Getting Around
Western Nebraska Road Conditions
For Nebraska winter travel conditions, call 800-906-9069. To check with the Nebraska Department of Roads, visit www.511nebraska.org, or call 511 (if calling from Nebraska).
Information Centers
All major communities have tourist information centers, as do some rest areas along I-80. Look for the half-circle symbol on the map.
Time Zones
While North Platte and Valentine are in the Central Time zone, most of Western Nebraska is on Mountain Time, which is an hour earlier. Check the map to be sure of the time at your destination.
Airports
Western Nebraska has airports with airline service to and from Denver at Alliance (308-7625311 or 308-762-5992), Chadron (800-554-5111 or 308-432-5717), North Platte (308-532-1900) and Scottsbluff (800-554-5111).
Nebraska Tourism
Pine Ridge
Trails West
Sandhills & Scenic Rivers
Wild West
Canoeing the Niobrara, p. 68
6•
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
NEBRASKA
Jorn Olsen
MOUNTAIN TIME
CENTRAL TIME
Chimney Rock, p. 23 Alan J. Bartels
Grant County Museum
Thomas County Historical Museum
Pilgrim Holiness Church
Hudson-Meng Education and Research Center, p. 79 Nebraska Tourism
MOUNTAIN TIME
CENTRAL TIME
Scenic Byways (see pg. 8) Bridges to Buttes Byway – Hwy 20 Valentine to WY Border 385 Gold Rush Byway – Hwys 385 & 87 Sidney to Chadron Sandhills Journey Scenic Byway – Hwy 2 East from Alliance Western Trails Byway – Hwy 26 Ogallala to WY Border Lincoln Highway – Hwy 30 East of Brady to WY Border WELCOME CENTERS/ REST AREAS
NEBRASKALand Days, p. 32
WESTNEBRASKA.COM • 7
Scenic Byways
18
Bowring Ranch State Historical Park
Bridges to Buttes Byway
Christopher Amundson
15
9
Ogallala Lake McConaughy
Lincoln Highway Scenic Byway
17 Nebraska Tourism
8•
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Alliance Central Park Fountain
385 Gold Rush Byway
Middle Loup River
Sandhills Journey Scenic Byway Barbara Johnston
Alan J. Bartels
18
1
2 3 4
19
6 5
9
8
SCENIC BYWAYS
Escape the grind and travel Western Nebraska’s scenic byways.
7 17
10 21 11
12
13 20
14
15
16
Follow our scenic byways and visit these exciting attractions along the way: 1 Toadstool Geologic Park
12 Courthouse Rock and Jail Rock
2 High Plains Homestead
13 Cabela’s
3 Hudson-Meng Education and Research Center
14 Ash Hollow State Historical Park
4 Fort Robinson State Park 5 Chadron State Park 6 Museum of the Fur Trade 7 Carhenge 8 Alliance Historic Main Street 9
Alliance Central Park Fountain
10 Scotts Bluff National Monument 11 Chimney Rock
15 Lake McConaughy 16 Buffalo Bill’s Ranch Historical Park 17 Nebraska National Forest Bessey Ranger District 18 Bowring Ranch State Historical Park
For mo inform re on our ation by see pag ways e 88.
19 Niobrara National Scenic River 20 National Pony Express Monument 21 Riverside Discovery Center
WESTNEBRASKA.COM • 9
Trails West
Scotts Bluff National Monument, Gering, p. 14
Wild West
pg. 12
Gering Scottsbluff Mitchell Henry Minatare Morrill Bayard Bridgeport Lisco & Broadwater Lewellen Oshkosh
14 18 22 22 22 22 23 23 26 26 26
pg. 28
North Platte Maxwell Brady Hershey Sutherland Sidney Potter Lodgepole Lemoyne Ogallala Keystone Big Springs Paxton Chappell Brule Kimball Harrisburg
30 37 39 39 39 40 45 46 46 47 50 50 50 50 50 51 52
Cody Park, North Platte, p. 30
Alan J. Bartels (top), Nebraska Tourism (bottom)
Western Nebraska Tourism Coalition
Nebraska Life Magazine
President: Hal Enevoldsen Vice President: Brenda Leisy Secretary: Kirsten Parker Treasurer: Patty Glidden Membership Chair: Karla Niedan-Streeks Past Chair: Mike Kesselring
Publisher and Editor: Christopher Amundson Associate Publisher: Angela Amundson Assistant Editor: Alan J. Bartels Design: Jenny Coriell and Tannon Asche Photo Editor: Joshua Hardin Advertising: Christopher Amundson
PO Box 628 • Ogallala, NE 69153 1-866-684-4066 • www.WestNebraska.com
206 Norfolk Ave., PO Box 819 • Norfolk, NE 68702-0819 1-800-777-6159 • www.NebraskaLife.com
About the Cover Enjoy horseback riding at Scout’s Rest Ranch at North Platte (large), visit the Hudson-Meng Education and Research Center (left), follow pioneer trails to Scotts Bluff National Monument (center) and explore Niobrara River waterfalls near Valentine. You’ll love Western Nebraska. Come see us soon, won’t you? Large cover photo by Bobbi and Steve Olson
Small cover images by Alan J. Bartels, Alan J. Bartels, Nebraska Tourism (left to right)
Sandhills and Scenic Rivers
pg. 54
Alliance 56 Hemingford 60 Hyannis 61 Ashby 61 Mullen 63 Tryon 65 Arthur 65 Seneca 65 Thedford 65 Halsey 66 Valentine 68 Merriman 68 Nenzel and Cody 68 Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge, Valentine, p. 68
Pine Ridge
pg. 70
Chadron Crawford Whitney Harrison Gordon Hay Springs Rushville
73 78 82 82 83 83 84
Ride the Ridge, Crawford, p. 78 Alan J. Bartels (top), Christopher Amundson (bottom)
Journey to Western Nebraska is the magazine of travel and tourism for the 20 member counties of the Western Nebraska Tourism Coalition – a nonprofit organization of businesses and local government entities dedicated to promoting and developing the tourism industry. The magazine and companion website (www.westnebraska.com) are produced in partnership with Nebraska Life Magazine. To submit editorial content and advertising, please contact Nebraska Life. We appreciate our advertisers for making Journey to Western Nebraska possible. Throughout the magazine advertiser’s directory listings are in yellow. To become a member, contact the Western Nebraska Tourism Coalition.
WESTNEBRASKA.COM • 11
TRAILS WEST
Gering • Scottsbluff Mitchell • Henry Minatare • Bayard • Morrill Bridgeport • Lewellen Lisco & Broadwater • Oshkosh
GETTING STARTED
Chimney Rock appeared in the diaries of pioneers. Today the spire appears in the vacation itinerary of thousands of tourists.
Jorn Olsen
The Oregon Trail stretches 2,000 miles, yet since the 19th century many found the heart of its natural beauty to be here in Western Nebraska. This road of wilderness offered an uncertain fate when fabled frontiersmen like Kit Carson drove those first wagon trains from Missouri in 1842. No doubt, their favorite treacherous tourist stops had to be in the Platte Valley of Trails West Country. The Oregon Trail’s most famous landmarks were seen at Ash Hollow, Courthouse and Jail rocks, and Scotts Bluff National Monument. Sail through the 155-mile journey on the Western Trails Historic and Scenic Byway. The drive will take just hours, but a lifetime of memories awaits.
EXPLORE
Trails West HOLD ON FOR THE RIDE
2
1
6
7
3 4
WELCOME CENTERS/ REST AREAS
10
5 8
1 9 1
Attractions 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
11
Western Trails Scenic Byway Riverside Discovery Center Scotts Bluff National Monument Robidoux Trading Post Wildcat Hills State Recreation Area Lake Minatare North Platte National Wildlife Refuge Chimney Rock Courthouse Rock & Jail Rock Crescent Lake National Wildlife Refuge Goose hunting Capital Ash Hollow State Park
Gering Historians know little about Hiram Scott, and legends abound about the fur trapper who died in 1828 near the bluff that came to bear his name. And though Scotts Bluff National Monument is in Scotts Bluff County, it is nearest the city of Gering rather than Scottsbluff. No matter. To simplify things, folks around here call it “The Monument,” a name as matter-of-fact as its wise Indian moniker, Maa-pa-te, which means “hill that is hard to go around.” Wagon trains from the Missouri River reached it only after two months of hard travel. More than 350,000 pioneers are estimated to have passed by here between 1841 and 1869. The ruts and swales left by their many possessionladen wagons still can be seen here. Rising 800 feet above the valley floor, the bluff is sometimes taken for a small mountain, which it is not. Mountains are pushed
14 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
up from below; Scotts Bluff is what remains of the ancient High Plains that were eroded by rivers over millions of years. It is part of the scenic Wildcat Hills. The Monument near the North Platte River encompasses nearly 3,000 acres. Among its badlands of sandstone and siltstone the fossilized remains of ancient oreodonts, tortoises, rhinoceroses, horses and camels and other prehistoric creatures have been discovered. Atop the bluff on a clear day, one can see Chimney Rock to the southeast and Wyoming’s Laramie Range of the Rocky Mountains to the west. From the bluff, a two-mile-long Union Pacific train looks tiny as it rolls along toward Mitchell. You can drive to the top from the Visitor Center and Oregon Trail Museum by way of Summit Road, Nebraska’s oldest concrete road. The route provides a stunning view and takes vehicles through three tunnels carved through the bluff. If you have the stamina, hiking the Saddle Rock Trail from the visitor center to the top is more of an adventure. Seeing the bluff ’s walls up
12
close is spectacular, and at one point the trail passes through a narrow, rocky tunnel carved through part of the bluff itself. The less strenuous Oregon Trail Pathway allows visitors to walk the same ground where pioneers passed long ago. The visitor center/museum displays the remains of ancient creatures that once lived here, and artifacts from the pioneer era. The Monument is three miles west of Gering on the Old Oregon Trail. It is open daily 8 a.m.-7 p.m. from Memorial Day through Labor Day and closes at 5 p.m. the rest of the year. Admission is $5 per vehicle, and rangers give interpretive programs on many weekends throughout the year. (308) 436-9700. Just east of the Monument on the Old Oregon Trail, the Legacy of the Plains Museum shows visitors the history of the valley and the development of High Plains agriculture. The 110-acre site has exhibits ranging from horse-drawn implements and steam engines to conservation tillage and the sugar beet industry. The artifacts of the former North Platte Valley Museum are now displayed here. A 1930s farmstead has been moved onsite to interpret that period.
Eighteen holes of fun await golfers at Monument Shadows Golf Course at Gering. Great views of Scottsbluff National Monument are a bonus no matter your golfing score.
Christopher Amundson
During the Harvest Festival on the third weekend of September, volunteers demonstrate farm practices of the past. Visitors can harvest potatoes to take home, or try their hand pitching bundles of wheat into the thresher. The museum is open 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 1-5 p.m. Sunday, mid-May through mid-September, or by appointment offseason. (308) 436-1989. Across the road from the museum and overlooking the monument is the City of Gering’s Five Rocks Amphitheater, which shows movies on summer evenings. Concerts, car shows and other community events are also held at this striking, open-air venue unlike anything else in the West. (308) 436-0056. Nearby is Monument Shadows Golf Course, a challenging 18-hole course
enhanced by outstanding views in its setting at the base of Scotts Bluff National Monument. The course features include a driving range, clubhouse and cart storage. To get there, go 1 1/2 miles north of the intersection of Five Rocks Road and the Old Oregon Trail in Gering, then turn west on Country Club Road and south on Clubhouse Drive. (308) 635-2277. The Ever Green House in Oregon Trail Park has the only producing fig tree in Western Nebraska. (308) 635-3089. The Wildcat Hills, pine-covered bluffs that rise abruptly from the plains, are some of Nebraska’s most ruggedly beautiful country. Eight miles south of Gering on Highway 71, Wildcat Hills State Recreation Area and Nature Center offers more than four miles of winding
HOTELS & MOTELS
and scenic hiking trails, picnic facilities and cross country skiing on more than 1,000 acres of pine and cedar clad canyons. The Nature Center has an auditorium, displays and educational opportunities in ecology, biology and geology. Children especially enjoy the fossil dig, and the center’s large windows provide wide views of the area, as well as wildlife including eagles and other birds, coyotes, bobcats, wild turkey and deer. A Nebraska state park entry permit is required to enter the state recreation area. (308) 436-3777. The adjacent Wildcat Hills Wildlands are open for mountain biking, horseback riding, hiking, hunting, camping and general enjoyment of the outdoors. It’s the result of a cooperative effort between many agencies, and provides access to nearly 30,000 acres of this rugged and beautiful landscape. Buffalo Creek State Wildlife Area offers hiking, fishing and abundant wildlife. From the Gering exit, take Highway 71 south 4 miles, then go east 2 3/4 miles on County Road W. Cedar Canyon Wildlife Management Area is home to a herd of more than 40 bighorn sheep. The herd was established in 2001 when 22 bighorns were trapped in
Phone
Rooms
Cavalier Motel, 3655 N. 10th St, Gering www.motelcavalier.com
308-635-3176
39
Outdoor pool
1-50
Circle S Lodge, 400 M St, Hwys 92 & 71, Gering
308-436-2157
30
Pets allowed
1-75
Monument Inn and Suites, 1130 M St, Gering www.monumentinnsuites.com
308-436-1950 866-436-1950
61
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Amenities
Fees
CAMPGROUNDS
Amenities
Rate Range
Phone
Open
Robidoux RV Park, 585 Five Rocks Rd, 1/2 mi. S. of Jct of Hwy 92 & Five Rocks Rd, Gering. www.gering.org
308-436-2046
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 42 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: unlimited tents.
Wildcat Hills SRA, 4235 Hwy 71, Gering www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-436-3777
Year Round
RV Amenities: water, room for 5 trailers. Rest Facilities: pit toilets. Camping: 5 tents.
GOLF COURSES Monument Shadows Golf Course, 2550 Clubhouse Dr, Gering
Phone 308-635-2277
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18 holes, public
10-28 6 & NE Park Permit
Rate Range Under 15
SCOTTS BLUFF COUNTY TRAILS WEST • 15
Colorado and released in Cedar Canyon. To get there, go 4 miles west of Highway 71 on Carter Canyon Road, then 1 1/2 miles south on County Road 17, and continue one mile west to the parking area. In 1851, Plains Indians brought their furs to Robidoux Trading Post (pronounced ROO-bi-doo). In the early days of the Oregon Trail, it was one of the first signs of civilization after many weeks on the prairie. The sod-roofed building has been reconstructed with 100-year-old hand-hewn logs and period furnishings. It is located in beautiful Carter Canyon, on the original Oregon Trail route before travelers began using Mitchell Pass, known to settlers as Devil’s Gap, at what is now Scotts Bluff National Monument. The winding, 23-mile Carter Canyon Road takes you through rugged country, past pioneer graves marked and unknown and to the trading post. Entrance to the road is two miles south of Gering off of scenic Highway 71.
Bicycle enthusiasts can travel the U Street Pathway from 10th Street in Gering, take in the scenic views of the river and Wildcat Hills and ride all the way to Scotts Bluff National Monument. For travelers seeking entertainment of a faster variety, the Hi-Way 92 Raceway Park, two miles east of Gering on Highway 92, has stock car races Friday and Saturday nights all summer and has since 1968. It is one of only two asphalt circle tracks in Nebraska. (308) 436-7223. Bicycle enthusiasts can travel the U Street Pathway from 10th Street in Gering, take in the scenic views of the river and Wildcat Hills and ride all the way to Scotts Bluff National Monument. It is also a popular thoroughfare for walkers and joggers. For more information on Gering, contact the Gering Convention & Visitors Bureau at (308) 436-6886 or visit www.visitgering.com.
16 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Gering Events Father’s Day Rock-n-Roll Classic Car Show June 18. More than 300 classics from seven states roll into Five Rocks Amphitheater for this day-long show and shine. (308) 436-6886. Oregon Trail Days July 7-10. Parades, food fairs, bands, chili cook-off, art show and more. (308) 436-6886. Harvest Festival Sept. 17-18. Celebrate historic agriculture of the northwest at Legacy of the Plains Museum. (308) 436-1989. Monument Marathon Sept. 24. Run along the Oregon Trail and through Mitchell Pass in this mostly downhill event. (308) 630-6551.
Located adjacent to the Gering Civic Center, the Monument Inn & Suites is your headquarters for fun and business activities in the North Platte Valley. We’re located minutes from the Scotts Bluff National Monument, Legacy of the Plains Museum, Oregon Trail sites, the Riverside Zoo, Five Rocks Amphitheater and shopping in downtown Gering with restaurants, antiques and other retail stores. Free Wireless Internet • Microwaves/Refrigerators • Flat Screen TV with USB Ports • Keurig Coffee Service • Complimentary Bottled Water • Local Newspaper • Complimentary Hot Breakfast • Fitness Room • Guest Laundry • Free Airport Shuttle • Free Long Distance Calling
Tripadvisor Certificate of Excellence 2014
Rick Myers
The sugar beet industry, agricultural practices and local history are interpreted at the Legacy of the Plains Museum at Gering.
SCOTTS BLUFF COUNTY TRAILS WEST • 17
The communities of Gering, Scottsbluff and Terrytown come together in the rugged Wildcat Hills of Western Nebraska.
Christopher Amundson
Scottsbluff
You’d expect to find wildlife in the rugged country around Scottsbluff, and you will. Elk, pronghorn, mule deer, bighorn sheep, bobcats and even an occasional mountain lion are seen. You wouldn’t expect to see exotic species such as chimpanzees, zebras or tigers, but you’ll find them at Riverside Discovery Center. It’s home to more than 70 animal species. They include rare species such as Amur tigers, addax and several primate species. Other special exhibits include the Big Cat Complex, Chimpanzee Conservation Center and Heritage Barn with a petting zoo. When visiting during summer, bring swimsuits and flip-flops to enjoy the Splash-pad, a refreshing zero-depth water feature. The 23-acre facility with its new Dino Dig is located on South Beltline Highway W., half a mile west of Highway 71. (308)
18 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
630-6236. www.riversidediscoverycenter. org. Open daily 9:30 am-4:30 pm. Riverside Campground, open May through September, is nearby. (308) 630-6238. The Westmoor Pool is another familyfriendly attraction in Scottsbluff. Located at Avenue I and 20th Street, the outdoor pool includes water cannons, slides and a lazy river. (308) 632-8881. The West Nebraska Arts Center, located in the Carnegie Library at 106 E. 18th St., is a hub of activity for painting, sculpture, artists-in-residence and the performing arts (308) 632-2226. Affiliated programs are Theatre West, a summer theater company, and the historic Midwest Theater, a grand, old movie palace of yesteryear in downtown Scottsbluff. (308) 632-4311. Alongside the North Platte River and Scotts Bluff National Monument, walking and biking trails connect Scottsbluff, Gering and Terrytown. Monument Valley
SCOTTS BLUFF COUNTY TRAILS WEST • 19
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Candlelight Inn, 1822 E. 20th Pl., Scottsbluff www.candlelightscottsbluff.com
308-635-3751
56
Wheelchair accessible, outdoor pool, free continental breakfast
51-75+
Capri Motel, 2424 Ave I, Scottsbluff
308-635-2057
30
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-50
Comfort Inn, 1902 21st Ave, Scottsbluff www.choicehotels.com
308-632-7510
49
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Hampton Inn & Suites Conference Center, 301 W. Hwy 26, Jct of Ave B & Hwy 26, Scottsbluff.. www.hampton-inn.com
308-635-5200 800-HAMPTON
81
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
75+
Holiday Inn Express, 1821 Frontage Rd, Scottsbluff www.hiexpress.com/scottsbluffne
308-632-1000
70
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
75+
Lamplighter American Inn, 606 E. 27th St, Scottsbluff
308-632-7108
40
Restaurant on premises, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
50
Scottsbluff Days Inn, 1901 21st Ave, Scottsbluff www.daysinn.com
308-635-3111
136
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Super 8 Motel, 2202 Delta Dr, Scottsbluff www.super8.com
308-635-1600
55
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Trails West Camp, 1918 S. Beltline Hwy W., Scottsbluff www.trailswestymca.org
308-632-5705
9
Wheelchair accessible, outdoor pool
CAMPGROUNDS
Amenities
Rate Range
75+
Phone
Open
Amenities
Riverside Campground, 1514 S. Beltline Hwy W. S www.scottsbluff.org
308-632-6342
May 1Sept 30
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 43 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 50 tents.
