Nebraskaland

May 2024 Nebraskaland

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/1519842

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May 2024 • Nebraskaland 37 elaborated on the story in his History of Western Nebraska. Shumway claimed that the voyage took place in 1852 and that the El Paso reached Fort Mitchell near Scottsbluff and continued upstream to the site of present-day Guernsey Dam in Wyoming. But Shumway did not cite any sources, nor could he remember any when Nebraska State Historical Society superintendent Addison Sheldon later asked him about it. But the story continued to spread, repeated as fact in other articles and books. Historian William E. Lass fi nally debunked it in a 2008 article for Nebraska History Magazine. Lass showed that the El Paso was a real Missouri River steamboat, a 260-ton sidewheeler that measured 174 feet long and 26 feet wide. (Try to picture that next time you cross the Platte!) But he also showed that the boat's whereabouts were well documented in 1852 and 1853 — and the El Paso was never on the Platte. As for Fort Mitchell, its purported A Union Army pontoon bridge near Fredericksburg, Virginia, in 1863. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PRINTS & PHOTOGRAPHS The steamboat El Paso's career on the Missouri River lasted barely fi ve years, from its fi rst voyage in March 1850 until it struck a snag and sank on April 10, 1855.

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