Today's Destination is Homestead National Monument, Beatrice, Nebraska ( 15 mins ) and is the last stop of our video trip.

Penny and I were so pleased that Jim & Jan Bastian invited us to attend the annual Bucking Horse Sale in Miles City, Montana as we had a wonderful time and saw some beautiful sites because of that invitation.

You’ve been to Miles City, Montana for all the exciting activities there during the Annual Bucking Horse Sale, you’ve been to Banff, Canada; Yellowstone; Devil’s Tower; Pompey’s Pillar, Little Big Horn, Golden Spike Tower, overlooking Edd Bailey Classification Yard, North Platte, Nebraska, Carhenge in Alliance, Nebraska and now final destination, Homestead National Monument, Beatrice, Nebraska. (Hope you enjoyed the video journey that comprised some 20 days, 6000 plus driving miles to/from Cleveland, OH)

Homestead Heritage Center and Education Center

The Homestead Heritage Center, dedicated in 2007, contains exhibits that treat the effect of the Homestead Act on immigration, agriculture, native tribes, the tallgrass prairie ecosystem, and federal land policy. The roof line of the center resembles a “single bottom plow moving through the sod,” and the parking lot measures exactly 1-acre (4,000 m2). A separate Education Center features science and social science presentations that can be shared with classrooms anywhere in the United States through distance-learning.

Tallgrass Prairie.

The park includes 100 acres (0.40 km2) of tallgrass prairie restored to approximate the ecosystem that once covered the central plains of the United States—and that was nearly plowed into extinction by the homesteaders. This restoration, which necessitates regular mowing, haying, and prescribed burns, has been managed by the National Park Service for more than 60 years and is the oldest in the National Park System. The park maintains about 2.7 miles (4.3 km) of hiking trails through the prairie and woodland surrounding Cub Creek, accessible via all-terrain wheelchair.

Palmer-Epard Cabin

The restored Palmer-Epard Cabin was built in 1867 about fourteen miles northeast of the Monument. Over more than sixty years, Palmers and Epards lived in the 14 X 16 foot structure before it was converted to grain storage. The cabin, built of squared logs of mixed hardwoods, consists of a single, earth-floored room downstairs and a small attic. It was donated to the park in 1950 and has been moved and restored several times through the intervening years.

Freeman School

The Freeman School, built of foot-thick red brick with carved limestone lintels, was the longest continuously used one-room school in Nebraska history (1872–1967). The school also served as a Lutheran church, a polling place for Blakely Township, and a community center for debates, clubs, and box socials. The National Park Service has restored the school to look as it did during the 1870s.

The Freeman School was the focus of an early, influential judicial decision regarding separation of church and state. In 1899, Daniel Freeman sued the school board after a teacher, Edith Beecher, refused to stop praying, reading the Bible, and singing gospel songs in her classroom. In Freeman v. Scheve, et al. (1902), the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled that Beecher’s activities violated provisions of the Nebraska constitution.


VIDEO: Homestead National Monument, Beatrice, Nebraska ( 15 mins )

http://ray-penny.smugmug.com/2014-Vacation/MontanaMay/Homestead-Nation-Park-Beatrice/i-qJmZMnB/A

Photo Gallery ( 3 pages )

http://ray-penny.smugmug.com/2014-Vacation/MontanaMay/Homestead-Nation-Park-Beatrice/


Cheers! Ray & Penny