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The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune Archive

  • North Platte, Nebraska
  • 18951968

About

Fort McPherson was established in 1863 in an area that later became Lincoln County, Nebraska. The siting of the fort proved fortuitous as various Indian raids and wars, such as the Plum Creek Massacre, broke out nearby in 1864. In November 1866--only three years after the wagon train massacre, North Platte, Nebraska, was platted by General Grenville Dodge for the Union Pacific Railroad. The town grew up almost overnight, attracting more than 5,000 people. Most were railroad laborers, gamblers, and adventurers--a rough-and-tumble frontier town. One account said "Neither property of life was safe." Within two years, the lawless hordes moved westward with the railroad and North Platte settled down into a prosperous community that officially became a city in late 1875. In 1878, Scout's Rest, the house of William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody near North Platte, was completed, and Cody joined his family there.

Archive Info

  • 33,194
  • North Platte, Nebraska
  • 18951968
0

Source Information

The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune, 1895–1968 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: 2 August 2021

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Testing Range Horses

Testing Range Horses

The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune
North Platte, Nebraska
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The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune
North Platte, Nebraska
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The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune
North Platte, Nebraska
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The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune
North Platte, Nebraska
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The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune
North Platte, Nebraska
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Archive Info

  • 33,194
  • North Platte, Nebraska
  • 18951968
0

Source Information

The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune, 1895–1968 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: 2 August 2021