7-20
Route 26 Campground, 180454 US Hwy 26. 6 tents, 38 trailers
308-635-3760
Apr-Oct 1
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 38 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 6 tents.
16-26
20 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Fees
Pathways includes 6.3 miles of trails; 26 miles are planned. In 1902, railroad surveyors discovered an old wagon tire inscribed with the name of Rebecca Winters and the year 1852. It marked the grave of the Mormon pioneer woman who was stricken with cholera near Fort Kearny and perished near what is now Scottsbluff. Her family continued west.The proximity of the memorial to the railroad tracks led to the woman’s remains being moved in 1995, with more than 100 of Winters’ descendants in attendance. Today, the wagon tire is part of the monument that tells her story. The Rebecca Winters Grave is alongside Highway 26, 1 1/2 miles east of Scottsbluff. The area’s frontier history is also comUNIQUE LODGING Barn Anew B&B, On old Oregon Trail Rd, 3 mi. W. of Scottsbluff. www.barnanew.com
GOLF COURSES Riverview Country Club, 100928 Cty Rd 19, Scottsbluff
memorated on the Oregon Trail west of Scottsbluff near the intersection of Highway 92 and Hunt Dairy Road. Two markers stand here. One is for Fort Mitchell, a calvary outpost built in 1864. The fort and a nearby pass of the same name were named for General Robert B. Mitchell, who commanded the military district of Nebraska. All traces of the fort have vanished but this marker stands as a reminder of the role the men stationed at Fort Mitchell played in the settlement of the region. The marker was erected in 1923. The monument to the left depicts a Pony Express rider and is dedicated to the young men who willingly rode into danger for the brief time that the organization existed (1860-1861). The exact spot of the Scott’s Phone 308-632-8647
Phone 308-635-1555
Bluff Station is unknown but is believed to have been on Fort Mitchell, or very nearby. In Western Nebraska, the human population is sparse and people value wide-open spaces. Scottsbluff, with nearly 15,000 residents, is the Panhandle’s largest city. Combined with sister city Gering (pop. 10,500) and with Terrytown (pop. 1,200) sandwiched between, the Scottsbluff/Gering metro area is the largest population center in Western Nebraska. The much younger Terrytown was founded by businessman and politician Terry Carpenter in 1949. For more information about Scottsbluff contact Scottsbluff Area Tourism at www. visitscottsbluff.com or the Scottsbluff/ Gering United Chamber of Commerce at (308) 632-2133.
Amenities
Rate Range
100-year-old barn in the shadow of Scotts Bluff National Monument, private rooms, full breakfast
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18 holes, public
75+
Rate Range Under $15
Scottsbluff Events Sugar Valley Rally June 3-5. The history of the sugar beet industry is honored with this hundreds of miles long, precision driving contest through Western Nebraska. www.visitscottsbluff.com. Rock Show May 27-30. Rocks, gems and fossils for show, swap and sale at Riverside Discovery Center Campground at 1600 S. Beltline Hwy. (308) 436-4888. 18th Street Farmers Market Saturday mornings June through September. Backyard produce, small farmer veggies, locally-raised meat and other items for sale from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Saturday mornings downtown between Broadway and 1st Ave. www.Facebook.com/ScottsbluffFarmersMarket. Riverside Discovery Center Zoobilee August 20. Spend an unforgettable evening with a live band, catered food, auction items, a raffle and the zoo animals to raise funds for the Riverside Discovery Center. A great way to end the summer! (308) 630-6236.
SCOTTS BLUFF COUNTY TRAILS WEST • 21
Mitchell
Mitchell is the usual point of departure for Agate Fossil Beds National Monument, 30 miles north on Highway 29. Hunting and fishing opportunities abound nearby. Other recreational activities include a motocross track at the old airport, scenic Centennial Park, and the historic Nile Theater. Scenic Knolls Golf Course, a public, nine-hole course, is two miles north of the intersections of Highways 26 and 29. Camping is available, with electrical and water hookups. (308) 623-2468. For more information on Mitchell, contact the city offices. (308) 623-1523.
Henry
Henry is Nebraska’s westernmost town. One mile south, Stateline Island is part of the North Platte National Wildlife Refuge and offers nature observation and hiking. The 130-acre refuge is a bird watching mecca. One mile east of Henry is the place where in 1847 Brigham Young called a special prayer circle on behalf of the westbound Mormon pioneers. It is known as Prayer Bluffs today. It is accessible by a service road.
Minatare
Lake Minatare is large, but not so big that it needs a lighthouse. It has HOTELS & MOTELS Oak Tree Inn, 707 E. Webster, US Hwy 26, Morrill
UNIQUE LODGING Cheyenne Ridge Outfitters, 320075 Ankony Pkwy, Minatare. www.cheyenneridgeoutfitters.com
CAMPGROUNDS
Christopher Amundson
The lighthouse at Lake Minatare east of Scottsbluff has been a fixture in the area since 1939.
one anyway and it offers an impressive 360-degree view. It was built by the Veterans Conservation Corps, a New Deal agency that provided jobs to unemployed veterans. (308) 783-2911. Located seven miles north of the town of Minatare, the recreation area offers swimming, boating, fishing, picnicking and more. It has boat ramps, electrical and primitive camp sites and restroom and shower facilities. A state park permit is required. Lake Minatare is part of the North Platte National Wildlife Refuge, which also includes nearby Winters Creek Lake and Lake Alice, and Stateline Island near Henry. All are good bird-watching areas. To provide undisturbed habitat during migration season, all but Stateline Island Phone
Rooms
308-247-2111
97
Phone 308-783-5739 877-850-5144
Phone
are closed Oct. 15-Jan. 14. (308) 635-7851.
Morrill
In 1851, 10,000 Plains Indians from 10 tribes met government officials near Horse Creek to form a treaty. Never in recorded history had so many gathered at one spot on the Plains. From the government’s perspective, the treaty’s purpose was to ensure safe passage for people using the Oregon Trail and to stop intertribal warfare. The government broke the treaty almost immediately. The Horse Creek Treaty Marker is 3 1/2 miles west of Morrill on Highway 26. Every July, Morrill’s Horse Creek Rendezvous commemorates the event.
Amenities
Rate Range
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, pets allowed
Amenities
51-75
Rate Range
Rooms with shared bath, full breakfast, lodge with sauna
51-75+
Open
Amenities
Fees
RV Amenities: water, room for 50 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 110 tents.
7-18, NE Park Permit
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 6 trailers.
15
Lake Minatare SRA, 7 mi. N. of Minatare on Stonegate Rd
308-783-2911
Scenic Knolls Campground, 20548 Hwy 29, Mitchell www.mitchellcity.net
308-623-2468
Mar-Sep
Scotts Bluff County Fairgrounds, 130625 Cty Rd E., Mitchell, www.scottsbluffcountyfair.net
308-623-1828
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 80+ trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. 14+ tents. Horse boarding - $10.
10-15
Zeigler Park, 1280 Center Ave., Mitchell www.mitchellcity.net.
308-623-1616
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, room for 4 trailers. Rest Facilities: flush toilets.
5
GOLF COURSES
Phone
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times.
Rate Range
Scenic Knolls, 20458 Hwy 29, Mitchell
308-623-2468
9 holes, public
Under 15
Rolling Green Golf Course, 520 Rail Rd, Morrill
308-247-2817
9 holes, public
Under 15
22 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Bayard
Visible to wagon trains from several days away, Chimney Rock was the most noted landmark along the Oregon Trail. With a 120-foot spire and standing 325 feet from tip to base, it was unlike anything the pioneers had ever seen. The landmark’s story is told at the Ethel and Christopher J. Abbott Visitor Center at Chimney Rock National Historic Site. The center interprets the westward migration of the 19th century – the greatest voluntary mass migration in history – and the significance of Chimney Rock itself. It is 1 1/2 miles south of Highway 92 near Bayard and is open daily. (308) 586-2581. In town, the Bayard Depot Museum is housed in a refurbished railroad depot at the south end of downtown. It is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily during the summer and at other times by appointment. Contact the Chimney Rock Visitor Center (see above) for more information. Chimney Rock Pioneer Crossing offers gift shops, snacks, a stocked fishing hole, teepee sleeping, RV parking and hookups. Chimney Rock Golf Course, a nine-hole public course, is north of town. Flying Bee Beefmaster Ranch is a 4,000acre working cattle ranch that offers camping, cabins, bed-and-breakfast guest rooms, hiking and trail riding. Wagon ruts and remains of original sod houses are vis-
ible at the Chimney Rock Pony Express Station. The site is on private land two miles south of town on Highway 26, then 1 1/2 miles west on Oregon Trail Road. Call ahead for directions. (308) 586-1850. For more information, contact Bayard Area Development. (308) 586-1234.
Bridgeport
Courthouse Rock and Jail Rock are ruggedly beautiful and prominent in the pioneer history and ancient legends of the region. Courthouse Rock rises 340 feet above the valley floor and got its name because of its blocky shape. Oregon Trail migrants thought it looked like a stately courthouse; the smaller rock formation nearby was therefore the jail. Both were mentioned in pioneer journals and diaries. They are the easternmost rocky outliers of Western Nebraska’s Wildcat Hills escarpments. The story is told of a band of Skidi Pawnees who fled their Sioux enemies by climbing Courthouse Rock. With cliffs on three sides and only one difficult path to the top, the Pawnee seemed trapped. The Sioux warriors camped at the base of the rock and waited for their enemies to give up from thirst and hunger. But late at night, the Pawnees made a long rope from their pony lariats and escaped down a cliff one by one. The area is five miles south of Bridgeport on Highway 88. You won’t need to ask directions. The rocks are visible from many miles away. The area is open year-round and charges no admission. Courthouse and Jail Rock Golf Club, a nine-hole public course, is nearby. Just off Highways 26 and 92 on the west edge of town, Bridgeport State Recreation Area offers primitive camping, hiking, fishing, swimming and waterskiing. A
Morrill County Events Annual Greek Festival – Bridgeport August 13-14. A Greek celebration in cowboy country? Now that’s Western Nebraska. This will be the 89th year of the event that celebrates Bridgeport’s partially Greek heritage with Greek music and dancing, food, games and many other fun activities. Be Greek for a day in Bridgeport. (308) 262-0281.
SCOTTS BLUFF & MORRILL COUNTIES TRAILS WEST • 23
Nebraska Tourism
Oregon Trail pioneers named Courthouse Rock and Jail Rock. The blocky monoliths reminded them of municipal buildings back east. A stretch? Maybe, but the names have stuck.
state park entry permit is required. As its name indicates, the town of Bridgeport started with a bridge. Camp Clarke was the site of an early bridge across the North Platte River, built to serve gold rush travelers going to and from the Black Hills. When the railroad came through, the original site was abandoned and the new site became known as Bridgeport. The history of Camp Clarke and the area are displayed at the Pioneer Trails HOTELS & MOTELS
Museum. It is open Memorial Day to Labor Day. (308) 262-1117. Call ahead for a demonstration at Horse history, where history comes alive in Bern Miller’s indoor arena. (308) 262-0181. Travelers are welcome to use the exercise room and shower at Prairie Winds Community Center on North Main Street. For more information, contact the Bridgeport Chamber of Commerce. (308) 262-1825.
Phone
Rooms
Landmark Inn, 246 Main St, Bayard www.landmarkinn-webs.com
308-586-1075
11
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
1-75
Bridgeport Inn, 517 Main St, Bridgeport www.bridgeport-ne.com
308-262-0290
12
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
1-75
Meadowlark Annex, 2 mi. N.W. on US Hwy 385 to mile marker 77, Bridgeport www.meadowlarkmotorinn.com
308-262-0410 800-595-4948
8
Pets allowed
1-75
Meadowlark Motor Inn, N. US Hwy 385, Bridgeport. www.meadowlarkmotorinn.com
308-262-0557 800-510-1210
22
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Amenities
Fees
CAMPGROUNDS
Amenities
Rate Range
Phone
Open
Chimney Rock Pioneer Crossing, 3 mi. S. of Bayard at Jct Cty Rd 75 & Hwy 92, www.chimneyrockpioneercrossing.com
308-631-4478
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 16 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 30 tents.
20-30
Bridgeport SRA, N.W. on US Hwy 26, Bridgeport www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-436-3777
Year Round
RV Amenities: water, room for 50 trailers. Rest Facilities: pit toilets. Four sandpit lakes totaling 78 acres. Camping: 100 tents.
6, NE Park Permit
Meadowlark Annex RV Park, 2 mi. N. on US Hwy 385, Mile Marker 77, Bridgeport.
308-262-0410
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 18 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 10 tents
9-18
GOLF COURSES
Phone
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times.
Rate Range
Chimney Rock Golf Course, N. US Hwy 26, Bayard
308-586-1606
9 holes, public
Under 15
Courthouse & Jail Rock Golf Course, 5 mi. S. on Hwy 88, Bridgeport
308-262-9925
9 holes, public
Under 15
24 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
MORRILL COUNTY TRAILS WEST • 25
Lisco & Broadwater
Ancient Bluff Ruins is the most dramatic and extensive bluff formation along the north side of the North Platte River. The three buttes were formed by erosion and were named by Mormons from England who thought they resembled ancient towers and castles from the old country. Trail ruts can be seen nearby.
Lewellen
Modern travelers descend into the North Platte Valley by an easy grade. Pioneers faced a steeper route. To this day, Windlass Hill at Ash Hollow State Park bears the scars from the countless wagons that made the steep descent. Visitors can follow a paved walking path to the top. An old sod house stands at the bottom of the hill, enclosed with a fence with a wagon wheel gate. “Close gate, please,” a sign reads. “Otherwise cattle get in and rub the old house down.” Ash Hollow’s abundant water and trees made it a favorite resting place. The park offers picnicking and a visitor center. Multiple hiking trails lead to a cave once inhab-
ited by American Indians. Their relics have been found nearby. The park is 1 1/2 miles southeast of Lewellen on Highway 26. A state park entry permit is required. Experience life on the Oregon Trail on Father’s Day weekend at the Ash Hollow Pageant, an outdoor performance using historical diaries and music. (308) 778-5548. Rachel Pattison was just 18 years old when she died of cholera here in 1849. Her grave is at Ash Hollow Cemetery, east of Lewellen. A drive north brings you to the Clear Creek Wildlife Refuge. West of town 1 1/2 miles along Highway 26 is the Blue Water Battlefield marker. It marks the site of an Army raid that destroyed a Lakota village. Lewellen, at the west end of Lake McConaughy, features The Most Unlikely Place, a 1908 silent movie theater that is now a cafe. The owner roller skates about the maple floor, serving visitors surrounded by high-end art. On that same Main Street you’ll find the 17 Ranch Winery. Visitors can tour the winery and top off the visit with a taste. On the corner of Highway 26 and Main Street the Blue Water Gallery features art from local creators.
Oshkosh
Summer is the peak season for Western Nebraska tourism, but Oshkosh is also popular in fall. It’s the Goose Hunting Capital of Nebraska. Oshkosh also is a point of departure for Crescent Lake National Wildlife Refuge, located deep in the remote and beautiful Sandhills Lakes country. The 46,000-acre refuge is 30 miles north of Oshkosh and includes 21 lakes fed by an aquifer below. It was established primarily as a migratory bird refuge. Canada geese, snow geese, grouse and pheasants, prairie chickens, owls and many species of ducks are among the 200 bird species observed there in the past 30 years. Attention hunters, the area is rich with sharp-tailed grouse, ring-necked pheasants, mule deer and white-tailed deer. Anglers enjoy the lakes’ walleye, crappie, yellow perch, largemouth bass and carp. Other local attractions include the Oshkosh Swimming Pool, 200 E. First St., which offers swimming in a heated pool; the Oshkosh Country Club, a nine-hole course near the North Platte River, one mile south of town on Highway 27; and the Garden County Museum. The museum has the Silverhill Theatre at 501 W. First St., and the Rock School, a century-old stone schoolhouse at 215 W. Avenue G. The museum houses pioneer and Native American artifacts, fossils and a stuffed bird collection of more than 300 specimens. For more information on Oshkosh, contact the Garden County Visitors Committee. www.visitgardencounty.com.
Garden County Events Ash Hollow Pageant – Lewellen June 17-18. Enjoy a chuck wagon supper before 30 cast members take the stage for this 23rd annual outdoor musical of life on the Oregon Trail at Ash Hollow State Historical Park. (308) 778-5548.
Stephen Jones
Thirty miles north of Oshkosh, the “Goose Hunting Capital of Nebraska,” Crescent Lake National Wildlife Refuge provides sanctuary for all species of native and migratory wildlife. The 46,000-acre refuge includes 21 natural Sandhills lakes. Birders have seen 200 bird species here.
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Lewellen Lodge, 215 E. Church St, Lewellen. www.lewellenlodge.com
308-672-0690
22
Wheelchair accessible, workout room, pets allowed
65-100
Marina Landing, 5051 Albees, Hwy 92, mile marker 124, Lewellen. www.lakemacmarinalanding.com
308-355-3535 888-767-7791
8
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises
51-75
Otter Creek Lodge, 100 Otter Creek Ct, Lewellen, Lake McConaughy, 12 mi. from dam on Hwy 92
308-355-2372
9
Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
1-50
Mesa View Lodge, NE Hwy 92 W., Lewellen, Lake McConaughy. www.homesatlakemac.com
308-355-5000 888-568-7620
10
Pets allowed
1-75
Riverview Lodge, 110 Rd 68, 1 mi. S., 1 mi. W., Lisco www.riverviewlodgelisco.com
308-772-3839
8
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
51-75
Oshkosh Inn, 207 W. Ave A, Jct US Hwy 26 & NE Hwy 27, Oshkosh. www.oshkoshinn.com
308-772-3066
13
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, pets allowed
1-50
Shady Rest, 201 Main St, Oshkosh. www.oshkoshshadyrest.com
308-772-4111
12
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
1-75
UNIQUE LODGING
Phone
Amenities
Amenities
Rate Range
Rate Range
17 Ranch, 5052 Rd 197, 1 mi. W., 1 1/4 mi. N., 1/2 mi. W., Lewellen. www.agonline.com/17Ranch
308-778-5543
Working family cattle ranch. Wheelchair accessible, rooms with shared bath, full continental breakfast, reservations required
Clear Creek Retreat, 2220 Rd. West O North, Lewellen clearcreekretreat.com
308-778-9546
Three bedrooms, full kitchen; cater to hunters and fishermen.
Gander Inn B&B, 105 E. Church St, Lewellen. www.ganderinn.net
308-778-5616
Small-town peaceful setting. Game room & gift shop. Wheelchair accessible, rooms with private and shared baths, full breakfast., meals arranged around guests
51-75+
Nancy B’s Backyard Bunkhouse, 19150 Rd 44, US Hwy 26 to Rd 44 W, Lewellen. www.visitogallala.com
308-778-5408
3-bedroom guesthouse or tepee, continental breakfast
51-75+
The Rackett, 9250 Rd 193, Lewellen. www.hunttherackett.com
303-680-2462
Private sleeping quarters, clubhouse, dining hall, weather-tight dog kennels
200+
Blue Creek Lodge, 8460 Rd 181, Oshkosh. www.bluecreeklodging.com
308-772-9912
Furnished 4-bedroom lodge, sleeps 8-10, rooms with private and shared baths
150+
Open
Fees
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Amenities
Highway 26 RV Park and Camping, 311 Home St., Lewellen. www.hwy26rvpark.com
308-778-9552
Oregon Trail Trading Post, E. of Lewellen on US Hwy 26.
308-778-5879
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 12 trailers. Camping: 12 tents.
Pleasant View Lodge at Otter Creek, 1290 NE Hwy 92 W., Lewellen, www.homesatlakemac.com
308-355-5000 888-568-7620
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 8 trailers. Rest Facilities: pit toilets. Camping: 8 tents Cabin Rentals: 10.
Oregon Trail Campsite, 402 W. Ave A., Oshkosh www.oregontrailcampsite.com
308-778-7395
Apr 1Nov 1
GOLF COURSES Oshkosh Country Club, South Hwy 27, 2 mi. S. of Oshkosh
Phone 308-772-3881
51-75 90+
RV Amenities: electricity, water. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: available.
