Friday, July 19, 2019
Lincoln, Nebraska :: essays research papers
 Lincoln, Nebraska      The city of Lincoln is the capital of the Cornhusker State, Nebraska. Lincoln  is located in the southeastern part of the state, about 60 miles (100  kilometers) southwest of Omaha. It lies in a shallow basin about 1,160 feet (355  meters) above sea level. Salt Creek and its tributaries thread through the basin.  Lincoln serves as a center for educational, cultural, and religious institutions.  The city also developed as the trade center for a wide agricultural area.  In the city are the buildings that house the various departments of the city,  county, and state governments, the state mental and orthopedic hospitals, and  the state penitentiary. Also located in Lincoln are a veterans' hospital and the  regional headquarters of the Veterans Administration and the United States  Department of Agriculture.  The University of Nebraska was founded in Lincoln in 1869. The city is also  the home of Nebraska Wesleyan University and Union College.  The State Capitol, designed by the architect Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue and  completed in 1932, has a central tower that rises 400 feet (120 meters) from a  massive two-story base and is considered a showpiece of American government  architecture. `The Sower', a statue symbolizing Nebraska's farms, stands atop  the tower. Museums include the State Museum of History, the University of  Nebraska's Christlieb Western Art Collection, and the Sheldon Memorial Art  Gallery, designed by architect Philip Johnson. Pioneers Park includes a nature  center. The Nebraska State Fair takes place in Lincoln each summer. Other  cultural groups include a symphony orchestra, the Lincoln Community Playhouse,  and the National Art Association.  Lincoln got its first rail connection in 1870 and by the late 1800s had 19  different rail routes. Railroads gave Lincoln its most important industry--  railroad-car repair. Among the city's manufactures are dairy and meat products,  telephone equipment, agricultural machinery, cement, bricks, and drugs. There  are also printing and publishing plants, and the city is the headquarters for  more than 30 insurance companies.  Lincoln arose from a settlement established in 1856 to work salt deposits. In  1859 it was named Lancaster, the seat of Lancaster County. When Nebraska became  a state in 1867, the town was renamed for President Abraham Lincoln and became a    					    
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