by the government along the line of storing the flood water of the North Platte river will add a large number of acres to the irrigated area.


In the valleys of the Platte and North Platte rivers are found the largest irrigation enterprises of the state. In many places the valley reaches a width of ten to twelve miles, and contains some of the best soil to be found anywhere in the state.


On the Republican some very successful ditches have been operated. The total length of these ditches is nearly two hundred miles, covering about fifty thousand acres. -


In the northwestern part of the state a large number of canals have been built, using the water from Hat creek, White river and Niobrara river and their tributaries. Most of these ditches are small, but they are of great value, as they furnish the means of supplying winter feed for the cattle which graze upon the range adjacent to these irrigated sections during the greater part of the year. These small ditches also enable the ranch- man to raise a variety of products which would be impossible without irrigation.


Many canals have been built,taking their water from the Loup rivers and their tributaries. The largest of these, the Great Eastern canal, which


heads a short distance above Genoa, has about seventy miles of canal constructed and in opera- tion, and covers about forty thousand acres of land. These streams flow for the greater portion of their lengths through a section of the state where the natural rainfall is generally sufficient for the production of good crops, and for this reas- on only a very small percentage of the flow has been diverted for use in irrigation.


Some very extensive schemes for the develop- ment of power have been planned, involving the use of the waters of the Loup, Elkhorn and Platte rivers.


Only a few canals have been taken out of the Elkhorn and lower Niobrara rivers for irrigation. Among the largest of these is the Elkhorn Valley canal.


The Elkhorn river is used extensively for the development of power, and application has been made for water for several large power plants on the Niobrara.


Some of the smaller streams such as Lodge Pole, Pumpkin Seed and Frenchman rivers, irri- gate an area very much in excess of what would be expected from an examination of the records of their discharge measuremnts.


The Lodge Pole, which rarely flows more than twenty cubic feet per second at any point at this writing, supplies seventy-seven miles of canal, covering about twelve thousand acres of land, and a large percentage of this land receives sufficient water to insure the production of good crops.


In many localities in Nebraska the land under irrigation has reached a high state of cultiva- tion, and a large variety of crops is produced. Under the older canals many well-improved farms are found which will compare favorably with any to be found in the eastern portion of the state.


A great deal of alfalfa is grown under irriga- tion, and the cultivation of sugar beets is being rapidly developed. The beets show a very large percentage of sugar, and the tonnage is heavy. The abundance of sunshine and the fact that the amount of moisture supplied may be regulated so as to give the growing beets just the amount re- quired, and the further fact that the soil seems to be particularly adapted to their growth, make this an ideal locality for sugar-beet culture. Much of the land under irrigation has never been broken up, and is devoted to the production of native hay. The native sod when irrigated pro- duces large crops of hay of a very superior qual- ity.


Within the last few years the supreme court has handed down several opinions which have done much to settle the question of irrigation rights in Nebraska. These decisions declare the irrigation laws of the state to be constitutional, define the rights of riparian owners, and uphold the rights of appropriators who have made bene- ficial use of the water. This has done much to es- tablish the stability of existing rights and to en-


22


COMPENDIUM OF HISTORY, REMINISCENCE AND BIOGRAPHY.


courage appropriators. There are still a number of important points which remain unsettled. Nebraska, extending as it does from the Missouri river almost to the mountains, includes within its borders two distinct regions. The eastern portion of the state is within the humid region, and the rainfall is sufficient for successful agriculture. The extreme eastern portion might be classed as semi-arid. Here the rainfall in the past has been very variable. The conditions being so different in different portions of the state render it very difficult to settle many of the questions which arise in regard to the use of water.


The question of the distribution of the water of interstate streams is a very important one, and one which should be seettled as soon as possible. Ne- braska is particularly interested in this question. A very large part of the land reclaimed in this state receives its water from the Platte rivers. The pioneers of irrigation have gone into this part of the state and encountered all the hard- ships incident to the settlement of a new country, and have brought thousands of acres of land un- der the influence of irrigation and added millions of dollars to the value of the state. These people should be protected in the use of water which they have appropriated, and be assured that subsequent appropriators in other states will not be permitted to divert the water and ruin their work of a lifetime. Some system should be devised whereby the appropria- tor of the water of any stream who has made beneficial use of the same, should be protected without regard to state lines or other political subdivisions.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.