Great Platte River Road Archway Monument

Kearney NE

This archway spans across I-80 in Kearney NE. The archway itself is a pretty good museum, chronicling the 49er, California, Utah and Mormon Trails movement of hundreds of thousands of Americans in the mid-19th century.
While the 49er, California, Utah and Mormon Trails all traveled through Nebraska, little recognition has focused on those who stayed in Nebraska. These sculptures outside the Archway Museum personify those who stayed in Nebraska.
Molly and Jack
Anton
Joseph
Ester
Anna (the mom) and Elizabeth
Inside the museum, up these escalator steps you can walk through the history of the westward expansion through Nebraska.
Wagons going west
Harsh winters
Family tragedy
The routes of the 4 trails
Pony Express station
Transcontinental Railroad – the Union Pacific Railroad
Mark Twain
Cross country in the 20th century
Camp sites
Mid 20th century travel to national parks
1950s diner
This is pretty cool. A police radar set up over I-80 to show speeders. This one is going 80 mph.
Nebraska Sand Hill Cranes

Sculpture Walk Across Nebraska

The timing for our trip to Nebraska was perfect to see the Sculpture Walk Across Nebraska, which showcases revolving art installations six cities across the state. We visited five of the six cities that participated. Each of the works list the artist, and the purchase price for those interested.

Ogallala NE

Sunrise Serenade, by Lee Luening & Sherri Treeby, $19,000
Hey, Mary Lou, by Lee Luening & Sherri Treeby, $40,000
Saturday’s Distraction, by Lee Luening & Sherri Treeby, $25,000
The Feather, Kirk Seese, $10,000
Windows to the Future, Gedion Nyanhongo, $14,400
Regenerate, Tim Adams, $10,000
Fenceline Turnaround, Lee Luening & Sherri Treeby, $17,500. This one had a significant amount of bird droppings on the farmer’s head, so I wiped it off before I took the picture!

North Platte NE

Maestro, Lee Luening, $35,000
Running Girl, Harold Linke, $9,545
Carmen Marimba, Lee Luening & Sherri Treeby, $22,500
We Are One in Love, Gedion Nyanhongo, $34,000
Aquaman, Shannon Sargent, $7,000
Once Upon a Time, Sondra Jonson, $11,500

Grand Island NE

School’s Out, Lee Luening & Sherri Treeby, $28,000
Circle of Trust, Hilde Debruyne, $14,500
Shepherd, Lee Luening & Sherri Treeby, $30,000
Escape, David Biehl, $4,500
Outer Limits, Tim James & Aidan Demarais, $9,900
Lyrical, Nathan Johansen, $5,900
Meandering Connections, Ryan & James Pedersen, $18,500
Iron Steed, Ryan & James Pedersen, $3,295
Mantel, Steve Elliott, $3,500
Inner Peace, Dale Compton, $6,000
Magnify, Kirk Seese, $10,000

Madison NE

Vertical Draft, Jim & Ryan Pedersen, $2,695
Farmer, Lawrence Stark, $20,000

Norfolk NE

Garden Fairy, Sondra Jonson, $8,900
Saturday’s Distractions, Lee Leuning, $31,000
Shapes in Harmony, Michelle Cubbison, $1,750
The Sheaf, Paul Reimer, $20,000
Spring Dancer, Sunday Mahaja, $9,000
Ibis Family, Gedion Nyanhongo, $69,500 – this is the single most expensive piece we saw.
The Proposal, Sunday Mahaja, $12,000
Red, Reno Carollo, $8,000
Aloft, Jim & Ryan Pedersen, $10,500
Sisu, Mike Fluent, $8,750
Be Kind, Joe & Terry Malesky, $19,500
Channel, Brian Bickel, $12,500
Short Stack, Andrew Libertone, $8,000
Asteria, Tim Adams, $10,000

Columbus NE

Stand For the Flag, Lee Leuning & Sherri Treeby, $19,000
Self Reflection, Albert Rhea, $9,500
The Pollinator, Kirk Seese, $10,000
Flushing Pheasant, Carl Weiss, not for sale
Tatanka, Carl Weiss, not for sale
Dystopia, Tim James & Aidan Demarais, $9,000
Hunting Buddy, Joseph Krings, $1,250

Petrified Wood Gallery

Ogallala NE

Cool log carving
Pine from Utah
Blue Agate.
Araucaria Pine
Three unidentified species
Wood art
Prehistoric turtles.
Fossil Fish
Authentic dinosaur egg!
Arrowhead assortment

Front Street

Ogallala NE

Front Street is a cafe, saloon and museum depicting frontier life.
Crystal Palace Saloon was THE place to be for cards and drinks.
Sam Bass famously robbed a train in Big Springs
Frontier apothecary bottles
The Cheyenne, Arapaho and Sioux were the principal Indian tribes in Western Nebraska.
Undertaker
Barbershop
Sheriff’s office
Jail
Frontier kitchen

Ash Hollow State Historical Park

Lewellen NE

Ash Hollow was famous on the Oregon Trail (early 1800s). The hollow was entered by Windlass Hill. Wagons had to be eased down its steep slope by ropes. Travelers usually stopped here for several days for its water, wood and grass.
Many wagons travelled this deep ravine.
These ruts from the 1800s are still visible today.
Pioneer Homestead sod house at Windlass Hill
Locals still leave their boots on fence posts.
Views from Ash Hollow
Storm brewing on the horizon.
Local residents built this stone schoolhouse in 1903. From 5 to 12 students attended this school until 1919.
Ash Hollow Cave is a niche in a bluff wall, which became a rock shelter for various groups of prehistoric people, including most recently the Dismal River people, who are the ancestors of the Apache people.
The cave is behind glass for protection.