^^ This work Is dedicated to the memory of her who shared the joys and sorrows of the author for forty-six years. Archibald R. Adamson. North Platte And Its Associations BY ARCHIBALD R. ADAMSON. Author ol "Rambles Through the Land of Burns," Etc. "The days of old to mind I call, And often think upon." —Old Song. THE EVENING TELEGRAPH, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. h'^ Copyright, 1910, by A. E. ADAMSON, CCI.A27S560 PREFACE. The purpose of this work is to review the gradu- al growth of North Platte, and incidents associated with it, with such brevity as will lay the storj^ be- fore the reader in a condensed form. Therefore, the narrative is restricted to the simplest recital of events and modest mention of a few pioneei' citizens, who, under unpromising conditions, aided to make North Platte the fairest city in western Nebraska. Material for a work of this kind is not abundant, as feAV stirring incidents arc interwoven witli the city's history; so, on this account, the following pages contain nothing more than a retrospection that will recall events and incidents to the minds of eld- erly citizens, and serve as a flash-light on the past, which it is hoped a new generation Avill appreciate. Of late, death has claimed many old settlers, and onlj' a surviA^ng few arc left with whom to consult. With two excei)tions, they seemed pleased to be call- ed on, and proved reminiscent, and talked with zeal of occurrences that took place when Indians and buf- falo were numerous and frontier life perilous. Such recollections, combined with gleanings from the County, City, School and church records have aided greatly in tracing the progress of local events, and adding interest to the narrative. Andrew J. Miller, who was intimately and promi- nentl}^ identified with the county and city when they were emerging from the primitive, has been resource- ful and obliging, and has supplied information that will prove interesting. Maj. William Woodhurst, who was sheriff of Lincoln County when law and order were loosely observed ; has also supplied what will engage attention. Appreciation of help received from these gentle- men, and from Mrs. W. C. Reynolds, Franklin Peale, James Belton, James Babbitt, and others, is grateful- ly acknowledged. THE AUTHOR. North Platte And Its Associations, CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY. Exploration and pioneer settlement of Nebraska. — The Mormon invasion. — The gold seekers of 1849. — Nebraska becomes a Territory. — The Bill for the construction of the U. P. Railroad passed. — • Ceremony at breaking ground. — Speeches. — Dur- ant calls for a million ties and gets laughed at. — First rail laid. — ^Arrival of first locomotives and first engineers. — Perils of track laying. — Track reaches North Platte. Less than a century ago, Nebraska was consid- ered to be nothing more than an uninviting wilder- ness with few streams, and for the most part con- sisting of treeless, waterless plains unfit for cultiva- 1 2 NORTH PLATTE AND tion, and consequently useless to civilized man. In- dian tribes, living in the most primitive manner, oc- cupied the region, and vast herds of buffalo roamed the trackless waste, living luxuriously upon the with- ered-like grass that clothed the barren soil. Deer and antelope were numerous, and the Indian, a born hunter, lived by the chase in comparative comfort, the buffalo supplying his wants; the hide furnishing clothing and shelter, the flesh, food, and from the bones and intestines he fashioned implements and use- ful articles. One Coronado, a Spanish cavalier, is credited with being the first to explore the region constitut- ing Nebraska. He came in 1541 expecting to find cities, and silver and gold in abundance, but was dis- appointed. Hakluyt, an ancient chronicler, states that he came from the southwest accompanied by a large body of men, and that "when they came to Quiuira, they found Tarrax wiio they sought, an hoarie- headed man, naked, and with a Jewell of copper hang- ing at his neck, which Avas all his riches. The Span- iards seeing the false report of so famous riches, re- turned to Tiguex, without seeing either crosse or shew of Christianitie ; and thence to Mexico." ITS ASSOCIATIONS 3 Two brothers, Perre and Paul Mallet explored the valley of the Platte in June, 1739, tracing the river as far west as the forks, and Avere followed by other adventurers and hunters. In 1804, President Jefferson commissioned and fitted out an expedition under command of Captain Meriweather Lewis, and Lieutenant William Clark, *Ho explore an expanse of country shrouded in mys- tery," west of the Missouri river. In 1819, an exploring and scientific expedition headed by Major S. H. Long, penetrated the wilds and followed the Platte river to its source. In 1842, John Charles Freemont, statesman, sol- dier and explorer, accompanied by a party, was com- missioned by the government ''to explore and report upon the country between the frontiers of Missouri and the south pass of the Rocky Mountains, and on the line of the Kansas and Great Platte rivers." He passed along the Platte valley and has left an in- teresting account of the journey. It took a year and a half for him to reach Sutter's mill in California, and the journey is now made in less than three days amidst practically all the comforts of home. Senator Benton, so noted for wisdom, declared at the time 4 NORTH PLATTE AND that God himself had set up a barrier to the advance of the white man's civilization, and he doubtless be- lieved it to be so, but many barriers have been swept away, and the unmapped wilderness of his day has become the home of several million people. Nebraska long continued to be exclusive Indian country, but the tide of immigration began to flow westward, and its outposts gradually reached the banks of the Missour river and white settlers invaded the soil of Nebraska. In 1844, when the Mormons were compelled to leave Illinois, they moved west, and endeavored to establish colonies on the Nebraska side of the Mis- souri river. The main colony squatted about six miles north of where the city of Omaha now stands and named the settlement ''"Winter Quarters," and in two years the population numbered over ten thousand. The requirements of such a concourse of people were great, and the slaughter of game and de- struction of timber so disturbed the Indians that they appealed to the United States Government, and as the land was theirs, the Government compelled the Mormons to go elsewhere. Many, although indiffer- ently equipped, entered upon the perilous journey to ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 5 an expectant home at Salt Lake, leaving quite a num- ber to become settlers and test the adaptability of Nebraska soil to cultivation. Another item in the colonization of Nebraska is the gold panic which seized the people of the East in 1849 when it was announced that gold had been discovered in California. The valley of the Platte being a natural avenue to the mountains, especially from the northern states, great number of people ar- rived at fords of the Missouri river, and for a time they were crowded, there being no available means to gain the opposite bank. A shrewd observer named "William Brown, seeing an opportunity to make money, organized a company, and soon had a ferry in operation from Council Bluffs to the Nebraska shore. This same gentleman conducted a hotel in Council Bluffs, and in 1853 took a claim which nearly covered the town site of Omaha as it was afterwards laid out; marking its bounderies by blazing trees with a hatchet. The gold seekers were a diverse crowd composed of all classes, making their way across the plains as they best could. Some had mules, others ox-teams, some rode horse back, and not a few went on foot. 6 NORTH PLATTE AND and being ill prepared, many perished on the long weary marches. Not a few gave up the attempt at acquiring wealth in such a way and began life as pio- neers in the new country, despite the fact that the Indians looked upon all settlers as invaders of their domain, and harrassed them by thefts of stock and pilferings. Notwithstanding unfavorable criticism, the wealth and pojiulation of Nebraska increased so rapidly that it was considered advisable to elevate it to the dignity of a territory, and it was so organized, February 2, 1853. Prosperity being assured, a railroad was wished for, and it was hoped one would be constructed through the valley of the Platte to the Pacific coast and open up the new country. The Legislature, and every Governor from Gumming to Saunders advocat- ed the measure, and it had the support of a major- ity of the people, although many laughed at the pro- posal, considering the whole scheme wild and vision- ary. It is needless to go into details regarding the passage of the bill for the construction of the Union Pacific railroad. Suffice it to say, that after run- ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 7 ning the gauntlet of amendments, postponements, and other parliamentary experiences, it was finally adopted, and became law, July, 1862, On December 2, 1868, Peter A. Dey, the chief en- gineer of the proposed road, received a telegram from New York, announcing that the President of the United States had authorized him to formally break ground, and that it had been decided to make Om- aha the initial point of the proposed railroad. Omaha and Council Bluffs were little more than sprawling settlements at the time with no bright future before them, but the assurance that a line of railway to the Pacific coast would be constructed changed the aspect of affairs, and property suddenly increased in value, and an excited crowd of would be homesteaders besieged the Land Office. Business men and leading citizens being hurriedly called togeth- er, agreed to appropriately celebrate the event of breaking ground, and fixed the hour for the cere- mony at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. The day was pleasant and the sun shone brightly, and at the hour named, a crowd of fully 1,000 people assembled and marched to the place where ground was to be formal- ly broken. Flags fluttered, people cheered, and can- 8 NORTH PLATTE AND non boomed on both sides of the river in honor of the event. Every body felt happy, for the day was one to be remembered. The exercises were opened Avith prayer by the Rev. T. B. Lemon, in which he invoked a blessing upon the great work about to be inaugurated. Afterwards, the chief engineer, as- sisted by Augustus Koutze, of Omaha, George Fran- cis Train of New York, Dr. Atchinson, of the West- ern Stage Company, and William E. Harvey, Terri- torial Auditor, with pick in hand, commenced to clear the ground preparatory to removing the first shovelful of earth, which was done amid the roar of artillery from either shore ^ of the Missouri, and shouts of the assembled multitude. These proceed- ings were followed by addresses by Governor Saun- ders, Mayor Kennedy, A. J. Poppleton, George Fran- cis Train and others. Mr. Poppelton said in part: ''On the 13th of October, 1854, about seven o'clock in the evening, I was sent down by the Western Stage Company of yonder city of Council Bluffs. At the rising of the sun the following morning, I climbed to the summit of one of the bluffs which overlook that prosperous and enterprising town, and took one long and linger- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 9 ing look across the Missouri at the beautiful site on which one sees in fall vigor of business, social and religious life, the youthful but thriving, and this, day, jubilant city of Omaha. Early in the day I cross- ed the river, and along a narrow path cut by some stalwart man through the tall rank prairie grass, I wended my way in search of the Postoffice. At length I found an old pioneer seated apparently in soli- tary rumination upon a piece of hewn timber, and I inquired of him for the Postoffice. He replied that he was postmaster, and would examine the Postoffice for my letters. Thereupon he removed from his head a hat, to say the least of it, somewhat veteran in appearance, and drew from its cavernous depths the coveted letters. On that day the w^olves and Om- ahas were the almost undisputed lords of the soil, and the entire postal system was conducted in the crowm of this venerable hat. Today radiant faces gladden our streets, and the postal service sheltered by a costly edifice, strikes its Briarean arms towards the north, the south, east and west, penetrating regions then unexplored and unknown, and bearing the sym- bols of values then hidden in the mountains and be- neath the streams, of which the w^orld in its wildest 10 NORTH PLATTE AND vagaries had never dreamed. Then it took sixty days for New York and California to communicate witli each other. Today, San Francisco and New York, sitting upon the shores of the oceans, three thou- sand miles asunder, holds familiar converse. Iron and steam and lightning are daily weaving their des- tinies more closely with each other and ours with theirs as the interoceanic city whose commerce, trade and treasures leave the last great navigable stream in their migration from the Atlantic to the Pacific sea board. It is natural, therefore, that you should lift up your hearts and rejoice. And although we have watched for nine long years, during which our fortunes have been, like Antonia's treasures, 'mostly in expectancy,' we at last press the cup in full frui- tion to our lips." Mr. Popeleton was followed by Judge Larimer, who, after the cheering su])sided, said; "The heavens are reverberating around us and above us from can- non planted on either shore of the river near by, which divides the State of Iowa from your Territory, but they are not deluging the soil with blood of fel- low countrymen. No, it is another cause in which they are speaking ; it is the cause of progress, of civil- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 11 ization and peace, and this the day we celebrate, is one of its days of triumph. Although I have thought and hoped with you for years for the consummation of the event we are here today to celebrate, and with Avhich the interests of the people of Omaha and Coun- cil Bluffs have ever been so intimately identified, yet it has remained until this hour a subject of Avhich w^e could not speak with any degree of certainty. But it is that the President, as he Avas authorised to do, has designated this as a point, and that there, on the banks of that turbid stream which rolls at our feet — w^hicli takes its course thousands of miles above us, where it is so small that a single ox could drink it dry of a summer day, is to be the crossing of that great national thoroughfare which is to unite and bind together with bands of iron the Atlantic and Pa- cific. We look upon this as an event in the history of this country and of our people as worthy of commem- oration. As yet this is a sparsely settled country, but wdth all the elements for the creation of agricultur- al wealth which is the basis upon which all others rest, w^e may now, by the location of this road, ex- pect a large accession in numbers. With such a country as we have here, with such a future as there 12 NORTH PLATTE AND is before it, the odious relations of landlord and ten- ant, which is only another name for that of master and slave, now existing in the older States, will be placed in progress of gradual extinction. ' ' A stirring and witty speech was delivered b}^ the somewhat erratic George Francis Train, in which he stated that he happened to be lying round loose in the locality and had availed himself of the opportun- ity of being present at the inauguration of 'the great- est enterprise under God, the world ever witnessed." The statement of Train in this speech that the Union Pacific Railroad would be completed before the year 1870, was received with a burst of derisive laughter. The statement seemed extravagant, but the prediction came true, the last rail being laid, and the last spike driven on the 10th of May, 1869. When Mr. Train concluded his address the crowd dispersed, well satisfied with the proceedings, and in the evening Omaha was brilliantly illuminated and a banquet and ball took place at the Herndon House ; there being great rejoicing that before long a railroad would open a way for immigration into the valleys of Nebraska. Preparatory arrangements were immediately en- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 13 tered into for the construction of the road, and T. C. Durant's call for one million cross ties for immedi- ate use, and three million more within two years was received with derision, as no person believed that such a quantity could be procured. Mr. Durant, how- ever, was not to be deterred by apparent impossibili- ties, and emphatically declared they must be had. Every source was applied to and good prices of- fered, and very soon a perfect torrent of ties began to come in. Some grading was done in the Autumn of 1864, but it was not until the 10th of July, 1865, that the first rail of the Union Pacific Railroad was laid along the bottoms between Cut-off Lake and the grade leading through the hills out of Omaha, and it may be remarked, that it was the first rail of the first railroad in the State of Nebraska. Towards the end of the same month, the first locomotive arrived. It was named the ''General Sherman," and was brought up the Missouri river by steamboat in charge of Thomas Jordan who put it together on the track and ran it for some time. Jordan was an expert engineer, but becoming unsettled, drifted away from the Union Pacific, and after a variety of fortune died 14 NORTH PLATTE AND it is said, in Denver. Two weeks later the second lo- comotive arrived in charge of Luther 0. Farrington. It was named the ''General McPherson, " and was brought from St. Joseph, Missouri on the steamboat *' Colorado." Mr. Farrington put this engine to- gether on the track, and commenced running it on August 3, 1865. There was but one and one-half miles of track built out of Omaha at the time, and the country was almost exclusively inhabited by In- dians, and herds of buffalo, deer and antelope roam- ed the plains. Mr. Farrington remained in the employ of the Union Pacific Company until February, 1905, when he was retired and Iplaced on the pension list. He was born in Calledonia County, Vermont, March 12, 1840, and became a member of Division 88 of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers when it was organized at Grand Island in July, 1867. He was an early citizen of North Platte, and ran a passenger train between it and Grand Island for mau}^ years. He enjoyed a comfortable leisure up to about the close of 1909, when broken in health, he went to Ex- celsior Springs, IMissouri, for treatmen, and from thence to a hospital at Omaha. Being sick unto ITS ASSOCIATIONS 15 death, he longed to be at his home at North Platte, and in an endeavor to reach it, was conveyed on board a train, bnt died when it neared Brady, on the night of June 12, 1910. "When the building of the Union Pacific Railroad was entered upon; General Grenville M. Dodge was chief engineer of construction, and