…continuing with our July road trip as we began to explore/sightsee in northern and western Nebraska.
Our next stop along US Hwy 275 was in Scribner Nebraska, a town of about 800 people, that was founded ca. 1870. The surveyor who plated the town named it for his son-in-law, who had founded the Scribner Publishing firm.
The
Harder Hotel at 503 Main Street in Scribner was built in 1901 for Hans Harder,
a German immigrant from Schleswig-Holstein.
Harder had been a stonemason before moving to Nebraska. The building was designed in the Rundbogenstil
style and it is Nebraska’s only recorded example of an Atrium Type hotel.
OK…I had
no idea what the Rundbogenstil style was.
It is a round-arch style that was popular in the German speaking lands
of Europe and among German immigrants.
It is an amalgamation of several architectural styles. As for an Atrium type hotel…basically it is a
hotel where the atrium is the central focus of the building with bars,
restaurants, seating areas around it and the rooms reaching out from the
central core.
The
second and third floor rooms in the old hotel are now vacant. In addition, the Old Hotel Café and Saloon on
the ground floor is no longer in operation.
The building is reputed to be haunted…a piano playing has been heard by
locals and the sound of children playing has also been heard. It is alleged that in the past a man was
found dead in one of the rooms, a woman was found dead in the closet of another
room and another fellow supposedly flung himself to death from the top
floor. To learn more, go to http://www.doyouseedeadpeople.org/usr/docs/Old-Hotel-PRISM-article-Scriner-HS-2013.pdf.
FYI, the
Harder Hotel building is currently for sale/redevelopment. It can be yours for only $50,000. Check it out at: https://www.scribner-ne.gov/the-hotel/.
The J.O. Milligan Building at 439 Main Street in Scribner was constructed in 1884 and it was home to the Milligan Dry Goods Store. Over the years it served a number of businesses. However, in 1973 Amos Musbach purchased the building. The son of German immigrants, Musbach bought the Milligan Building just a year before his death. He wanted to have a place to leave and display his most cherished possessions. The Musbach Museum opened in 1973, the same year that it was purchased.
Today
this museum features antique farm machinery, medical equipment, kitchen ware, an
old pioneer wagon, a player piano and a large salt and pepper shaker collection…with
1,728 sets of shakers! To learn more
about the Musbach Museum, you can go to https://www.facebook.com/pages/category/Museum/Scribner-Musbauch-Museum-104420454713503/.
I wasn’t able to determine when this building was constructed. I did find a postcard on line from 1923 that describes it as the City Hall. It also appears to have served as the town’s fire station at some point. Love that bell tower... At its peak in 1930, Scribner’s population totaled 1,066 and today it has about 800 residents.
Like most
towns along the northern portion of Nebraska, decline set in when the Chicago
and North Western Railway ended service in the spring of 1982. Scribner still had a population of over 1,000
when rail service ended. Flooding along
the Elkhorn River had damaged and destroyed too many bridges. Repairs weren’t economically feasible.
A notable
event occurred in Scribner on March 7, 1929.
Poorly stored dynamite exploded in a house fire, killing 6 firefighters
and as many as 50 others were injured.
This is the second largest loss of firefighters lives in Nebraska’s
history. One survivor lived to be 100
years old…with a 2.5 inch nail lodged near his heart. He died in 1998.
We love a
good country fair and Scribner is home to the annual Dodge County Fair during
the first week in August. It lasts for 4
days and features 4-H exhibits, livestock shows and plenty of old time
entertainment. There is no admission fee
at this fair.
The next small town along our route was West Point Nebraska. West Point, with a population of about 3,300, is the county seat of Cuming County. The town was founded in 1857 when 4 Omaha businessmen formed the Nebraska Settlement Association which was focused on finding suitable townsites in the Elkhorn Valley. West Point was the westernmost outpost along the valley.
The West
Point City Auditorium was built in 1911 and it was listed on the National
Register of Historic Places in 2009. Significant
as a local venue for performing arts and community events and financed by local
donations, this Early Commercial and Tudor Revival Style building was purchased
by the city in 1945.
The
auditorium has also been known as the Nebraskan Theatre and, as shown in the
photo, the West Point Community Theater.
Currently it shows first run movies and it is also used as a performing
arts theater. To learn more or to see
what’s playing, just go to https://westpointcommunitytheatre.org/.
West Point became the county seat of
Cuming County in 1858 after winning the election over the community of
DeWitt. Only 19 votes were cast but 12
were for West Point. The following
spring, over 4,000 Pawnee flooded the valley during a hunting excursion. They were displeased that white settlers were
in the valley and they burned down several homesteads and killed livestock for
the meat. The so called “Pawnee War”
ended without a fight. To learn more,
you can open the following and read what the general in charge of the army told
to the Nebraska Historical Society in 1900.
https://history.nebraska.gov/sites/history.nebraska.gov/files/doc/publications/NH1937PawneeWar.pdf.
