| Pioneer Days - Palisade
- June 9-11, 2006
308-285-3300
Citywide. Parade, BBQ, dance, picnic and
song fest for everyone to enjoy.
4th of July Celebration - Culbertson
308-278-2123
Citywide. Parade, sports tournaments,
car show, horseshoe tourneaments, fireworks, and more 6:30 am -
10:30 pm Free.
Harvest Festival - Trenton - August
5-6, 2006
308-334-5488
Festival kicks off with a Friday night
Jamboree at the Pow Wow Grounds west of town.
Saturday activities include a parade down Main St., children's games
at VFW on Main St.Free popcorn and cold drinks at Farmers State
Bank, hotdog & hamburger stand in park grounds, free swimming
at pool, co-ed sand volleyball, horseshoe tournament, craft show,
and museum is open after the parade until 5:00 pm. A free barbecue
at 6:00 pm, team penning at 7:00 pm, and dance at 9:00 pm are held
at the Pow Wow Grounds. Sunday concludes with a pie and ice cream
social at 6:30 pm.
Fall Harvest Festival - Stratton - September
30, 2006
308-276-2206
Bailey St. Children's games in the park,
free BBQ, street dane, old-fashioned melodrama, auto show and more.
10 a.m. - Midnight. Free.
In the late 1860s and early 1870s
an influx of cattlemen began moving into the area between the Republic
and Frenchman River Valleys in Southwest Nebraska. By the spring
of 1873 the population had increased so dramatically in this area
that settlers sent a petition to Gov. Robert B. Furnas requesting
that a county be organized.
The settlers' request was honored by the governor, who on July 5,
1873, signed a proclamation ordering an election be held to select
county officers and a county seat. The area would become known as
Hitchcock County, named after Phineas W. Hitchcock, a United States
senator from Nebraska at the time. The first county seat was located
at a site just west of the present town of Culbertson. Instead of
building a courthouse, county officials' offices were located in
the upper story of a store.
Early development of what is today Hitchcock County can be traced
back to the days of the Texas-Ogallala Cattle Trail, which cut across
the area diagonally. Years later the Burlington and Missouri River
Railroad would have an even greater impact.
The summer of 1874 took its toll on the county, as a drought and
an infestation of grasshoppers forced many settlers to pack up and
move on. Eventually the county began to recover and in the early
1880s a series of townsites sprang up. One of these was Trenton,
which was established near the center of the county in 1884 by the
Lincoln Land Company. Trenton, located on the Republican River,
would be named the county seat in 1894 and in 1906 the first courthouse
was built. This building would house the county's offices until
1969 when the present courthouse was constructed. With its dependence
on agriculture, Hitchcock County realized early on the importance
of conservation, flood control and irrigation. This led to the construction
of a large dam on the Republican River just west of Trenton. In
1949, state and local officials dedicated the Swanson Reservoir.
Today the large lake, named in honor of Trenton conservationist
and civic leader Carl Swanson, is a popular recreation area.
Copyright © 2004
Nebraska Association of County Officials. All rights reserved.
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