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 15 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 7 tents.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9 holes, public
Call for rates 5-20 Call for rates
Rate Range 18
EXPLORE THE
Wild West SADDLE UP FOR ADVENTURE
WILD WEST
Brady • Maxwell • North Platte Hershey • Sutherland • Paxton Ogallala • Brule • Keystone Lemoyne • Big Springs Chappell • Lodgepole • Sidney Potter • Kimball • Harrisburg Dalton • Gurley
GETTING STARTED
This is a land of big thinkers and living large. William F. Cody dreamed up his Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show here. And in 1877, outlaw Sam Bass and his gang made history at Big Springs when they got away with $60,000 in gold and currency heisted from a passing train. Legends abound of a stash of $20 gold pieces still buried nearby. Chappell calls out today to Interstate 80 travelers with a massive 52-by-100 foot American flag painted on grain silos. At North Platte, the Golden Spike Tower climbs eight stories to give visitors a bird’s eye view of Bailey Yard, the world’s largest railroad classification facility. Nebraska’s biggest body of water, Lake McConaughy, thrills visitors with 35,000 acres of sky blue waters at Ogallala. From Brady and Sidney, to Kimball and beyond, big adventure awaits.
Nebraska Tourism
The Crystal Palace Review and Shoot Out on Ogallala’s Front Street is Nebraska’s longest running summer theater. Ogallala, Nebraska’s “Cowboy Capital,” was a much rougher cow town in its early days.
WELCOME CENTERS/ REST AREAS
9
2
3
4
14 5
8
6 7
1
Attractions 1 Panorama Point 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
& Tri-State Marker Missile Silo Home Potter Sundry Lincoln Highway National Pony Express Monument Cabela’s Front Street Lake McConaughy Haythorn Ranch Sutherland Reservoir Golden Spike Tower at Bailey Yard Buffalo Bill State Historical Park Fort McPherson National Cemetery Bird Watching
30 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
North Platte
While approaching North Platte from Interstate 80, one of the first landmarks seen is Fort Cody Trading Post. When viewed from the outside it looks like a frontier log stockade complete with authenticallydressed mannequins with toy rifles standing guard. Inside it’s a combination gift shop and museum, with authentic Buffalo Bill Cody and Wild West memorabilia, and a miniature mechanized Wild West Show. Twenty thousand individual pieces make up the one-of-a-kind machine and no quarters are required. It comes to life on its own every half hour. A taxidermy two-headed calf and frontier canons are among the curiosities to be seen, and jewelry, moccasins and coon skin caps are among the unique gift items found here. Under the watchful eye of one of the few remaining Muffler Man sculptures, the Fort Cody Music Series takes place each summer in the Fort Cody courtyard. Besides queries about that calf, owner Chuck Henline said the most common question he gets from travelers is, “How do you get to the ranch?” The ranch, of course, is the Buffalo Bill Ranch State Historical Park, which showcases the restored 1880s Victorian home,
horse barn and outbuildings of William F. Cody’s famous Scout’s Rest Ranch. The site features Wild West Show memorabilia, period household furnishings, picnic areas and walking trails. Cody owned about 4,000 acres, and the park encompasses 25 acres of the original ranch. As folks at Fort Cody would tell you, it’s easy to find: north on Highway 83, then west on Highway 30, then north on Buffalo Bill Avenue. A Nebraska park permit is required to visit the park open April 22-October 2, 2016. Admission is charged to tour the Cody home. (308) 535-8035. Buffalo Bill is memorialized at Cody Park on north U.S. Highway 83. In 1998, a British sculptor donated a life-size bronze statue of Buffalo Bill, whose show was a big hit in Queen Victoria’s time. As the centerpiece of the park’s Wild West Memorial, the statue, valued at $500,000 at the time of its installation, is surrounded by the flags of every state and nation the Wild West Show visited. At the park’s Railroad Museum, Union Pacific Railroad displays two of its largest locomotives (one steam, one diesel) and houses a railroad museum in the accompanying cars and restored depot. The steam engine is one of two remaining 3900-class
12 10
11 13
Grain Bin Antique Town near North Platte makes use of 20 old grain bins as miniature antique stores and fills them with treasures. Christopher Amundson
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Open
A-1 Sunset Mobile Park, 3120 Rodeo Rd, North Platte
308-532-9182
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 22 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets.
Buffalo Bill Ranch SRA, US Hwy 83 N. to US Hwy 30, 2 mi. W., 1 mi. N, North Platte
308-535-8035
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 23 trailers. Rest Facilities: pit toilets. Camping: 12 tents.
Cody Park Campground, 1601 N. Jeffers, N. US Hwy 83 www.ci.north-platte.ne.us/publicservices
308-535-6706
May 1Oct 15
Holiday RV Park & Campground, 601 Halligan Dr, I-80 Exit 177, N.E. quadrant, North Platte www.holidayparkne.com
308-534-2265 800-424-4531
Year Round
Lake Maloney SRA, 5 mi. S, North Platte www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-535-8025
CB’s Hideaway, 206 N. Lake Rd, North Platte
308-534-5315
Year Round
Lake Side Camping, 3800 Hadley Dr, I-80 Exit 179, N.E. quadrant, North Platte
308-534-5077 877-648-2267
May 15Sept 15
GOLF COURSES
Phone
Amenities
Fees 30 7-13 NE Park Permit
Room for 40 trailers. Rest Facilities: Flush toilets.
5
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 92 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 8 tents.
Call for rates
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 120 trailers. Rest Facilities: Showers, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 50 tents.
7-14 NE Park Permit
RV Amenities: electricity (year round), water, sewer, room for 30 trailers. Full hookups April-Oct. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 15 tents.
6-15 80/week
RV Amenities: Electricity, water, sewer, room for 54 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 16 tents.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times.
Call for rates
Rate Range
Indian Meadows Public Golf Course, 2746 W. Walker Rd, North Platte
308-532-6955
9, public
Under 15
Iron Eagle Golf Course, 2401 Halligan Dr, N. of I-80 Exit 179, North Platte
308-535-6730
18, public
15-30
Lake Maloney Golf Club, 608 Birdie Ln., 5 mi. S. of I-80 on US Hwy 83, 2 mi. W., North Platte
308-532-9998
18, semi-private
15-30
LINCOLN COUNTY WILD WEST • 31
32 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Challenger locomotives built by Union Pacific. The park also has a swimming pool and amusement rides for children, including a carousel and Ferris wheel. A concession stand adds treats to the memories made here. Some of the animals that Cody saw on the frontier can be seen at Cody Park, too. Deer and bison are part of the herd, and the bugling of elk can be heard across North Platte during rutting season. Peacocks and llamas live here, and there are geese, ducks and donkeys. The lake at Cody Park attracts rare trumpeter swans. Binocular-clad birdwatchers come here for nature’s show during spring and fall migrations. There is an admission for rides; other attractions are free. In 1995, the Guinness Book of World Records recognized Union Pacific’s Bailey Yard as the world’s largest railroad classification yard. It has since grown by 25 percent. It stretches eight miles and covers
nearly 3,000 acres. More than 15,000 cars pass through daily. Golden Spike Tower and Visitor Center rises eight stories for a bird’s-eye view of massive Bailey Yard. An elevator takes visitors to the seventh floor open-air observation deck, or to the top for an enclosed viewing experience. (308) 532-9920. The area’s geological history is part of the flavor of Feather River Vineyards, where the mineral-rich soil produces distinctive grapes for its new wines. There’s a tasting room for sampling each variety, and the purchase of bottles of your favorites and other gifts. (308) 696-0078. Putting Nebraska agricultural ingenuity to work, Grain Bin Antique Town offers high quality collectibles and antiques for sale from re-purposed grain bins. A boardwalk connects 20 depression-era grain bins chock-full of vintage
signs, glassware, wooden furniture, trinkets and more. (308) 539-7401. The North Platte Canteen is commemorated at the Lincoln County Historical Museum. The World War II canteen met every train and fed the service men and women who passed through the depot – about 6 million in all. The museum also features a village of historic buildings, including a Pony Express station and the old Fort McPherson headquarters. (308) 534-5640. Located just south of I-80, America’s 20th Century Veterans’ Memorial honors all military men and women of the past century. A brick bas-relief sculpture depicts major wars from World War I to the Persian Gulf. Larger-than-life-size bronze statues depict the branches of the armed forces and the ladies of the North Platte Canteen. The memorial is south of I-80 beside Highway 83. (308) 532-6579.
Buffalo Bill Ranch State Historical Park, also known as Scout’s Rest Ranch, includes William F. Cody’s 1880s Victorian home and period furnishings, 25 acres of the original ranch, and Cody’s huge horse barn. The property on North Platte’s northern edge became a state park in 1965. Christopher Amundson
LINCOLN COUNTY WILD WEST • 33
Military veterans are memorialized at North Platte’s 20th Century Veterans’ Memorial.
Nebraska Tourism
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Americas Best Value Inn Travelers Inn, 602 E. 4th St, I-80 Exit 177, 1 1/2 mi. N. on US Hwy 83, 6 blks E., North Platte www.bestvalueinn.com
308-534-4020 888-315-2378
32
Outdoor pool, pets allowed
Best Western Plus North Platte Inn & Suites, 3201 S. Jeffers, North Platte I-80 & US Hwy 83 S.
308-534-3120
79
Restaurant on premises, outdoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
Blue Spruce Motel, 820 S. Dewey St, North Platte
308-534-2600
25
Pets allowed
Cedar Lodge Motel, 421 Rodeo Rd, North Platte
308-532-0970
31
Comfort Inn, 2901 S. Jeffers St, I-80 Exit 177 S., North Platte. www.comfortinn.com/hotel/ne021
308-532-6144
90
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75+
Days Inn, 3102 S. Jeffers, I-80 Exit 177, 1 blk S., North Platte. www.daysinn.com
308-532-9321
48
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75+
Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott, 319 W. South River Rd, North Platte. www.marriott.com/lbffi
308-532-9900 888-236-2427
82
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool free continental breakfast
75+
Hampton Inn, 200 Platte Oasis Pkwy, North Platte I-80 Exit 177 & US Hwy 83, www.hampton-inn.com/hi/ northplatte
308-534-6000 800-426-7866
110
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
75+
Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites and Convention Center, 300 Holiday Frontage Rd., North Platte. www. hiexpress.com/northplattene
308-532-9500 888-562-9500
152
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Howard Johnson, 1209 S. Dewey, North Platte www.howardjohnson.com
308-532-0130
77
Restaurant on premises, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
Husker Inn, 721 E. 4th St, North Platte
308-534-6960
20
Wheelchair accessible
1-50
Knights Inn, 501 Halligan Dr, I-80 Exit 177 N., North Platte www.knightsinn.com
308-532-6650 888-532-0151
81
Restaurant on premises, outdoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75
LaQuinta Inn & Suites, 2600 Eagles Wings Pl., North Platte. I-80 Exit 179, www.821.lq.com
308-534-0700 866-534-0700
65
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Motel 6, 1520 S. Jeffers St., North Platte. www.motel6.com
308-534-6200
61
Wheelchair accessible, outdoor pool, pets allowed
1-50
Oak Tree Inn, 451 Halligan Dr, North Platte. I-80 Exit 177 www.oaktreeinn.com
308-535-9900
111
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Park Motel, 1302 N. Jeffers, North Platte. N. US Hwy 83
308-532-6834
27
Quality Inn & Suites Convention Center, 2102 S. Jeffers St., North Platte. I-80 & US Hwy 83. www.sandhillcc.com
308-532-9090 800-760-3333
196
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Rodeway Inn, 920 N. Jeffers St, North Platte
308-532-2313
38
Outdoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Super 8 Motel, 220 Eugene Ave, North Platte I-80 Exit 177. www.super8.com
308-532-4224
111
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Western Motel, 706 Rodeo Rd, North Platte
308-532-5240
10
UNIQUE LODGING Brauer’s Bed & Breakfast,12900 N Sandhills, North Platte. www.bauersbedandbreakfast.com Knoll’s Country Inn B&B, 6132 S. Range Rd., North Platte. www.knollscountryinn.com
34 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Phone
Amenities
Rate Range 1-75
51-75+
1-75
Amenities
51-75+
1-50
Rate Range
308-530-1753
Rooms with private and shared bath, full breakfast. Beautiful view, horse boarding, bird watching
70-100
877-378-2521
Rooms with private and shared bath, full breakfast. Outdoor activities and horse boarding
51-75+
LINCOLN COUNTY WILD WEST • 35
36 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
The North Platte Area Children’s Museum offers hands-on learning about science, technology, culture and the arts in the Carnegie Library building, 314 N. Jeffers St. (308) 532-3512. Downtown has unique shops, restaurants and art galleries, including the Art & Gift Gallery, 516 N. Dewey, the largest original art gallery between Omaha and Denver. (308) 534-1946. North Platte’s Prairie Arts Center opened its first exhibition in the renovated 1913 federal building during the 2015 holiday season. The historic building, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, is undergoing further renovation, but the main level, complete with grand entry hall, gift shop and gallery is open TuesdaySaturday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. showcasing local artists and traveling exhibits. Cody Go-Karts near I-80 has water slides, mini golf, bumper boats and go-karts mid-March through September, weather permitting. (308) 534-8277. The North Platte River valley between North Platte and Sutherland hosts thousands of Sandhill Cranes during spring migration February to April. For viewing information call (308) 532-4729. Five miles south of town, Lake Maloney State Recreation Area provides fishing, boating, camping, picnicking, as well as archery, golf and wildlife watching. North Platte offers three 18-hole golf courses: Iron Eagle, (308) 535-6730; Lake Maloney, (308) 532-9998; and Rivers Edge, (308) 534-7550; as well as a nine-hole course, Indian Meadows, (308) 532-6955. For more information about North Platte, contact the North Platte/Lincoln County Convention and Visitors Bureau at (800) 955-4528.
Maxwell
When Fort Cottonwood was renamed Fort McPherson in 1866, its soldiers were already accustomed to fetching cold, greattasting water from the well of John “Mac” McCullough. Soon, other travelers heard about the well and would stop. As a community formed, it was decided to name it after Mac’s well. Maxwell was born. Fort McPherson National Cemetery glows with peace south of Maxwell and the Platte River. Soldiers from conflicts dating back to the Indian Wars have been laid to rest here with honor. Four Medal of Honor recipients are interred here. Fort McPherson
Christopher Amundson
The Golden Spike Tower rises eight stories to give visitors a bird’s eye view of Bailey Yard.
Lincoln County Events Country Bluegrass Festival – North Platte April 28-30. The festival offers great bluegrass entertainers, good food, craft/ vendor show, workshops, jamming, and more at the Lincoln County Fairgrounds. http://npcountrybluegrassfestival.weebly.com NEBRASKAland DAYS – North Platte June 15-25. NEBRASKAland DAYS returns for its 52nd celebration. It kicks off with 4 nights of PRCA Buffalo Bill Rodeo (June 15-18), the Junior Rodeo (June 19), Family night (June 20), and close with the US Cellular Summer Jam Concert Series Featuring Sam Hunt and Dierks Bentley (June 24-25). www.nebraskalanddays.com. Rail Fest – North Platte Sept 16-18. Celebrate the Union Pacific Railroad in Cody Park with live music, a model train expo, art competition and pancake feed. Events spill over to the Lincoln County Historical Museum, Buffalo Bill State Historical Park, Bailey Yard and other sites. www.nprailfest.com Christmas at the Cody’s – North Platte December 16-19. Buffalo Bill’s mansion is decked out for you to enjoy. Complete with 20 Christmas trees, Santa, cookies and hot cider, caroling and horse drawn rides. Buffalo Bill is even there to welcome you. (308) 535-8035
LINCOLN COUNTY WILD WEST • 37
38 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Christopher Amundson
National Cemetery was founded in 1873 and it is Nebraska’s only national cemetery. The original Pony Express route and Oregon Trail passed through what is now the cemetery. One mile southeast of the cemetery a monument marks the site of the flagstaff of the military post.
Hershey
Brady
Sutherland
On the eastern end of Wild West Country, Brady is home to several outdoor adventures. Jeffrey Canyon Reservoir is five miles south and one mile west of Brady. Potter’s Pasture in the beautiful hills south of Brady, consists of 1,300 acres of privately owned land crisscrossed with 15 miles of mountain biking trails.
HOTELS & MOTELS
Stones and Bones Gallery and Emporium offers a unique assemblage of Stone Age artifacts from Western Nebraska, along with western and wildlife art. (308) 368-7400.
Sutherland Reservoir offers swimming, camping and fishing. The area has good wildlife habitat, and bald eagles use it as a winter feeding area. Oregon Trail Golf Course is a nine-hole course and campground on the north shore of the lake with RV hook-ups and campsites. (308) 386-4653. Phone
Rooms
Park Motel, 1110 First St, I-80 Exit 158, Sutherland
308-386-4384
19
Prairie View Motel, 409 N. Commercial Ave, Wallace
308-387-4618
3
CAMPGROUNDS
Loess Hills’ soil imparts unique flavors to Feather River Vineyards’ wines.
Phone
Open
Amenities
Rate Range 1-75
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, pets allowed
1-50
Amenities
Fees
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 18 trailers. Camping: 5 tents.
Hidden Acres Campground, 16501 W. Murray Rd., Hershey
308-368-7654
Oregon Trail Park, 31200 W. Tower Rd, 1 mi. S. of I-80 Exit 158, Sutherland, www.oregontrailgolfcoursene.org
308-386-4653
Mar-Nov
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 31 trailers. Rest Facilities: flush and pit toilets. Camping: 10 tents.
7-20
Sutherland SRA, 3 mi. S., Sutherland
308-535-8025
Year Round
RV Amenities: water, room for 50 trailers. Rest Facilities: Pit toilets. Camping: 35 tents.
7 & NE Park Permit
GOLF COURSES Oregon Trail Golf Course, 1 mi. S., 1/4 mi. E. of I-80 Exit 158, Hwy 25 Tower Rd, Sutherland
Phone 308-586-4653
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, semi-private
12
Rate Range Under 15
LINCOLN COUNTY WILD WEST • 39
man was shot and likewise displayed. The party, so it was said, ended only after the third shooting. Good times. These days the community of 6,900 residents is best known as the home of Cabela’s, a locally-owned business that began on a kitchen table and now bills itself as the “World’s Foremost Outfitter.” Visible for miles, the green-and-gold water tower bearing the Cabela’s logo stands tall at exit 59. It
tent camping available with a restaurant on site. (308) 254-7889. Near the Cabela’s store is the Pony If this were an 1870s travel guide, we’d Express National Monument. The monuadvise you to go around Sidney. There’s ment’s flags can be seen from a long disno sense in taking your chances with the tance by travelers motoring on I-80. outlaws, gamblers and other riffraff that Sidney Barracks was established in made this railroad town one of the tough1867 to protect Union Pacific Railroad est places in all of the American West. track layers from Indian attack. In 1869, Stay on the train, lock the doors and you’ll the post was relocated to the present site be fine. Unless there’s a train robbery. at Sidney. The following Sidney began in 1867 year it was renamed Fort as an Army fort guarding Sidney and was active the Union Pacific Railroad Outlaws, gamblers and riffraff made the through the Indian wars. from hostile Native railroad town of Sidney one of the toughest At its height, the fort had Americans. With the dis40 buildings. It closed covery of gold in the nearby places in the American West in the 1870s. in 1894. Three buildings Black Hills, Sidney became a trailhead for northbound On one city block alone there were 23 saloons. remain in what is now a residential neighborhood gold-seekers. The boomon Sidney’s east side. town days brought easy beckons irresistibly to more than 1 million The grounds of former Boot Hill money for some, and outlaws that many visitors each year. The 72,000-square-foot Cemetery, established by the military had to contend with. Legend has it a single store sells outdoor equipment of every sort in 1868, has been restored and features city block in Sidney once held 23 saloons. from fishing and hunting supplies to backinterpretive panels with stories of some The tales of Sidney’s rowdy past are packing and boating equipment. Open of the people buried there. The cemetery many. One local favorite is an incident 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Monday-Saturday and 10 was used until 1889, and 211 bodies were in which a man was shot and killed at a a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday. Closed Christmas Day, removed and relocated in 1922. dance. The body was propped up in a Thanksgiving and Easter. RV parking and At Sixth and Jackson streets, Fort Sidney corner, and the dance went on. Another
Sidney
40 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Joshua Hardin
Sidney’s western history is strong. So were the Pony Express riders memorialized today at the Pony Express National Monument near Sidney’s Cabela’s store adjacent to Interstate 80.
