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/
JPEG
Wooden Board
English
Kearney, Nebraska
Buffalo County, Nebraska
Platte River
Fort Kearney, Nebraska
Hand-drawn Map of Thayer County and Belvidere, Nebraska Area
Hand-drawn Map from 19th Century Nebraska
Map of Thayer County and Belvidere, Nebraska from 1883. Framed and hand-drawn by Earl Philip Dill. Contains a numbered grid and included on map are trail markers (Oregon Trail), school, Government building, railroads, rivers/streams, etc. (see photograph). On the back is written:
Earl Philip Dill
1883= 7-25-78
Belvidere, NE
Thayer County
Earl Philip Dill
Barbara Beechner
Earl Philip Dill
06/20/2015
1883
7-25-78 (on back of map)
1910 (date written on front of map, center)
April White
Dr. Thomas Kiffmeyer
Barbara Beechner
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
http://www.historicmapworks.com/Atlas/US/8107/Thayer+County+1900/
http://nebraska.hometownlocator.com/ne/thayer/belvidere.cfm
JPEG
Hand-drawn map on paper with wooden frame
English
Belvidere, Nebraska
Thayer County, Nebraska
P & J Arnold Brown Derby Pottery Vitreous Stone Bottle
19th Century Brown Stoneware piece, Inkware Bottle
Full vitreous stoneware ink bottle from P & J Arnold of London, England. This was part of the Denby Pottery Company near Derby, England. Artifact's spout is broken and the lettering is worn, but upon further research the full label should read:
Vitreous Stone Bottles
J. Bourne & Son
Patentees
Denby Pottery
Near Derby
P & J Arnold
London
England
Vitreous Stone Bottles—J. Bourne & Son—Patentees—Denby & Codnor Park Pottery—Near Derby—P. & J. Arnold, London
Barbara Beechner
06/20/2015
April White
Dr. Thomas Kiffmeyer
Barbara Beechner
University of Nebraska at Kearney (Images)
https://www.sar.org/News/Artifact-Unearthed-Site-New-Museum-Construction
National Society, Sons of the American Revolution (Full Documentation and Photo Archive of Complete Object)
History Harvest
JPEG
Brown Stoneware
English
Dobytown, Nebraska
London, England