Armed Forces Report of Transfer or Discharge
War, Vietnam War, and U.S. Air Force Documents, Report of Transfer or Discharge
Report of Transfer or Discharge for Jimmy Ray White. This particular report was for an Honorable Discharge. Jimmy, originally from Kearney, Nebraska, served in the U.S. Air Force during the Vietnam War and was father to Andy White. Jimmy passed away in 2004, after extensive chemotherapy and a long illness related to Agent Orange Gas Poisoning. This certificate was issued out of the Buffalo County Courthouse of Kearney, Nebraska.
Buffalo County Courthouse
Armed Forces of the United States
Jimmy Ray White
Andy White
Buffalo County Courthouse
December 30, 1974
October 1, 1971
December 20, 1968
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Jinny Turman (scans)
Andy and April White
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
http://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/about-service-records.html
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Paper Report
English
Kearney, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Vietnam
Kearney City Hall Postcard
History Postcards of Kearney, Nebraska, City Hall
Colored postcard of the old City Hall of Kearney, Nebraska. Postcard is blank. On the back it says "Made in Germany."
The Omaha News Company, Omaha, Nebraska
Steve Rotherberger
Dresden-Leipzig-Berlin, Germany
The Omaha News Company, Omaha, Nebraska
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Jinny Turman (scans)
Steve Rothenberger
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
http://cityofkearney.org/index.aspx?nid=759
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Postcard
English
Kearney, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Omaha, Nebraska
Germany
United States Post Office Kearney, Nebraska Postcard
Historic Early 20th Century Postcards, Kearney, Nebraska
Colored postcard of the United States Post Office in Kearney, Nebraska. The building, completed in 1911, was converted to the Museum of Nebraska Art (MONA) in 1986. The postcard is dated July 2, 1927 and is addressed to Miss Katherine Jones of Bruno, Nebraska.
Steve Rothenberger
1927
06/20/2010
April White
Dr. Jinny Turman (scans)
Steve Rothenberger
http://www.nebraskahistory.org/histpres/nebraska/buffalo/BF05-169_USPO.pdf
https://mona.unk.edu/mona/
JPEG
Postcard
English
Kearney, Nebraska
Bruno, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Grothan Elmwood Sanitarium, Kearney, Nebraska (The Frank House)
Historic Nebraska Postcards, The Frank House, Grothan Elmwood Sanitarium
Colored postcard of the Grothan Elmwood Sanitarium established c. 1908 by Dr. Ole and Dr. Georgiana Grothan. In 1911, after the doctor couple divorced, the building was sold to the state of Nebraska and converted into living quarters for the physicians and nurses who worked at the adjacent Nebraska State Tuberculosis Hospital until 1971. The building still stands, housing the historic Frank House Museum and is part of UNK's campus and the National Registry for Historic Sites. The building was originally built in 1889 by George W. Frank of Kearney, Nebraska, Corning, Iowa, and New York state.
The postcard was sent to Lizzie Parr of Omaha, Nebraska.
Steve Rothenberger
1911
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Jinny Turman (scans)
Steve Rothenberger
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
http://www.unk.edu/offices/frankhouse/
https://www.facebook.com/UNK.Frank.House/
JPEG
Postcard
English
Kearney, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Omaha, Nebraska
Homestead Certificate
Paper Document, Early Nebraska Homestead Certificates
Original paper homestead certificate presented to Albert More of Grand Island in 1884, Nebraska from the General Land Office of the United States. Albert More is a familial ancestor of Sara and Terrence Holoubeck. The Homestead Act was passed by Congress and signed by President Abraham Lincoln on May 20, 1862 to encourage the rapid settlement of the western half of the United States. This certificate is no. 5296, application no. 11553.
General Land Office of the United States.
Sara and Terrence Holoubeck
General Land Office of the United States
Albert More
1884 (Certificate Issue Date)
May 20, 1862 (Homestead Act)
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Jinny Turman
Sara and Terrence Holoubeck
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/homestead-act/
https://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/ourdocs/Homestead.html
http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0500/frameset_reset.html?http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0500/stories/0501_0100.html
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Paper Document
English
Grand Island, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Washington D.C.
Land Ownership Deed
Paper Documents, Early Nebraska Deed
Original paper deed for land ownership presented to Roswell D. Gould of Buffalo County, Nebraska in 1879, ancestor to Sara and Terrence Holoubeck. The deed was presented to Gould by the General Land Office at Grand Island, Nebraska of the United States and states that Gould had paid in full for the land and thus given rights to ownership of the land. These deeds were issued after the Congressional Sale Act of 1820, which allowed settlers to purchase smaller areas of land for $1.25 per acre. An interesting aspect of this deed is that the two Presidential signatures by Rutherford B. Hayes do not match. The deed certificate is no. 1153 and has the United States seal.
General Land Office of the United States
Sara and Terrence Holoubeck
Roswell D. Gould
General Land Office of the United States
1879 (Deed Issue Date)
April 24, 1820 (Sale Act of Congress)
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Jinny Turman
Sara and Terrence Holoubeck
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
http://www.blm.gov/style/medialib/blm/wo/Law_Enforcement/nlcs/education__interpretation/homestead_graphics0.Par.57736.File.dat/Expanded%20Homestead%20Timeline%20final.pdf
http://www.blm.gov/es/st/en/prog/glo.html
https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-by-era/jackson-lincoln/timeline-terms/land-act-1820
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Paper Document
English
Grand Island, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Washington D.C.
