Seeing Lincoln
Presented by Gold & Co. LINCOLN, NEBR.
Written for The Nebraska State Journal By Anne Longman
Come with us, all you who are new to the city or you who bid fair to live and die in Lincoln without ever having seen her various faces. We’ll teach you in—well, we don’t know how many lessons—something about the city in which you are living.
Maybe we should begin with the capitol, known over the world for its beauty. But we think we’ll start with that handy starting and stopping place, O street. Lincoln is often described as an overgrown country town, O its Main street. But even New York has its lapses into the primitive, and who doesn’t like, in medium doses, the simplicity and the friendliness that spell country town.
When Lincoln was only a handful of blocks flung down on the prairie for hasty habitation by early salt seekers, restless young Civil war veterans, the railroad advance guard and those with an incurable pioneer fever, it huddled within the confines of what is now the most downtown part of Lincoln. Along O from Eighth to Fourteenth were its beginnings. The town spread slowly, like extremely cold molasses, into an indefinite shape with an undulating circumference at the present time of about 20 miles.
So, here’s O street, looking from Tenth east. Most of Lincoln’s buses head up O to Tenth, rolling around government square and then rolling back to O again. You can’t get lost in Lincoln. Just keep one foot, or at least an eye, on O and say your alphabet north and south. Or on Thirteenth and say your numbers east and west. And then there are a few streets on the edges with fancier names, just to make it a little harder.
This city is one of 25 cities or towns in the United States sharing the name of Lincoln. Sixteen of these 25 were named for Abraham Lincoln. It is perhaps not unduly vain to say that Lincoln, Neb., is most noted of these Lincolns. To begin with, it is the capital of a state, and that state is the geographical center of the North American continent.
Anne Longman
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No. 1—O street
No. 2—The Lincoln Statue
No. 3—Old Butler Mansion
No. 4—Kennard House
No. 5—Official Milestone
No. 6—Nebraska State Journal
No. 7—St. Paul Methodist Church
No. 8—County Courthouse
No. 9—O Street Columns
No. 10—City Library
No. 11—Normal Methodist church
No. 12—City Mission
No. 13—Aeronautical Institute
No. 14—Lincoln Postoffice
No. 15—Old Oliver theater
No. 16—Dr. Harry Everett’s home
No. 17—L. C. Chapin Home
No. 18—Student Union
No. 19—Memorial Stadium
No. 20—University Hall
No. 21—Don Love Memorial Library
No. 22—Grant Memorial Hall
No. 23—The Temple
No. 24—Art Gallery, Morrill Hall
No. 25—Morrill Hall Entrance
No. 26—Carrie Belle Raymond hall
No. 27—Old W. J. Bryan home, 1625 D
No. 28—Cadman Home south of State Hospital
No. 29—Marker on Burlington Station
No. 30—Marker at 14th and O
No. 31—Oak Creek Park
No. 32—Pioneers Park, West Van Dorn
No. 33—Smoke Signal, Pioneers Park
No. 34—Zoo in Antelope Park
No. 35—War Memorial, Antelope Park
No. 36—Nebraska Capitol
No. 37—Front Entrance, Capitol
No. 38—Capitol Panel, Signing the Magna Carta
No. 39—Foyer of State Capitol
No. 40—First Presbyterian church, 17th and F.
No. 41—Burlington Shops at Havelock
No. 42—Governor’s Mansion, 15th and H
No. 43—Nebraska Wesleyan
No. 44—Scene of big bank robbery
No. 45—First Plymouth church, 20th and D
No. 46—Cotner college
No. 47—Union College
No. 48—Pershing home, 1748 B
No. 49—Former Dawes home, 1301 H
No. 50—Wyuka, 36th and O
No. 51—State Penitentiary, 14th and Pioneers
No. 52—Holy Trinity Episcopal, 1200 J
No. 53—Lincoln High, 21st and J
No. 54—Veterans Hospital, 600 So. 74th
No. 55—Yankee Hill Brick Mfg. Co.
No. 56—Whitehall, 5903 Walker
No. 57—St. Mary’s Cathedral
No. 58—Northeast High, Sixty-third and Baldwin
No. 59—State Historical Society
No. 60—Orthopedic Hospital, 11th and South
Street Directory
Transcriber’s Notes