Museum and Post Commander’s Home consists of the Officers’ Quarters, which is a museum of Sidney’s colorful past, and the Post Commander’s Home, which has been restored with original and other period furnishings. The third building is an octagonal stone structure once used as the fort’s powder magazine. It is at 1047 Fifth Ave. All three buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Fort Sidney Complex is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday and 1-4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Memorial Day-Labor Day. (308) 254-2150. Annual Christmas Lamplight tours are popular and take place the Friday after Thanksgiving from 6 p.m.-9 p.m. The building remain open for the holidays through December from 1-4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. The Christ Episcopal Church in Sidney was built in 1866 and was the original church of Fort Sidney. Worshippers gather today at 1205 10th Ave. in the same building where Native Americans and early settlers once worshipped together. Half a century after Fort Sidney closed, Sidney again became home to a major military facility. The Sioux Army Depot, built in 1942, held equipment and ammunition. Located six miles west and two miles north of Sidney, the site once covered 36 square miles. It closed in 1967. Its igloo-shaped ammunition bunkers remain and are accessible through a driving tour. Twenty-nine Sidney buildings are on the National Register of Historic Places. Sidney is the only Western Nebraska city with a “Historic District” designation. When a local man suggested erecting a flagpole for the War Memorial in Legion Park and Memorial Gardens, local residents decided that just any old flagpole wasn’t enough to honor the sacrifice of Cheyenne County’s veterans. Volunteers and local companies converted a blown-down interstate light pole into a flag pole. At 140 feet, it is the tallest flagpole in Nebraska. The flag measures 20 feet tall and 38 feet wide. The park, at 11th and Toledo, features a railroad monument, pond, handicapaccessible docks, gazebo and playground. The Living Memorial Gardens is home of “Nebraska’s First Angel of Hope” (based on the Christmas Box Angel). A trail begins here and winds through the community. For visitors seeking more of a workout, the Cheyenne County Community Center, 627 Toledo, offers indoor basketball and racquetball courts, running
CHEYENNE COUNTY WILD WEST • 41
Joshua Hardin
Cabela’s, touted as the world’s foremost outfitter today, began at a kitchen table in 1961. Its flagship store pulls thousands of motorists into Sidney each year. The gem of the Cheyenne County Museum is the former Fort Sidney’s Officers’ Quarters.
tracks and weight lifting equipment. Visitors to Sidney receive free admission. Open year-round Monday-Friday, 5 a.m.10 p.m.; Saturday, 7 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sunday, noon-6 p.m. (308) 254-7000. Located on bluffs overlooking Sidney, Hillside Municipal Golf Course incorporates the area’s rugged Western terrain into a 18-hole adventure. The course twists through a beautiful canyon, offering spectacular views of Sidney and the countryside. (308) 254-2311. Test your marksmanship at the Sidney Shooting Park with target shooting lanes and sporting clays courses. From I-80 exit 59, go north to U.S. Highway 30, then west to Greenwood Road, then three miles north. Sidney Shooting Park prices and hours are subject to change and availability. (308) 249-2555. In 1874, a military expedition led by George Armstrong Custer discovered gold in the Black Hills. Though a treaty reserved the Black Hills for the Sioux
42 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Nebraska Tourism
Indians, the Army stopped enforcing it. Interlopers trespassed by the thousands and soon a major gold rush was under way. It led to a tragic war between the Sioux tribe and the United States, a war in which Custer himself was famously killed during the Battle of the Little Bighorn. For would-be gold miners, Sidney became a popular jumping-off place,
leaving behind the ease of railroad travel and heading overland by horse, oxen, mule and wagon up the 267-mile Sidneyto-Deadwood Trail. Through the early 1880s, the trail carried most of the gold rush traffic, including rich gold shipments from the Black Hills in South Dakota. On Highway 30 west of town, a historical marker indicates where trail ruts
are still visible across from the Union Pacific tracks. Highway 30 is also part of the old Lincoln Highway, which in the 1920s became the first paved coast-tocoast auto route. Today, the Nebraska portion of U.S. Highway 385 is designated the Gold Rush Byway. From the Colorado to the South Dakota state lines, the highway connects Sidney with Bridgeport, Alliance and Chadron. It follows the old trail for much of the way and rolls through some of the most spectacular country in Nebraska. Heading north from Sidney, the highway passes through Gurley and Dalton before descending dramatically into the North Platte Valley beside Courthouse and Jail rocks near Bridgeport. Northeast of Sidney, visitors can find one of the state’s most interesting greenhouses. It’s interesting, too, that the owners of Ricky
and Lucy’s Country Greenhouse, 11732 Road 32, are neither named Ricky nor Lucy. In 2003, Terri and Dan Wolff opened the business in a renovated 1800s era barn. Their organic farm offers herbs and spices, dips, medicinal herbs, teas, coffees and pasta. There is a gift shop with Roman-inspired fountains and pottery. Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday from May-September, or by appointment; and during the off season by appointment only. (877) 254-2204. Six miles west of Sidney, the I-80 Golden Link marks where the last segment of Interstate 80 was completed in 1974. The link is a 6-inch strip of brass plates embedded in both lanes of the thoroughfare, signifying the joining of Western and Eastern Nebraska. For more information about Sidney, contact the Cheyenne County Visitors Committee. (866) 545-4030. Joshua Hardin
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Americas Best Value Inn & Suites, 2115 W. Illinois St, W. on US Hwy 30, Sidney
308-254-2081
58
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Best Western Plus Sidney Lodge, 645 Cabela Dr, I-80 Exit 59, www.bestwestern/us/ne/sidney.com, Sidney
308-254-0100
64
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Country Inn & Suites, 664 Chase Blvd, Sidney
308-254-2000
85
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, indoor pool, pets allowed
75+
Days Inn, 3042 Silverberg Dr, I-80 Exit 59, Sidney www.daysinn.com
308-254-2121
47
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
El Palomino Motel, 2220 Illinois St, W. US Hwy 30, Sidney
Amenities
Rate Range
18
1-50
Ft. Sidney Inn, 935 9th Ave, 1 blk S. of post office on US Hwy 30, Sidney. www.fortsidneyinnmotelne.com
308-254-9106
51
Outdoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75+
Generic Motel, 11552 US Hwy 30, 2 mi. N. of I-80 Exit 59, Jct US Hwys 30 & 385, Sidney
308-254-4527
13
Pets allowed
1-75
Hampton Inn, 635 Cabela Dr, Sidney www.hamptoninn.com
308-254-2111
74
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
75+
Motel 6, 3040 Silverberg Dr, Sidney www.motel6.com
308-254-5463
47
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
Sidney Motor Lodge, 2031 Illinois St, W. US Hwy 30, Sidney
308-254-4581
18
Pets allowed
1-75
Sleep 4 Le$$, 954 E. Elm St, I-80 Exit 59, 2 1/2 mi. N. to US Hwys 30 & 385,www.sleepforlessmotel.com
308-254-4009 877-220-0109
11
Pets allowed
51-75
Quality Inn, 730 E. Jennifer Ln, I-80 Exit 59, Sidney www.choicehotels.com
308-254-5011
54
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Open
Amenities
75+
Fees
Bear Family RV Park, I-80 Exit 59, E. US Hwy 30, Sidney
308-254-6074
June-Oct
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 25 trailers. Rest Facilities: Showers, flush toilets. Camping: unlimited tents.
25
Cabela’s Campground, I-80 Exit 59, Sidney
308-254-7177
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 31trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 6 tents.
Call for rates
GOLF COURSES Hillside Golf Course, 2616 Hillside Dr, Sidney
Phone 308-254-2311
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18, public
Rate Range 15-30
CHEYENNE COUNTY WILD WEST • 43
Sidney Events Gold Rush Days June 10-12. The Old West comes alive with quick-draw competitions, a chuck wagon cookout and fun for all. (866) 545-4030. Cheyenne County Fair and Rodeo July 17-23. This county fair goes back to the roots of such events with marksmanship contests and 4-H exhibits, livestock shows and judging, rodeo, dog show, horse shows plus more. (308) 250-1976. Oktoberfest Sept. 30-Oct. 2. Hundreds of classic cars line up, side by side, for inspection by judges, and hundreds of enthusiastic gearheads. There will be a show and shine at Legion Park, and a parade, farmer’s market, crafts and entertainment, all helping make this festival fun filled. (308) 254-2932. Lamplight Tours Always the day after Thanksgiving. The Fort Sidney Museum and Post Commander’s Home come alive in this holiday gala. (308) 254-5851. Downtown Christmas Kickoff Always the first Saturday following Thanksgiving. Enjoy a parade of lights, refreshments, a visit from Santa and a tree lighting in Hickory Street Square. (308) 254-5851.
44 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Potter
You don’t have to go far out of your way to visit downtown Potter – it’s just a minute’s drive from I-80. Unwind at city parks or at the Reading Garden beside the library downtown. In one of several restored historic buildings, Potter Sundry is an old-fashioned soda fountain serving homemade food and ice cream desserts. The Tin Roof Sundaes are legendary. The A Collective Gathering Flea Market is next door. Nearby is Chestnut Street Memory Station antique store, and the old Lincoln Highway Cafe, now known as Bags Bar and Steakhouse. The Railroad Museum on Front Street displays Union Pacific Railroad History. Potter Historical Museum on Sherman Street preserves local history. Both museums open by appointment. (308) 879-4356. Prairie Pines Golf Course is a links style seven-hole course. Cart rental available. (308) 879-4469.
HOTELS & MOTELS Point of Rocks Motel & Campground, 8175 US Hwy 30, 2 1/2 mi. E. Potter
CAMPGROUNDS
Potter Duckpin Bowling Alley
Potter is proudly home to great games at one of the few remaining duckpin bowling alleys in the Great Plains. Nearby, the Potter Sundry serves a Potter original, the Tin Roof Sundae.
Three miles east of Potter on U.S. Highway 30 is the historic Point of Rocks, where railroad crews laying the Union Pacific line east of Potter clashed with Indians. The altercations provided the impetus to establish Fort Sidney. The track here, called Buffalo Bend, is the sharpest curve on the Union Pacific line. Lodgepole
Phone
Rooms
308-879-4400
9
Creek, which parallels the track, is the longest creek in the world. The Point of Rocks Motel and Campground located beneath the Point, just south of Highway 30, offers lodging and camping facilities. For more information about Potter, contact the Cheyenne County Visitors Committee. (866) 545-4030.
Amenities
Rate Range 1-50
Phone
Open
M&S Campground & Trailer Park, 1325 Front St, Potter I-80 Exit 38
308-879-4224
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 6 trailers.
Call for rates
Point of Rocks Motel & Campground, 8175 US Hwy 30, Potter
308-879-4400
May-Nov
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 24 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 10 tents.
Call for rates
GOLF COURSES Prairie Pines Golf Course, 402 Prairie Pine Dr, Potter
Phone 308-879-4469
Amenities
Fees
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, public
Rate Range Under 15
Potter Events Potter Days Labor Day weekend. This 85th annual event includes a fun run, duck race, prize drawings, parade and more. (308) 879-4332.
CHEYENNE COUNTY WILD WEST • 45
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Admiral’s Cove Resort, 999 Lemoyne Rd, Lemoyne. Lake McConaughy Gate 6. www.admiralscoveresort.com
308-355-2102
23
Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
1-75+
North Shore Lodge, 5 North Shore Rd, Lemoyne. Hwy 92 near Lake McConaughy. www.northshorelodge.net
308-355-2222
21
Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
51-75+
Mesa View Lodge, 1290 Hwy 92 W., Lemoyne. Lake McConaughy. www.homesatlakemac.com
308-355-5000 888-568-7620
10
Pets allowed
1-50
Vogl’s Lodge and Lure, 721 Hwy 92 W., Lake McConaughy. www.voglslodgeandlure.com
308-355-2321
12
Pets allowed
51-75+
Amenities
Fees
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Admiral’s Cove Resort, 999 Lemoyne Rd, Lemoyne www.admiralscoveresort.com
308-355-2102
North Shore Lodge, Lake McConaughy Gate 5, Lemoyne www.northshorelodge.net
308-355-2222
Lodgepole
Old Settlers’ Days is the big event of the year for Lodgepole. A free barbecue, mud volleyball tournament, parade and street dance are just a few of the events that take place during the Labor Day weekend celebration. Sullivan Hills is located just north of Lodgepole and features 640 acres of beautiful rolling hills and trees. You will find wildlife running free, ponds for fishing, hiking, paddle boating and kayaking. Campers from all over Nebraska enjoy the peaceful location. The Lodgepole Depot Museum, on the corner of McCall Street & Bates Boulevard, displays horse buggies, antique furniture, pony express items and historical clothing inside the an old train depot. Open by appointment, (308) 483-5353.
46 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Open
Amenities
May-Sep 3
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 5 trailers. Rest Facilities: Showers, flush toilets. Camping: unlimited tents. Cabin Rentals: 25.
15
May-Oct
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 23 trailers. Rest Facilities: Showers, flush and pit toilets. Cabin Rentals: 18.
Call for rates
Dalton
Every direction is covered when it comes to enjoyment in Dalton. At South Park there are picnic areas, playground equipment and a basketball court. North Park has plenty of shade and also the Prairie Schooner Museum. An authentic log cabin is part of the history preserved in this community along Highway 385.
Gurley
Rate Range
With only six miles separating them, it makes sense for Dalton and Gurley to join together for their annual Christmas Lighting Contest each December. Other events here have a seasonal ring. Two miles east of Gurley, Fanny’s Fruit Farm celebrates the bounty of summer with a pick your own raspberry harvest. Their pumpkin patch brings fun to fall with
18 varieties of pumpkins, barrel trains, a corn maze, goat barn, haunted evening tours and more. (308) 249-2266.
Lemoyne
The unincorporated community of Lemoyne, near where Lonergan Creek flows into Lake McConaughy, had its all-time high population of 90 people back in 1960. There were just a few souls less than that in the most recent census. The original community of Lemoyne was flooded when the reservoir was filled in 1941. In dry years old foundations of its buildings are sometimes exposed. The relocated community is holding its own today. With sandy beaches, boat docks, recreational facilities, fuel, bait, food, resorts, lodging and storage available nearby, little Lemoyne is a relaxing place to be.
Nebraska Tourism
What is 22 miles long, 142 feet deep and more than 100 miles around? It’s Nebraska’s largest reservoir – Lake McConaughy. Fishing, sailing, swimming, diving, water skiing and relaxing on white sand beaches are a few of the popular activities to be enjoyed here.
Ogallala
Nebraska Tourism
Howard and Harvey Kenfield’s art, as well as work from other artists, is displayed at the Petrified Wood Gallery in Ogallala.
Ogallala was the “Gomorrah of the cattle trail,” wrote Andy Adams, a trail driver who first saw the community in 1875. In the 1870s and 1880s, Ogallala was the end of the trail as cowboys drove herds of longhorns up from Texas to be shipped east on the Union Pacific Railroad. After several long, hard months in the saddle, cowboys were ready for a rip-roaring good time when they reached town. Visitors to Nebraska’s “Cowboy Capital” can enjoy Wild West entertainment at Front Street. The Crystal Palace Review and Shoot Out is Nebraska’s longest-running summer theater, a musical comedy family show where dance hall girls kick up their heels and shots ring out. Adjacent attractions are the Front Street Steakhouse and the Cowboy Museum, a free museum that includes a jail, barbershop, funeral parlor and authentic cowboy and Native American artifacts. (308) 284-6000. The renowned Petrified Wood Gallery has a newly expanded gallery at 481 E. First St. It features the petrified wood art of twin brothers Howard
and Harvey Kenfield, as well as fossils, gemstones, geodes, Western sculpture and Native American artifacts collected locally. (308) 284-9996. The Mansion on the Hill was Ogallala’s finest home when it was built in 1887. It is open Memorial Day through mid-September as a Victorian period residence museum. It is at the corner of Spruce and 10th streets. Three blocks west of the mansion on 10th Street is the original Ogallala cemetery, long known as Boot Hill for the cowboys who were “buried with their boots on.” Seventeen miles northeast of town, Haythorn Land & Cattle Co. is a fifthgeneration ranch offering wagon rides and chuck wagon dinners. They prepare and ship mesquite-smoked meats and homemade butter fudge across the nation. (308) 355-4000. What the old-time cowboys needed, but didn’t have, was a really big lake in which to cool off. Eight miles northeast of Ogallala, Lake McConaughy is Nebraska’s largest reservoir. At full capacity, McConaughy is four miles wide, 22 miles long and 142 feet deep at the dam with more than 100 miles of shoreline.
CHEYENNE & KEITH COUNTIES WILD WEST • 47
48 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
When irrigation season is in full swing, miles of white sand beaches provide the perfect perch for a summer vacation. Just below Kingsley Dam is Lake Ogallala. It covers half a square mile and offers excellent fishing for rainbow trout and yellow perch. It is also a good backup destination if wind curtails water sports on the big lake. South of Ogallala, at Meadowlark Hill, one might expect to see birds. What people
come here to see, and smell, are lilacs in full bloom. More than 40 years in the making, Max and Darlene Peterson’s passion has grown to fill 14 acres with the flower, and it’s the world’s largest private collection of lilacs. To see the flowers in full bloom, the best time to visit is mid-May. (308) 284-2524. For more information about Ogallala and Lake McConaughy, contact the Ogallala/Keith County Chamber of Commerce. (800) 658-4390.
HOTELS & MOTELS
Keith County Events Eagle Viewing – Lake McConaughy/Lake Ogallala Late December through the first weekend of March. Water discharged from the Kingsley Hydroplant creates open water on Lake Ogallala, attracting bald eagles. View from the heated facility below the dam. (800) 658-4390.
Phone
Rooms
Best Western Stagecoach Inn, 201 Stagecoach Trail, Ogallala www.bestwesternnebraska.com
308-284-3656
100
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, outdoor & indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
Comfort Inn, 110 Pony Express Rd, Ogallala www.choicehotels.com
308-284-4028
49
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
51-75
Days Inn, 601 Stagecoach Trail, Ogallala www.daysinn.com
308-284-6365
31
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75+
Elms Motel, 717 W. First St, Ogallala
308-284-3404
12
Holiday Inn Express and South Platte Cabins & Kennels LLC, 501 Stagecoach Dr, Ogallala I-80 Exit 126 N. to service road, 1/4 mi. E.
308-284-2266 888-922-3691
71
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Kingsley Lodge, 1510 N. Hwy 61, Ogallala
308-284-2775
17
Pets allowed
1-75
Lazy K Motel, 1501 E. 1st St, Ogallala N. of I-80 Exit 126
308-284-4056
19
Quality Inn, 201 Chuckwagon Rd, Ogallala I-80 Exit 126 N., www.choicehotels.com
308-284-3623
101
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, outdoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Pump & Pantry Motel, 730 E. 1st, Ogallala Turn right at the overpass, 5 blks
308-284-6119
15
Pets allowed
1-75
Rodeway Inn, 108 Prospector Dr, I-80 Exit 126, Ogallala www.rodewayinn.com
308-284-2056
40
Free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-50
Super 8 Motel, 500 E. A St S., I-80 Exit 126, Ogallala www.super8.com
308-284-2076
90
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75
Amenities
Fees
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Open
Amenities
Rate Range
1-75
1-50
Cottonwood Grove, 1045 Keystone Roscoe Rd, Ogallala
308-284-2282
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 10 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 6 tents.
Country View Campground, 120 Rd E. 80, Ogallala I-80 Exit 126, S. 1/2 mi., left at John Deere. www.cvcampground.com
308-284-2415
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 50 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 12 tents.
27-30
Eagle Canyon Hideaway, 1086 Lakeview W. Rd, Brule www.eagle-canyon.com
308-287-2673 866-866-5253
Mar 1Dec 30
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 21 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 16 tents. Cabin Rentals: 17
Call for rates
Lake McConaughy SRA, 1475 NE Hwy 61 N., 9 mi. N.E., Ogallala. www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-284-8800
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 242 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush and pit toilets. Camping: Unlimited tents.
Call for rates
Lake Ogallala SRA, 1475 NE Hwy 61 N., Ogallala.10 mi. N., E. side of dam, www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-284-8800
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 82 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush and pit toilets. Camping: Unlimited tents.
