Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland May 2018

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/977334

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 63

t's small consolation if you ever get stuck in the mud, but the fact is Nebraska has come a long way since pioneer times in the development of its public roads and highways. A glance through pioneer reminiscences and the spring issues of early newspapers provide plenty of evidence that good old-fashioned Nebraska mud was one of the principle obstacles in the way of spring travel here. Covered wagon emigrants, beating their way to Oregon, California or Utah, frequently had trouble with the muddy Nebraska leg of the long journey, almost always undertaken in early spring. The trails became so badly rutted that wagons could not pass, and new roads had to be marked out. This accounts in part for the fact that the Oregon Trail may be several miles wide in certain parts of the state, notably southeastern Nebraska. In territorial times, roads were little better than trails and when the ground thawed out in the spring they usually were impassable. Rural roads were not the only ones afflicted by the spring thaw. Villages and city streets suffered in equal or greater proportion. An editorial in the Dakota City Democrat, April 13, 1861, issue may be considered typical: "Last week this city was visited by shower after shower of April rain that reduced I By Patricia C. Gaster, Nebraska State Historical Society 10 NEBRASKAland • MAY 2018 A Brief History Muddy Nebraska The Elmer Ball family, Woods Park (Custer County), 1886. NSHS RG2608-1069 Stuck in the mud near Bancroft, ca. 1910s. NSHS RG3334-1-56

Articles in this issue

view archives of Nebraskaland - NEBRASKAland May 2018