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Keith County Area History
From 1870 to 1885, Ogallala was the "gateway of the Northern
Plains". Hard-bitten Wyoming and Montana cattlemen met in Ogallala's
hotel and saloons with Texas cattle kings and bargained over cattle
prices. Gold flowed freely across the table, liquor across the bar,
and occasionally blood across the floor as a bullet brought some
unlucky cowhand to his death on the floorboards of Tuck's Saloon.
The first white men to come to this area were the trappers from St.
Louis. They were able to get along with the Pawnee Indians who lived
along the Republican River. The Sioux Indians to the north, however,
were not friendly and were a constant menace to the trappers.
The next people were those who followed the Oregon Trail. To protect
them, the government established forts at intervals along the trail.
Then came the Union Pacific Railroad. It is assumed that Ogallala
had its beginning about 1867. Settlers started to follow the
railroad west, and the cattlemen started driving their cattle to
Ogallala to be shipped east or to be sold to Montana and Wyoming
ranchers.
Ogallala's early history was unspectacular, promising to be nothing
but a section house and water tank for the railroad. Then, in the
spring of 1868, three men appeared to set the destiny of Ogallala.
These men were the Lonergran brothers and Louis Aufdengarten. The
Lonergran brothers came to do construction work for the Union
Pacific Railroad. They found the plains to their liking, and
subsequently became interested in Ogallala.
By 1876, Ogallala had changed little from its infant days in 1868.
The stores were all south of the railroad tracks, and fronted what was called railroad street and the trail
leading south to the Platte River. Along this trail extended the
rest of the town. The town consisted of saloons with such names as
The Cowboy's Rest and the Crystal Palace. The last building on the
street was the Ogallala House - dining room widely patronized
because of its excellent fare. It was run by S.S. Gast.
The military campaign carried out by General Crook and Colonel Miles
during the fall and winter of 1876 brought an end to the Indian
troubles in this part of the territory. These campaigns made sure
that the Sioux Indians would be confined to their reservations.
By 1880, Ogallala consisted of one courthouse, one school, one
hotel, two dwelling houses, and twenty-five permanent residents. The
tempo of living in early Ogallala changed with the seasons. During
the months of winter and early spring life was drab and dreary.
Shortly after the first of June the town began to hum with activity
as the first Texas trail herds started to arrive. During the three
summer months business boomed - ten to twelve herds, each of two
hundred or more trail hands taxed the facilities of Ogallala.
Sleeping rooms and meals were hard to find when the trail hands were
in town. Activities in Ogallala continued at a fever pitch until the
end of August, by then the Texans were heading back to Texas; by
November Ogallala had settled back in quiet and peaceful repose.
Ogallala's population of floaters, gamblers, trades-people and dance
hall hostesses drifted to Omaha or Cheyenne to spend the winter. One
hotel, one supply house and a single saloon remained open for the
winter. The community sank into a state of inanimation until next
spring.
In 1882-1884, the settlers and farmers reached Ogallala. These men
were encouraged by the Union Pacific Railroad because the railroad
started selling their land at quite low prices.
A serious epidemic of Texas fever swept over Nebraska during the
summer of 1884. The disease first appeared near Ogallala in July
apparently being brought in by Texas cattle. The disease spread
quickly and it caused very heavy losses to the cattlemen. The
ranchers had started to put expensive blooded bulls in their herds.
These ranchers demanded that Texas cattle be excluded from Nebraska.
This ban of Texas cattle was a damaging blow to the Texas trail herd
business. This was the end of the romantic period of Ogallala. The
cattle industry no longer existed and the wild-violent town was
reduced to a peaceful farmer’s settlement.
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