Call for rates
Sleepy Sunflower RV Park, 221 Rd E. 85, Ogallala. I-80 Exit 126 S. www.sleepysunflower.com
308-284-1300
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 48 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 10 tents.
23-26
Van’s Lake View Fishing Camp, Brule, 13 mi. N.W. of I-80 on US Hwy 26, #1 Lake View. www.vanslakeview.com.
308-284-4965
May 1 -Nov 1
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 100 trailers. Rest Facilities: Showers, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 15 tents. Cabin Rentals: 2.
12-28
GOLF COURSES West Wind Golf Club, 359 Rd E. 85, Ogallala, 1 1/2 mi. E. of I-80 Exit 126
Phone 308-284-4358
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18, public
20-30
Rate Range Over 30
KEITH COUNTY WILD WEST • 49
HOTELS & MOTELS Days Inn, 851 Paxton Elsie Rd, 1-80 Exit 145, Paxton
UNIQUE LODGING The Beach House, Lake McConaughy, Keystone www.lakemacbeachhouse.com
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Rooms
308-239-4510
Phone 308-762-2892
34
Amenities
Rate Range
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
Amenities
1-75
Rate Range
Luxury townhomes with lake views, rooms with shared and private bath
75+
Phone
Open
Amenities
Riverside Campground, 1000 S. State St, I-80 Exit 117, Brule
308-287-2474 800-809-2921
Apr 1Oct 30
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 45 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets.
15+
The Lodge, 851 Paxton Elise Rd, I-80 Exit 145, Paxton
308-239-4510
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 12 trailers. Camping: 12 tents.
20
GOLF COURSES Bayside Golf Club, 865 Lakeview W. Rd. Brule
Keystone
East of Kingsley Dam, Keystone is home to a most unique church. Built in 1908, the Little Church of Keystone is the result of cooperation and ingenuity. The town was too small for two churches, so this one was built as a combined Catholic/Protestant church. It has a Catholic altar at one end and a Protestant altar at the other. Reversible pews face either way. (800) 658-4390.
Paxton
Ole’s Big Game Steakhouse began as a bar in downtown Paxton. Through the years, owner Ole Herstedt decorated it with more than 200 big game trophies. (308) 239-4500.
Brule
Nine miles west of Ogallala is the community of Brule. It was founded in 1886 on the site of a former Brule Sioux encampment.
50 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Phone 308-284-4358
Fees
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18, public
Big Springs
Heading west from Ogallala on I-80, you’ll come to Big Springs. The first and largest robbery of a Union Pacific train happened here in 1877. Texas outlaw Sam Bass and five companions made off with $60,000 in gold and currency. Some say that part of the loot, a stash of $20 gold pieces, is still buried nearby. A historical marker at Eiker Park, on the west side of town, tells the story of the famous robbery. The town is named for a natural spring. From the town’s founding through 1950, the spring supplied water for Union Pacific steam locomotives. Today, walking trails at Eiker Park lead to the spring. The Phelps Hotel was built in 1885 to house railroad workers staying in Big Springs between shifts. It is open for tours by appointment. (308) 889-3625. Western Nebraska is sod house country. The Waterman Sod House is among the last of them still standing five miles north of Big Springs on Day Road. For more information, contact the Big Springs Chamber of Commerce. (308) 889-3681.
Rate Range 15-30
Chappell
Travelers see grain elevators aplenty along I-80, but none with a paint job like the Farmers Elevator in Chappell. An American flag measuring 52 feet by 100 feet is painted on its south side. The curves of the silos make the flag look like it’s waving. Chappell is a convenient stop for travelers looking for golf, camping or fishing. The nine-hole Chappell Golf Course. Chappell Lake is just north of the interchange and offers fishing, native grasses, wildflowers and public rest rooms. The Sudman-Neumann Heritage House at Fifth and Vincent streets is restored to its 1911 glory and filled with period furniture and open 2-4 p.m. Sundays, or call (308) 874-3441 for an appointment. You won’t find Rembrandt paintings in Chappell, but the reproductions at the Chappell Memorial Art Gallery are so good that they were long thought to be Rembrandt originals. The gallery is part of the Chappell Public Library, 289 Babcock. Call Chappell Tourist Information at (308) 874-2401.
Deuel, Kimball and Banner County Events Kimball Ranch Rodeo – Kimball June 11. Competitors from Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming and Kansas compete in individual and team rodeo events to ride broncs, milk wild cows, load trailers and brand cattle. Vendors will keep everyone fed and a beer garden will flow, too. See real cowboys show the skills they use everyday in Western Nebraska. (308) 241-1760. Bushnell Day – Bushnell Aug. 20. Take a break from the summer heat and find a shady spot from which to watch the parade. Visit the craft fair, sample a variety of delicious foods, try your luck at prize-winning raffles and much more in this tiny Western community. (308) 360-0756. Farmer’s Day – Kimball Sept. 23-25. Kimball honors those who grow our food with this flavorful smorgasbord of fun. Last year’s event had 2,000 burgers grilling and this year will be even better. There’s a pie auction and bake sale, best salsa contest, garden tractor pull, parade, silent auction and more in honor of the American farmer. www.kimballbannercountychamber.com.
HOTELS & MOTELS Motel 6, 111 Circle Rd, I-80 Exit 107, Big Springs
UNIQUE LODGING
Phone
Rooms
308-889-3671
62
Phone
Phelps Hotel, 401 Pine St, Big Springs The Bunkhouse B&B and Stables, 30914 Cty Rd 2, Big Springs. www.cowboybunkhouse.com
CAMPGROUNDS Creekside RV Park, N. of I-80 Exit 85, Chappell HQH Stables & Campground, 1625 Rd 203, Big Springs www.a-chordpublishing.com
Amenities
Rate Range
Indoor pool, pets allowed
Amenities
1-75
Rate Range
308-889-3580
Historic hotel built in 1885, rooms with shared and private bath
51-75+
308-464-1224
Rooms with private and shared bath, full breakfast, full kitchen. 2 full RV hookups & horse stables
51-75
Phone
Open
Fees
308-874-2267 888-871-2267
Year Round
877-241-8653
Amenities RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 28 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, flush toilets Camping: Unlimited tents.
12-25
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 6 trailers. Riding area available.
10-20
McGreer Camper Park, 693 Rd 209, Big Springs www.mcgreercamperpark.com
308-889-5093
AprOct 31
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 28 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets Camping: 8 tents.
25-30
The Bunkhouse RV Park & Stables, 30914 Rd 2, 3 mi. S. of I-80 Exit 107, 1/2 mi. E. , Big Springs
308-464-1224
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 2 trailers. Cabin Rentals: 1.
Call for rates
GOLF COURSES Chappell Golf Course, US Hwy 385, Chappell
Kimball
Kimball began as a railroad construction camp. Because of large herds of pronghorn in the area, the railroad called the new station Antelope, and the new village, Antelopeville. In 1885,
Phone 308-874-2729
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, public
Rate Range Under 15
the growing settlement was renamed for railroad executive Thomas Kimball. Kimball’s history is displayed downtown at the Plains Historical Museum. After oil was discovered in Kimball County in 1950, Kimball became known as the “Oil Capital of Nebraska.” It soon
had another title – “Missile Center, U.S.A.” The area’s first Atlas missile site was completed in 1961. Today, some 200 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles are housed in the tri-state area. For an insider’s look at missile silos, visitors can tour the home of Don and
KEITH, DEUEL & KIMBALL COUNTIES WILD WEST • 51
Charlene Zwonitzer south of Kimball. The Zwonitzers purchased and converted a silo into their 15,000-squarefoot home. (308) 235-2708. Kimball bills itself as the “High Point of Nebraska.” The elevation of Panorama Point is 5,424 feet. It is easily walked to. The Kimball County Tourism offers tongue-incheek certificates to those who reach the summit. Call (308) 241-0573. Nearby, the
Tri-State Marker shows the spot where Nebraska, Wyoming and Colorado meet. Oliver Reservoir Recreation Area has a 270-acre lake for fishing and boating, and sandy beaches. (308) 254-2377. Four Winds Golf Course is two miles east of town. The 18-hole green fee is good for as many holes you can play in a day. (308) 2354241. For more information on Kimball, contact Kimball Area Tourism. (308) 241-0573.
HOTELS & MOTELS
Turning north from Kimball, State Highway 71 will take you past the little village of Harrisburg. The Banner County Museum is an 11-building complex that includes a 19th-century log schoolhouse, sod house, log cabin, 1910 barn, pioneer church and the old Banner County Bank. (308) 436-4514.
Phone
Rooms
1st Interstate Inn, 1704 S. County Rd. 41, Kimball www.1stinns.com
308-235-4601
29
Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
Days Inn, 611 E. 3rd St., Kimball. www.daysinn.com
308-235-4671
30
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
Motel Kimball, 1017 E. 3rd St, Kimball. E. US Hwy 30
308-235-4606
16
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
1-50
Sleep 4 Less, 600 W. US Hwy 30, Kimball. I-80 Exit 22
308-235-4878
25
Pets allowed
1-75
Super 8 Motel, 1701 S. County Rd. 41, Kimball. I-80 Exit 20
308-235-4888
57
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75+
Amenities
Fees
CAMPGROUNDS Oliver Reservoir Recreation Area, 8 mi. W. on US Hwy 30, Kimball. 270 acres of water and 917 acres of land
GOLF COURSES Four Winds, E. US Hwy 30, Kimball
52 •
Harrisburg
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Phone
Open
308-254-2377
Year Round
Phone 308-235-4241
Amenities
RV Amenities: water, room for 75 trailers. Rest Facilities: pit toilets Camping: 100 tents.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18 holes, public
Rate Range 1-50 51-75+
No fee
Rate Range 15-30
‘Tanks’ for the memories
Bobbi and Steve Olson
Saddle up Adventures on horseback have taken place in Western Nebraska since long before we were a state. With plenty of land available for riding your trusty steed or mare, there’s no need to be a tenderfoot. The Samuel McKelvie National Forest, Bessey Ranger District of the Nebraska National Forest, the Pine Ridge Ranger District, Fort Robinson State Park, Chadron State Park and other public lands combined offer access to hundreds of thousands of scenic land from which to enjoy your horseback hobby. Private businesses provide opportunities to horse lovers, too. Some rent horses, others provide facilities for yours. Double R Guest Ranch north of Mullen is a century-old family ranch. Rent one of their horses or bring your own. (866) 2172042. Our Heritage Guest Ranch north of Crawford and near Toadstool Geologic Park provides riding lessons and indoor stalls. Eagle Canyon Hideaway offers facilities for your horses and an 8-mile tour by Lake McConaughy. Horseback riders have the opportunity to connect to the long history of rugged Western Nebraska in a way that most other travelers never will. Enjoy the ride. Visit www.WestNebraska.com for a list of area outfitters and lands open to horseback riding.
You’ve seen them from the road – those round water tanks at the base of a windmill with horses and cattle gathered around them taking a drink. That’s a good use for them but it’s not much fun. That’s where tanking comes in. Tanking is climbing into one of those round wonders with your friends and maybe a cooler of drinks and floating downstream. There’s no need for any paddling. Let Mother Nature do the work. With the exception of possibly dragging your tank to deeper flows a time or two, there’s not much effort involved. Tanking is a great way to get close to nature. Tankers have reported floating by deer, swans, eagles, turtles, otters and other wildlife. The large, flat-bottomed craft are stable and provide plenty of room. So stable and spacious in fact that you can stay totally dry during a float if you like – depending on how rowdy
your fellow travelers are, that is. Sandhills Motel and Canoe Rental in Mullen has been in the tanking business since about the time the first adventurer hit the water in a re-purposed tank. They put their tankers out on the Middle Loup River – one of the most constant flowing streams in the world. This full service outfitter provides lodging and transportation for a complete tanking experience. They rent kayaks and canoes, too. Niobrara Riverview Retreats and Little Outlaw Outfitters, both near Valentine, also rent tanks to river adventurers. The Niobrara River is known far and wide by kayakers and canoeists. Tanking the Niobrara River continues to grow in popularity. The float is a slower and less strenuous experience from a tank, leaving more time to soak up the scenery. Isn’t it time to cross tanking off of your bucket list of outdoor aquatic adventures?
Sandhills RC&D
Fun modes of travel abound in Western Nebraska. Faithful horses are used for work and for fun here. There’s little work involved in launching downstream with friends in a livestock tank.
SANDHILLS & SCENIC RIVERS
Alliance • Hemingford Hyannis • Ashby • Mullen Tryon • Arthur • Seneca Thedford • Halsey Merriman • Nenzel Cody • Valentine
GETTING STARTED
Waterfalls in Nebraska? You betcha. Float the Niobrara and see for yourself.
Alan J. Bartels
You’ll find sand and hills on almost every continent, but you’ll only find the Sandhills in Nebraska. Drive on through this area of grass-stabilized sand dunes and your jaw may drop down to Kansas at these towering grassy hills resembling endless waves rolling in from the sea. Running through its northern shores is the Niobrara River, a bucket-list float for anyone who has ever put a paddle to water, and recognized as one of the 10 best canoeing rivers in the United States. Hills become tidal waves of hand-planted trees at the Nebraska National Forest near Halsey and Thedford. Romantics and rodeo queens love Valentine. Look for Dobby’s Frontier Town, and the half-buried corpses of old cars at Carhenge, both at Alliance. Heavenly cattle ranches and pristine lakes beautify this region of more than 19,000 square miles of Sandhills and Scenic Rivers Country.
EXPLORE
Sandhills and Scenic Rivers IMMERSE YOURSELF IN NATURE
Alan J. Bartels
Carhenge, just north of Alliance, is one of Western Nebraska’s most popular and quirky attractions. With that said – there are no traffic jams – and there’s plenty of free parking. Below, the Knight Museum and Sandhills Center, also in Alliance, preserves the long, rich history of the area.
Alliance
Alliance has a long lineage of agriculture, business, industry and railroading. Rogues, rascals and visionaries have colored the town’s history. Alliance has grown from a frontier town to 9,000 residents and a variety of businesses, amenities and attractions. Located at the intersection of Highways 2 and 385, Alliance is the largest city for 50 miles in any direction. Two-and-a-half miles north of Alliance on Highway 87, Carhenge is perhaps the strangest attraction in Nebraska. The full-scale replica
56 •
of England’s famous Stonehenge is built entirely from old cars. Local resident Jim Reinders got the idea in 1982 when his family gathered at the family farm after his father died. They decided to build a tribute to his father and gathered five years later to begin. Carhenge is built from 38 cars, painted gray. Some are half-buried, others are welded together, and some jut from the ground at odd angles, mimicking the present configuration of Stonehenge. In recent years, more automobile sculptures have been added. Just a short walk
Knight Museum and Sandhills Center
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
from Carhenge, fun and quirky pieces include “Spawning Salmon” (a car that looks like giant salmon bursting from the ground) and “The Ford Seasons” (representing the four stages of wheat grown in the area). There is no admission charge, and there’s a small visitor center and gift shop where you can smash a penny for your own Carhenge souvenir. Displays at the 19,000-square-foot Knight Museum and Sandhills Center span many aspects of western life, including an extensive display of Native American artifacts, railroad memorabilia, military history from the Indian Wars to Alliance’s World War II air base, homestead and ranch life, and the various cultures who shaped the area. The museum’s research center houses the largest collection of genealogy material in the region. Volunteers are available for one-on-one assistance in perusing the thousands of records. To get there, turn north on Yellowstone Avenue from highways 385 and 2. The museum is at 908 Yellowstone. (308) 762-2384. The Carnegie Arts Center is a gallery featuring local and regional artists. This center hosts renowned art shows such as installations of original Rembrandt and Albrecht Durer prints. It is housed in a historic 1911 building at 204 W. Fourth
9 12
14 13
17 Snake River
10 11 1 North Loup River
WELCOME CENTERS/ REST AREAS
5
6
Middle Loup River
2 3 4 7
15 16
Dismal River
8
Attractions 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Alliance has grown from a frontier town in the American West to 9,000 residents and a variety of amenities and attractions. St. Open 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and 1-4 p.m. Sunday. Closed holidays. (308) 762-4571. Dobby’s Frontier Town, 320 E. 25th St., is a historic village with buildings from the 1890s through Prohibition. Buildings include a general store and meat market, a mortuary (complete with a glass-topped coffin), a log cabin built by the area’s first black homesteader, an early gas station, a replica 1880s post office, a Chinese laundry, a saloon, a bootlegger’s cabin and a bordello. Call ahead for hours. (308) 762-4321.
With 140 acres of public space, Alliance is proud of its extensive park system. Central Park is the city’s oldest, and its Central Park Fountain is on the National Register of Historic Places. Other Alliance parks include Laing Lake and Bower Park, and there are several mini-parks throughout the city. The Central Park Fountain operates Memorial Day weekend through Oct. 1. After dark, it features a lights-and-water display. Nearby, at 11th and Niobrara, Sallows Conservatory and Arboretum features tropical and sub-tropical plants. Paths wind throughout the Sunken Gardens. Laing
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Box Butte Reservoir Carnegie Arts Center Knight Museum and Sandhills Center Carhenge Dobby’s Frontier Town Nebraska Veterans Cemetery Sandhills Movie Drive-In Crescent Lake National Wildlife Refuge Arthur Bowring Sandhills Ranch State Historical Park Merritt Reservoir Valentine National Wildlife Refuge Niobrara National Scenic River Smith Falls State Park Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge Canoeing, tubing, kayaking Nebraska National Forest – Bessey Ranger District Samuel R. McKelvie National Forest
BOX BUTTE COUNTY SANDHILLS & SCENIC RIVERS • 57
15
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Amenities
1st Interstate Inn, 1207 W. 3rd St, W. on Hwy 2 & US Hwy 385, Alliance
308-762-4040
42
Pets allowed
Alliance Hotel and Suites, 117 Cody Ave, 3rd & Cody Sts, Alliance
308-762-8000
60
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
American Inn, 1419 W. 3rd St, Alliance
308-762-8300
39
Free continental breakfast, pets allowed
Holiday Inn Express, 1420 W. 3rd St, Alliance www.hiexpress.com/alliancene
308-762-7600
60
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
Rainbow Motel, 614 W. 3rd St, Alliance
308-762-4980
13
Restaurant on premises, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-50
Sunset Motel & RV Park, 1210 E. Hwy 2, Alliance www.clicksunset.com
308-762-8660
20
Indoor pool, pets allowed
49-75
UNIQUE LODGING Grandma Lala’s Bed and Breakfast, 1232 Box Butte Ave, Alliance
Phone
1-50 51-75+ 1-75 51-75+
Rate Range
Four rooms with private bath, morning brunch included
75-110
Phone
Open
Fees
J&C RV Park, 2491 S. US Hwy 385, Alliance
308-762-3860
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 13 trailers.
Call for rates
Sunset RV Park, 1210 E. Hwy 2, Alliance www.clicksunset.com
308-762-8660 800-767-8660
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 24 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets, indoor pool.
18-30
CAMPGROUNDS
GOLF COURSES Sky View, 2613 Cty Rd 57, Alliance
58 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
308-762-2925
Amenities
Rate Range
Phone 308-762-1446
Amenities
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18, public
Rate Range 15-30
Alliance Events Thunder on the Prairie June 3-5. Classic cars cruise to the music of the ‘50s and ‘60s. Also poker run, barbecue and dance. Located in Central Park. www.385cruisers.com (308) 762-2761.
BOX BUTTE COUNTY SANDHILLS & SCENIC RIVERS • 59
Lake Park has ducks, geese and good fishing from shoreline or pier. Railroad buffs can stop at the corner of Laing Lake Park and visit Locomotive 719 and a vintage coal car. The park, bordered by 18th Street, Box Butte Avenue, Burnham Drive and Emerson Avenue, also has two miles of walking trails. During World War II, Alliance was home to the Alliance Air Base, a site chosen for its proximity to the Sandhills, which were considered excellent for parachute and ammunition training. The 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment trained here before landing in Normandy hours before the D-Day invasion. As a result, a large number of D-Day casualties were known personally to the people of Alliance. Today, the former air base is the Alliance Municipal Airport. In 2010, in tribute to those gallant heroes, Nebraska Veterans Cemetery was opened at the former Alliance Army Air Field on 20 acres once used as a troop training field. These 20 acres rest near the airport, which is east of Alliance, south of Highway 2. (877) 402-7990. The Sallows Military Museum, 1100 Niobrara St., features artifacts from the air base and Box Butte County history from all military branches. It is open 1-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday, and by appointment. (308) 762-2385 or (308) 762-2384. Alliance’s downtown brick-lined main street, Box Butte Avenue, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and has an associated Historic Main Street organization. There are numerous shops, restaurants and other businesses in the downtown district. For more information please contact the Alliance Visitors’ Bureau at (877) 269-8776 or the Alliance Chamber of Commerce at (800) 738-0648. www.VisitAlliance.com
UNIQUE LODGING
Alan J. Bartels
Hemingford’s Avenue of Flags appears on Independence Day, Memorial Day, Veterans Day, Flag Day and other holidays. Run entirely by volunteers, it draws patriots from a wide area.