General Jack Casement and his brother Dan had charge of the track laying. They were men of undoubted ability and courage, and well qualified to carry on the work intrusted to them. The working force was almost entirely compos- ed of retired soldiers whose experience during the Civil War admirably fitted them for encounters with hostile Indians and to endure the privations of camp life on the plains. At an alarm, when hostile Indians were seen approaching the camp,these men would fall into line and prepare to meet the attack with the read-^ iness and decision of veteran soldiers. To General Dodge belongs the credit of forward- ing the work of track laying with unwonted rapid- ity. Being an enthusiast, he not only communicated his spirit to his working forces, but skillfully managed hostile Indians, laborers, and the ruffians 16 NORTH PLATTE AND and gamblers who followed the camp. Having dis- tinguished himself during the civil war, he was inti- mate with commanding officers of garrisons and military posts along the route, and was enabled to avail himself of military aid against marauding Indi- ans, and also frequently to maintain order when worthless camp followers became unruly. His system of track laying was unique. In the lading of con- struction trains with material brought up on boats from St. Joseph, each car was assigned a certain number of rails of the same length, and the exact number of spikes required to lay them. When the scene of track laying was reached, the rails were thrown off; the train backed, and the rails trans- ferred to small cars. Horse power was used to move these to within a couple of feet from the end of the rails already laid down; and before the car had well stopped, a dozen men grasped a rail on each side, ran it down on the already laid ties, gaug- ed it, and before the clang of its falling had ceased to reverberate, the car was moved ahead and an- other pair of rails drawn out. Men followed up and dropped spikes, and some thirty others drove them. The moment a car was emptied of rails, a number ITS ASSOCIATIONS 17 of men seized it and threw it off the track, and a second one followed with its load of rails. By this process, it was estimated, that on an average, eight hundred feet of track was laid in the brief space of thirty minutes. The first government inspection of the track took place on January 26, 1866, and at that time about thirty miles had been laid, and it is worthy of remark that the equipment consisted of four loco- motives, five box cars, and thirty flat cars. By the Fall of 1866, two hundred and sixty miles more of track were completed. Grand Island was reached on July 8, 1866, and the construction train was run to that point; the train being drawn by the engine "Osceola," which was captured by the Indians Avest of Plum Creek about two years afterwards. At that date, the road was finished so far, and in operation, with depots and water stations, and substantial bridges spanned streams which were the terror of emigrants in days when the slow, toiling team carried the family and household goods to the mountains, or the green valleys of the Pacific Slope. The track was completed to North Platte in No- vember, 1866, and there the terminus remained until 18 NORTH PLATTE AND the following year; continuance of the work being delayed by Indian hostility. Few have any idea of the difficulties under which the line of the Union Pacific was constructed. Chief Engineer General G. M. Dodge in a statement to the eastern owners, said: ''During the entire con- struction of the road, a relentless, determined war has been waged all along the line b}^ the tribes of the plains, and no peace found until we had long passed the hostile country and got beyond their reach * * * Every mile had to be run within range of musket, and there was not a moment's security. In making surveys, numbers of our men, some of them the ablest and most promising, were killed; and dur- ing the construction, our stock was run off by the. hundred; I might say by the thousand. As one dif- ficulty after another was overcome in the engineer- ing, running and construction departments, a new era in railroading w^as inaugurated. Each day taught us a lesson by which we profited for the next, and our advances and improvements on the art of rail- way construction were marked by the progress of the work." Everything was done at enormous cost. None of ITS ASSOCIATIONS 19 the Iowa railroads had reached the Missouri river, consequently all material, machinery, fuel, provisions, men, everything in fact, had to go to St. Louis and be transferred by boat to Omaha. The treeless plains of Nebraska furnished no ties, and they had to be transported from remote points at great ex- pense, sometimes costing as much as $2.50 apiece. The cost of labor and provisions was also greatly enhanc- ed by lack of direct communication with markets; and in the absence of wood and coal, fuel had to be shipped in at a fri^^htful cost; therefore, all honor to the men who constructed the Union Pacific rail- road and braved danger and almost unsurmountable difficulties, to blaze the way for civilization. 20 NORTH PLATTE AND CHAPTER II. First house built in North Platte. — First store. — The Peniston & Miller homesteads. — Coming of the U. P. Railroad creates a large population. — The first newspaper. — A military post for town pro- tection. — Building the U. P. shops and Round House. — First houses. — Early residents. — Work- men sleep and cook for themselves in" the shops" — The Cedar Hotel. — Indian troubles. — The Peace Conference. — First weddings. — Shop associations. — Indians threaten the town. — To the Round House for refuge. When the site of the fair city of North Platte was buffalo pasture, and the surrounding country the home of the Indian, William S. Peniston and An- drew J. Miller conducted a trading post called "Gold Water" at a point twenty -five miles west of Plum Creek. The country was without civil gov- ernment, Indians numerous, and white men few, and the few were generally voyagers or in some way con- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 21 neeted with the United States army. In the sniumer of 1866, the track of the Union Pacific Railway was built past this trading post, and Mr. Miller, learning while in Omaha that the termin- A. J. MILLER, North Platte's First Citizen. us of the first division of the road would be located between the rivers above where they were building the North Platte bridge, a better location for the 22 NORTH PLATTE AND business conducted by Peniston and himself was sug- gested. Having a quantity of lumber and building material brought from Denver, they hauled it to the newly platted site of North Platte, and Mr. Miller, with his men and teams, camped there the last of September, 1866. Stillness reigned, and there was little to encourage settlement, but he felt assured that before long the silence would be broken by the hum of human activity. The town site was newly staked off, and looking round, he selected and bought a lot at the corner of what is now Locust and Front streets; and put up a frame building for a store, which was the first building built in North Platte. He afterwards paid the first freight bill, and opened up with a stock of goods on the 9th day of November. Early in 1867, he moved the log store building that he and his partner had at Cold Water, to Co- zad, and shipped it to North Platte, and put it up where it now stands. The frame building, and half of the lot was afterwards sold to Althimer & Co. for $1,111. This firm shortly thereafter, took the build- ing down in sections and following the construction camp, set it up where convenient. After a time the ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 2:] half lot was bought back for $150, and such is the ac- count of a very early real estate deal, and the ori- gin of the well built, bustling city of North Platte, as related by A. J. Miller, its first citizen. Peniston & Miller were associated in business up to 1870; when they dissolved partnership. Mr. Mil- ler carried on the business until 1872, w^hen deciding to retire, he sold the merchandise to Otto Uhling, and the historic building to Charles McDonald vrho conducted a popular grocery business in it for sever- al years. After Mr. McDonald vacated the building, it as- sumed a dilapidated and abandoned appearance, the activity by which it was characterized having depart- ed. The building, however, was a land mark, and was pointed out as a relic of early days, but on the morning of April 21,1910, it caught fire and despite heroic efforts of the Fire Brigade and citizens, it was thoroughly wrecked before the flames were subdued. The cedar logs of which the walls were constructed were exposed by the fire, and appeared as solid as when put in place. W. S. Peniston nd A. J. Miller were the first to take up land adjoining, and likely to be included with 24 NORTH PLATTE AND in the limits of the proposed city at some time. It appears that they had a stretch of land on the south fenced in. Col. J. B. Park was surveying in the neighborhood and noticing this, interviewed Mr.Mil- ler. In course of conversation he said that if he was allowed to homestead part of the land they had in- closed, he would give the number of the section. As the land was not officially announced as surveyed, this was agreed to, and it was arranged that the Col- onel should homestead one hundred and sixty acres, and that he and Peniston, take eighty each; and such is the origin of these additions to the city. As stated, the Union Pacific Railroad was com- pleted to North Platte in November, 1866, and there the terminus remained until the following year. Then, the country was in a state of nature, wild and open, with no sign of civilization. Deer, antelope and buf- falo were numerous; ducks and geese swarmed on the sloughs and along the rivers, and Indians roam- ed at will in primitive freedom. The advance of civ- ilization, however, was fated to change all this; for with the railroad came a motly crowd of construction camp denizens; amongst 'whom were roughs, toughs and gamblers, and saloons and questionable resorts ITS ASSOCIATIONS 25 were soon doing business in canvass tents, and all manner of hurriedly constructed abodes. This cosmo- politan crowd is said to have numbered some three thousand persons, and no governing power control- led it. A. J. Miller tells of a mammoth tent east of his store; in w^hich there was a saloon bar; billiard ta- bles, and all kinds of gambling devices. A man by the name of McDonald, he states, ran it, and made a large amount of money by following the construc- tion camp. Less pretentious resorts where vice was pandered to were numerous, and on the whole, the North Platte of that day was a lively and somewhat picturesque place. It is worthy of mention, that a newspaper called the Pioneer on Wheels, came with the railroad and supplied the camp with news of the outside w^orld. It was printed in, and published from a box car by a man named Clark, and without doubt was the first news sheet issued in North Platte. A copy would be a curiosity, but search and inquiry have failed to lo- cate one. This paper is referred to in the Platte Val- ley Independent, an early local paper, and James M. Ray, a pioneer citizen, speaks positively of it. 26 NORTH PLATTE AND Work on the Railroad was resumed in July, 1867 ; and Avhen the construction camp moved west, the bulk of the floating population followed, and it was not long until there Avas barely one hundred and fifty people left, most of them being employed on the rail- road. The Indians were never very docile or easily man- aged, but early in 1867, they became restless and ov- erbearing. Small parties of white men had been at- tacked, and unprotected, killed and scalped. Stock was also run off when opportunity afforded, and many depredations committed. Peniston and Miller had eighty head of cattle stolen by them when fill- ing a wood contract at Willow Island, and others lost heavily by raids. By the close of 1867, North Platte was becom- ing quite a village ; and as it showed signs of growth ; the Government, to protect it and suppress Indian troubles, established a Military Post, garrisoned it with two companies of cavalry and maintained it until 1880. About that date, the Indians in Lincoln Coun- ty were deported to a reservation, and as there was no further need for Military protection; the build- ings of the Post were disposed of, and the site is now ITS ASSOCIATIONS 27 built on and traversed by streets. This historic Post or Barracks was sitiiattd a little west of town near the railroad track. Early in 1867 the Railroad Company began the erection of their Round House, and shops. The Blacksmith shop was first built. Arthur P. Wood, Civil Engineer of Omaha superintended the work, and remained until all the buildings were completed. The first houses w^ere built oj sod and not a few of logs, but by the close of 1867 several frame houses were erected; notably, the two still standing at the corners of Locust and Sixth Streets. The one on the west corner was tht home of A. J. Miller and the one on the east, that of W. S. Pen- iston. The late David Day, Franklin Peale, and Jos- eph and Andy Picard/ were the first shopmen to build. Their homes were or Sixth and Chestnut streets, but by the Fall of 1868 the prairie became dotted with small houses. These were mostly unplas- tered, but secured against the penetrating winds of • winter by robes, skins and such like tacked to the walls. With these, and a hot cook-stove going day and night while cold spells and blizzards lasted, the inmates managed to get along. But families kept com- 28 NORTH PLATTE AND in^ and were made welcome, and it may ])e trutli- fidly said that there was more friendly intercourse amongst neighbors than there has been since. Among the families of these early days were those of David Day, Franklin Peal, Albert Marsh, Frazier, Struthers, W. J. Patterson, M. C. Keith, Lew Baker, Lamplaugh, Dangherty, Peniston, Miller, Van Doran, A. P. Carlson, Russell, Austin, Morin, R.J. WymaUjW. M. Hinman and others, all worthy citizens, and al- though many of them have entered the silent halls of death, all names are familiar and associated with days when North Platte was a frontier settlement and the Indian and buffalo roamed the wilds of Lin- coln County in unrestricted freedom. The Union Pacific pay roll for January 1868 shows there were five blacksmith, twenty -two ma- chinists, and one boilermaker in the employ at North Platte, and that J. P. Marston was master me- chanic, Albert Marsh, foreman of the blacksmith shop, James Van Claim of the machine shop, and a Mr. Granger of the copper shop. "Work at that time, and for years after, was plentiful and pressing, and continued from seven in the morning until half past ten at night, and often until twelve and one next ITS ASSOCIATIONS 29 morning; Sundays being iis other days. Big money was earned, and as it was spent freely, others were made prosperous. In those days, boarding places were few and crowded, and many workmen slept in bunks in the machine shop and round house, the carpenters sleeping on their , work benches. Some cooked their food and roughed it ,while others took their meals at the Cedar Hotel, a rough log structure that stood on the site of the Timmerman building on Front Street. It was the only hotel in town at one time, but served requirements as well as any at the pres- ent day. One fine morning, however, it burned, and as the town was increasing, the late IM. C. Keith erected a larger and better building on the site and successfully ran a hotel for some time; but his build- ing also shared the fate of its predecessor. Shortly after its destruction, the Nebraska House was built, and it and other boarding places began to offer ac- commodation to railroad men and the traveling pub- lic. The Indians continued surly and dissatisfied. They claimed that they had been deprived of their lands by the encroachment of the whites, and that 30 NORTH PLATTE AND certain remuneration for their loss had been denied them. They also complained that the government had not kept its promise; that at stated times, blan- kets and other necessities would be issued to them, and that upon going to appointed places to receive supplies, they were disappointed. To negotiate with the Indians, and obtain a cessation of hostilities,a con- ference was suggested, and the Indian chiefs agreed to meet commissioners appointed by the Govern- ment at North Platte, on September 24, 1868, To- ward the end of July small bands of Sioux began to arrive; but by September, not only Sioux, but Pawnees, Cheyennes, and other tribes came in force, and it is stated by citizens who saw them, that it was a never-to-be-forgotten sight to see the various bands filing slowly along west of the round house clothed in garments made of hides of deer, antelope, buffalo and elk. Many had jjonies with poles attach- ed to them, the ends trailing on the ground. On these improvised, wheelless wagons, baggage was piled, and what could not be put on, squaws and ponies carried. This quaint, picturesque throng toiled slowly to the North river, crossed by a ford, and went into camp. The chiefs, headmen, and interp- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 31 reters, with their squaws and families; and also half- breeds and squaw-men with their families, camped a little to the west of the round house. Skins, buffalo robes and pelts w^ere all the In- dians had to exchange for desired commodities, and the result was that the stores of Peniston and Mil- ler, and Otto Uhling (the only stores in tow^n at the time) were packed w-ith theto. Buffalo robes were a drug on the market, and Indians gladly accepted a silver dollar for the finest. These Indians are said to have been fine specimens of mankind, being mod- erately tall, and physically vigorous and strong. The Society of Friends of Philadelphia sent boxes of clothingjthe articles to be distributed amongst them, but they had no use for coats or vests, and as for pants, they changed them to approved Indian fash- ion by cutting the legs off at the knees, and mak- ing a flap in the seat. General Sherman, General Harvey, and John P. Sanborne were appointed by the Government to con- fer with the Indian chiefs. The Union Pacific ma- chine shop was just built, and as the machinery had not been placed in it, it was considered a suit- able place in which to hold the conference, and 32 NORTH PLATTE AND there it was held. The Indian chiefs. Standing Elk, Swift Bear, Pawnee Killer, Spotted Tail, Man-that- walks-iinder-ground, and Big Mouth arrived on the day, and at the hour appointed Avith their interpre- ters, and after a long conference and much discus- sion, a Treaty of Peace was entered upon. By this time. North Platte was getting to be a town of some importance, and during their stay the commissioners were well entertained by the citizens. Parties were given in their honor, and at a wedding they attended, Gen. Sherman was the first to kiss the bride. Previous to this, W. M. Hinman officiat- ed at a double wedding in the old Union Pacific Ho- tel