Nebraskaland

Nebraskaland October 2021

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1408550

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October 2021 • Nebraskaland 41 This 1894 oil painting by Ad Albrect is based on an 1850s sketch by Stanislas Schimonsky. It shows Bellevue near the end of its trading post days, but the Missouri River bluff s seem to have grown to legendary proportions in the retelling — much like Sarpy himself. History Nebraska 300P steam ferry and played a prominent role in negotiating land cessions by the Omaha and Oto tribes. In 1857, the Nebraska legislature named Sarpy County in his honor. "Sarpy lived the life of a minor frontier baron," writes John Wickman, who says Sarpy was known for his hospitality and for his love of "fast horses, fi ne hunting dogs, and a considerable interest in the pleasures of liquor." Throughout his life, Sarpy cultivated a reputation for both generosity and ruthlessness. Missionary Samuel Allis described him in ways that reveal as much about the time and place as about the man himself. Allis said that Sarpy, "although sometimes rough and uncouth, was a high-toned gentleman, who exerted a great infl uence among the whites as well as the Indians. He was particularly generous to white men of distinction and wealth, also to the Indians when it paid well, but exacted every penny of his hired men and others who earned their living by labor. Still he was generous to the needy … He was all that could be wished for a man of the world, except the habit of intemperance." These sources say nothing about Sarpy's 1841 conviction for false imprisonment. Perhaps the story didn't follow him out of Missouri. Peter Sarpy died in Plattsmouth in 1865. His body was returned to St. Louis for burial, but it's said that his wife Nicomi remained in the Plattsmouth area. N Visit History Nebraska's website at history.nebraska.gov. Bellevue, Nebraska Territory, from Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, June 5, 1858. Contrary to the caption, there is no evidence that the Bellevue trading post existed prior to 1823. History Nebraska 13000-50

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