Hemingford
Hemingford is 18 miles northwest of Alliance and features year-round holiday events, including the Harvest Moon Festival each October and the Avenue of Flags. Hemingford displays more than 200 American flags along its village streets during various holidays, such as July 4th weekend, Flag Day, Memorial Day, Veteran’s Day and others. Each historic flag once draped the casket of a veteran from the area, some of whom served in conflicts dating back to the Civil War. In early August, Hemingford is home to the popular Box Butte County Fair. During the Christmas holiday season, Hemingford displays its Christmas Diorama. The drive-thru diorama, depicting scenes painted on wood panels, stretches nearly three football fields in length. Box Butte Reservoir, a 1,600-acre lake Phone
and recreational area, is 10 miles north of town. It offers excellent fishing, boating, swimming, windsurfing and sailing, and is part of a state recreation area with picnic areas, hiking and primitive camping. For more information contact the Hemingford Chamber of Commerce. (308) 487-3300.
Hemingford Events Harvest Moon Fall Festival Oct. 15. Join in this autumn bash featuring Pumpkin Chunkin, Spud Gun Contest, a scarecrow competition, Outhouse Races, and Cornshucking Relay. www.hemingfordevents.com.
Amenities
Rate Range
Patriot Inn B&B, 851 Cty Rd 71, Hemingford www.bbc.net/~patriotinn
308-487-1776
Rooms with private bath, continental breakfast
51-75
The Cottage, 405 Shoshone Ave, Hemingford www.visitboxbutte.com
308-487-5272
Private cottage with full kitchen, rooms with shared bath, laundry facilities
51-75
Shared Outdoors Lodge, 130 Old Dunlap Rd, Hemingford. www.sharedoutdoors.com
308-487-3426
Full-equipped lodge with full kitchen, fireplace, laundry facilities, WiFi, phone, satellite TV, 4 bedrooms able to sleep up to 12 people.
Call for rates
Phone
Open
Amenities
Fees
Box Butte Reservoir SRA, 9 1/2 mi. N., Hemingford. On the Niobrara River. www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-665-2900
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 64 trailers. Rest Facilities: pit toilets. Camping: 60 tents.
6-12 & NE Park Permit
Shared Outdoors, 130 Old Dunlap Rd, Hemingford www.sharedoutdoors.com
308-487-3426
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer. Rest Facilities: Showers, pit and flush toilets. Camping: available.
20-40
CAMPGROUNDS
GOLF COURSES Hemingford Golf Course, Fremont St, Hemingford
Phone 308-487-3639
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, public
Rate Range Under 15
Hyannis
Hyannis is home of the Windmill Days celebration each June. Look for the windmill in the center of Main Street and you’re in the right place to partake in the festivities. The Grant County Museum at the county courthouse, 105 E. Harrison, displays area history and oddities such as props from John Wayne’s stunt man and a world-class barbed wire collection. Open 1-4 p.m. Tuesday-Wednesday, or by appointment.
(308) 458-2371. Golfers can shoot nine holes at Pelican Beach Golf Course. Open to the public. (308) 458-2579.
Ashby
The village of Ashby is big on creativity. Just cross the tracks north of the Sandhills Journey Scenic Byway (Highway 2) and find the most unique shop with Nebraska’s own “Pot Lady.” CaLinda’s Pot Shop & Art Gallery showcases owner/ artist Linda
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Double JT & Hyannis Hotel, 1025 Main Ave, Hyannis
308-458-2332
11
Ranchland Motel, 305 E Hwy 2, Hyannis
308-458-2264
6
UNIQUE LODGING
Phone
Lacy’s one-of-a-kind western creations of clay and canvas. Experience throwing a pot of your own or create a family art event. The shop is open Mon-Fri from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (308) 458-8051. CaLinda’s Pot Shop & Art Gallery will host several artists during the Sandhills Journey Scenic Byway’s Follow the Rails Art Trail, Oct. 14-16, 2016, when the entire village of Ashby will come alive with creativity. Call (308) 458-8051 for details.
Amenities Restaurant on premises
Amenities
Rate Range
308-458-2300
Historic bed and breakfast, rooms with shared bath, full breakfast
Pelican Beach Cabin, 43863 E. Hwy 2, 1/1/2 mi E. on Hwy 2. Hyannis
308-458-2444
Rooms with shared bath, sleeps 6, full kitchen, laundry facilities, bedroom loft, overlooks lake
Phone
Ranchland Motel Campground, 305 E. Hwy 2, Hyannis
308-458-2264
Simpson’s Trailer Court, 316 Morton St, Hyannis
308-458-2354
GOLF COURSES Pelican Beach Golf Club, 2 1/4 mi. E. on Hwy 2, Hyannis
Phone 308-458-2579
Open
51-75 51-75
Whisperin’ Angel Inn, 101 S. Manderson Ave., Hyannis
CAMPGROUNDS
Rate Range
Amenities
75+
Fees
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer. Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 6 trailers. Camping: unlimited tents.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, public
Call for rates
Rate Range Under 15
62 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Cool fun rules at Mullen in March during the Polar Bear Tank Race, the annual fundraiser for the Sandhills Journey Scenic Byway.
Mullen
West of Thedford on Highway 2, Mullen sits at the geographic heart of the Sandhills. For a region that is known for its striking beauty, it’s appropriate, although surprising, that one of the world’s best golf courses is here. Sand Hills Golf Club is an 18-hole private golf course designed by pro golfer Ben Crenshaw and design partner Bill Coore. Golf Digest has ranked Sand Hills Golf Club number one in the Modern List.
To get to the course, go 12 miles south of Mullen on Highway 97 to mile marker 55, then go west three miles. Visitors are welcome at the clubhouse, but to golf, players must either be members or sponsored guests. The Nebraska Sandhills are also home to the Dismal River Club, another world-class private course. Designed by Jack Nicklaus, the Dismal River Club is links golf in its purest form: rugged, windblown, hard and fast. The course is located two miles south and 17 miles
HOTELS & MOTELS Glidden Sandhills Motel, W. Hwy 2, Mullen www.sandhillsmotel.com
UNIQUE LODGING
Phone
Rooms
308-546-2206 888-278-6167
19
Phone
southwest of Mullen. (308) 546-2900. Mullen also has a fine public nine-hole course on the west edge of town called Mullen Golf Club. (308) 546-2446. Experienced canoers and kayakers can test their skills on the Dismal River south of Mullen. The Dismal is a fast-flowing, springfed river with plenty of twists and sunken debris that make it a natural obstacle course. Along the trip, canoers and kayakers are treated to a swim in a large spring from which water and sand upswell from the aquifer below.
Amenities Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, outdoor pool, pets allowed
Amenities
308-546-2288
Fully-furnished 2-bedroom guest house, sleeps 9, laundry facilities
Double R Guest Ranch LLC, 86091 Double R Dr, Mullen www.rrguestranch.com
308-546-2314 866-217-2042
Secluded furnished cabins, rooms with private and shared bath, sleeps 16
Glidden Sandhills Campground, 507 S.W. 1st, Mullen (W. Hwy 2) www.sandhillsmotel.com
GOLF COURSES
Phone
Open
308-546-2206 888-278-6167
Year Round
Phone
Rate Range 1-75
Rate Range
Carter Morris House, 102 NW 3rd St. , Mullen
CAMPGROUNDS
Nebraska Tourism
Amenities RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 10 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower and flush toilets.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times.
Dismal River Golf Course, 83040 Dismal River Trl, Mullen
308-546-2900
18, semi-private
Mullen Golf Course, 102 N. Veteran - W. Hwy 2, Mullen
308-546-2445
9, public
51-75+ 75+
Fees 15
Rate Range Over 30 15-30
HOOKER COUNTY SANDHILLS & SCENIC RIVERS • 63
People looking for a family-friendly river trip can float or paddle down the Middle Loup River just north of Mullen. The Middle Loup also is spring-fed and has relatively calm waters as it meanders through wide, sloping Sandhills canyons. Canoe and kayak rental is available for both rivers. Stock tank rental is available for the Middle Loup. The Nebraska National Forest, Bessey Ranger District lies between the two rivers and campsites are located adjacent to the rivers. The Dismal River converges into the Middle Loup River just east of Dunning. For more information on Mullen or the rivers, call (888) 278-6167. Dismal River Outfitters is a big-game hunting ranch with more than 50,000 acres available for bison, elk, whitetail deer, mule deer and turkey hunting. The ranch is 14 miles south of Mullen. (308) 546-0567.
Mullen Events Sharp-tailed grouse and prairie chicken viewing March and April. Observe the breeding displays of native birds. (308) 546-2206. Polar Bear Tank Race March 4-5. Competitors, some much more serious than others, float the scenic Middle Loup River for the best times, but mostly for bragging rights. (308) 546-2206.
64 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Tryon
The museum of the McPherson County Historical Society includes a historic bank, sod house and area artifacts. Open by appointment. (308) 587-2376.
Arthur
Bobbi and Steve Olson
There’s a load of fun when Tami Swanson hitches her wagon and loads up friends in Arthur.
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Amenities
The Bunkhouse, South end of Main St, Arthur
308-764-2476
4
Pets allowed
Longhorn Motel, 480 Hwy 92, Tryon. Jct Hwys 92 & 97, Tryon
308-587-2345
5
CAMPGROUNDS Arnold SRA, 1 mi. S. of Jct Hwys 40 & 92, Arnold www.arnoldne.org
GOLF COURSES Augusta Wind, 1 mi. S. on US Hwy 83, Stapelton
Phone
Open
308-848-2228
Year Round
Phone 308-636-2428
About 40 miles west of Tryon on Highway 92, Arthur is the only town in Arthur County. The ranching town boasts the world’s smallest courthouse. The 26-by-28-foot white frame building was built a year after Arthur County seceded from McPherson County in 1913. The former Pilgrim Holiness Church is one of the few places of worship ever made from baled straw. Rate Range 1-50 1-50
Amenities
Fees
RV Amenities: electricity, room for 20 trailers. Rest Facilities: pit toilets. Camping: 100+ tents.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, public
15
Rate Range Under 15
Seneca
On Main Street, Cattleman’s Restaurant has served locals and travelers for more than 20 years. Open Thursday-Sunday, (308) 639-3242. Also, the Northern Plains Studio has Native American and western art for viewing and for sale, by appointment only. (308) 639-3227.
Thedford
Scenic views are standard in the Sandhills and Scenic Rivers region.
Nebraska Tourism
Thedford is a crossroads community along Highway 2, from which Highway 83 leads north to Valentine. The Thedford Art Gallery, 509 Court St., sells art, photography, sculptures and pottery. Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. TuesdaySaturday, May 1-Dec. 30; open the rest of the year 1-5 p.m. or by appointment. (308) 645-2396. There’s also the Yellow Calf Studio, which shows and sells sculptures by appointment. (308) 645-2537. One block west of the art gallery, the Thomas County Historical Museum depicts Sandhills history, displaying artifacts used by settlers. (308) 645-2477.
HOOKER, LOGAN, CUSTER & THOMAS COUNTIES SANDHILLS & SCENIC RIVERS • 65
Thedford Golf Course is a nine-hole public course overlooking the Middle Loup River. Cart rental available. (308) 645-2233.
Halsey
For the westbound traveler, Highway 2, the Sandhills Journey Scenic Byway, heads northwest from Grand Island, passes the Nebraska National Forest at Halsey, crosses the lake country of the western Sandhills, then exits the region near Alliance and turns north toward the Pine Ridge. This byway is rated in the top 10 scenic routes in the United States and is listed as one of the highways to drive in “1000 Places to See Before You Die.” The Bessey Ranger District of the Nebraska National Forest covers more than 90,000 acres, and is the largest handplanted forest in the world. It is a favorite place for camping, ATV-ing, horseback riding, hiking and picnicking. Local volunteers have created a handicapped accessible Discovery Loup walking trail and are renovating an arboretum of 59 tree species. The rangers’ lookout tower offers a panoramic view of the surrounding forest and hills. The forest is open year-round.
HOTELS & MOTELS
Alan J. Bartels
Visitors are welcome to tour Scott Tower at the Nebraska National Forest near Halsey.
Thomas County Events Thomas County Fair - Thedford
July 28-31. Thedford’s biggest bash includes a parade, live concerts, games for all, a fishing tournament and more. (308) 645-2646. Loup 2 Loup Open Race - Halsey
Aug. 10-11. Seventeen-mile car race between Halsey and Purdum. Car shows and vendors. (308) 533-2328.
Phone
Rooms
Halsey Frontier Inn, 503 Hwy 2, Halsey www.halseyfrontierinn.com
308-533-2240
11
Free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75
Arrowhead Lodge & Café, 39293 Hwy 2, Thedford Jct Hwy 2 & US Hwy 83
308-645-2246
19
Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
1-50
Roadside Inn, 39357 E. Hwy 2, Thedford www.roadsideinn.net
308-645-2284
42
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75
UNIQUE LODGING
Phone
Amenities
Amenities
Rate Range
Middle Loup River Ranch Guest House, 4 mi. W. of Halsey, Hwy 2; Mile Marker 221. www.middleloupriverranch.com
402-450-2268
Two bedroom guest house, rooms with shared bath, sleeps 9, laundry, AC, sat TV, Wi-Fi, gas grill. Next to Nebraska National Forest.
Pine Street Cabin, 804 Pine St., Halsey
308-533-2345
Furnished cabin with fully equipped kitchen, on-site laundry
CAMPGROUNDS
Rate Range
75+
Phone
Open
Bessey Recreation Complex, Nebraska National Forest, 2 mi. W., Halsey www.fs.fed.us/rz/nebraska
308-533-2257
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 21 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, pit and flush toilets. Camping: 13 tents
Halsey Frontier Inn Campground, 503 Hwy 2, Halsey www.halseyfrontierinn.com
308-533-2240
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 6 trailers. Rest Facilities: Shower and flush toilets. Camping: 6 tents. Cabin Rental.
15
Belle’s Bunkhouse and Campground, 202 Main St, Halsey. Adjacent to Hwy 2, cabin adjacent to campground
308-539-1462
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 9 trailers. Camping: available. Cabin Rental: 1 (2 night minimum, $75+).
10-15
Arrowhead Lodge & Café, 39293 Hwy 2, Jct Hwy 2 & US Hwy 83, Thedford. www.freewebs.com/arrowheadlodge
308-645-2246
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 8 trailers. Camping: 2 tents
13-14
Roadside Inn Campground, 39357 E. Hwy 2, 1 mi. E. on Hwy 2, Thedford. www.roadsideinn.net.
308-645-2284 800-373-1648
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 10 trailers. Rest Facilities: flush toilets. Camping: 3 tents
18.50
GOLF COURSES Thedford Golf Course, 1 mi. S. on US Hwy 83, Thedford
66 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Phone 308-645-2634
Amenities
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, public
Fees 8-11
3 vehicle
Rate Range Under 15
THOMAS COUNTY SANDHILLS & SCENIC RIVERS • 67
Valentine
The “Heart City” is near the Niobrara National Scenic River. Outfitters provide everything needed for fun floating. Much of the land adjacent to the river is privately owned. Please respect property rights. Five miles east of Valentine on Highway 12, bison and elk roam Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge. (402) 376-3789. Northeast on Highway 12, Smith Falls drops 70 feet. (402) 376-1306. Merritt Reservoir is home to lunkers. (402) 3763320. Make a splash at Valentine Family Aquatic Center. (402) 376-8019. Samuel R. McKelvie National Forest is a forest in grass. (308) 533-2257. The Valentine National Wildlife Refuge is 20
UNIQUE LODGING
miles south of Valentine. (402) 376-3789. Valentine is home to The Prairie Club. There are three golf courses, a lodge and restaurant. (888) 402-1101. Valentine has another golf course, Frederick’s Peak, a new 10-hole public course. Set in scenic hills and designed by Tom Lehman, the course is scheduled to open summer 2016. (402) 376-2969. For more information about Valentinearea attractions, contact the Valentine Visitor Center. (800) 658-4024.
Merriman
The history of Sandhills ranch life is displayed at Arthur Bowring Phone
Ranch State Historical Park, north of Merriman. (308) 282-0730. Cottonwood Lake State Recreation Area is a halfmile east of Merriman and a half-mile south. Fishing, boating and camping are allowed. (308) 684-3428.
Nenzel and Cody
Near Nenzel, the Nollette brothers offer tastes of the Sandhills and their ranch-raised grapes from Niobrara Valley Vineyards. (402) 823-4131. The students of Cody-Kilgore High School helped build the strawbale Circle C Market and also operate it. (402) 823-4099.
Amenities
Rate Range
Blue Moon Ridge B&B, 10 Blue Moon Ridge Rd., Valentine. www.bluemoonridgebb.com
402-376-8090
Rooms with private and shared bath. Continental breakfast.
Cody’s Country Cabin, US Hwy 20, Cody
402-823-4182
3-bedroom house, rent to one party at a time
1-50
Heartland Elk Guest Ranch, 114 Lake Shore Dr, Valentine 17 mi. E. on Hwy 12, 2 1/2 mi. S. www.heartlandelk.com
402-376-1124
Outdoor activities available
75+
Lord Ranch Resort, 17 mi. S. on US Hwy 83 to Mile Marker 9, 1 mi. E. on 16B Spur, Valentine
402-376-5984 800-270-0181
Rooms with private bath. Cabins surround by the Sandhills.
75+
Niobrara River Ranch, 15 mi. E. on Hwy 12, S. 3/4 mi., Valentine
402-890-1245 866-282-8677
Rustic handcrafted log cabins.
75+
Schlagel Creek Ranch, 5 mi. S. on US Hwy 20, 1 1/2 mi. W., Valentine. www.schlagelcreekranch.com
402-376-2679
Outdoor activities. Fall and spring hunting packages.
90-110
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Comfort Inn, 101 Main St, Valentine www.civalentine.com
402-376-3300
50
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
75+
Econo Lodge & Suites, 340 E. US Hwy 20, Valentine www.duneslodge.com
402-376-3131
72
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75+
Merritt Trading Post Resort, 26 mi. S. on Hwy 97, Valentine. www.merritttradingpost.com
402-376-3437
15
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, pets allowed
75+
Motel Raine, 618 W. US Hwy 20, Valentine www.sleepintheraine.com
402-376-2030 800-999-3066
31
Restaurant on premises, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
1-75
Outback Motel, 217 S. Cherry St, Valentine www.outback-motel.wix.com/valentine
402-376-1408
Super 8 Motel, 223 E. US Hwy 20. www.super8.com
402-376-1250
Trade Winds Motel, 1009 E. US Hwy 20, Valentine www.tradewindslodge.com Valentine’s Niobrara Lodge, 803 E. US Hwy 20, Valentine www.niobrarariverlodge.com
CAMPGROUNDS
Amenities
Rate Range
Free WiFi, microwave, refrigerator, cable TV
Call for rates
60
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast
51-75+
402-376-1600
32
Free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75+
402-376-3000 877-376-3003
61
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, pets allowed
75+
Phone
Open
A&C Outfitters, 18 mi. E. on Hwy 12, 5 mi. S., 1 mi. E., Valentine.
402-376-2839
Apr-Sep
Berry Bridge Resort, 13 mi. E. on Hwy 12, 3 mi. S. , Valentine. www.niobraracamping.com
402-376-3474
May 15Oct 15
Cody City Park, One block north of Hwy 20, off Western Nebraska Ave, Cody
402-823-4118
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer.
Call for rates
Cottonwood Lake SRA, 1/2 mi. E., 1/2 mi. S., Merriman www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-684-3428
Year Round
RV Amenities: water. Rest Facilities: pit toilets. Camping: unlimited tents.