which was celebrated in true Western fashion. This hotel was destroyed by fire in May, 1869. These weddings were the first in North Platte, but such celebrations steadily increased, and are far from be- coming obsolete. After the Peace Commission, the first meeting of Free Masons in North Platte Avas convened in the machine shop, and held in a small room in the loft, then, and for long after reached by a stairway. The object was to get the brethren in the locality to- gether, so that by spending a social hour they Avould ITS ASSOCIATIOiNS UIJ become acquainted. In this same room were rifles and bayonets for the workmen should the Indians at any time make a raid on the company's premises. They w^ere never required, and wiien Indian troubles ceased, w^ere appropriated by youths in the employ of the company and converted into rifles for hunting. So late as 1881, a few of these weapons w^ere found covered with dust and rust and for some time bay- onets lay about the machine shops. The ten stall round house of that day, blown down in 1881, also had its associations. To it wom- en and children fled when terrorized by a report that the Indians were going to attack the town and murder the inhabitants. This was in the spring of 1868. It seems that a report had been circulated that the Indians were on the war path in large force perpetrating their usual atrocities. The tale spread on all sides, and was supplemented and enlarged by all kinds of variations that imagination and fear could suggest. Settlers thronged to the military Posts for protection, and the women and children of the town sought refuge in the round house. Men armed themselves and looked out for the expected Indian attack, but as it failed to materialize, the 34 NORTH PLATTE AND scare subsided. That the local report was not whol- ly without foundation is made evident by the state- ment of A. J. Miller. He says: ''Peniston and I had been over on the south side of the river, and com- ing back to town, noticed many Indians. They all had their bows strung and arrows in their hands, and I told Peniston it looked as though we were going to have trouble. I drove up to the store and found that many people in town had already gone to the round house. I ran over to my house and tried to get my wife and Mrs. Peniston to go there too, but my wife refused to go. I then ran out and found High Bear and asked him to harangue the Indians and tell them their hearts were bad, and that I want- ed to see them at the store. In a short time the store was full of Indians, and I made a talk to them, telling them that I could see that their hearts were on the ground, but that I was their friend and wanted them to feel good. I then gave them about two hundred and fifty dollars worth of goods so they could have a feast, besides giving them some hats and clothing and things of that kind. There was no further trouble. The Indians afterwards told General Harney at the Whetstone Agency, that if it ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 35 had not been for 'Sharp Nose', (the name they gave me) they would have killed everybody and burned the town." 36 NORTH PLATTE AND CHAPTER HI. North Platte's rapid growth. — Becomes the County Seat. — First meeting of County Commissioners.' — Circuit Judge holds Court. — First County War- ants.- — Cattle raising. — Judge Daugherty and the school fund. — North Platte in '68. — First sa- loon licenses. — U. P. Engines levied on for taxes and chained. — The old Log School house, its teachers and associations. — An Indian scare, and the gun that scared the teacher. — First Sunday School in North Platte. About the close of 1867, North Platte had so increased in population and importance that it was considered more suitable to be the county seat than Cottonwood Springs where it was located at the time. That this idea was universally entertained is evident by the following enterics in the County Rec- ords: ''At a special term of the County Commission- ers' Court of Lincoln County, Nebraska, at their ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 37 usual place of holding court at Cottonwood Springs, Nebraska, on the 27th day of September, A. D., 1867. Present, W. M. Hinman and John A. Morrow, Com- missioners; the following proceedings were had: It was ordered that all that portion of Lincoln County south of the Platte river shall constitute Cotton- wood Precinct; and all that portion of said county lying between the North and South Platte shall con- stitute the North Platte precinct. It is also ordered that an election be held in Lincoln County on the 8th day of October, A. D., 1867, for one member of the House of Representatives; one Commissioner for district No. 2; one Probate Judge; one Coroner; one County Treasurer; one County Clerk; one County Surveyor; one Prosecuting Attorney for the precinct of North Platte; two Justices and two Constables; also for the location of the County Seat of Lincoln County, Nebraska. No other business, the Court ad- journs to meet at the same place on the 25th day of October, A. D., 1867." Charles McDonald was County Clerk, and the Commissioners met at his house. How many ran for these offices, or to what political parties they be- longed, is not recorded, but twenty-one votes were 38 NORTH PLATTE AND cast, and the proposition to make North Platte the County Seat carried, and the following gentlemen were elected to guard the welfare, and shape the destiny of County and City : B. I. Hinman, Represent- ative; W. M. Hinman, Judge; Charles McDonald, Clerk; 0. Austin, Sheriff; Hugh Morgan, Treasur- er; A. J. Miller, Commissioner. As arranged, the Commissioners met at "the usual place of doing business, ' ' on the 25th of October, 1867; and after appointing an assessor for Lincoln County and transacting other business, ''It was or- dered that on the 12th day of November, 1867, the County Seat of Lincoln County, and all records of said County shall be transferred to the town of North Platte, State of Nebraska. On motion, the County Commissioners adjourned to meet at North Platte, Nebraska, at noon, on the 12th day of November, A. D., 1867." They met on the day and at the hour appointed; but North Platte had no municipal building, or place wherein to transact County business; so the first, and several other meetings were held in a log house used as a residence of W. M. Hinman who that fall had removed to town. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 39 There being no business to transact at the first meeting of Commissioners in North Platte, an ad- journment was taken. Towards the close of 1867, Judge Gantt, then Cir- cuit Judge for the entire State of Nebraska, conven- ed Court at the Railroad Hotel, and although a jury was impaneled, no indictments were brought in. It was during this year that the first county warrants were issued. Mr. A. J. Miller states that when he was elect- ed County Commissioner in '67, there was no money in the treasury, and County "Warrants were hardly worth anything, many being sold for ten cents on the dollar. To carry the County along , Peniston and Mil- ler took them at their face value in exchange for supplies to the Sheriff for the jail and other county requisites during years 1868 and 1869; and in this way acquired a pile that figured up to between ten and twelve thousand dollars. Being anxious to re- alize on them, Mr. Miller took warrants amounting to $10,000, to Omaha, and was told by the president and cashier of the First Nation.-d Bank that they would not loan ten cents on the dollar on them, as they did not consider they were worth any thing. 40 NORTH PLATTE AND They said that it was doubtful if North Platte was in Lincoln County as thei west line was east of it. Dis- heartened but not discouraged, Mr. Miller returned home, and it was not long before Lincoln County war- rants were freely accepted. Owing to the aggression of the Indians, cattle raising had not been carried on to any extent around North Platte previous to 1868. About that date, herds were brought in by Nathaniel Russel, Peniston and Miller, M. H. Brown, Keith and Barton, John Bratt and others; and this may be said to have been the beginning of the vast cattle business so long car- ried on in Lincoln and adjacent counties. Hundreds of miles of Government and Railroad lands lay unoccupied, and it might be said that range for cattle was unlimited. The winters were less se- vere then, and really rough wintery weather was of short duration, and cattle came through in fairly good condition. Putting up hay to winter stock was considered unnecessary; and so matters went on until the winter of 1880 when cattle perished by the thousand, and the prairie was strewn with carcasses. Many had invested, and a few made fortunes, but this catastrophy ruined several. Ever after, cattle re- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 41 ceived attention; and all went well until homestead- ers invaded the range. Cattlemen fumed and swore, and tried to drive them away; telling them the land was unproductive and they would starve. To this the homesteader turned a deaf ear, and continued to plough and sow, and see crop after crop fail for lack of moisture. He experienced privation and hardship, but hope sustained him and in the expectation of bet- ter results, he plodded along. Threats did not deter homesteaders, for they continued to come until it be- came impossible to run herds, and cattlemen had to give up business, or leave for other pastures. Mois- ture gradually became more abundant, and in course of time, a grazing country became a rich farming country. In January, 1868, Charles McDonald was re-elect- ed County Clerk, but having neglected to qualify for office, R. C. Daugherty was appointed. Daugher- ty was also Justice of the Peace, and on February 4, 1868, fined a man $21.50 for stealing an overcoat. This was the first money paid into the public treas- ury, and was the first contribution to the school fund, the law of the state being, that all money col- lected as fines go to support public scliools. Daugh- 42 NORTH PLATTE AND erty is said to have been a stern judge who never scrupled to impose a penalty. "Go on with your school/' he would say, "and I'll find funds for it," and he did; for every one brought before him was fined to the limit. At that time, North Platte was infested with reckless desperados, brothels, gambling dens and unlicensed saloons that ran wide open all days of the week and hours of the night. Most men went armed, and few law abiding citizens ventured out alone after dark. There were some small buildings arranged along what is now Dewey Street, and where the First National Bank stands, was a notorious sa- loon much patronized by gamblers and questionable characters of both sexes. Front Street, however, was the business street, and froni Walnut to Ash Street were many one storied shanties in which drinks were dispensed. Then cowboys would ride long distances to have "a good time" at North Platte, which gen- erally consisted in patronizing its saloons and re- sorts. They were a frolicsome lot and seldom gave trouble, no, not even after a round up when they spent their hard earned dollars freely, and made things lively, and it was not uncommon for one or ITS ASSOCIATIONS 43 more to ride into a saloon, order drinks and in wild glee, shoot out the lights; or ride at a furious pace through the town, whooping and yelling as they shot in the air. Then, many a man died with his boots on, and it was a question with the law abiding, whether white men or Indians were most to be feared. The transactions of the County Commissioners were somwhat formal at first, but at a meeting held, March 23, 1868, they got dow^n to business, and insti- tuted reform that startled the community. At that meeting it was ordered that 0. 0. Austin be appointed Assessor for North Platte precinct, ''and that he be directed to assess the property of the Union Pacific Railroad company in this precinct which consists of the district of country between the Platte rivers, to the western boundary of the State of Nebraska. Al- so to assess all town lots in the town of North Platte and Julesburg; and further ordered that all persons be prohibited from selling spirituous or malt liquors in less quantities than five gallons, unless they ob- tain license from the County Commissioners as provid- ed by law. Also, that all persons applying to sell liquor pay the sum of twenty-five dollars as a license fee for one year from date of application, into the 44 NORTH PLATTE AND County Treasury, and that the County Clerk post no- tices giving ten days to all retailers of spirituous and malt liquors to comply with the order." To pay for license was considered an imposition, and an infringment of western liberty and the sa- loonists refused to comply. However, the Commis- sioners remained firm, and at a meeting held on the 6th day of April, 1868, the bonds of seven saloon keepers were approved, and license granted; and all went well until the following year when the Commis- sioners saw fit to increase the fee to one hundred and fifty dollars for twelve months. This order caused great dissatisfaction and was so vigorously opposed, that it had to be rescinded and the former fee re- stored. Then, and long after, wiiiskey retailed at twenty-five cents a drink, and other beverages were proportionately high priced Wages were high, and so were the necessaries of life ; a quarter having no greater purchasing power than a five cent piece has today. The assessor, acting upon the order of the Commissioners, levied on the property of the Union Pacific Railroad Company in North Platte Precinct, and made an assessed valuation of $49,000. This tax- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 45 ation the Railroad Company refused to pay, and the case was tested before the courts of the state and finally brought to a settlement by the Sheriff locking- and chaining the engines in the round house under a writ of attachment procured by the County Treas- urer. Major William Woodhurst was sheriff at the time, and he states that he chained the engines and left an armed guard in charge, and that the process speedly brought about a settlement. Since that time, there has been no trouble with the Union Pacific Company regarding the payment of taxes. The effort of the County Commissioners to con- trol the liquor traffic is commendable, but no effort was made to improve the moral condition of the peo- ple. There was not a place of worship in the city, and the means for educating children was limited and crude. The old log school house that stood on the corner of Fifth and Dewey Streets, was newly built when they began to legislate, but there is no record that the Commissioners had any thing to do with its erection. Mr. A. J. Miller states in a com- munication that it was built by money subscribed by citizens for the purpose, he thinks, not before 1868. ''When it was built, ', he says, 'Sve had no teacher. 46 NORTH PLATTE AND so I wrote to an nnele in New York and told him if Mary Hubbard would come out, I would meet her in Omaha, and we would give her the school to teach at $100 per month, and she could live with my family. She came and taught in the first Public School in Lincoln County." In the records of the Public Schools of North Platte, there is an entry signed, ''James Belton, " stating that "the origin of our district like that of our ancestors is lost in gloom, but tradition tells us that in the year 1868, a few citizens of this place met and organized School District No. 1 by electing L. H. Baker, E. Morin and Mr. Probin, school officers, who proceeded to the erection of a log school house. Lou Baker was elected to the honorable office of Treasurer, and as the district had no money, he went down into his own pocket every Saturday and paid the workmen. Mr. T. M. Clarke, the brother of Mrs. Lou Baker was the first teacher. The school attend- ance was about eight pupils. The foregoing was ob- tained from Mr. L. H. Baker as no record is now in existence." Local tradition has it that the first public relig- ious service in' North Platte was held in the log school ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 47 by an itinerant Lutheran minister named Cook, in August 1868, and that the voice of the first school teacher in Lincoln County also woke its echo. He is said to have been a young- man named Clarke; but he did not take kindly to teaching, and resigned be- fore the term expired. He was succeeded by a Mr. Garman who also resigned after a brief stay. The next appointed was Miss Mary Hubbard, a young First School House in North Platte. woman in all the bloom and blush of early woman- hood, and school was opened by her, November 30, 1868. She had less than a dozen scholars, and few school books; only one Fourth Reader, and it was monopolized by the only one in the class, a tall young man, so tall, that the teacher had to look up to him, and when the class was to be heard, the one book 48 NORTH PLATTE AND difficulty was got over by the pupil sitting down so the teacher could see the page from which he read. Miss Hubbard is now Mrs Gilman, and although somewhat aged, retains much of her youthful vivacity. No pioneer citizen is more esteemed than she, and her family is alike a credit to herself and the city. A report was circulated that the Indians were about to invade the town and scalp all and sundry, people became excited. A school director called at the school house and gave the teacher a revolver to protect herself and the children. The w^eapon was laid aside, but she eyed it with suspicion, and spent the afternoon in fear and trembling, not of the In- dians, but of the pesky gun, lest it might go off and kill some one. In course of time the population increased, and children of school age soon taxed the capacity of the log school house. To obviate this, an addition was built to it in 1875, and Misses Holcomb and Hall engaged to teach. This enlargement, however, only gave temporary relief, and a more commodious build- ing was necessary. In 1873 a two-story brick school house was erected, and the log school house having served its day was sold at public auction, February ITS ASSOCIATIONS 49 9, 1874, and knocked down to Joseph MeConnell, his bid being six hundred and eleven dollars. It was long occupied by Mrs. Thompson as a residence and millin- ery store, and was looked upon as a relic of pioneer days. Mr. Hershey came to own it, moved it to make space for the erection of the Warner building. It presently stands in the Alley behind the Lock resi- dence on Fourth Street, covered with sheet iron and converted into a stable. Its identity is gone, and it is to be regretted that it is thus desecrated. There was nothing very lovable or attractive about the old build- ing, but it was an interesting relic of the past ; and it was with genuine regret that several who received the rudiments of their education at it, witnessed its removal. It is worthy of remark that the first Sunday School in North Platte w^as held in the log school house. The late Mrs. E. J. Cogswell of blessed mem- ory, came to North Platte in 1868 intent upon mis- sionary work. She was a Unitarian, but no sectarian, and willingly co-operated with people of all shades of belief for the moral good of the community. Near the colse of that year, aided by Mrs. M. C. Keith, 50 NORTH PLATTE AND Mrs. A. J. Miller and Mrs. Kramph, she had the school room arranged for the reception of scholars to form a Sunday School class, but to the vexation of these excellent women, only three children attended. Mrs. Cogswell, however, was not easily discouraged, and visiting every family in town, in which there were children, she solicited their attendance and was re- warded by having quite a number of scholars. This school was organized as a Union Sunday School, and continued as such for many years. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 51 CHAPTER IV. Necessity for a jail. — Log jail built. — Prisoners es- cape. — The town expands. — The Vigilant Com- mittee. — First church built. — South Platte bridge built. — Buffalo hunting. — McLucas store robbed. — Suspects arrested. — Man lynched at railroad bridge. — Mob at jail. — Suspects brought into court. — Seized by mob. — One hanged to telegraph pole. — One escapes and dies through exposure. At the close of 1868, and well into the seventies; North Platte was a pretty tough town, and very in- differently equipped to enforce the law and main- tain order. It had no jail, and on this account crime often went unpunished, but Avhen occasional arrests w^ere made, culprits had either to be kept in the guard house at the Post; sent to Fort McPherson, or other places for safe keeping. Prisoners w^ere a cost- ly encumbrance as will be seen by the following ex- tracts from the county records: ''October 16, 1868. — 52 NORTH PLATTE AND At a meeting of Commissioners it was ordered that the claim of the Union Pacific Railroad Company for the transporting of prisoners to Fremont, the sum of one hundred and twenty-eight dollars and fifty cents be paid." '^ January 19, 1839: The claim of William Pateny for guarding prisoners eight days ; the sum of twen- ty-five dollars." ''January 24, 1869: The claim of Dodge County, Nebraska, for keeping and trying John Burly for the crime of murder; the sum of four hundred and six- teen dollars, and fourteen cents." ''February 1, 1869: Ordered that the claim of Company D; 18th United States Infantry for board- ing and guarding prisoners, the sum of two hundred and thirty-eight dollars be paid." "February 19, 1859: Ordered that the claim of Col. Bracket for keeping prisoners at Fort McPher- son, the sum of twenty-two dollars be paid." "March 3, 1869: Ordered that the claim of the Union Pacific Railroad Company for transporting prisoners from Omaha to North Platte, the sum of eighty -seven dollars and twenty-five cents, be paid." The commanding officer at the Post seems to ITS ASSOCIATIONS 53 liave tired of his guardhouse being used as a city jail, and intimated as much to the sheriff, who in turn, informed the county commissioners, but from an entry in the county records, its appears they had the erection of a jail under consideration, for, as it states, "The court met on the 28th of September, 1868, at the county clerk's office at two o'clock p. m. Present, A. J. Miller, and W. M. Hinman. "It was ordered by the Board that proposals be received at the county clerk's office on the 5th day of October, 1868, to build a jail in the County of Lin- coln; said jail to be divided into two rooms, twelve feet square, and bids for larger or smaller rooms will be considered. Ordered that the county clerk is- sue notices to secure proposals for building a jail or furnish material for same ; said proposals to be re- ceived up to the 15th day of October 1868; the Board reserving the right to reject any or all bids." On October 17, 1868, a contract is entered into with W. S. Peniston, in accordance with his bid to build a county jail; and on January 16, 1869, it is ordered "that he receive the sum of twenty-five hun- dred dollars for building jail and furnishing cot. That this sum stands on motion." o4 NORTH PLATTE AND Afterwards, it was ''Ordered that the deed of Peniston and Miller, for the west half of lot number three (3) block, one hundred and three (103), in the town of North Platte, upon which the jail of Lincoln County now stands, be received under contract w4th W. S. Peniston, until the Union Pacific Railroad Com- pany can make a title ; and it is further ordered, that the claim of Peniston and Miller for extra work to county jail, the sum of five hundred dollars, be audited and allowed from county general fund." Readers who remember the low-roofed, rough log cabin designated "the jail," that stood on Front Street, a little west of the railroad depot, with its small barred windows and heavy door, may con- sider that the commissioners paid liberally for it, but every thing was high priced in those days. The log jail, like the log school house, had its as- sociations, and some of them are gruesome and grim. It often had in its keeping, cattle and horse thieves; murderers and assassins ; yea, criminals of all grades ; and upon two occasions at least, it was assailed by a mob of would be lynchers. One sheriff stood in its doorway, revolver in hand, in front of an excited mob wishing to wreck vengeance on a prisoner, and de- ITS ASSOCIATIONS oo elated in defiant tones, that any who crossed the threshold of the jail, would do so over his dead body. All knew he meant what he said, and none ventured. The old building, strong as it look- ed, was not over secure, and it was harder to keep prisoners in it, sometimes, than it was to catch and put them in. It had no foundation and some gained freedom by digging under a sill, but a favorite mode of escape was through the shingled roof. A venti- lator also served as an avenue to freedom, and slim fellows occasionally availed themselves of it. Es- capes were so frequent that it had to be patroled, and the cost of guarding, and supplies to the jail, made it an expensive institution. There is frequent mention in the county records of money paid for guarding the jail, and one entry, dated December 1, 1871, states that the bond of T. Redmond, who is to watch the jail at sixty dollars a month, is approved. During 1869 many houses were erected, and al- though somewhat scattered over the still open prairie, it was evident that the industry and frugality of rail- road employes, and the ever increasing traffic on the road, would, in course of time, make North Platte 56 NORTH PLATTE AND a place of importance. Many doubted this, but wise ones whose faith was well founded, secured town lots and land in the vicinity, and turned a deaf ear to pessimists, and today, several in their old age benefit hy such investments. Like other frontier towns, North Platte was in- fested by toughs and tramps who beat their way from place to place on the railroad, and assaults and holdups were so frequent, that leading citizens got together and organized a Vigilent committee to which w^as assigned the duty of ridding the city of unde- sirable characters. Undersirables selected were noti- fied by a letter containing a rude drawing of a skull and cross bones, and a piece of rope -with a noose. The postoffice at that time was on Front Street ; and the late R. J. Wyman, was the postmaster. He fre- quently found such letters in the mails, and the par- ties to whom they were addressed, generally left town hurriedly. On the first of January, 1870, a newspaper call- ed the Platte Valley Independent appeared in the city, and the editor in its columns denounced the Vigilants for being over vigilant, and going too far with their system of intimidation. It is related ITS ASSOCIATIONS 57 that this editor, when asked about the circulation of his paper, said, "My paper goes every where, and it is as much as I can do to keep it from going to h — L" It did not go there, however, but to Grand Is- land after running one year in North Platte and has been published in that city ever since as the Grand Island Independent. Up to 1870, there was not a church in tow^n, but in that year, the Baptists, who had affiliated and worshipped together in private houses, appealed to the citizens for aid to build one, and the handsome sum of eight hundred and fifty dollars was subscrib- ed. This church was erected on the lot occupied by the Oddfellows' Hall, but was removed to its pres- ent site on Fifth street in 1874. Unfortunately, the records of this church are lost, but it is safe to state that its members were never numerous, and that it has had many pastors; and for many years, a struggling existence. At pres- ent it is fairly prosperous. When the Rev. R. B. Favoright, the present pas- tor, was inducted, there were but sixty-eight members, twenty-two of them being non-resident. This was dis- couraging, but by close application and zeal, he has 58 NORTH PLATTE AND succeeded in the four years of his pastorate in in- creasing the number of adherents to one hundred and sixty ; only thirty-nine being non-resident. This congregation purchased the Unitarian prop- erty, corner of Fourth and Locust streets, at a cost of $3,000, and expect to build a church edifice on the site of what was at one time, the Unitarian Hall; the locally historic building having fallen into decay. Before coming to North Platte, Mr. Favoright was stationed at Berwick, 111., for nigh on three years. He is a native of Indiana ; being born in that state in 1873. Acquiring a taste for the ministry in early manhood, he entered Shurtleff College, Upper Alton, 111., in 1895, and in seven years, graduated. He was ordained at Atlanta, 111., in August, 1903, and served as student pastor of different churches for six years. The building of this, the first church in town, was much appreciated, and the Commissioners, in an endeavor to reduce the number of saloons, increased the fee for a liquor license from twenty-five to fifty dollars. Many needed improvements were suggested to ITS ASSOCIATIONS 50 the coininissioners, among them the necessity for a bridge over the South Platte river, the only bridge at the time being that of the railroad. The mode of crossing the North and South rivers was by fords, and the task at times was perilous. A ford of the South Platte much used by persons going to, or coming from Fort McPherson was below the present bridge; and many a wild ride drunken soldiers and cowboys had across it. One soldier named Thomas Casey, in his eagerness to cross, when the river was in flood, was drowned. After much deliberation, the Commissioners at a meeting held in March, 1870, ordered a special elec- tion to vote $30,000 in bonds for the purpose of bridg- ing the South Platte river near town. The election was held, the bonds voted, and Wells, French & Co. of Chicago awarded the contract to build a pile bridge, which they did to their own satisfaction. J. B. Park surveyed a road from the Union Pacific Ho- tel to where the bridge is, and from thence to Fort McPherson, and from it to a point known as Bent's ranch. A. J. Miller and John Hornby were County Commissioners at the time, and sketched a design for the bridge bond warrants. It was sent to J. W. Mid- 60 NORTH PLATTE AND dleton, Lithographer, Chicago, to be printed from, but Lincoln County had no standing, and he would do no work for it unless paid in currency; Mr. Mil- ler, however, had faith in the county, and paid the required $105.50, and accepted a warrant for his pay. The first offer the Commissioners had for bridge war- rants was seventy cents on the dollar, but after- wards, seventy-seven cents was procured, and the Wells, French Company accepted them at that, and went on with the building of the bridge. A bridge east of town was equally requisite, and the Commissioners applied to S. H. Clark, assistant superintendent of the Union Pacific Railroad to find upon what terms their bridge could be used by the general public. They were informed that the use of the bridge for highway travel could be ha;d for three years, with the privilege of five, for the considera- tion of fifteen hundred dollars in Lincoln County warrants. The terms were accepted by the Commis- sioners, and thus approaches to the city from south and east were secured. Parties frequently came from the eastern states, to hunt buffalo, getting off the cars at North Platte and making their headquarters there or at Fort Mc- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 61 Pherson. When the Indians were peaceable, soldiers had leisure and often accompanied hunting parties, or went on their own account. In the fall of 1870, a grand hunt was projected by General Sheridan for the entertainment of James Gordon Bennett, of the New York Herald; General Anson Stager of the Western Union Telegraph Company; Charles Wilson, editor of the Chicago Evening Journal and other dis- tinguished men of the period. They hunted round North Platte for a time, but went to Fort McPher- son where they were received by a company of cav- alry under General Embory, Major Brown and Buf- falo Bill. They had an extended hunt to the south where buffaloes Avere abundant, and where they met with great success. Many hunters went after buffalo then, with no other object than wanton slaughter, but others hunted for profit as well as sport. Hunting parties of citizens and soldiers often went after buffalo and returned from the chase rejoicing. It was in December, 1870, that such a party, of- ficered by Colonel Lieb, Major Urbain and Lieuten- ant Thomas of the Fort, and Lieutenant Tracy of the Post, returned from a foray with the spoils. In 62 NORTH PLATTE AND a day and a half they killed fifty buffaloes, of which Buffalo Bill brought down thirty-three. They had six wagon loads of hams which were divided, the share of .the Post being twenty. Little w^onder that the noble Bison is extermin- ated, and that the buffalo hunter was succeeded by the hunter of buffalo bones. Lynching is not an inviting subject, but as one took place at the railroad bridge and another in town February, 1870, they cannot very well be omit- ted in these associations of North Platte. It was con- sidered that the Vigilants had been fairly successful in ridding the town of undesirable individuals, but when a section foreman named O'Keif was held up by two men armed with revolvers and robbed of some ninety odd dollars at the depot of the Union Pa- cific Railway in presence of the Company's watch- man; and that some time during the same night, the McLueas jewelry store was broken into and robbed, it was evident that some had been overlooked. This burglary seems to have been well planned and neat- ly executed, as nothing was found in or about the premises to give the least clue to the perpetrators. Nathan Russell was sheriff at the time, and Major ITS ASSOCIATIONS 63 William Woodhiirst deputy, and they were as anxious as any that the burglars be apprehended and pun- ished. A simple incident often leads to the detection of crime, and the finding of a tray that jewelers display their wares in, which McLucas claimed as having belonged to him, gave ground for the supposition that the burglars had dropped it while going east by a circuitous route. It was known that some tough characters had taken up their abode in an abandon- ed dobie or sod shack near the railroad bridge, and the sheriff and his deputy went to interview them. On their way they met a man carrying a bundle and searched him, but he made it evident that he was in no way connected with either robbery. When the dobie was reached, the sheriffs entered, and finding it occupied by two men, disarmed them and put them under arrest, Mr. Woodhurst telling them that his companion Avas sheriff and he deputy, and as a robbery had been committed, they had come to search the place. ''All right," said one, "we know nothing of a robbery, and have no hand in this one." They searched, but found nothing to criminate the men. Not satisfied they decided to detain the pris- 64 NORTH PLATTE AND oners and inarching them to town placed them in jail, returning afterwards they searched more thorough- ly, and found the stolen jewelry under a board buried in the sand. Letters were also found, w^iich showed that the men in custody belonged to an or- ganized gang of thieves. When the sheriffs returned to town and announced that the jewelry had been found, great excitement prevailed. The Vigilants met in the log school house to discuss the situation, and agreed to proceed to the bridge and investigate, and if possible find the companion of the men in jail, who, as they stated, had gone hunting. Followed by a crowd, they proceeded along the track to the bridge and found the dobic unoccupied. Soon a man was seen coming across the bridge, who, upon be- ing threatened, said they were the men who robbed the jewlry store. Not satisfied, the questioners in- sisted that he tell all he knew about them. The ter- rified w^retch did so expecting to be released, but the mob was excited, and like all mobs, unreasonable, and on the assumption that he was one of the gang, a rope was produced; an end flung over the limb of a Cottonwood tree near the river, and in a brief space the victim of mob violence dangled in air. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 65 Satisfied with what was accomplished, the crowd returned to town intent upon getting the two men confined in jail. Finding this to be no easy matter, Judge Daugherty was seen, and induced to hold court at six in the evening, and give the suppos- ed robbers a preliminary examination. A board building east of the jail served for a court room at that time. Court being opened with the usual formality the prisoners were brought in. The room was packed, and a mob had gathered out- side, the proceedings were watched with interest. Evidence given, proved them guilty of the robbery, and it soon became evident that many on the outside were anxious to lay hold of the prisoners. When the trial was about concluded, the lights were suddenly extinguished, and the same instant the prisoners were seized and dragged to the street, and one that resist- ed was brutally beaten on the head with the butt of a revolver. A leading business man with a rope in one hand and a revolver in the othei led the waj^ to a telegraph pole to the east of the jail followed by an orderly, but determined crowd. One of the pris- oners made a dash for liberty, running, as only a desperate man would, in the direction of the South 66 NORTH PLATTE AND Platte river, and although pursued and shot at, es- caped. Tlie other prisoner, a powerful dark visaged man, neither pleaded or flinched, but walked with a firm step, and when the rope was being placed round his neck, growled, ''If you are going to hang me, make a good job of it, and don't hang me like a dog." He was hanged, and it is said the object les- son proved beneficial, for many toughs climbed on trains and got out of town. As already stated. Major William Woodhurst was deputy sheriff at the time of these lynchings. He kindly furnished the main facts in the foregoing ac- count of the disgraceful affairs. He got into com- munication with the father of the last victim of local lynch law, and forwarded to him the personal effects of his son, whose end did not greatly surprise him, for seemingly, a bad boy had developed into a bad man. It is said that the body of the man lynched in town was taken to Fort McPherson by an army surgeon for dissection and that the body of the man lynched at the bridge w^as secured by local doctors for the same purpose, and that in ripping the clothes off, a belt around the waist contained several hun- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 67 dreds of dollars in bills was found. The late Dr. F. N. Dick was well versed in local lore, and when speaking* of these lynchings, would say that the story about dis- secting was possibly correct, but he had his doubts about money being found. The culprit who escaped from the lynchers and ran towards the South river was supposed to have gotten away, but some weeks after the lynchings, a cowbo}^ informed Deputy Sheriff Woodhurst that he had found the body of a man near Fremont Slough. Upon investigation, it Avas found to be that of the escaped prisoner. Dr. Dick, who examined the body, said, the man had been shot through the arm and had bound the wound with a handkerchief, but the wound was slight, and not sufficient to cause death; but having forded the river in his terror and fear of pursuit, he had been so chilled that he succumbed and died from exposure. Several who took an active part in these lynch- ings are dead, and others have moved away, but he who placed the rope round the neck of one of the victims, lives, and bitterly regrets that he got mixed up in the disgraceful affair. The tree at the bridge upon which tlie unfortun- 68 NORTH PLATTE AND ate man was lynched, despite his pleading, has long since disappeared, but it was looked at with super- stitious awe by many for it was supposed that a curse clings to a tree upon which a man has been hanged, and that it withers and dies. ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 69 CHAPTER V. Indians steal horses. — Soldiers give chase — Kate Man- ning murder. — Her brother arrested.. — A mob at the jail. — Soldiers called. — Brick making. — First brick buildings. — The old grave yard. — Hinman remains. — The new cemetery. — Col J. B. Park dies. — The Episcopal church and history. — The Unitarian Hall and associations. — Grasshoppers. — St. Patrick's church and pastors. — The parson- age burns. Indians seldom hesitated to appropriate the prop- erty of white settlers when the prospect of escaping with the booty was favorable. On a Sunday morning in March, 1871, the late M. C. Keith had thirteen head of horses grazing be- tween the section house and the Cody residence, when, to the surprise of witnesses, eight Indians rode furiously toward the herd, rounded it up, and drove westward at a rapid pace. An alarm was given, and 70 NORTH PLATTE AND as soon as Major Brown, who was stationed aj the Post with, a company of the Fifth Cavalry was in- formed, he ordered his men out and. gave chase; but the Indians, having a good start were seen far ahead, apparently making for a ford of the North river about seven miles from town. When the soldiers reached the ford, the Indians w^ere disappearing in the hills with the stolen horses. Nothing daunted, the pursu- ers foUow^ed until darkness hid the trail. A fall of snow completely covered it by morning, and Major Brown gave up the chase and returned with his men, all hungry and tired. On the afternoon of the day on which the horses were driven off, three Indians and a squaw came to town from a camp of ninetj^ lodges camped on the Republican near Blackwood Creek, and asked for tra- ders, stating that they had five hundred robes, and that Red Cloud and Spotted Tail and all Indians ex- cept the Winnebagos are going down there if they can get permits; and that buffalo blacken the prairie from near North Platte, to Smoky Hill fork. They were asked about the morning raid, and said that three days ago they came upon a camp of eight Win- nebagos who had mistreated them the previous win- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 71 ter, and they had no doubt tliat they were tlie In- dians that ran off the horses. There was every possibility of their story being correct, but the horses were never recovered. In this narrative we have a glimpse of the wilds of Lincoln County dur- ing the early seventies and the buffalo that blacken- ed the prairie. ''The guilty fleeth when no man pursueth/' so many loafers with no visible means of earning a live- lihood, impressed by the significance of the lynchings got out of town, and people began to go round at all hours without fear of being molested. This tranquil- ity, however, did not last long, for, on the morning of April 9, 1871, a young woman named Kate Man- ning was found dead on the claim she had been hold- ing down, a little southeast of town. It was evident- ly a murder, but as Kate was w^ell known and re- spected, and had no enemies, the c[uestion was, who committed the deed? Major William Woodhurst was sheriff at the time and he speedly had the case in hand. To find a clew, the ground about the tent or shanty w^as examined, and footprints in soft soil evidently made by some one wearing a peculiar shoe were observed. Kate's brother Pete, who kept a sa- 72 NORTH PLATTE AND loon on Front Street, had a deformed foot, and he was arrested on suspicion and placed in jail. Being of a happy disposition, and a general favorite, no one believed him capable of committing such a deed; how- ever, he had threatened to ''jump" his sister *s claim, and this and other circumstances wove a net of cir- cumstantial evidence around him. The shoe he wore on his deformed foot was found to fit the impression in the soft soil so neatly that he was accused of the murder. Lynching was openly spoken of, and a mob of some 300 citizens assembled in front of the jail. Leaders of the previous mob were on hand, and one of them — a then prominent citizen, but now dead — walked up to the door and knocked. Mrs. Woodhurst opened it and asked what was wanted. Being told they wanted admittance to the room in which Pete Manning was confined, she said Mr. Woodhurst was from home, but a well armed deputy was inside pre- pared to protect the prisoner, and if any one enters the jail he would do so at his own risk. Mrs. Wood- hurst's calm demeanor surprised the crowd, and with true American politeness, a deference was shown the feminine defender that would not have been ac- corded the sheriff or his deputy. At this stage, an- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 73 other leader stepped forward and said: "We do not wish any one hurt, but we are going- to get Manning." 'If you want Manning/' Mrs. Woodhurst replied, ' ' get him in a legal way ; but I think you had better go home to your wife, for 1 know she never would sanction you leading a mob." With this admonition she went inside, closing and bolting the door. In the meantime Sheriff Woodhurst returned and comprehending the situation, went to the Commander of the Post and asked for a guard to protect the jail. This was granted, and the leaders of the mob changed their tactics and presented a petition asking him to turn Manning over to them, and censuring him for protecting a murderer. His reply to this was, that being sheriff it was his duty to protect the prisoner, and he would do so. Not to be foiled and lest Man- ning should be spirited away, the citizens put a guard at the jail to prevent him being removed without their knowledge. This state of affairs continued for five days, to the annoyance of Major Brown and the sheriff, but the sheriff was equal to the occasion, and procuring a soldier's uniform caused Manning to put it on in the morning and march to the Post with the guard when it was relieved. The scheme worked, and 74 NORTH PLATTE AND in this way he was taken to Fort McPherson guard- ed by soldiers, to be kept until called for. The Vigilants soon discovered that the prisoner was gone and where he had been taken to, and sent a committee to Port McPherson to w^ait on General Embory and demand the surrender of Manning. When the general was informed of their mission, he told them that he would give them ten minutes to get off the reservation, and they did so without demonstrance. When a week had passed, Sheriff Woodhurst went to the fort and brought Manning to North Platte and put him in jail, but there was no further trouble, the excitement having subsided. Manning had a hearing and stoutly maintained his innocence, declaring that he was in no way con- nected with the murder of his sister. Circumstan- tial evidence, was strongly against him and he was committed for trial, but owing to local prejudice was granted change of venue to Grand Island. After a trial that lasted several days, he was acquitted and returned to North Platte, financially and physical- ly ruined, and after a seige of ill health, died within three years. Manning's bar-tender was suspected of being ITS ASSOCIATIONS 75 implicated in the murder, or having a guilty knowl- edge of it, and although arrested and examined there was no evidence to connect him with the crime, and he was turned loose. The citizens, however, were not satisfied, and the Vigilants w^aylaid him and tried to induce him to make a confession, and to empha- size the request, produced a rope and used him rough- ly, but to no purpose. Although threatened with death, he denied all knowledge of the crime, and maintained that he knew nothing about the guilt or innocence of "Pete'.' Manning; where he was, or what he did on the night of the murder. If he knew, he kept his own council, and who murdered Kate Manning remains an unsolved mystery. The Manning incident past, quietness and order again reigned in the city. Houses w^ere built at inter- vals, mostly by Railroad men; for to their frugality, the phenomenal growth of North Platte is mainly due. The cost of building material greatly retarded the erection of homes. The making of brick from clay found in the neighborhood of the city had been thought of and tried, but with no great success; yet, on April 17, 1872, A. M. Oliver, then road supervisor, 76 NORTH PLATTE AND appeared before the Commissioners and proposed to burn a kiln of one hundred thousand brick made of clay found near town, and to test its capability, ask- ed them to advance him the sum of two hundred and tAventy-five dollars. Said brick, he averred, could be profitably made and deliA^ered for fifteen dollars a thousand. The Commissioners did not comply with the request, but promised to take it into considera- tion. The result was, they concluded to offer a re- ward of five hundred dollars for the first five thou- sand good merchantable brick made of clay found in the vicinity of North Platte. On May 31, 1873, A. T. Gillet appeared before the Commissioners and claimed the reward. To qu )te from the County Rec- ords: "The Commissioners and many citizens having gone and examined the kiln of brick burnt by A. H. Gillet, was fully satisfied that said brick are as good as are made in the State of Nebraska, and the Com- missioners order that said A. H. Gillet be paid the $500 reward for making the first 5,000 merchant- able brick in the county." The first brick house in the city w^as built by A. H. Gillet, and still stands on the corner of East 4th and Pine streets, and after its erection brick began ITS ASSOCIATIONS 77 to be used as building material to a degree that changed the architectural features of the city; all stores, public buildings and a few residences being constructed of the material. The Smallwoods, Wil- kinsons and others, tried to make brickmaking a busi- ness, but owing to the cost of fuel and the difficulty to find proper clay it could not be made profitable, and the making of brick is now a vanished local in- dustry. In the early seventies, dwelling houses were some- what scattered, but none of them were far from Front Street. The corner of 4th and Locust Streets at that time was on the outskirt of town, and there North Platte's first burying ground was spread out. It extended south into the lot now occupied b}^ the Peniston house and west beyond the old home of Joseph McConnell. There was a number of unmarked graves, but a few were indicated by small memorial stones and boards; and as late as 1881 several re- mained, but the street grader swept them away, and the traffic on Fourth Street rumbles over the re- mains of persons whose identity is forgotten. In digging a trench for a main pipe in 1887, waterworks workmen unearthed human bones and pieces of cof- 78 NORTH PLATTE AND fins, and, it is affirmed, the bodies of two soldiers who probably died at the Post; and in digging a cel- lar on the McConnell lot, a much decayed coffin con- taining bones was found ,and Fred Marti frequently found remnants of mortality under the soil near his dwelling. Old residents fail to remember when this burying ground began to be, but undoubtedly, like other frontier towns, some one had to get killed before a graveyard could be started ,and this one, according to A. J. Miller, had its beginning in like manner. It seems that early in 1867, a would be bad man got crazy drunk, and flourishing his revolver endeavored to find trouble. Failing, he threw it on the ground which it no sooner hit than it exploded and killed him. That this man was the first buried there, is possibly correct, but at least two ''old timers" af- firm that there were graves there when he was buried and they were supposed to be of persons murdered by Indians, and travelers who died on the way when going west in search of wealth. Be that as it may, it is said that many men lie there who died with their boots on in days when every man carried a re- volver and was not slow to use it when fired by pas- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 79 sion and whisky. That the people of North Platte buried their dead there is well known, and also that a few bodies were moved to the new cemetery when the town began to encroach. Probably the last person buried in the old bury- ing ground was a prominent Free Mason named Richard Ormsby who died at Fort McPherson on the 11th of January, 1870, and was interred the follow- the day with Masonic Honors. The funeral was the largest ever seen in North Platte, there being one hundred and twenty-five present. The funeral services were conducted by the Rev. Rees of Fort McPherson, and at their conclusion the Free Masons engaged in their solemn ceremony. It is stated in the County Records that a depu- tation waited on the Commissioners and asked them to have the bodies in the old graveyard exhumed and buried elsewhere, but after giving the request due consideration, they concluded they had no jurisdic- tion. An increasing population soon made a cemetery beyond the city limits an absolute necessity, and a meeting of citizens w^as held on December 13, 1872, to talk the matter over. The result was that Jona- 80 NORTH PLATTE AND than Rogers was elected temporary chairman; R. C. Daugherty, secretary, and B. I. Hinman, treasurer. Matters being so far arranged, another meeting was held on June 13, 1873, and at it the North Platte Cemetery Association Avas organized, and an ar- rangement made that five acres of land be purchased from Franklin Peale at twenty dollars an acre, and that the purchase money draw ten per cent in- terest until i)aid. Also, that the price of double lots in the cemetery be twenty dollars, and single ones ten. John F. Kramph was the first man buried in the new cemetery, and Kate Manning the first woman, Mr. Kramph is remembered as being diligent, and of a genial sympathetic disposition. Kate had many friends, and her tragic and untimely death evoked much sympathy. A marble slab erected to her mem- ory, states that she ''died May 9th, 1871, aged 27 years, 10 months and 15 days" Her grave was long- attended to and kept neat, but it is now forgotten, covered with rank grass, and the slab lies broken in- to. In August, 1881, the Association purchased ten ac};es of land adjoining the cemetery from Mrs. AV. F. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 81 Co(\y to make a much needed extension, as the re- pository of the city's dead was slowly ])ut surely ])ecomiing inadequate. At this date, the cemetery presents a some- what hleak appearance, having been swept by prairie fires on several occasions. There are many tasteful memorial stones and neatly kept graves, but the neglected and forgotten predominate. The cemetery books were long kept without method or order, and on this account, the number of interments is unknown, but since they came into the hands of George French, entries are made in a way that the identity of persons buried can be ascertain- ed, and their graves located. It was on June 27, 1873, that the eyes of Col. Josiah B. Park, a popular pioneer citizen, were closed in everlasting sleep after a somewhat event- ful and arduous life. He was born April 1, 1831, and served in the Fourth Michigan Cavalry ,and saw much active service during the war of the rebellion, and it is supposed that his death was accelerated by wounds he then received. He came to Omaha with his family in August, 1866, and soon thereafter procured surveying con- 82 NORTH PLATTE AND tracts from the Government. The pursuit of his pro- fession brought him to western Nebraska, and it is said that in his time he drove corner stakes for nearly every section in Lincoln and adjacent coun- ties; and that one day he stepped out on a bluff overlooking "The Points" and unexpectedly beheld the waters of the North and South Platte rivers meet and mingle, and a long stretch of the Platte Val- ley in all its primitive beauty. He was a lover of Nature, and the scene so impressed him that he long- ed to locate in it, or in its immediate vicinity, and at once began to seek a location, and this is what in- duced him to homes^tead land in the immediate vi- cinity of North Platte as narrated in the second chap- ter. Like most men, he had hobbies, and his chief one was irrigation. This he put to the best by convey- ing water by ditch to his claim from the South Platte river, and demonstrated that crops could be successfully grown on the then arid soil of Nebraska by the application of moisture. He was accomplished in many ways, and had a taste for literature as well as for agriculture. He is- sued the ''Lincoln County Advertiser," a success- ful newspaper that held the field for some time, but ITS ASSOCIATIONS 83 surveying was his forte, and his services were often called for by the Government, the Union Pacific Railway Company and the County. He left a widow and two children, a boy about thirteen, and a girl about twelve who died. The boy, William Lee Park, went braking out of North Platte at the early age of sixteen. He worked diligently, saving what he could from his earnings until he got sufficient money to enable him to take a course at Baylie's Commercial College at Keokuk, Iowa. At the age of eighteen he was promoted to freight con- ductor, and at twenty-two was permanently assigned a like position on a passenger train. All along he made railroading a study, and labored assiduously to master its intricacy. At thirty, he was appointed As- sistant Superintendent of the Union Pacific Railway at North Platte, and in 1900 was given charge of the Wyoming division, and in February, 1904, was made General Superintendent. At this date, 1910, he is Vice President of the Illinois Central Railway ; and such is the remarkable career of a North Platte boy whose only capital was confidence in himself and the diligent discharge of duties assigned him. The Episcopalians built a small frame church on 84 NORTH PLATTE AND West Fourth street in 1873, when the district was sparsely built up. Tliis church was moved in 1892, and replaced by the present building, which is some- what imposing in ajipearance. Internally, it is com- pact and neat, and the stained glass windows Avitli which it is adorned, shed a hallowed light. The most conspicuous is one to the memory of Susan C. Keith, a founder of the parish, who died September 2o, 1877; and another over the altar, to the memory of John McNamara, D. D., a former rector, who died, October 24, 1885, aged sixty years. Dr. McNamara entered upon his duties as pastor of this church September 21, 1884, and ministered un- til the time of his death. He was highly esteemed, and under his care, the parish prospered. He was born in County Down, Ireland, December 27, 1825, He served during the civil war in the First Wiscon- sin Volunteer Infantry, and was afterwards assistant rector. Church of the Holy Communion, New Yorlv City, and cliaplain of St. Luke's Hospital, New York, 1875, and President of Nebraska College, Nebraska City, 1882, previous to coming to North Platte. This church Avhieh bears the name of the Chur. h of Our Saviour, like other churches in the city, liad ITS ASSOCIATIONS 85 m Episcopal Church, North Platte. 