Timber-Culture Certificate
Paper Documents, Early Nebraska Deeds and Certificates
Certificate for Albert More, a family ancestor of Terrence and Sara Holoubeck. The certificate is original, paper, and stamped with United States Seal. The certificate was issued as part of the 1873 Timber Culture Act by Congress to encourage settlers to plant trees. This particular certificate, no. 475 application 2142, was issued for encouraging tree planting near/around Grand Island, Nebraska and granted More 160 acres to do so. The other interesting aspect of this artifact is that the two Presidential signatures of Benjamin Harrison do not match. The Holoubecks believe that one or both were signed by Secretary M. McKean for President Harrison.
The United States Congress
Sara and Terrence Holoubeck
Albert More
General Land Office of the United States
1874-1878
1873
1892 (Certificate Issue Date)
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Jinny Turman
Sara and Terrence Holoubeck
http://www.mnopedia.org/thing/timber-culture-act-1873
http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/publicat/timeline/timber_culture_act_1873.htm
http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/broadsides_bdsks10468/
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Paper Document
English
Grand Island, Nebraska
Washington D.C.
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Walking Cane with Concealed Knife
Utilitarian Object
Wooden walking cane that has a hidden, detachable knife at the top. L.D. Powers, local Buffalo County enthusiast, carved the cane in January 1939. See associated article for further information.
L.D. Powers
Don Dingman
L.D. Powers
1939
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Thomas Kiffmeyer
Don Dingman
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
JPEG
Wooden Cane
English
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Thermo-Scope Temperature Reader
Original Thermo-Scope akin to a modern-day thermometer
An original, round Thermo-Scope used at the Ira C. Anderson Funeral Home (established in 1920) in Kearney, Nebraska (which is now the Horner, Lieske, McBride, & Kuhl Funeral Home in Kearney located at the intersection of 25th St. and Avenue A. Thermoscopes were used before the modern thermometer and may have been first discovered by Galileo Galilei. However, the artifact suggests that Thermo-Scope was a company because of the tagline "Better than a Thermometer."
Thermo-Scope
Don Dingman
Ira C. Anderson Funeral Home
06/20/2015
1920
April White
Dr. Thomas Kiffmeyer
Don Dingman
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
http://www.hlmkfuneral.com/?page=history
http://www.stormdebris.net/Thermoscope.html
http://www.brannan.co.uk/who-invented-the-thermometer
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Thermometer
English
Kearney, Nebraska
Fort Kearney Marker
Wooden Post Marker
Original wooden road marker for Fort Kearney Crossing. The dates on the front are 1848, 1871. The marker was installed in 1910 and found years later. The dates on the front mark when the trail to Fort Kearney crossed the Platte River from 1848-1871 on the Overland-Oregon Trail, and there are visible bullet holes. Don received the marker as a birthday present c. 1996. It was found in the 1950s by amateur archaeologist Merwyn Henderson.
This web article has a much more detailed history of the artifact:
http://www.kearneyhub.com/news/local/history-buffs-solve--year-old-mystery/article_25afb46a-ebfc-11e0-9a0e-001cc4c002e0.html
Don Dingman has this important information to include:
There were three crossing points on the Platte River. All of these crossing points were, and still are, located in Buffalo County, Nebraska. There were two crossing points on the north side of the river, and one on the south side at the ferry crossing point on the Oregon Trail where this marker was placed.
The Soldier's Free Homestead Association of Gibbon, Nebraska (a.k.a. the Old Settler's Association) was a Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) group of civil war soldiers. They first came to Buffalo County in 1871 on a train with the purpose of homesteading land there. In the following years, they would meet on the grounds of Fort Kearney for picnics and reunions (see attached PDF photos). In 1906, this group organized into the Fort Kearney National Park Association with the goal of having their beloved fort declared a national part. At that time they decided to have an annual three-day reunion and gain political support for their idea with their representatives in Washington D.C.
The group wanted to place large, granite markers on the three crossing points and also honor General Carrington. Carrington had done a complete survey of the islands and the crossing route in 1866. He was still alive in 1910 and had planned to be at the reunion that same year. Sadly, his health was failing and he was unable to attend. Two years later, General Carrington died in 1912.
The group had a vision of Fort Kearney and the surrounding area eventually being a national park with many stone monuments and markers to tell the history and stories of Fort Kearney and the Oregon Trail. In August 1910 came the reunion at the fort and it was a marked success. They named the reunion "Camp Carrington." Over 500 people camped at the old fort and there were four to five thousand visitors including the Governor of Nebraska and a Nebraska Congressman.
Originally, the marker was meant to be dedicated and placed on Thursday afternoon (August 25, 1910), but was moved to Thursday morning due to some train schedule mix ups with the ceremony's scheduled speakers. The Fort Kearney National Park Association did not have the funds to purchase a stone marker so a temporary one was placed instead. The marker was dedicated by the Women's Relief Corp (WRC) to the women that crossed the Platte River at that point on the Oregon Trail.
Don Dingman also adds:
For the GAR to place a marker on any western trail is extremely rare. Unfortunately the effort in Washington failed that year and the group ended along with its cause.
Kearney, Nebraska
Don Dingman
Merwyn Henderson (1989)
1848-1871
1910
06/20/2015
1950s
April White
Dr. Thomas Kiffmeyer
Don Dingman
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
http://www.kearneyhub.com/news/local/history-buffs-solve--year-old-mystery/article_25afb46a-ebfc-11e0-9a0e-001cc4c002e0.html
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fort_Kearney_Crossing_1848_-_1871_-_Platte_River_Marker..jpg
http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/markers/texts/old_ft_kearny_road.htm
http://www.newspapers.com/newspage/39434712/
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Wooden Board
English
Kearney, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Platte River
Fort Kearney, Nebraska