4 NE Park Permit
Fishberry Campground, HC 14 Box 1, 4 1/2 mi. N. on US Hwy 83., Valentine. www.fishberrycampground.com
402-376-1662 866-376-1662
May 1Nov 1
Fritz’s Island Campground, 7 1/2 mi. S.E. of Sparks. www.campniobrara.com
402-376-3791 877-700-3791
May-Oct
Graham’s Camp, 5 mi. S. of Sparks. www.grahamoutfitters.com
402-376-3708 800-322-3708
Apr 1Nov 1
Merritt Reservoir, 28 mi. SW on Hwy 97, Valentine www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
402-376-3320
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 215 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, flush and pit toilets. Cabin Rentals: available.
Merritt Trading Post, 26 mi. SW on Hwy 97, Valentine www.merritttradingpost.com
402-376-3437
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 7 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, flush toilets. Cabin Rentals: 15
Rock Barn Outfitters, Sparks, E. on Hwy 12 to Mile Marker 28, 5 mi S., 1 1/2 mi E. www.rockbarnoutfitters.com
402-376-1764 800-335-6252
May 15Sept 15
RV Amenities: water, room for 6 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower and pit toilets. Camping: 40 tents.
5
Rocky Ford Camp & Outfitters LLC, 13 mi. S. of Sparks www.rockyfordoutfitters.com
402-376-1124 800-497-3479
Apr 15Sep 15
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 8 trailers. Rest Facilities: Shower, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 35 tents. Cabin Rentals: 5
3
Shady Spot RV Camp, 402 N. Main St, 1 blk N. of Jct US Hwy 20 & Hwy 61, Merriman
308-684-3330
June 1Sep 1
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 6 trailers.
10
Smith Falls State Park, 3 mi. W., 4 mi. S. of Sparks. www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
402-376-1306
Year Round
RV Amenities: water, room for 5. Rest Facilities: shower, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 25 tents.
4 NE Park Permit
Sparks Store & RV Camp, 101 Main St, Sparks, 18 mi. E. of Valentine on NE Hwy 12. ww.drylandaquatics.com
402-376-3119 800-337-3119
Apr-Nov
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 6 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 30 tents Cabin Rentals: 2
Call for rates
Steer Creek Campground, Samuel R. McKelvie Nat’l Forest, 20 mi. S. of Nenzel
308-533-2257
Year Round
Room for 23 trailers. Rest Facilities: Pit toilets. Camping: 23 tents
5
Sunny Brook Camp LLC, 11 mi. S.E. of Sparks. www.sunnybrookcamp.com
402-376-1887 877-376-1887
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 3 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 20 tents. Cabin Rentals: 2.
Call for rates
Valentine City Park, N. Main St., along Minnechaduza Creek, Valentine
402-376-2323
May-Sep
Rest Facilities: shower, flush toilets. Camping: 5 tents.
Village Park, 3rd & Main Sts, Wood Lake
402-967-3054
May-Sep
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 2 trailers. Rest Facilities: flush toilets.
Wacky West Travel Park, 702 E. C St, Valentine
402-376-1771 866-376-1771
Year Round
GOLF COURSES The Prairie Club, 109 S. Main St, Valentine.
Phone 888-402-1101
Amenities
Fees
RV Amenities: electricity, water. Rest Facilities: shower, pit toilets.
Call for rates
RV Amenities: electricity, room for 8 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 18 tents. Cabin Rentals: 4.
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 22 trailers. Rest Facilities: Shower, flush toilets. Camping: 10 tents.
28
RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 20 trailers. Rest Facilities: Shower, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 60 tents.
6-27 6
Rest Facilities: shower, pit toilets. Camping: 50 tents.
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 31 trailers. Rest Facilities: shower, flush toilets. Camping: 10 tents
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 18, semi-private
7
Youth under 10 Free
7-14 NE Park Permit 14-22
5 Donation Call for rates
Rate Range Over 30
EXPLORE THE
Pine Ridge DISCOVER THE FRONTIER
70 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
GETTING STARTED
PINE RIDGE
Harrison • Crawford Chadron • Hay Springs Rushville • Gordon
Paradise in the Pine Ridge plays a symphony of sounds. Springs stream past white cliffs as deer dance in the thick grasslands, and songbirds sing with joy to the percussion of pedals pushing energetic cyclists on a daring ride over another bluff. Turkeys go wild when the bighorn sheep join the show, and the forest whispers in the gentle prairie wind that all creatures are welcome. There is plenty of room for humans, too. History embraces this state’s northwest ridge, and the legends live on in this arc of uncommon beauty, 20 miles wide and 100 miles deep. It is a giant bedroom for fossils, epic railroad vistas, and the cowboys still ride off into the sunset. But they can’t wait to saddle up at dawn, because every morning is precious in Pine Ridge Country. Christopher Amundson
Rails, roads and pioneer trails weave through the Pine Ridge. The region’s rockiness and steep hills are the reason for its remoteness and scenic beauty.
72 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
11
3 4 5 8
2
7
15
10 6
14
12
9
13
6 9
1
Attractions 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Chadron
Agate Fossil Beds Oglala National Grassland Toadstool Geologic Park Hudson-Meng Education & Research Center Fossil hunting Horseback riding Fort Robinson State Park High Plains Homestead Mountain biking Dawes County Historical Museum Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center Museum of the Fur Trade Metcalf Wildlife Management Area Tri-State Old Time Cowboy Museum Trailside Museum of Natural History
Chadron is a city with a rollicking frontier history including hardy fur traders, tough cowboys, Indians, ranchers, scholars and railroaders. The community lies between the Pine Ridge to the south and the High Plains that rise to the north and west. Founded in 1921, Chadron State Park is Nebraska’s oldest state park, encompassing nearly 1,000 acres of Pine Ridge wilderness. Located nine miles south of Chadron on Highway 385, the park offers trout fishing, camping, hiking, mountain biking, bird watching and horseback riding. There are 22 two-bedroom, housekeeping cabins available April 15-Nov.
15. A swimming pool and sand volleyball courts elevate the fun at Chadron State Park, and there are mountain bikes and paddle boats for rent. The park also has an RV campground complete with 70 electrical hookups, showers, laundromat, dump station and playground. Primitive camping also is available. Hike and bike trails spread in every direction and the park is open year-round. (308) 432-6167. The Pine Ridge Ranger District of the Nebraska National Forest is 52,000 acres of ponderosa pine and mixed grass prairies. Primitive camping is allowed. The Red Cloud Campground has picnic tables, fire grates and vault toilets; it is eight miles
WELCOME CENTERS/ REST AREAS
south of Chadron on Highway 385. The forest has about 80 miles of marked trails popular with mountain bikers, hikers and horseback riders. The area’s most popular trailheads include East Ash, West Ash, Soldier Creek, Coffee Mill, Spotted Tail, Roberts, Strong Canyon and Outrider. Roberts and Outrider trailheads have horse corrals, a rider ramp and other amenities. Only certified noxious weed free animal feeds are allowed. Off-road vehicles must be equipped with spark arrestors to reduce wildfire danger. Pine Ridge trail maps are available at the Chadron Area Chamber of Commerce. Chadron State Park offers the National Forest/Oglala National Grassland map showing trails. (800) 603-2937. The Pine Ridge National Recreation Area is a 6,600-acre parcel of land limited to non-motorized recreation. There are horse corrals, a rider ramp, modern toilets, drinkable water via a hand pump, and picnic tables. Hiking, horseback riding and mountain biking are allowed. The
DAWES COUNTY PINE RIDGE • 73
74 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
recreation area and trailhead are connected by the scenic 3 Mile Loop. The best entry point to the Pine Ridge National Recreation Area is from the Roberts trailhead, eight miles west of Chadron on Highway 20 to Eleson Road, then seven miles south to Bethel Road and then 1 1/2 miles east. There is a charge for overnight camping at Roberts trailhead but no charge for day use activities. The Museum of the Fur Trade is located at the site of a trading post operated by the American Fur Company from 1837 to 1876. The building has been reconstructed on the original foundation. The museum’s three galleries go far beyond local history. They interpret the fur trade from the Arctic to the American Southwest, from early colonial days to the 20th century. Exhibits trace the everyday lives of British, French and Spanish traders, voyageurs, mountain men, buffalo hunters, and plains and woodland Indians. Among the museum’s artifacts are trade goods from the 18th and 19th centuries – such as “Northwest” muskets made for Native Americans (including one that belonged to the famous Shawnee chief, Tecumseh), trade silver, textiles, beads, costumes and paints. The museum is three miles east of Chadron on Highway 20. Open May 1-Oct. 31 or by appointment. (308) 432-3843. In 1890, after the Wounded Knee Massacre in South Dakota, Gen. Nelson Miles commandeered a local hotel, the Chadron House, while investigating the incident. The luxury hotel was the town’s showplace. Today, it is restored to its former glory and operating as the Olde Main Street Inn. The inn offers lodging, dining and includes the 77 Longbranch Saloon. 115 Main St. (308) 432-3380. There’s another historic hotel in Chadron. When the Chadron-to-Chicago Horse Race kicked off in 1893, it did so with a shot fired by Chadron’s fire chief from a Colt revolver from the veranda of the Blaine Hotel. The event began as a joke, but then gained momentum and came to fruition and garnered attention from around the world, putting Chadron on the map. Characters like notorious horse thief Doc Middleton, a race favorite among Chadron residents, and William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody were involved. Dishonesty and cheating were exposed before the winner
Christopher Amundson
The Museum of the Fur Trade at Chadron chronicles the industry that opened the continent.
crossed the finish line 13 days later at the World’s Fair. Today’s Cowboy Trail covers part of the 1,000 mile race route. The building is an apartment complex today. Owners Larry and Cindy Bagneschi won’t mind if you pose for a selfie or family photo on the doorstep where that famous raced launched from all those years ago at 159 Bordeaux St. The Dawes County Historical Museum – five miles south of Chadron on Highway 385 – has an original log house and barn, a schoolhouse and a railroad caboose, in addition to pioneer artifacts. Open Memorial Day-Sept. 30. (308) 432-4999. The Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center is dedicated to the study of Nebraska and High Plains culture, literature and history. Located at Chadron State College, the center features museum and art exhibits, an archival library and a two-story atrium. The center is named after Mari Sandoz (1896-1966), who is among Nebraska’s best-known authors. A High Plains native, Sandoz gained national prominence with her 1935 biography of her father, “Old Jules.” Sandoz wrote powerfully of Plains subjects such as Crazy Horse, the Cheyenne Outbreak, buffalo hunters and
beaver trappers. (308) 432-6401. For more information about Chadron, contact the Chadron Chamber of Commerce at (800) 603-2937.
Chadron Events Festival of Quilts April 22-24. Learn about quilts through programs and demonstrations. Quilt show and vendors. (308) 432-4401. Fur Trade Days July 7-10. Join the 40th annual celebration commemorating Western Nebraska’s fur trading heritage. Events range from a primitive buckskinner camp, historic presentations, Traders’ Market, parade and more. (308) 747-2193. Dawes County Fair July 29-Aug. 5. 4-H livestock shows and projects displayed, tractor pull, rodeos, Tough Truck contest, concert and more. Join us! (308) 432-3373.
DAWES COUNTY PINE RIDGE • 75
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Best Western West Hills Inn, 1100 W. 10th St, 1/2 mi. S. Jct US Hwys 20 & 385, Chadron www.bestwesternnebraska.com
308-432-3305 877-432-3305
67
Wheelchair accessible, restaurant on premises, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
75+
Bunk House Motel, 901 E. 3rd St., Chadron www.bunkhousechadron.com
308-432-5591
21
Pets allowed
1-50
Grand Westerner Motel, 1050 W. US Hwy 20, Chadron www.chadron.com
308-432-5595
45
Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
1-50
Motel 6, 755 Microtel Dr, S. US Hwy 385 & 8th St Exit, Chadron
308-432-3000 800-297-7410
43
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, pets allowed
51-75
Super 8 Motel, 840 W. US Hwy 20, Chadron www.chadron.com
308-432-4471 800-800-8000
45
Wheelchair accessible, indoor pool, free continental breakfast, pets allowed
51-75+
Westerner Motel, 300 Oak St, W. US Hwy 20, Chadron www.chadron.com/business/westerner
308-432-5577 800-947-0847
27
Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
UNIQUE LODGING
Phone
Amenities
Rate Range
1-50
Amenities
Rate Range
Olde Main Street Inn, 115 Main St., Chadron www.chadron.com/oldemain
308-432-3380
Rustic country inn on National Register of Historic Places, rooms with private bath, full continental breakfast
R Lazy J Country Hideaway, 1260 Bethel Rd, 7 mi. S. off Hwy 20, between Crawford and Chadron, rlazyj.com
308-665-2377 308-430-0134
Private ranch house, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, full kitchen, laundry. Great for families or individuals. Wildlife watching, star gazing, exploring encouraged
Rocking Heart Elk Ranch, 1338 Table Rd, Chadron www.elkplanet.com
308-432-4314
2-story log cabin, wheelchair accessible, full breakfast
51-75
Victorian Inn B&B, 307 Shelton St, Chadron www.chadronvictorianinn.com
308-432-5696
Built in 1910. High-speed Internet, grand piano, central AC. Rooms with shared bath, full continental breakfast
1-75
Shared Outdoors Lodge, 130 Old Dunlap Rd, Hemingford. www.sharedoutdoors.com
308-487-3426
Full-equipped lodge with full kitchen, fireplace, laundry facilities, WiFi, phone, satellite TV, 4 bedrooms able to sleep up to 12 people.
Call for rates
Phone
Open
Fees
Chadron State Park, 9 mi. S. on US Hwy 385, Chadron www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov.
308-432-6167
Year Round
Eagle’s Rest RV Park, 1/4 mi. W. on US Hwy 20, Chadron
308-432-4349
Elec. only winter
Red Cloud Campground, Nebraska National Forest, 8 mi. S. on US Hwy 385, Chadron. www.fs.fed.us/r2/nebraska
308-432-0300
Year Round
RV Amenities: room for 6 trailers. Rest Facilities: Pit toilets, Camping: 7 tents.
5 May-Nov
Roberts Trailhead Campground, Nebraska National Forest, 18 mi. S.W., www.fs.fed.us/r2/nebraska
308-432-0300
Year Round
RV Amenities: water. Rest Facilities: Pit toilets. Horse corrals available.
8 vehicle May-Nov
Shared Outdoors, 130 Old Dunlap Rd, Hemingford sharedoutdoors.com
308-487-3426
CAMPGROUNDS
GOLF COURSES Ridgeview Country Club, 16611 US Hwy 385, Chadron
76 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Phone 308-432-4468
1-75+ 95+
Amenities RV Amenities: electricity, water, room for 70 trailers Rest Facilities: Showers, flush and pit toilets. Camping: 18 tents. Cabin Rentals: 22. RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 48 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush toilets. Camping: 20 tents.
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer. Rest Facilities: Showers, pit and flush toilets. Camping: available.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9 holes, semi-private
11-65 NE Park Permit 25
20-40
Rate Range Under 15
DAWES COUNTY PINE RIDGE • 77
Harland Schuster
North of Crawford, Toadstool Geologic Park is part of the Nebraska Badlands, and is unlike any other landscape in Western Nebraska. Fossils of creatures from millions of years ago – giant land tortoises, oreodonts, prehistoric camels and other animals – protrude from the ground here.
Crawford East of Harrison, Highway 20 crosses High Plains country before the White River Valley appears, revealing the Pine Ridge. Located in the heart of Pine Ridge Country, Crawford bills itself as the “Big Game Capital of Nebraska.” Legend Buttes Golf Course was named Nebraska’s top nine-hole course by Nebraska Golfer magazine. History abounds at Crawford. The Army scout known as “Little Bat” was killed on Main Street. Not far away, MJ’s Ranch House is said to be haunted. Crawford’s post office has a mural commissioned by the government during the Great Depression. The Crawford Historical Museum chronicles this history and more at 341 Second St. Fort Robinson State Park is three miles west of Crawford on Highway 20. It began in 1874 as a military camp at the Red Cloud Indian Agency. Now, the park is one of Nebraska’s most popular attractions. Lakota warrior Crazy Horse surrendered here in 1877. Two years later, the fort was involved with the Cheyenne Outbreak. Northern Cheyenne fled their Oklahoma reservation for their homeland, but were caught and imprisoned at Fort Robinson. One night in January 1879, under fire from troops, 130 Northern Cheyenne escaped. Sixty-four Cheyenne and 11 soldiers died in the fighting. “Fort Rob” was home to AfricanAmerican “Buffalo Soldiers” in the segregated military of the day. In the 20th
78 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
century, the fort was the world’s largest military remount depot, and in World War II included a K-9 corps training center and a German POW camp. In addition to original buildings, some barracks have been reconstructed – including those of the Cheyenne and the Buffalo Soldiers. Visitors can enjoy cookouts, trail rides, hiking, and a summer repertory the-
Nebraska Tourism
Experience the warmth of Native American culture during Western Nebraska events.
ater at the Post Playhouse. There’s lodging in officers’ houses and camping at 100 sites with electricity and 25 non-electrical pads. Fort Robinson is open mid-April through mid-November. A state park permit is required. (308) 665-2900. Through artifacts and informative displays, Fort Robinson Museum traces fort history from the Indian Wars through the 1940s. (308) 665-2919. The Trailside Museum of
Natural History explores the area’s geology and natural history. Don’t miss the “Clash of the Mammoths.” A pair of bull mammoths locked tusks more than 10,000 years ago and died together. Their skeletons lie in display at the museum. (308) 665-2929. Soldier Creek Wilderness was once part of the fort. Today, the 7,794-acre area has 15 miles of trails. Follow Soldier Creek Road at the entrance to Fort Robinson State Park. Peterson State Wildlife Management Area is near, south of Highway 20. From Red Cloud Buttes, you see Crawford to the east, Fort Robinson to the south, and the Red Cloud Agency site to the southeast. Half a mile northwest is the site of the Treaty Tree, where in 1875 the U.S. government tried to buy the Black Hills from the Lakota. Crow Butte is the site of an 1849 battle between Sioux and Crow Indians. For the best view, travel 2 ½ miles south of Crawford, down Highways 2 and 71, then four miles east to Ponderosa Wildlife Management Area. Songbirds, falcons, deer, turkeys and golden eagles are often seen. Highway 2 leads north to Oglala National Grassland, home of pronghorn, turkey, mule deer and burrowing owls. Toadstool Geologic Park is a strange landscape within the grassland. Sediment layers deposited by ancient volcanoes have eroded at different rates, leaving sandstone formations perched on clay stems. The park has a trail, picnic and camping areas and a reconstructed sod house. Go five miles north from Crawford on Highway 2, then
10 miles northwest on Toadstool Road. There’s more mystery here. People thought rancher Albert Meng had found sheep bones. He and friend Bill Hudson had scientists take a look. It turned out the bones belonged to more than 600 bison. Nearly 50 years later, Hudson-Meng Education and Research Center is open to the public and the 10,000-year-old bones are still being studied. Because of stone tools found here, many scientists believe Paleo-Indians killed the bison; others disagree. Further excavation may reveal answers or more questions. It is south of Toadstool Park. On Toadstool Road, turn on Sand Creek Road and go six miles. Open mid-May through September. On the way, High Plains Homestead/ Drifter Cookshack features “cowboysized” meals. Lodging is available, and there’s a blacksmith shop, antique store and Dirty Creek Saloon. (308) 665-2592. The High Plains Homestead is one of many businesses of the Northwest Nebraska High Country group promoting local bed-and-breakfasts, cabins, guest ranches, cattle ranch vacations, “horse motels,” hunting, fishing, hiking, camping and fossil hunting. All members are located in and near the timbered Pine Ridge. nebraskahighcountry.com. The 750-foot-long Belmont Tunnel is no longer used by trains. Railroad enthusiasts watch trains climbing the 10-milelong Crawford-to-Belmont grade. Look for the Belmont sign nine miles south of Crawford on Highway 2. For more information about Crawford and vicinity, contact the Crawford Chamber of Commerce at (866) 665-1817.
Crawford Events 25th Annual Ride the Ridge June 18. See Fort Robinson by horseback on guided, free adventures for all levels of riders. Morning and afternoon rides cover different trails and there’s a poker run, too. Morning riders can share donuts and coffee with the Trail Bosses and fellow riders. (402) 469-6289.