86 NORTH PLATTE AND its beginning in the harmony of beliefs and ideas, which in some way influence people to combine and worship together, as Avill be seen from the following excerpt from its neatly kept records : The first services of this church were held by Bishop Clarkson in a room of the Union Pacific Hotel before a missionary was appointed. The dates of these services were about 1869-70. The Rev. John Lyon, missionary at Grand Island held services during 1870-4, and the families promi- nently connected with the church, were those of M. C. Keith, Mr. W. J. Patterson, and also Mrs. Mary E. Kramph. Mr. Patterson and Mr. Richard Rogers were the first wardens, and were appointed, probably in 1872. The Union Pacific Railroad Company gave the half block of ground on which the church is erected, and a prominent citizen gave Bishop Clarkson fif- teen hundred dollars privately, towards the cost of erecting a church building. This fact was made known to Mr. William Patterson by the Rev. John Lyon immediately. Mr. Patterson prepared a sub- scription paper, and in a few hours secured eight hun- dred dollars. A pencilling on the wall of vestry ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 87 room read as follows: ''This church was consecrated by the Right Reverend Robert H. Clarkson on the festival of the Ascension, 1873." Beach I. Hinman, M. C. Keith and William Patterson were amongst those that gave the most liberally. The ladies of the town led by Mrs. M.C. Keith, Avere untiring in their labors for the church from the first. Early in the year 1874, the Rev. Frank E. Bullard deacon, was appointed bj^ Bishop Clarkson to take charge of the perish. This registry of official acts began during his pastorship. The last official acts of Mr. Bullard in the parish were done in July, 1879. During 1880, the Rev. A. J. Graham of Grand Island frequently visited the parish, his visits were highly appreciated. It was during the vacancy of the rectorship, that the ladies led in a movement for a rectory. Early in the year 1881, the Rev. W. G. Hawkins of central New York was called to the rectorship. The people became very earnest in church work. Mrs Mary Nichols, Miss Mollie Keith and Mr. H. N. Jones are at this time specially noted. The Ladies' Church Guild accomplished much good. The rec- tory was completed at a cost of about $3,000. The SS N(3UTn PLATTE AND ladies secnricg at least $1,000, Mrs. Mary Nichols bestowing much necessary furniture. The Clarkson seliool was set on foot — the build- ing cost $800. In February, 1882, a great desire was expressed that the Rev. A. J. Graham might be secured to take the rectorship, the Rev. W G. Hawkins having re- signed, but his health would not allow him to accept. The parish remained vacant from February, 1882, until the following October, when the Rev. Alexander Allen of Dorcas, Toronto, Canada, was called. Mr. Allen resigned at Easter, 1883. The parish remained vacant from the latter date, until KSeptember, 1884, when John McNamara, D. D. was called. The parish was very prosperou:; under his care, but on October 24, 1885, he died suddenly from a stroke of paralysis. The Rev. John II. Babcock of Red Oak, Iowa, accept- ed the call, and entered upon his duties, December 23, 1885, and resigned. May 26, 1886, having been sent by the bishop to take charge of the work at Sidney, Nebraska. The parish continued without service until No- vember 6, wlien the Rev. John M. Bates of Topeka. Kansas, at the invitation of Bishop Worthiugton, as- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 89 sullied charge of the parish, on November L5. He re- ceived and accepted a call to take charge of St. Paul's Mission in the city of Omaha. At the bishop's suggestion, and invitation of the vestry, the Rev. George Grimes spent the month of September 1888, in ministering to the parish, and accepted a call to the rectorship at a salary of $1000 per annum, together with the use of the rectory, and entered upon his duties. He found almost sixty communicants. Fre- quent and long vacancies in the rectorship had left matters in a disorganized state, and the people more or less scattered, but lively interest induced them to draw together. A large guild of ladies was formed, and work began immediately and the rectory was re- paired and put in a satisfactory condition for occu- pancy. A Sunday school was organized with sixteen pu- pupils in September, 1888, and by Easter day, 1890, they numbered sixty-f^ve, and the parish was in a united and flourishing condition. Since that time, the Episcopal church has been progressive, and a moral influence in the city. It has had several able and popular rectors who have aided to build up a con- gregation that includes many prominent families. 90 NORTH PLATTE AND Presently, 1910, there are 250 communicants, and 220 scholars attending two Sunday schools connected with the church. The present rector, the Rev. C. F. Chapman, B. A. B. D., was appointed to the charge October 13, 1905. Mr. Chapman was born at Piedmont, West Vir- ginia, on the 17th of April, 1872, where his father, the late Ephraim Chapman, practiced medicine but afterwards removed with his parents to Keyser, W. v., ^where he spent his boyhood. When ten years old, his father died, and his mother, himself, and three other children were reft of a loving protector. After the bereavement, Mrs. Chapman and children lived with her father, Mr. John Russell of Berlin, Pennsylvania, where Mr. Chapman graduated from the public school and acquired a trade. Being of a studious disposition and cultured mind, he took a pre- liminary course, and entering college at Deal-ware, Ohio, graduated in 1895 with the degree of B. A., and after spending three years at Bexley Theological school, was ordained to the deaconate, and in 1899, to the priesthood of the Episcopal church; and short- ly thereafter was appointed rector of Emmanual church, Cincinnati, Ohio, and coming to Nebraska, ITS ASSOCIATIONS 91 assumed charge of Christ Church, Central City, May 1 1902, and the same year, married Miss Carry Garlick, of Cincinnati. The snug parsonage, adjacent to the church, is occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Chapman and their three healthful children. Mr. Chapman is justly popular, and esteemed by his congregation and the general public. It is safe to state that the Rev. George A. Beecher, who was rector of this church for eight years, was the most popular clergyman, in and out of the church the town ever had. He was born at Monmouth, Illinois, in 1868, and came with his par- ents to Kearney, Nebraska, when fourteen years old. He attended the University of Nebraska from 1886 to 1889, and then the Divinity school at Philadelphia, graduating in 1892. He was ordained to the deacon- ic in 1892, and went to Fort Sidney, where he was stationed until 1895. Being ordained to the priest- hood, he was called to the pastorate of the Church of Our Saviour, and from this charge was transferred to St. Luke's church, Kearney, and from thence to Omaha in 1904 as dean of Trinity Cathedral. In that city he distinguished himself as a leading sociologist ; 92 NORTH PLATTE AND for in every field of charitable work among the poor, and in every endeavor to improve their condition, and rescue children from paths of vice and crime, Dean Beecher was active. In October, 1910, he was appointed bishop of Kearney, an honor, universally conceded, he well merits. Up to 1873, North Platte had no hall or suitable place in which to hold meetings or entertainments, and the few Unitarians who had gathered round Mrs. E. J. Cogswell, a missionary of the faith, concluded to erect a building that would serve for a public hall and place of worship This they did at a cost of $3,300, and it became known as the Unitarian hall. It still stands, battered and weatherworn at the cor- ner of West Fourth and Locust streets, and has passed through many vicissitudes. Unitarianism was never popular in North Platte, and the consequence was, that adherants were few, and funds scant. The American Unitarian association gave liberal financial aid, and sent several pastors in an endeavor to es- tablish a church, but limited audiences and an un- certain salary were not encouraging and none of them remained long. This small body of christians struggled along for years, some times with a pastor ITS ASSOCIATIONS ' 93 but more often witliout, until it became almost ex- tinct. Archibald K. Adamson endeavored to rally lo- cal Unitarians avIio had become indifferent, and suc- ceeded in keeping a congregation together for a lengthened period, but he was the last to conduct serv- ices in the hall under the Unitarian banner, for dis- sention caused disruption, and in 1902 the property got into the hands of a very few who sold it and ap- propriated the money. It was by Mrs. Cogswell's un- wearied zeal that money was raised to pay for the building, and it is questionable if they who profited by the sale ever contributed a cent. The parties in that deal will doubtless feel small when they meet Mrs. Cogswell ''in the sweet by and by," for it was a poor requital for her devotion and labor. As already stated, Mrs. E. J. Cogswell came to North Platte in 1838 and organized the first Sun- day school. She afterwards engaged in teaching and missionary work, and held religious meetings before there were any resident ministers. She also taught music and singing, and performed funeral services in the absence of a clergyman, and was first and foremost in all enterprises for the improvement of the people. Many friends in the east were inter- 94 NORTH PLATTE AND ested in her work, and contributed books for her Sun- day school, money for the support of the church, and clothing for destitute families. She was always plan- ning to help the uniortunate and suffering, and ready to render service 'to others. Owing to failing health, she returned to her early home in Lexington, Mas- sachusetts, and after two years of feebleness, died on the 23rd of July, 1897. Her devotion to the I^ni- tarian faith continued to the last, and it is to be re- gretted that the latter days of her life were embit- tered by the knowledge that her work at North Platte was a failure. ^ 1874 is memorable as the year of the first grass- hopper plague in Nebraska. The pest came in clouds and ate up every green thing. The grasshoppers cov- ered the ground to a depth of from two to three inches, and on occasions the Union Pacific railway trains were stopped, the moisture from the crushed bodies of the hoppers on the rails causing wheels to slip. This visitation caused great destitution amongst farmers and homesteaders, and in response to an ap- peal for aid to the ever generous American people, food and clothing were sent from the east to Ne- braska and neighboring states. In 1875 the plague ITS ASSOCIATIONS 95 was not so virulent, but in 1876, grasshoppers cloud- ed the sky and obscured the sun; trees being strip- ped of leaves the prairie of grass and crops de- voured. Again destitution ensued, and again a gen- erous public responded to an appeal for aid. In the fall of 1875, the Knights of Pythias erected a two-story building for a hall which was much ad- mired at the time, but it has undergone many intern- al changes, and the Knights are no longer a popular order in North Platte. No body of christians are so attached to their church as Catholics, and no clergy so devoted and' self- sacrificing as theirs. Early in 1867 when North Platte was remote, and far from civilization. Father Ryan of Columbus came and sought out Catholics and celebrated mass in a sod house west of the depot, and a gentleman who was present states that he believed it to have been the first mass celebrated in the dis- trict. Afterwards, he came at intervals and offi- ciated until the appointment of Father Lynch in 1875. Father Lynch was the first resident priest, and it was mainly through his exertion that St. Patrick's church, a neat frame building, was erected. In 1880, he was succeeded by Father Conway, and it was during the 96 NORTH PLATTE AND ITS ASSOCIATIONS \)i Rev. Conway's incumbency that the frame cliurt h was removed and the present brick church and par- sonage built at a cost of $10,000. Several clergy- men have succeeded the Rev. Conway, notably, Fa- thers 0. Tool, Fitzgerald, McCarthy and Haley. The present incumbent is the Rev. Steven F. Carrol. The old frame church, converted into a school, stands near the new church. In 1879 the parsonage caught fire and came near being consumed. There was no fire brigade in those days. When a fire occurred the Union Pa- cific shop whistle blew and everybody grabbed a bucket or other utensil and ran, and in brief space every pump in the neighborhood w^as brought into requisition. This fire was valiently fought and extin- guished, but not before great damage was done and the building rendered untenantable. The Rev. Burns w^as officiating at t'.he church at the time, and re- sided at the home of Mrs. Dwyer on Front street un- til repairs were made, and received the care and at- tention the delicate state of his health required. Next to the Dwyer home was a notorious saloon kept by two burly Irishmen named Brady which was . a resort of cowboys and the rough etement of the 98 NORTH PLATTE AND town. The cowboys would often ride up and down in front of the saloon, and by whoops, yells and fir- ing- revolvers in the air, render night hidious. People thought little of this, but the Rev.' Burns being sick, the kindly heart of Mrs. Dwyer sympathised with him, and fearing the unusual noise of a particular night disturbed her patient, she went into the saloon and asked the Brady's to induce ''the boys" to' quiet down. They blankly refused. ''Have you no respect for the clergy?" she asked. "We have," said they, "but we will not have our business interfered with." Mrs. Dwyer informed the invalid of her interview with the Brady's, and he languidly said, "Never, mind Mrs. Dwyer, the green grass will grow on the place where their saloon now stands." And so it came to pass. The Brady 's did not live a great while after, and where their saloon stood is now a blue grass lawn. Mrs. Dwyer was a benevolent, kind-hearted soul, but she now rests in our cemetery with other pio- neers. At that time, the Union Pacific shops being un- usually busy, industrious workmen prospered, and the town continued to grow. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 99 CHAPTER VI. First Mayor and City Council. — Court House built. — Second city election. — Women debarred from sa- loons. — First grading of streets. — Third city election. — James Belton elected mayor — Condition of city streets. — North Side in 1878. — ^An Indian scare. — Presbyterian church history. — The town goes dry. — First sidewalks. — Keith block and its associations. — McDonald block and first bank in city. — The M. E. church and its pastors. There were two factions in North Platte in 1874. One held that the simple method of early days by which the city was governed was satisfactory, and the other, that it would be moreso if a mayor and city council elected by the people conducted local af- fairs. Details of the controversy being of little im- portance at this date, it is sufficient to state that North Platte had the population and standing at the time to entitle it to municipal government, and that 100 NORTH PLATTE AND the popular party apt>lied for a charter and got it. There was little to attract public attention in those days, and the novelty of a local election caused con- siderable excitement. Candidates were put forward, an election held, and the following gentlemen chosen to fill city offices: Anthony Hies, mayor; Alexander Struther, treasurer; E. H. Barrett, clerk; A. H. Church, judge ; A.Walker, marshal; J. W. LaMunyon, engineer. Councilmen — First ward, W. J. Patterson, and J. D, Wilson; Second ward, Russell Watts and E. D. Thoelecke; Third Avard, Claus Mylander and W. C. Bogue. Anthony Ries took his seat as mayor, April 14, 1875, and preside^d at the first council meeting held at North Platte. This council had much to contend with, and accomplished little in the way of city improvements during its brief term of office. Early in 1876 the court house was finished and turned over to the commissioners. It was pro- nounced a well arranged, imposing building, which it certainly was at the time, but times have changed, and so have the requirements of Lincoln county, and what was never dreamt of, it is now in the heart of the city. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 101 The second election of city officers was held in 1876, and resulted as follows : Anthony Ries, mayor ; J. Rogers, treasurer; E. H. Barrett, clerk; W. S. Peniston, police judge; A. L Walker, marshal, J. W. LaMunyon, engineer, Councilmen — First ward, W. J. Patterson and J. Schatz; Second ward, W. F. Wright and A. J. Miller ; Third ward, W. C. Bogue and George F. Snell- ing. At the first meeting of this council, the mayor drew attention to the condition of the streets, sev- eral being almost impassable after rain, and urged that vice in every form be suppressed. There was ample room for reform, for saloons were numerous, and women of questionable character frequented them, and it was nothing unusual to see cowboys and maid- ens fair having '*a high old time" in such places in full view of passers by. After appointing commit- tees, the mayor selected Bogue, Miller and Schatz to frame "An ordinance to prohibit lewd women from entering or visiting saloons. "' This was done and ap- proved, and became law January 16, 1877, and no ordinance has been so rigorously enforced or ob- served, for women are never seen in or around such 102 NORTH PLATTE AND places in North Platte. It was during this council's administration that city streets were first graded, and the first sidewalks and crossings laid down. The members had high as- pirations, and had a scheme to beautify the city with a system of irrigation ditches, water to be obtained from the north 'river, but after careful sur- veying the city, engineer .pronounced the scheme impracticable. The election of candidates for municipal honors to serve during the year 1877 was spirited, and re- sulted in the following gentlemen being elected: W. M. Hinman, mayor; J. Rogers, treasurer; E, H. Bar- rett, clerk ; W. S. Peniston, police judge ; G. Butter- field, marshal; J. W. LaMunyon, engineer. Councilmen — First ward, J. Worthley and J. Schatz; Second ward, Charles McDonald and A. Fer- guson; Third ward, W. C. Bogue and George Mason, This council found little money in the treasury, and being unable to make many city improvements were caustically criticised; a petition signed by James Belton and sixty-seven others calling for its ''total abrogation" being presented. This petition did not worry the council, for after being read, it ITS ASSOCIATIONS 103 was "laid on the table" and the council went plod- ding along undeterred until the time came for it to step down and out. At the somewhat hotly contested election of city officers to serve during the year 1878, James Belton was elected mayor with a majority of 168 votes; T. J. Foley, treasurer; T. Keliher, clerk; A. H. Church, police judge ; Samuel Watts, engineer. Councilmen elected were : First ward, J. Worth- ly and J. Schatz; Second ward, James Babbitt and Charles McDonald; Third ward, George Mason and Goodale. When James Belton took his seat as mayor of North Platte, April 15, 1878, the few streets of the city most frequented were in a deplorable condition with mud and filth after rain. A resolution pre- sented to the council in the spring of that year gives a graphic word picture of their appearance. It fol- lows : "Resolved by Charles McDonald that the present condition of Locust street, between Fourth and Front streets, and of Fifth street, between Locust and the southeast corner of the government post is a stand- ing disgrace to our fair city, being a nuisance that 104 NORTH PLATTE AND should be at once abated. Therefore, resolved that the committee on streets and bridges be, and they are hereby authorized, and made their duty to pro- ceed at once and have said streets well repaired by ditches, bridges and putting in cross-walks so that the citizens of our city may be able to travel those streets, and the frog ponds of filthy, stagnent water be dried up.'' This resolution was adopted, but it does not ap- pear that it was ever put in force, however, in iti we have a glimpse of the city streets as they were in 1878. There were few dwelling houses on the north side then, but among the residents were "W. C. Bogue, S. W. Bye, Clause Mylander, the Frazers and VanDor- ans. It may be remarked that Mylander planted the first trees on the north side, and that they were a land mark for many years. For a long time there were no other trees, and the scene, east, west and north was uninviting prairie containing many sloughs and marshes difficult to cross, but the council re- modled this by having foot bridges built. During the Belton administration, the Indians got on the warpath, and committed deeds of rapine ITS ASSOCIATIONS lOo in the district no great distance from the city. For home protection, a body of citizens called the Noith Platte Guards was organized. These patriots were commanded by Major North of Pawnee fame, and had John Bratt for first lieutenant. The mayor and council petitioned Silas Garber, then governor of Ne- braska, to send arms, and in due time, 180 rifles with ammunition reached the imperiled city. This scare, like previous ones passed, but the coum-il chamber looked like an arsenal while it lasted and when the rifles were returned, a resolution signed by the mayor, was sent to the governor, thanking him *'for his consideration for the lives and property of the citizens of North Platte." James Belton served the city faithfully as mayor, but at the next election, R. J. Wyman was elected with a majority of 263 votes, and Mr. Belton retired, generously donating his salary to the city. When R. J. Wyman took his seat as mayor, x4pril 5, 1879, he announced in his inaugural address that he was opposed to all forms of vice in the city, and as liquor was at the root of most evils, its sale with- in the city limits ought to be suppressed. The ma- jority of the councilmen agreed with him, and despite 106 NORTH PLATTE AND reasons given by the minority that a crusade of the kind would be ineffectual, applications for renewals of saloon licenses lay on the table disregarded, and it was ''Resolved, that his honor the mayor notify, through the city marshal, all persons engaged in selling intoxicating liquors, that no licenses to sell liquor in North Platte will be granted by the coun- cil. '^ The foregoing resolution became law May 6, 1879, and the town Avas declared *'dry" and it may be remarked that North Platte was the first (supposed to be) "dry" town in the state of Nebraska. Law in those days was loosely administered and western life too free and easy for saloon keepers to be deterred from selling liquor by any such meas- ure, and they went right along doing business, with the slight difference that beer was called "butter- milk" and sold under that name. The fact that saloon keepers continued doing business being brought to the attention of council the marshal was ordered to suppress the sale of liquor, and close all houses of prostitution within the city. The order of the council and the marshal were alike unheeded, and mattet-s went on, the mud in the ITS ASSOCIATIONS 107 streets becoming deeper, and pools of stagnant water undiminished. Although this councirs idea of prohibition was somewhat crude, it passed sOme good measures one be- ing an ordinance to prohibit shooting within the limits of the city, and carrying deadly weapons; al- so, making the construction of sidewalks compulsory. Such is a glimpse of the doings of the city fathers in days gone by, when North Platte was emerging from the primitive and becoming a fit claimant for a place among the cities of Nebraska. Persons of the same creed have a tendency to get together and worship in unison. Ten Presby- terians combined in 1873, and at a meeting held in the Baptist church in June of that year, a church w^as organized by the Hev. N. C. Hobinson, superin- tendent of missions for southwestern Iowa and Ne- braska. The congregation worshipped in the Baptist church until the autumn of 1877, and afterwards in the court house hall until the summer of 1878 when it moved into a small frame church built by the con- gregation. This church stood on the west side of Dewey street on the site now occupied by the Keith theater. In course of time it came to be sandwiched 108 NORTH PLATTE AND between much higher buildings and looked the most unpretentious place of worship in town. The congre- gation, however, had high aspirations, and in 1905 the sanctuary was moved from shade to sunshine and ITS ASSOCIATIONS 109 placed on the corner of Fourth and Willow streets, and there it remained until the fall of 1909, when it was torn down to make room for the finest church building in the city. It is in the Gothic style and con- structed of pressed brick, and has a belfry and tow- er. The property including lots, is presently valued at $28,000. The interior of this church is spacious and fitted with every modern convenience. The windows are of brilliant art glass. One portrays Christ in Gethse- manie, and another a luminous picture of ''The Cre- ation." A melodiously toned organ that cost $2,500 completes this well arranged place of worship. This fine sanctuary was dedicated Sunday, June 26, 1910. Dr. Thomas B. Greenlee, a former pastor, preached the sermon, and following the simple cere- mony of dedication Dr. W. H. Kearns offered an im- pressive prayer, and at its conclusion, all understood that the building was set apart for the service of God. The Rev. George Franklin Williams, M. A., is a son of the late Rev. George Williams, D. D. He re- ceived his education in Bellevue college and Prince- ton Theological Seminary, and did post graduate work in Princeton University. He was ordained by 110 NORTH PLATTE AND the Presbytery of Omaha, in September, 1899, at Ban- croft, and was inducted to the charge, May 1, 1909. Mr. Williams is a fluent and attractive speaker, and since his settlement, the congregation has increased and become prosperous. During the ten years of his ministry, all of which has been in Nebraska, he has gained a wide acquaintance over the state, and at a meeting of the Presbyterian Synod in October, 1910, was elected moderator. He is, presently, the most popular clergyman in and out of the church the town has known. Early in 1880, several shacks and a frame build- ing on the corner of Front and Dewey streets in which P. J. Cohn & Company had a clothing store were moved, and on their sites a brick block was built. It was much admired at the time, but it was only the forerunner of similar buildings. ^'Beache's Bank," as it was termed, was in this building, and the Star clothing house, conducted by the late H. Otten, occupied the corner store room up to May, 1886, when he vacated the premises in favor of the newly organized First National bank which went in- to business with a paid up capital of $50,000. The upper floor of this building has been transformed sev- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 111 eral times. At first it figured as the Keith hall and was rented for entertainments, but as that did not pay, it was divided into rooms designed for offices. The land office was located in it, and many lawyers procured a precarious livelihood acting for home- steaders in contest cases and such like. The North Platte Telegraph had its birth in one of the rooms in 1881, the redoubtable James McNulty being pro- prietor and editor. James sold out, September 1st, 1883 and left the city, but the paper survives after many vicissitudes as a daily and weekly. Early in 1882, Charles McDonald erected the fine brick building on the west corner of Front and Dewey streets and installed therein the McDonald State bank, which is the oldest banking house in town. It began as the McDonald and Walker bank, and was located in a small frame building on Dewey street, but in 1878, Mr. McDonald purchased his partner's interest in the. business and carried it on in his own name. In 1891, he bought the imposing building corner at Sixth and Dewey streets, and transferred his bank to the corner room, February 22, 1902, and there the McDonald State Bank pros- pers. 112 NORTH PLATTE AND The North Platte National bank occupied the premises in which the McDonald State bank is lo- cated. The late Dr. A. D. Buckworth, who came from Hastings, Nebraska in 1872, to be register of the United States land office, was its president, and Samuel Goozee the cashier, but in some av9J, its af- fairs got tangled up, and after a brief existence, its door was closed on December 19, 1894, and its af- fairs passed into the hands of a receiver. It was in 1882 that the corner stone of the first Methodist Episcopal church was laid, but it was not until 1883 that the building was completed and dedi- cated to the worship of God by Bishop P. Hurst. The cost was $3,500. This church was organized in February 1877, with fifteen members, and as near as can be ascer- tained, they were, iMrs. J. H. McConnell, Mrs. Charles McDonald, Miss Alice Darly, Miss Alice Tink- ham, Mrs. B. L. Robinson, Charles Ormsby, Mrs, Mak- inson, Mrs. Morgan Davis, Mrs. Emma Marsh, Mrs. George Simpson, Mrs. J. Beattly, Mrs. Charles Hall, Mrs. A. B. Hall, Mrs. D. W. Adamson and Mrs. A. M. Mason. The first meetinjgs for worship were held in the ITS ASSOCIATIONS 11:] court house hall, afterwards in the Unitarian hall, then in the Baptist church, and again in the court house hall until a church was built. The first pastor was the Rev. J. C. Stoughton who was appointed in 1877 and removed in 1878.'' He was succeeded by the Rev. Edward Thompson who was appointed in March, 1878, and removed in Octo- ber, 1879. He was followed by the Rev. P. C. John- son, October, 1879, and it was during his pastorate the first church building was erected. The Rev. John- son was removed in October, 1882, and was followed by the Rev. Joel A. Smith who remained one year. The Rev. W. G. Vessels was appointed in 1888, and remained until September, 1886, when the Rev. W. A. Amsbury was appointed and removed in 1887, to take the district. The Rev. George W. Martin followed and was removed in 1888, to give place to the Rev. A. J. Clifton who remained until the close of 1890. The next pastor Avas the Rev. Erastus Smith who served two years. The Rev. W. E. Hardaw^'y was ap- pointed in October, 1892, and was removed in Septem- ber, 1895. The Rev. C. C. Suavely followed and serv- ed the charge until September, 1898, Avlien the Rev. C. C. Wilson was appointed. Since the Rev. Wil- 114 NORTH PLATTE AND son's time, C. P. Wimberly, R. Randolph, E. J. Rob- inson, J. W. Morris and S. J. Medelin have served. The Rev. W. S. Porter succeeded Medelin, and is the present incumbent. The clergymen whose names are recorded above, were well known in North Platte Severfi.l of them were eloquent speakers and had the gift of fascina- ting an audience, and were influential outside their own church circle. The Rev. W. S. Porter was inducted to the pas- torate on the 11th of October, 1908, and is fully as popular as any of his predecessors. He was ushered into this world of care in Louise county, Iowa, on May 15, 1868. His parents moved to Kansas when he was about two years old, and remained until he was about seven, when tli^y again moved and located on a farm near Monmouth, Illinois, where he attended the district school during the months of winter, and from spring to fall, worki^d on the farm from early to late. His lot was no worse than that of other farmer boys, but unlike many, he had a thirst for knowledge and self-improvement, and shortly after at- taining his majority he took a full course at Helling college, Abingdon, Illinois. ITS ASSOCIATIONS. 115 After six years, two in preparation work, and four in the College of Liberal Arts, he graduated in 1895 as valedictorian of his class with the degree A. B. In September, 1895, he joined the Central Illinois conference of the Methodist Episcopal church and served four years at Victoria, Illinois; three years at North Henderson, Illinois; two at Burnside, E- linois, and two years at LaHarpe, Illinois. In the fall of 1906, he transferred from the Central Illinois con- ference to the Western Nebraska conference, and was stationed at Holbrook, Furnas county, Nebraska, where, after serving tw^o years he was transferred to North Platte. On December 20, 1894, the Rev. Porter was united in marriage to Miss Nellie Childs, and their home is now blessed with four children, three boys and one girl. The first presiding elder of the M. E. church was the Rev. T. B. Lemon. Rev. W. A. Amsbury fol- lowed him, and he in turn was followed by the Rev. James Leonard. Afterwards, R. S. Moore and A. Chamberlain were appointed Associated with this church is a branch of the Epworth League, organized in May, 1889, and also, a Ladies' Aid society 116 NORTH PLATTE AND Many entertain pleasant memories of the old ^1. E. frame church, the original home of the con- gregation, which caught fire from a defective flue • ' A :, Jj!|i> fi ' JUi f la., -^'ff^Wi im. ^^^^K\^£ »> « - ,<-'.%!* ays ^r^'Si^B 1 H i » Methodist Episcopal Church, North Platte. while a prayer meeting was in progress, on the eve- ning of December 7, 1898. The calamity was deplor- ed by the congregation, but with them, to think was ITS ASSOCIATIONS 117 the act, and getting together, plans were laid and arrangements made to erect a better church building. Solicitation for aid to do so met with a hearty re- sponse and the result was, that the corner stone of a brick edifice was laid by the Rev. C. C. Wilson on April 12th, and on July 23, 1899, it was dedicated to the service of God by Dr. Lewis Curts. The cost of the church when completed was about $8,000. It makes an imposing appearance and is a credit to the city. 118 NORTH PLATTE AND CHAPTER VII. The city in 1884. — J. H. McConnell — Business streets and stores. - — Presidential campaign. — Judge Church. — Store buildings erected. — Building and Loan Association. — City waterworks. — The Luth- eran church built. — The Tucker saloon burns. — Erection of First National Bank building. — The new jail. — Old Settlers' reunion. — Town first lighted by electricity. In 1884, North Platte was a city of nearly 3,000 in- habitants, with well defined streets, and a business center containing many stores, law and other offices. Some three hundred and fifty men were employed in and about the railroad shops, and the pay roll aver- aged about $30,500 per month, and sixty per cent of the employees owned city property. As liberal buyers make successful merchants, business prospered and the city continued to grow, prosperity being the re- Avard of industry. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 119 J. H. ]MeConnell was master ineelianiL' in those days, and it is noteworthy that he materially aided in every movement tending to the advancement of the city. He was small of stature, but an expert in me- chanics, and was the master mind in many undertak- ings ; notably that of the North Platte Irrigation com- pany when organized, and the providing of free bath rooms and a library of upwards of 1,000 volumes, for employees. This library was merged into that of the Railroad Young Mens' Christian Association when that institution was established in the city in 1890. The city was scarcely eighteen years old in '84, but to get a comprehensive view of its development, it will be well to take a retrospective glance at the business streets, sto-:*es and industries, of that day. The city could then boast of two banks and two newspapers, the Nebraskan and Telegraph. The lead- ing grocery stores ware those of Charles McDonald on Front street and T. J. Foley corner of 6th and Dewey streets. They were well patronized and always crowded on pay car nights. Less pretentious gro- ceries were kept by A. J. ^Minshall, C. F. Ormsby and J. D. Jackson. I. E. VanDoran dealt in mens' furn- ishings, newspapers and cigars, and old man Nixon 120 NORTH PLATTE AND in notions and confectionery while J. F. Sclimal- zried manufactured cigars and supplied smoking re- quisites. Then there was the Warner book store and the jewelry stores of P. H. McEvoy and Thoelokie. The clothing stores were those of II. Otten, Rob- ert Douglas and A. Holzmark; and well stocked stores in which hardware, furniture and stoves were displayed were kept by James Belton, Thomas Keli- her and Conway & "Wiggans The drug stores were those of James LeFils, J. Q. Thacker and Dr. F. N. Dick, and the popular doctors were F. H. Longley, C. M. Duncan and F. N. Dick. There Avere lawyers plenty, the best known being William Neville, Alon- zo H. Church, E. M. Day, Oliver Shannon, J. W. Bix- ler and Hinman & Nesbit, and real estate and insur- ance had several representatives. Beside the Railroad hotel, there was the Hinman house and several boarding houses. Livery stables were conducted by Dickinson, Besack and VanDoran; and the black- smith shops were those of John Ottersteda, and the late much esteemed William J. Patterson who had his place of business on West Sixth street, a short dis- tance from Dewey. Cash and Iddings, Birge and Frees had lumber yards and were kept busy supply- ITS ASSOCIATIONS V2\ ing the wants of a develo])ing district. R. J. Bangs wis sheriff, and G. T. Snelling probate judge, but quietness and order reigned supreme and their duties were light. Twenty-six years have passed since then, and with the exception of tobacconist Schmalzried, there is not a storekeeper or blacksmith in business today that was in business then, and the city has grown and been improved to such a degree that it would scarcely be recognized by the long absent. During the presidential campaign of eighty four there was great enthusiasm and excitement in North Platte. In the evenings, old fashioned torch light processions paraded the streets with Imnners and emblems and bands of music. The Republican nom- inees were James G. Blaine and John A. Logan and those of the Democrats, Grover Cleveland and Thomas A. Hendricks. Both parties were energetic, and large audiences assembled in Lloyd's opera house on successive nights to hear the best speakers of both parties eloquently extol their candidates and the platforms upon which they hoped to be elected. The tariff was the all important subject of discussion, the Republicns upholding and the Democrats denouncino the measure. John Tracy, a staunch Democrat, as^ 122 NORTH PLATTE AND pired to a seat in the legislature, and to further his ambition, was ever ready to say a good word for his party and his own candidacy. In an address at a crowded meeting almost wholly composed of Demo- crats, John scathingly criticised Republican views of the tariff, and in a burst of eloquence declared that he had been ''robbed, shamefully rob- bed" by it. The statement seemed to pass indeed, but it did not, for Judge Church was taking notes; and the next night when Republicans were out in force and the opera house packed to suffocation, he spoke eloquently, and reviewing statements of Demo- cratic speakers at their meeting the previous night, said: ''Right here, John Tracy declared that he had been robbed, shamefully robbed by the tariff, but mark you, what did John Tracy do? Why, he sent to the old country for his brother Bob to come ov- er and be robbed too. That's what John Tracy done.'' The laughter and applause following this sally shook the building. Judge Church was one of several talented men that figured in the public life of North Platte in eighty-four. He was a ready and often eloquent speaker, and popular as lawyer and politician, and ITS ASSOCIATIONS 123 when death claimed him, it was universally regretted. In 1885, B. I. Hinman erected a two-story brick busi- ness building on Dewey street, and in 1886 some frame buildings at the southeast corner of Sixth and Dewey streets were removed, and on the sites a brick block was erected in which are fine well stocked stores. ''Jim" LeFils' drug store on the corner was long a favorite rendezvous of railroad men, and there, quick runs we^e run over again and railroad gossip dispensed. Alexander Streitz succeeded Le- Fils in the business and cai-ried it on with success until failing health compelled him to retire. That same year, J. K. Ottenstein erected a substantial store, and in doing so, displaced some ancient wooden structures that disfigured Dewey street. Important local events of 1887 were the forma- tion of a Mutual Building and Loan Association and the erection of a waterworks plant by the North Platte Waterworks Company. The Mutual Building and Loan Association has been an active agency for making North Platte a city of homes. It grew steadily from the first, and homes have been built and purchased by its assistance that never could have been obtained otherwise by people 124 NORTH PLATTE AND of limited means, and the waterworks has proved a blessing- to the community by bringing an abundance of pure water to the door of every householder and making it possible to have trees, shrubs, floAvers and blue grass lawns about residences. In those days of hand pumps and windmills there w^as difficulty in Plant of City Waterworks. maintaining vegetation about a home owing to the dryness of the climate, therefore, residence lots gen- erally had a brown, burned-out appearance. It was in the fall of 1880 that citizens of the Lutheran faith met and affiliated, but it was not un- til May, 1881 that the first Lutheran church of ITS ASSOCIATIONS 125 North Platte was organized by the Kev. J. F. Kiihl- man with twenty charter members. Different pastors and missionaries served the congregation until June, 1884, when the Board of Home Missions appointed the Rev. Charles Ander- son of Roekford, Illinois, who remained about a year. The Rev. Adam Stump, of York, Pennsylvania, took charge of the work Deccmiber 1, 1885, and remained until September, 1890. During the Rev. Stump's pas- torate, the present church, which was the first church in town built of brick, was erected at a cost of $8,000 This substantial building was dedicated to the service of God December 2, 1889. The Rev. Stump's pastor- ate was very successful, the membership increasing to ninety-two. After the Rev. Stump came the Rev. J. F. Kuhl- man who served the congregation as ''supply" for a time, but was afterwards appointed the regular pastor. Rev. Kuhlman resigned. May 21, 1893. During his pas- torate the congregaiioln received no aid from the Home Mission Board, The Rev. David J. Foulk became pastor January 1 1894. During his pastorate, the indebtedness of the church was cancelled, a bell for the tower purchased, 126 NORTH PLATTE AND and needed repairs made. Rev. Foulk was pastor for over five years, and was succeeded by the Rev. Is 0. Wolfe, who served the congregation for over two years, but resigned when called to another field. The Rev. John Seibert was the next pastor, and took up the work November 1, 1900, and after an em- inently successful pastorate of nearly nine years, re- signed to become missionary of the Synod of Northern Illinois. In 1901 the parsonage was enlarged and beautified, and in the year following, the church was renovated by being painted, papered and carpeted. Electric lights were also installed and the Altar and Chancel improved. The new parsonage was built in 1907, the old par- sonage being removed to its present location on Syca- more street. The Rev. Seibert did more for the temporal and spiritual welfare of the congregation than any pre- vious pastor. He infused new life in the church and gave it a standing in the community ; and when he left the members were thoroughly organized and united on a distinctively Lutheran basis, irrespective of na- tionality. The Rev. C. B. Harman began where the Rev. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 127 Mr. Seibert left off, and is concluding a year of suc- cessful church work, having gained the esteem and co-operation of his people. He began his labors as pas- tor near the place of his birth and scenes wherein he spent his early life, and has served as pastor of church- es in Pennsylvania and Illinois. He received his col- lege and seminary training at Selin's Grove, Pennsyl- vania, graduating from the college in 1897 with the de- gree of B. A., and from the seminary in 1900, with the degree of B. D., having taken the full collegiate and logical course. The property of the Nortli Platte first Lutheran church, notwithstanding its humble beginning, is val- ued at $13,000 and the baptized membership numbers 370, with a large number of adherents. In 1889 there vv-as a den called "the Tucker sa- loon" on the northeast corner of Sixth and Dewey streets. It was a celebrated place of its kind in ear- ly days and a favorite resort of cowboys, gamblers and thirsty citizens. It had a sinister reputation, and no one was particularly grieved when, on a bitter cold night in November of that year the place caught fire, and it and some low roofed buildings close to it were consumed. It was a big fire, and 128 NOliTH PLATTE AND the first to which the newly organized fire brigade had been called, but despite their efforts, there was nothing left but a heap of smouldering, blackened ruins. In the burned off space the directors of the First National Bank saw a desirable site for a bank building, and at once interviewed the owner, the late John Neary, who accepted terms offered as they were favorable alike to himself and them, and the erection of the fine building in which the banking business of the First National is now conducted was at once begun, and completed in January, 1890. The original quarters of this bank was on tlie corner of Front and Dewey streets. Prisons are necessary in all civilized commun- ities, and will be, so long as avarice and evil passions rage. The old log jail was never a safe or suitable place in wliicli to confine law breakers. North Platte having ceased to be a frontier town, a jail that was sanitary, secure and commodious was requisite. This was long under consideration, but it was not until 1889 that bonds were voted, and it was near the close of 1890 when the modern two-storied brick jail on Locust street was erected. There is nothing remark- able about the institution, and so far, no very des- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 129 perate or notorious criminals have been confined in it, and escapes have been few. The several sheriffs who have had charge of it were men of decisive char- acter who delighted in discharging the duties of the office. Residents of North Platte in early days were more than neighbors, they were friends, and it is no wonder that a feeling akin to clannishness bound them together when the town became populous. We have evidence of this, for on the 6th of March, 1890 they met with their families and friends to recall events and incidents that occurred in days when the city (such as it was) was on the frontier of civiliza- tion. W. F. Cody acted as toastmaster, and the meet- ing was put in his charge. W. H. McDonald, the first white child born in Lincoln county, was the guest of honor. There was among those present, W. H. Hinman and B. I. Hinman and many other old set- tlers who helped to lay the foundation of our city. M. C. Keith, George Vroman, Robert E. Peale and Superintendent W. L Park responded to toasts. The meeting was highly uccessful, and ended by W. F. Cody inviting all old settlers to a banquet at Scout's Rest Ranch. 130 NORTH PLATTE AND In 1892 an Electric Light company was organized most of the shareholders being residents of North Platte. The plant was built north of the railroad yards, poles erected and wires strung, and when in operation, many visited and viewed the generator with wonder. All admitted the superiority of the new light, but the change from coal oil to electricity was not appreciated to the extent expected, as only a limited number of business places and a few homes had it introduced. Electric lighting at the time was new and not well understood, and when lights went out — and they had a habit of doing so frequently — people would strike matches and attempt to light them as they would a lamp, but failing, ignorance be- gat prejudice, and many holding that the old sys- tem of lighting was more reliable and cheaper, re- turned to its use. This resulted in the expenses of the company exceeding the income, and after a valiant struggle, it went out of business in 1895, hav- ing sunk some $15,000. The plant lay for several years in a ruinous condition, but the power house was ultimately moved to the fair grounds, and there it stands a memento of a well intentioned endeavor to light North Platte by electricity. ITS ASSOCIATIONS 131 The failure of the Electric Light Company did not disturb business in the city; things went on as ^^s^al — the industrious prospering and the city ex- panding. 132 NORTH PLATTE AND CHAPTER Vin. The city fire of '93. — Progress of the flames. — Inci- dents. — Dr. Dick dies. — Telephone system intro- duced. — The Spanish war. — Our local volunteers. - — Off they go to meet the foe. — Scene at the de- pot. — Dewey's victory. — Volunteers return dis- appointed. — Methodist church burns. — M. C. Keith dies. — The story of his life. — City schools; teachers and pupils. On the morning of April 7, 1893, a vast prairie fire, rushed by a fierce wind and entending from riv- er to river was seen approaching the city from the west. Locomotive whistles shrieked an alarm and the fire bell rang to Avarn the citizens of coming danger. The fire brigade turned out, and people ran west- ward to fight fire and help to save property. Peo- ple whose homes were in the path of the fast ap- proaching wall of fl mes made hurried preparations to save property, and a few were more or less success- ITS ASSOCIATIONS 133 ful. Charles Wyman by strenuous exertion succeed- ed in saving his dwelling house and barn, but pens, fences and hay burned. Wash Hinman, considering his home doomed, had much of his household goods conveyed to some ploughed ground. Despite the pre- caution, fire reached them, and they and all he pos- sessed was consumed. The Freeman family had bare- ly time to escape from their blazing home and lost everything. The McDonald ranch and everything combustable about it was consumed. Between this ranch and the western outskirts oi the city was a space burned over by a previous fire which was con- sidered sufficient to stay the progress of the flames. It would have been under favorable circumstances, but the fierce wind sent burning embers flying, and wafted the fire around it. Despite the almost super- human efforts of citizens, fire got among the houses with astonishing rapidity and in brief space many were in flames; and blazing shingles wafted by the wind spread fire in very direction. Women and chil- dren fled in terror, while men scorched by heat, and well nigh blinded by smoke did what they could to save life and property. People whose homes were in the path of the 134 NORTH PLATTE AND fire, and no great distance from it, loaded their household goods on wagons in an endeavor to reach a place of safety but blazing shingles, in some in- stances fell among the goods and they burned so rapidly that there was scarcely time to unhitch the horses. Many people expecting their houses to burn, conveyed furniture nd needful articles to supposed places of safety, but there were instances where the fire became freakish and instead of burning the house consumed the articles removed. Numerous buggies and wagons were kept busy conveying women and children to the round house and places of safety, and the city being considered doom- ed, a train was held to help convey people out of town. Towards evening, the fire, much subdued, reach- ed Locust street, having been checked near the Id- dings property, and dividing, burned fiercely north and south of town, sweeping the Miller and Peniston additions, at the time sparsely built up, and eastward to the river, consuming barns, sheds, fences and side- walks, yea, everything in its course. The bottling works were wiped out, and the creamery, in which some $8,000 had been invested was a total loss. Some ITS ASSOCIATIONS 135 thirty-five houses were burned to the ground. Sev- eral people were rendered homeless and many lost all the}^ possessed. Strange acts are sometimes performed by individ- uals when crazed by excitement. One man is said to have heroically dragged his cook stove out of the kitchen into the yard, and returning, he gathered up the breakfast dishes and threw them out the window. Another, in a frantic endeavor to save his house witli water from a half inch hose gave up in despair, and falling upon his knees, prayed fervently that his property would be spared as it was all he had. The fire was getting hoM, and the house was in a fair way of being burned down when the practical Joseph Weeks of the fire brigade happened along, and taking in the situation, yelled, ''Get up, confound you, and take a hose." He did, and his home was saved. Ninety-four and ninety -five passed without any very important local event occurring, but on Decem- ber 29, 1896, the community was startled hy the an- nouncement that death had claimed Dr. F N. Dick, a pioneer citizen and one of the early resident physi- cians. He was popular in his profession, in social 136 NOKTH PLATTE AND and Masonic circles, and his familiar personality and pleasant manner are doubtless remembered by many. He was a native of North Carolina, and a graduate of the University of Virginia, and Washington col- lege of Baltimore, Md., and came to North Platte in 1868. His drug store was at the corner of Sixth and Locust streets and served as office and dispens- ary, and in it he practiced medicine and ministered to the afflicted until death laid its icy hand upon him. In 1867, the North Platte Telephone company was started by G. T. Field and 0. W. Sizemore, and a franchise was granted them by the city council to run lines in the streets and alleys. The first exchange was located in the rear of Sizemore ^s barber shop, and was started with some thirty-three subscribers. As the business grew, these quarters proved too small, and in 1900 the exchange was moved to the present location in the McDonald block on Dewey street. In 1903, Mr. Field bought out Mr. Sizemore 's interest, and the same year incorporated the North Platte Telephone company; and on June 1, 1907, sold ITS ASSOCIATIONS 137 out to the present company, who have made the service highly efficent, and communication can be had with places near and far. When President McKinley called for 200,000 vol- unteers to help settle our little difficulty with Spain. April 21, 1898, the boys of North Platte w^ere eager to enlist, and many joined Company E, second regi- ment, Nebraska Volunteer Infantry, organized in the city, November 21. 1893. Like Job's war horse. Company E sniffed t^e battle afar, and being anxious to go to the front, assembled at the Union Pacific depot on the morning of May 9th to go to Lincoln to be mustered into the United States serv- ice. A big crowd was there to see *'the boys" off. Flags fluttered in the morning breeze on many build- ings, a band played, and cheers rent the air, but a sad feature of the scene was the tearful faces of wives and sweethearts of volunteers who had come to say good-by to loved ones, not knowing but the parting might be forever. When the train pulled out, bells rang, locomotive whistles shrieked and cheer after cheer woke the the echoes, and a then popular Episcopal minister in exhileration threw his hat in the air, so joyous wa.