The Cuming County Historical Museum complex, at the county fairgrounds in West Point, includes several buildings filled with historical displays. It’s maintained by the Historical Society and the Cuming County Agriculture Society.
St. Matthew’s Lutheran
Church, which was built in 1886, was moved to the site and dedicated at the
Cuming County Fair in August, 1996. This
church served the community for about 108 years before closing in 1994. Every year during the Cuming County Fair a
non-denominational service is held in the Church on Sunday morning. This is also a local wedding venue…
In addition to the
church, the museum complex is home to a 1012 one-room schoolhouse as well as
the Dinklage and the 7,200 square foot Cuming County Heritage Museum building
was completed and dedicated in 1997. The
latter building’s displays include machinery, cars and a variety of antique
tools.
The museum complex also features this handsome and rather large Chicago North Western Depot. It was built in 1904 and it was moved to the fairgrounds in 1975. Upon entering the depot, visitors can see a kitchen with items used in local homes in the early 1900s and lifestyle exhibits of the past are featured. The Union Pacific caboose was placed next to the depot in 1990.
The original railroad
through West Point was the Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri, sometimes referred to
as “the Elkhorn”. It was established in
1869 with the railroad building several lines in Nebraska, including a long
east-west route from Omaha across the northern part of the state to
Chadron. This line became known as the “Cowboy
Line”. Chicago North Western acquired the
Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railroad in 1903…and, as I’ve mentioned
before, all service was discontinued in 1982.
Given the size of
this local museum, I was surprised to learn that the buildings are only open by
appointment and during the County Fair.
It seems like a wasted resource…but a general opening must require
several volunteers to monitor the different buildings.
In a previous post I mentioned that one big crop in Nebraska is corn. Well let me tell you, everywhere we went there were scenic fields of hay much like this one. In 2020, Nebraska planted 2,770,000 acres of hay which yielded 6,544,000 tons of feedstock!
Continuing along US Hwy 275, we passed through Norfolk Nebraska. While I’d noted several places in town of historic interest, given the size of the city, with its 24,500 residents, I decided that it would take too long to locate and photograph the buildings…so we kept moving so we could reach our planned destination with time to spare. FYI, Norfolk was Johnny Carson’s home town the local museum has a section dedicated to him.
The next
town that we explored a little was Pierce Nebraska. Pierce, with a population of about 1,730, was
founded by Germans from Wisconsin in 1869.
Pierce is the county seat of Pierce County. Both were named in honor of President
Franklin Pierce.
The
Chicago and North Western Railroad Depot is the cornerstone of the Pierce
Historical Museum Complex. Built in 1880,
the depot first served the Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railroad. In 1879, a line had been built from Norfolk
through Pierce to Niobrara on the Missouri River. This building’s passenger area has many
photos showing scenes from the town’s past as well as dishware, rooms depicting
home styles of times past as well as exhibits from the old doctor’s office, the
former newspaper’s printing press, the old Pierce Telephone switchboard, an old
soda fountain and much more.
In the
early 1900s, the railroad was very busy, with at least one freight and two
passenger trains daily. After World War
II the line and the services offered began to deteriorate. In 1951, passenger service was discontinued. In 1968 the Pierce depot facilities closed
and in 1969, the railway agent was removed.
The last train rolled through Pierce in June of 1978.
As you can see from this old photo that is part of the Pierce Museum Complex, the depot and it surroundings looked a bit different back in the early days...
In addition to the old
railway depot, the museum complex includes a rural schoolhouse. It is set up exactly as a school would have
been decades ago, complete with the original desks, school supplies and
children’s books. Other buildings
include the fully equipped Frank Kratochvil Blacksmith Shop, which was in
operation from 1889 until 1921, a machine shed that contains functioning threshing
bee equipment and a full size covered wagon.
A 3,000 square foot exhibition building rounds out the structures at
this community museum.
The Pierce Historical
Society Museum is staffed with volunteers.
The museum is open on Sundays from Memorial Day through Labor Day from
1:30 PM until 4:30 PM. Admission is
free. Unfortunately, we weren’t in
Pierce on a Sunday… To learn more about
this museum, go to
During my
research I noted that at one time Pierce was home to a flour mill (Gold Crescent
Flour) and a creamery, both of which shipped their products throughout the Midwest. In addition, the town had a cigar factory, a
brick yard and an ice plant. Sadly, time
and ‘progress’ does take their toll on our small towns...
That’s
all for now. Just click on any of the photo
to enlarge them…
Thanks
for stopping by for a visit!
Take
Care, Big Daddy Dave
Another beautiful and interesting town! I am really surprised a small town like that with a museum and hotel that size. Thanks for the tour, David.
ReplyDeleteYou know you are in small town America when the county seat has only 3300 residents.
ReplyDeleteI remember Scribner from the years in New York, I think their shop was on Fifth Avenue. There was also the famous Rizzoli bookshop, all Italian books. I used to love to go there. My little town here in Sicily has just about 3000 residents. There were many more but now young people are moving North for work, but actually there are no jobs all over Italy, maybe even Europe for that matter.
ReplyDelete