DAWES COUNTY PINE RIDGE • 79
80 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Amenities
Rate Range
Fort Robinson State Park, 3200 Highway 20, Crawford
308-665-2900
Hilltop Motel, 304 McPherson St, Hwy 2 & US Hwy 20, Crawford
308-665-1144 800-504-1444
13
Pets allowed
51-75
Town Line Motel, 3591 US Hwy 20, Hwy 2 & US Hwy 20, Crawford
308-665-1450 800-903-1450
24
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
1-75+
UNIQUE LODGING Aunt Myrna’s Cabin, 1007 Bethel Rd, 5 mi. S. of US Hwy 20,
Phone
Restaurant on premises, indoor pool, pets allowed
Amenities
50-245+
Rate Range
308-665-2343
Rooms with shared bath, full continental breakfast
51-75
Down Home Ranch Guest House, 12733 NE Hwy 2/71, Crawford. www.downhomeranchhouse.com
602-620-5755
Rooms with shared bath, 4-bedroom, 2-bath ranch near canyons and rolling hills, sleeps 10
1-50
High Plains Homestead, 263 Sandcreek Rd, 16 mi. N., Crawford. www.highplainshomestead.com
308-665-2592 888-365-2592
Wheelchair accessible, rooms with private bath, full breakfast, cow town museum, lodging, horse corrals, hunting and fossil collecting, open mid-Apr thru mid-Nov
51-75
Johnson Ranch, 220 Lawrence Rd, Whitney, 5 mi. N. of Crawford on Hwy 2, 2 mi. E. www.onelazyj.com
308-665-3960
Rooms with private bath, continental breakfast. Horse rental and boarding, and hunting
51-75
Our Heritage, 1041 Toadstool Rd, 16 mi. N.W. & 7 mi. N.W., Crawford. www.vacation-ranch.com
308-665-2810
Wheelchair accessible, rooms with private and shared bath, full breakfast. Sleeps 15. Ranch activities, hiking & fossil hunting.
1-75
Ponderosa Ranch, 10 mi. southeast of Crawford. www.ponderosaranch.net
308-629-7733
Private rustic cabin, full kitchen, BBQ, hunting, bird watching, star gazing. By reservation only.
75+
R Lazy J Country Hideaway, 1260 Bethel Rd, 7 mi. S. off Hwy 20, between Crawford and Chadron, rlazyj.com
308-665-2377 308-430-0134
Private ranch house, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, full kitchen, laundry. Great for families or individuals. Wildlife watching, star gazing, exploring encouraged
95+
Schoolhouse B&B, 1312 W. Ash Creek Rd., Crawford
308-665-1814
Cozy schoolhouse with private bath, full breakfast, bird watching, star gazing, hunting.
51-75
Southside Cottage, 1107 Hospital Dr, Crawford
308-665-2309
Rooms with shared bath, 2-bedroom cottage
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Open
Crawford City Park, First & Main St., Crawford www.crawfordnebraska.net
308-665-1462
Year Round
Fort Robinson State Park, 3200 W. US Hwy 20, Crawford. www.outdoornebraska.ne.gov
308-665-2900
Soldier Creek Wilderness Trailhead, 6 mi. N.W. of Fort Robinson State Park, Crawford
308-432-0300
Year Round
Southside Cottage and RV Park, 1105 Hospital Dr, Crawford. www.southsidecottage.com
308-665-2309
Apr 1Oct 31
Toadstool Geologic Park, Nebraska National Forest, 19 mi. N., www.fs.fed.us/r2/nebraska
308-432-0300
GOLF COURSES Legend Buttes Golf Course, 3440 US Hwy 20, Crawford 1/2 mi. W. on US Hwy 20
Phone 308-665-2431
Amenities
Fees
RV Amenities: electricity, room for 2 trailers. Camping: 2 tents. RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 103 trailers. Rest Facilities: showers, flush and pit toilets. Cabin rental: 34.
12-21 100-cabin
RV Amenities: water. Rest Facilities: pit toilets.
8/vehicle
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, 4 trailers. Cabin Rental: 1. Room for 6 trailers. $5 camping, $3 use fee mid-May thru mid-Nov.
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times. 9, public
75+
15-17 3-5, NE Park Permit
Rate Range Under 15
DAWES COUNTY PINE RIDGE • 81
Whitney
The community of Dawes City formed in 1885. When the railroad arrived but stayed north of the White River, the town of Earth Lodge formed. Buildings were moved to the new town, and it later became Whitney. Old Fort Useless was built nine miles from town to protect white settlers from hostile Indians but was never used. Aunt Myrna’s Cabin is a popular bed and breakfast five miles south of Whitney. (308) 665-2343.
Harrison
Harrison bills itself as “Nebraska’s Top Town.” It is inarguably closest to the state’s northwest corner. The Sioux County Historical Museum tells the story of Sioux County from settlement through the 20th century. Open Memorial Day-Labor Day and during September by appointment (308) 668-2110. For a scenic side trip, head north from town to Sowbelly Road, a byway that loops through Sowbelly Canyon to the north edge
82 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
of the Pine Ridge, then back up the breaks to the tablelands east of town on Pants Butte Road – about 12 miles through one of the most beautiful areas of the state. In 1876, the 5th U.S. Cavalry fought a band of Cheyenne at what is known as Warbonnet Battlefield. William “Buffalo Bill” Cody is said to have killed Cheyenne warrior Yellow Hand during the fight. Go three miles east of Harrison on Highway 20, then 16 miles north on Pants Butte Road to a sharp right curve, then four miles east on Montrose Road. Monuments to the soldiers and to Yellow Hand are on a conical hill north of the church. Agate Fossil Beds National Monument is home to an important collection of Native American artifacts. Visitors can walk among the fossils of ancient animals, and can see the artifacts of 31 Native American tribes with ties to the area. Rancher James H. Cook, who once owned this land, made friends among area tribes, who gave him gifts now part of the museum’s collection. Among the items is a
shirt belonging to Lakota chief Red Cloud. Located 22 miles south of Harrison or 34 miles north of Mitchell on Highway 29. (308) 668-2211. For more information on Harrison, contact the Harrison Community Club at (308) 668-2466.
Gordon
Cowboy memorabilia from the late 1800s through the present day is displayed at the Tri-State Old Time Cowboy Museum at the Gordon City Park at Fourth and Oak streets. The museum is open 1-5 p.m. daily, June 1-Sept. 15, and by appointment. (308) 282-0887. The Scamahorn Museum is a restored 1880s church and houses local history exhibits and genealogical records. It is on west Fifth Street in Wayland Park. It is open 1-4 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday from Memorial Day-Labor Day. (308) 282-1737 or (308) 327-2917. The Mari Sandoz Historical Marker is 30 miles south of Gordon on Highway 27. Follow the signs from there east to Mari’s Grave on the Sandoz homestead and see the still-producing fruit orchards planted by Jules Sandoz. For more information about Gordon, contact the Gordon Tourist Information Center. (308) 282-0730.
Bobbi and Steve Olson
Gordon, in Sheridan County, is the home of the Nebraska High School Rodeo each summer.
Hay Springs
Locals say a Loch Ness-style monster lives in the waters of Walgren Lake. We can’t confirm that, but we do know that Walgren Lake State Recreation Area has camping, fishing and picnic areas. To find the lake, start at the junction of Highways 87 and 20. Go south 1.8 miles on Highway 87, then turn east for three miles, then go south one mile. To find the monster ... well, you’re on your own. Wildlife abounds in the pine forest of Metcalf Wildlife Management Area. The area is closed to motorized vehicles, but hiking is allowed, as is camping at primitive sites. To find it, take Highway 20 to the east edge of Hay Springs and follow the county road seven miles north. Two local landmarks have historical significance. The Beaver Wall escarpment is in the middle of the Spotted Tail
DAWES, SIOUX & SHERIDAN COUNTIES PINE RIDGE • 83
Agency and old Camp Sheridan. Spotted Tail was a famous Lakota (Sioux) leader and a contemporary of Crazy Horse. From the top of Beaver Wall, you can see the buttes of Crawford 50 miles to the southwest and the outline of the Black Hills 75 miles to the northwest. To find it, go 10 miles north of Highway 20 on the county road at the west edge of Hay Springs. Sheridan Gates is the local name for two large buttes through which early settlers and military soldiers passed. Wagon ruts are still visible. The buttes stand west of Beaver Wall.
HOTELS & MOTELS Sage Motel, 398 E. US Hwy 20, Harrison www.sagemotelharrison.com
UNIQUE LODGING
For more information on Hay Springs, contact the Hay Springs Chamber of Commerce. (308) 638-7275.
Rushville
The story of the aforementioned Camp Sheridan and the Spotted Tail Agency can be found at the Sheridan County Historical Museum, along with exhibits showing frontier life. The museum is at the junction of Highway 20 and Nelson Avenue. In nearby Hay Springs, two branch Phone
Rooms
308-665-5300
13
Phone
museums, Heritage Center I and II, are in the 1884 Methodist Church in the 200 block of Baker Street, and in the building at Second and Main. The museums are open 1-4 p.m. MondayFriday, Memorial Day-Labor Day, and by appointment. (308) 327-2374. Smith Lake Wildlife Management Area has fishing, picnic areas and primitive camping. It is 27 miles south of Rushville on Highway 250. For more information on Rushville, contact the Rushville Chamber of Commerce. (308) 327-2221.
Amenities Restaurant on premises, pets allowed
Amenities
308-668-2166
Restored historic hotel located in scenic Sioux County, rooms with shared bath, free continental breakfast
The Nest B&B Inn, 13 mi. N.E. of Harrison on Hat Creek Rd., www.restinthenest.com
308-432-4227
Fully furnished ranch home, sleeps 10, rooms with shared bath
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Open
308-668-2441
Year Round
Sheridan County Events Western Art Show & Sale – Gordon Always the second Friday and Saturday in December. See the works of many local artisans, including paintings and bronze sculptures, at this annual event inside Hinn’s Home Furnishings in Gordon. (308) 282-1609. Friendly Festival – Hay Springs Always the last weekend of August. Hay Springs is known far and wide as a friendly town. Residents prove it each year with this friendly event that includes an ice cream social, golf tournament, free swimming, parade, lawn mower races and more. Friendly food vendors will sell Indian tacos, brats and hamburgers, and the local VFW will offer a large menu of meals. Friends you haven’t met invite you to join the friendly scene here in Hay Springs. (308) 638-7132. Rushville Rancher Roundup – Rushville Late October. Main Street in Rushville becomes a stage for bulls, heifers, steers and horses as ranchers display their best. There will also be homemade pie, a salsa contest and more. (308) 360-1995.
84 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
1-50
Rate Range
Harrison House Hotel, 115 Main St., Harrison www.harrisonhousehotel.net.
Corral Campground, 410 E. US Hwy 20, Harrison www.visitnorthwestnebraska.com
Rate Range
Amenities RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 12 trailers.
50-100 75+
Fees
HOTELS & MOTELS
Phone
Rooms
Jefco Inn, 308 S. Cornell, W. US Hwy 20, Gordon
308-282-2935
22
Wheelchair accessible, free continental breakfast
1-75+
Western Sands Motel, 107 W. US Hwy 20, Gordon
308-282-1795
20
Wheelchair accessible, pets allowed
1-75
Antler’s Motel, 607 E. 2nd, Rushville
308-327-2444
20
Free continental breakfast, pets allowed
1-75
Nebraskaland Motel, 508 E. 2nd St, Rushville
308-327-2487
15
Pets allowed
1-75
UNIQUE LODGING
Phone
Amenities
Amenities
Rate Range
Rate Range
Horse Thief Cave Ranch, 1711 550th Trail Rd, 15 mi. S.E., Gordon. www.horsethiefcave.com
308-282-1017
Rooms with shared bath, continental breakfast
1-75
Flying Heart Ranch LLC, 6473 440th Ln, Hay Springs. www.flyingheartranch.com
308-638-7426
Rooms with shared bath, 3-bedroom, 2-bath cabin. Solitude, wildlife, hiking/biking trails
75+
Hay Springs Rentals, 213, 221 & 230 N. Post St & 339 N. Chambers St., Hay Springs, www.hayspringsrentals.com
308-638-4466
Rooms with private and shared bath. 3-bed-room houses with kitchens and living rooms
CAMPGROUNDS
Phone
Open
Hamilton Park, E. US Hwy 20, Gordon. www.ci.gordon.ne.us
308-282-0837
Apr-Oct
Room for 6 trailers.
Tomahawk Park, 200 W. US Hwy 20, Gordon. www.ci.gordon.ne.us.
308-282-0329
Apr-Oct
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 15 trailers.
Call for rates
Sunset RV Park, 110 S. Post St, Hay Springs
308-638-7275
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 9 trailers. Camping: 9 tents.
7-20
Walgren Lake SRA, 4 mi. E. on US Hwy 20, 3 mi. S. , Hay Springs
308-665-2900
Year Round
RV Amenities: water, room for 50 trailers. Camping: 50. Rest Facilities: Pit toilets.
Rushville Service Center, W. US Hwy 20., Rushville
308-327-2375
Year Round
RV Amenities: electricity, water, sewer, room for 6 trailers. Camping: 5 tents.
GOLF COURSES
Phone
Amenities
Holes & Type Call for hours and tee times.
Gordon Golf and Country Club, 6535 210th Ln - 2nd & Willow Sts, Gordon
308-282-1146
9, semi-private
Sand Ridge, 3rd St & Golf Course Ln, Rushville
308-327-2966
9, public
Fees
6 & NE Park Permit 10
Rate Range Under 15 15-30
86 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
FRIENDS OF WESTERN NEBRASKA
• 87
Tourism Contact Information TRAVELING NEBRASKA’S WESTERN FRONTIER can be the adventure of a lifetime. All year-long, quality merchants, entertaining attractions and exciting events await those seeking to explore the West. If you need a little help planning your trail, the helpful folks below would be delighted to throw you a rope, or proudly tell you all about what makes their communities and the region such a special place to live, work and play in. Heck, we already know it’s a great place to visit, too.
Alliance Alliance Visitors Bureau or Alliance Chamber of Commerce 305 Box Butte • Alliance, NE 69301 800-738-0648 • 877-269-8776 www.alliancechamber.com • www.visitalliance.com
Gering Gering Convention and Visitors Bureau 1050 M St • Gering, NE 69341 308-436-6886 • 800-245-0717 karla@visitgering.com www.visitgering.com
Arthur Arthur Chamber of Commerce PO Box 68 • Arthur, NE 69121 308-764-2238
Terrytown Village Office 116 Terry Blvd • Gering, NE 69341 308-632-7212 cityofterrytown@cityoftt.com
Bayard Bayard City Office PO Box 160 • Bayard, NE 69334 308-586-1121 • bayardc@charterinternet.com www.cityofbayard.net
Gordon Gordon Chamber of Commerce PO Box 160 • Gordon, NE 69343 308-282-0730 • info@gordonchamber.com www.gordonchamber.com
Big Springs Big Springs Chamber of Commerce 101 E Second St • Big Springs, NE 69122 308-889-3681 • springs@megavision.com www.ci.big-springs.ne.us
Halsey Halsey Frontier Inn 305 Hwy 2 • PO Box 96 • Halsey, NE 69142 308-533-2240 • rockingrc@neb-sandhills.net www.halseyfrontierinn.com
Bridgeport Bridgeport Chamber of Commerce PO Box 640 • Bridgeport, NE 69336 308-262-1825 • Pwcc98@hamilton.net www.bridgeportneb.com
Harrison Northwest Nebraska Travel and Tourism Harrison, NE 69346 308-432-4401
Chadron Chadron Chamber of Commerce 706 W 3rd St • PO Box 646 • Chadron, NE 69337 308-432-4401 • 800-603-2937 chamber@chadron.com • www.chadron.com Chappell Chappell Chamber of Commerce PO Box 121 • Chappell, NE 69129 308-874-2658 • www.chappellne.org Crawford Crawford Chamber of Commerce PO Box 145 • Crawford, NE 69339 308-665-1817 • crawfordchamber@yahoo.com www.crawfordnebraska.us
Byways Contacts Hwy 2 – Sandhills Journey Scenic Byway PO Box 225 • Thedford, NE 69166 308-645-2715 or 402-450-2268 www.sandhillsjourney.com Hwy 20 – Bridges to Buttes Byway PO Box 201 • Valentine, NE 69201 800-658-4024 • valentinecc@qwestoffice.net www.bridgestobuttes.com Hwy NE 26/US 92 – Western Trails Historic & Scenic Byway Ogallala/Keith County Chamber 418 N Spruce • Ogallala, NE 69153 308-284-4066 • 800-658-4390 orla@visitogallala.com Gering Convention and Visitors Bureau 1050 M St • Gering, NE 69341 308-436-6886 • karla@visitgering.com Hwy 385 – Gold Rush Byway 658 Glover Rd • Sidney, NE 69162 308-254-4030 • 866-545-4030 www.sidneycheyennecountytourism.com cheycotour@aol.com
88 •
JOURNEY TO WESTERN NEBRASKA 2016
Hay Springs Hay Springs Chamber of Commerce PO Box 158 • Hay Springs, NE 69347 308-638-7273 Hemingford Village of Hemingford PO Box 395 • Hemingford, NE 69348 308-487-3465 • peggyr@bbc.net www.ci.hemingford.ne.us Kimball Kimball Area Tourism 204 S. Kimball Blvd. • PO Box 299 • Kimball, NE 69145 308-241-0573 • visit@kimballne.org visitkimball.com Lewellen The Most Unlikely Place 205 Main Street • PO Box 135 • Lewellen, NE 69147 308-778-9557 • cynden@embarqmail.com Lisco Lisco State Bank/Lisco Oldtimers PO Box 105 • Lisco, NE 69148 308-772-3226 • MShearer@fnbancs.com Lodgepole Lodgepole Village Office PO Box 266 • Lodgepole, NE 69149 308-483-5353 Minatare Village of Minatare PO Box 483 • Minatare, NE 69356 308-783-1414 Mitchell Mitchell Chamber of Commerce PO Box 72 • Mitchell, NE 69357 308-623-1523 • fact@prairieweb.com www.mitchellcity.net Morrill Morrill Community Development Group PO Box 363 • Morrill, NE 69358 308-247-3132 • Ron_kuncl@webtv.net www.villageofmorrill.com
Christopher Amundson
Mullen Sandhills Motel and Glidden Canoe Rental 507 SW 1st • PO Box 368 • Mullen, NE 69152 308-546-2206 • 888-278-6167 pglidde@neb-sandhills.net www.gliddencanoerental.com North Platte North Platte/Lincoln County Visitors Bureau 101 Halligan Dr. • North Platte, NE 69101 800-955-4528 • www.VisitNorthPlatte.com Ogallala Keith County Visitors Center 119 East 2nd, Ogallala, NE 69153 800-658-4390 • info@explorekeithcounty.com www.ilovelakemac.com www.explorekeithcounty.com Oshkosh Oshkosh/Garden Co. Chamber of Commerce PO Box 256 • Oshkosh, NE 69154 308-772-3333 • www.ci.oshkosh.ne.us Potter Potter Community Improvement Group 3042 Road 77 • PO Box 106 • Potter, NE 69156 308-879-4277 • www.potterne.com Scottsbluff Scottsbluff/Gering United Chamber of Commerce Scotts Bluff County Tourism 1517 Broadway, Suite 104 • Scottsbluff, NE 69361 800-788-9475 • tourism@visitscottsbluff.com www.VisitScottsBluff.com Sidney Cheyenne County Tourism 658 Glover Road • Sidney, NE 69162 308-254-4030 • 866-545-4030 • cheycotour@aol.com www.sidneycheyennecountytourism.com Sutherland Sutherland Chamber of Commerce PO Box 81 • Sutherland, NE 69165 308-386-4617 • villageorsutherland.com Thedford Thomas County Tourism PO Box 225 • Thedford, NE 69166 308-645-2715 • 402-450-2268 • Twitt02@nebnet.net www.tourthomascountynebraska.com Valentine Valentine Chamber of Commerce 239 S Main St • PO Box 201 • Valentine, NE 69201 402-376-2969 • 800-658-4024 valentinecc@qwestoffice.net • www.visitvalentine.com
Nebraska Division of Travel & Tourism
301 Centennial Mall South, 1st Floor • PO Box 98907 Lincoln, NE 68509-8907 • 402-471-3796 • 800-228-4307 tourism@VisitNebraska.org • www.VisitNebraska.com