Part One of the Great Western Road Trip is HERE. Part Two of the Great Western Road Trip is HERE. Part Three of the Great Western Road Trip is HERE. Part Four of the Great Western Road Trip is HERE.
The following morning we had our motel breakfast and conversed with the breakfast lady a bit. She was so nice and sweet.
Then it was off again heading West on Route 30. We made a quick stop at a local Walmart we passed to pick up a few things.
Only in Nebraska will you see prairie dresses for sale in a Walmart! lol
And this was an astonishing sight) In PA we have a dairy lobby that price fixes fresh milk products. At that time milk in PA was hovering at the $3 mark(It's now $4+ a gallon). If I had a small refrigerated truck with me I'd have hauled a load of milk with me back to PA on the return leg of this trip! ;-)
Passing through Schuyler Ne...because the water tower says so. lolz
Along the road I spied this oddly shaped barn. The sides were curved. Having seen a LOT of barns in my life this was a truly strange sight!
Yet another train passing us on the tracks that ran parallel to the road we took through much of Nebraska.
About an hour after leaving Fremont, we made it to Columbus, Nebraska.
A funny named building, Dickie Doodles, as we rode into town. Turns out it's a convenience store/gas station that serves food too.
We made a stop in Columbus to see an old friend, Randy, who I had met in Delaware at the 2nd Bloggerpalooza in 2014. There was some excitement for Randy the week before we got there. A woman driving down his street had plowed into his car, parked along the road in the residential neighborhood and totaled it. Randy had just bought a new car earlier that week with the insurance claim proceeds.
Randy with his new car.
After visiting for a bit, Randy whisked us off to lunch...
The 1920 location/building for Max Gottberg's automobile dealership was renovated and turned into a restaurant called "Dusters"(a reference to the early vehicles wearing duster coats I suppose)with a brewery called Gottberg Brew Pub.
The Brew Pub is a large metal silo building situated inside of the restaurant!
Metal old fashioned tractor seats in the pub.
The building retains many of it's original features and soaring ceilings.
Notice the table of elderly ladies all dolled up in this shot. Dusters is quite the place in Columbus to be seen for the "ladies who lunch". 8-)
Here's a not so great shot of the mural painted on the curved wall inside of the dining area. Randy treated us to lunch and I had a fish and chips lunch which was delish. Thanks Randy!
Here's Randy with Hubs.......
And with me after lunch before we headed out to see the small town sights in Columbus.
It was an unseasonably warm July day so we headed here to get out of the heat, the Columbus Historical Society Museum.
Who knew there was so many styles of barbed wire?
A replica of an old fashioned barbershop. I can't look at that photo without music from "Sweeney Todd" floating around in my brain. lol
A machine to make brooms.
There was a one room school room/house in the building with old books, desks, charts, etc.
Particularly interesting was this list of teacher rules form 1872.
The school room view from the teacher's desk. That's Randy in the back probably misbehaving. Good thing the teacher has stepped out to use the outhouse. ;-)
Randy spied a bunch of old school yearbooks in the back and found himself in one of them. Not that he's old enough to have gone to this town's school when it was a one room school but it was pretty funny finding himself in there anyway.
I enjoyed this display and information about a local resident who was an early woman aviatrix from the area.
Katherine Kuhlen was the first woman to Solo pilot an airplane in 1929 from a flight school in Topeka KS. I loved the photo of her in her flight suit and googled labeled "Aunt Kate".
Of course I had to go do a geneaology search on Kate. ;-)
She lived her life in Nebraska. The last census I can find her on is the 1940 one where she is 37 and lodging in someone's home in Omaha and working as a sales lady in a retail store. She married Clarence Ryan in 1942 at the age of 39. The couple had no children and she died at the ripe old age of 91 years in 1994.. Their headstone is HERE.
Here's a torture device from an old beauty salon. Imagine having that hooked up to your hair to curl it!?
Hubs admiring an old Indian motorcycle.
An antique telephone.
An antique buckboard wagon. Behind it is the first cabin built in what would become Columbus Nebraska. It was moved from it's original location in the center of town to inside this secondary building of the Historical Society.
Randy standing inside the doorway. He's pretty tall so that door is small.
And here's an early Ford....a Model A or T? I can't remember.
Here's a photo of some of the early log cabins in Platte County NE.
Now that's an old pressure cooker. If I had to use one of these early models I'd have been scared of it! lol
An old copper still outside the backside of the log cabin. What home back then didn't have one of these?
Here's an old switchboard from the town back when switchboard operators were necessary.
Up close of a windmill. The Plains were a great place to utilize wind power for many things, from pumping water from wells to grinding grain or running sawmills.
Another antique from last century's home, an ice box. First they were stocked with ice to chill foods but eventually they were converted to run on electricity.
Various home cleaning appliances through the ages. That one in the back on the right behind the carpet sweeper must have been awful to try to use. You had to use a pumping suction action and it looked like it picked up very little detritus at a time. But you probably had killer bicep muscles as a result of using it. lolz
A poster advertising the Grand Opening of the Union Pacific railroads Platte River Route on May 10th, 1869, running from Sacramento to Omaha.
This display was poignant. A railroad luggage cart with someone's possessions traveling on the Union Pacific line.
A close-up on someone from Columbus' ancestor who came here from Sweden.
Anna Bengston came to "Amerika" with her parents, Arvid and Lovisa and her siblings, Carl, Gustav, Sophia and Edward in 1886. Two more siblings, Alexander and Hilda would be born in Nebraska.
Anna was listed as widowed in the 1910 census(married William Foster in 1898) and she and her daughter Mildred were living with Anna's parents. Hmmm, William Foster was alive and well in the 1930 census living with his wife Serepta, whom he married in 1905. Anna remarried and was living in Fresno CA with husband Otto Johnson in the 1920 census.
But I digress....
Randy drove us around town, first to see the new Hydroelectric plant.
Then a big windmill on the campus of some college.
A delightful Columbus history mural on the side of a building downtown.
And I made him stop the car when we went by another of these odd looking barns with the curved sides so I could take a photo of it. Anybody know anything about these odd shaped barns? Please let me know!
Soon it was time to wave goodbye to Randy and Columbus Nebraska and head on Westward to our stop for the night.
I saw this water tower as we sailed down the road through another small town.
It was quite the small town after all, Clarks, population 369.
We stopped in Grand Island, NE for the evening. And we had a first for us for dinner there, a Runza sandwich.
Like the drink cup says, "The Famous Runza Sandwich featuring YES Cabbage". lolz
You can look up what a Runza sandwich is if you care. Why Nebraska(plus one location in in Kansas where a NE native moved and lamenting they couldn't find a runza so they got a franchise)you ask?
Sally Brening Everett, the daughter of a family who came to Nebraska from Germany by way of Russia, started a food stand in 1949 in Lincoln Nebraska. This grew into the Runza chain. Currently they have fast food restaurants in Kansas, Iowa and Colorado as well but with the vast majority of them located in Nebraska.
I heard the round barns were to have same square footage but smaller footprint, so they needed less material and space. Silo's are round for same reason.
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The Rules for Teachers is rough. I wonder if men went to church to earn the right to courting for two days.
ReplyDeleteI heard the round barns were to have same square footage but smaller footprint, so they needed less material and space. Silo's are round for same reason.
ReplyDelete