The Omaha S Bee. rOR ALL THE NEWS THE OMAHA DEE bEST IN THE WES1 vast rxaaa HALF-TONE taoiu ova to rovm. UNDAY r V) 1 i VOL. XXXIX NO. 50. OMAHA, SLWDAY MORNING, MAY 2D, 1910. SING LB COPY FIVE CENTS. ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF NEBRASKA HISTORY ' Quaint Old Bellevue, City of What Might Have Been, is to Be the Scene of Great Centennial Celebration June 23 Hrk.:t 1 ,88) BUT STILL ABLE TO 1 r A v. i sudge James Gow AGE. 98 YEARS cS.WPETERS "AGE 71 V lit I - ii fmmmr mm ? ii t'.bWH Mi", km' fc" 9.1.. M. " " 7: A. bELixYur. Itoic OF '5 JIEBJSTOBICAL SOOE.T'SC. .', EBRASKA, the beutlful land of Indian romance, land of velvet verdure sloping la graceful undulation from mountain foothill to river brink, premier common wealth reared from the prim itive, thanks to pioneer brawn and brain epito mized tersely, Nebraska, the great. Is about to commemo rate the century spanning 1810 and 1910. June 23 will be an epochal day in Nebraska history, ad ding a belated but momen tous appendix to treasured archives, for on that date, in quaint old Bellvue, there is to be a picnic under State Historical society direction to celebrate the one hun dredth anniversary of the founding of John Jacob As- V. 1 1 i DDWCAN llElirZSEXTOB BELLETOE CET4E1E.KV IP six other Frenchmen, who came up the Mississippi river from Nw Orleans to St. Charles, Mo., and thence up the Missouri river tq what Is now the eastern shores of Nebraska. Manuel Lisa, wily fur trader, landed on the site of Bellevue, so history states, in 1805, and leaving his crude water craft for a survey of the adjacent landscape, he gave expression to his impres sion of the beautiful vista by exclaiming: "Belleview," meaning thereby to catalogue the scene as sublime. That, so the story goes, was the origin of the name of Nebraska's 3 f 'BrONEEB.. iai historic village. In the early days there was conflict as to the spell ing of Bellevue, many of the old-timers preferring "Belleview" In- beneatn a massive monument erected by relatives. As to the value cesslble from this city, and such a strange blending of th primitive stead of "Bellevue," contending that "view" had a meaning, while of the estate he left, history conflicts. Some reports appraised his with the modern Is seldom seen in this progressive age. "vue" was not capable of definition. holdings at 175,000, which in tnat era was a big fortune, while Leaving Omaha for Bellevue by trolley, you hustle for your car No historical review of Nebraska is complete without mention others aver that he had dissipated the bulk of his fortune. Certain through city canyons walled on either side by gigantic skyscraper!, of Manuel Lisa, for it Is recorded of him that he almost Harriman- it Is, however, that he was a powerful leader of men, an empire you elbow vour wav throuch the crowds surxlng to and fro Ilk X h.rkin hark to the nloneer era when Bellevue was prominent as Ued the fur trade- Back ,n St LoulB- from whlch port tne nrewi b"ler and a pioneer well fitted for the hazardous task of blaiing the shifting particles of a kaliedscope. On street crossings you Manuel sailed when he started Nebraskawards, there waited for him a trail through the wilderness. are constantly on the alert lest you collide with the ever-onward a wife who was later to be distinguished as the first white woman Biographers of Peter Sarpy accredit him with wonderful fore- taxlcab. You board your car amid the very essence of metropolitan to take up her abode In Nebraska, but that wot not for Lisa, and eight, and it is related that seventy-five years ago, when almost all environment. The motorman applies the power and you ar whlsksd when he found that by taking to himself a wife from the Omaha the vast area west of the Mississippi river was practically unten- away over viaducts and through long lanes of factory, home and tribe of Indians, he could enhance his trading power by many shek- anted,- he predicted the land craze which 'exists today. "The day etore, landing within a few minutes In the heart of South Omaha, els, he at once became a squawman. Subsequently he brought his will come," he prophesied, "when Nebraska will be densely, popu- the great packing center, the source of beefsteak and pork chops white wife up the river and she spent one winter with him in his lated and will no longer be known as the 'west.1 And the dsy will for the millions. There, amidst scenes of remarkable industrial Nebraska camp. Just how he managed to prevent domestic turmoil come when all of the west, even to the brink of the Pacific ocean, activity, you change cars. Seated on the lnterurban, you glide away with two wives in the same bailiwick, one white, one red, historians will be as populous as the Atlantic coast." In fair measure these over a strip of country as beautiful as can be found anywherd 10 have been delinquent in recording. prophetic words have already been verified, and in the course of the world. Gentle hills, carpeted with nature'B green, slope grace Following closely one upon the other in the years from 1805 to time, basing conclusions on the present scramble for homes, the fUuy away into peaceful valleys, while fringing this landscape en k..w , k ..t.1.4 .. i0lu' CBln8 everttl eQln wnerem aanng expiorers touchea vermcauon win te complete. tne east the majestic Missouri, curving In and out. rolling its J . bVdavoVJ to the land IVmong "' . Mallet Another highly interesting early-day character was Logan Fon- turbid way seaward. Back of the river and across on the Iowa fur-trading station. The picnic program at Bellevue will savor of the reminscent, harklnK back to the Dloneer era when Bellevue was prominent as the first white settlement of Nebraska, and when the names of Chouteau, Sarpy. Fontenelle, D Roin, Lisa, Burt, Cuming, Morton, Robidoux McKlnney, Iiard, Hamilton, Lowrle and others were be ing written indellibly into primeval annals. Time, for the once, will in fancy turn back into the good old ways of the good old days. On the night of June 23, following a day given over to remin iscence, the scene of the centennial celebration will shift from Belle jvie, the ancient, to Omaha, the modern, and In the splendid new Auditorium of the Nebraska metropolis, there will be speech-mak ing in which the present tense will prevail. At the Omaha meeting 4. f 'time may be devoted to the Nebraska of today -J6t fulfillment. A John Lee Webster, who came to. Nebraska In 1869, and who served as president of the constitutional convention which in 1875 ; drafted the present state constitution, will, by virtue of his office as president of the 8tate Historical society, serve as presiding of ficer of the Bellevue picnic, also the meeting at night in Omaha. brothers, were Lewis and Clarke, Crooks and McLellan and the tenelle. half Indian, half French, who In 1853 was elected principal thero rises, like miniature mountain range, a series of rugged bluffs, Astor party. It was on April 28. 1810, that the Astor expedition, chief of the Omaha tribe of Indians. He was born near Fort Cal- fantastic and weird. Hilltops here and there along the trolley trail ueaaea uy vvuson t rice wum, a partner or jonn jacoD Astor or noun, iseD., May 6, 1825, and died on the battlefield In war between New York, anchored its primitive fleet on the banks of the Missouri the Omahas and the Sioux at the Beaver Creek engagement, river at Bellevue, scaled the bluffs and opened the fur trading sta tion. It is in honor of this event, nominally, and as a blanket com memoration of this and other expeditions in general, that the forth- are dotted with magnificent homes many of them being occupied June Dy Omaha men who have turned to the open country for relief from Local and visiting orators, some of the old school, some of the comng celebration. June 23 this year, is to be held. 1800- lne aeain or 'onienene cut snort a career which prom- metropolitan congestion. Sleek cows graze on luxuriant pastures by ised much in future achievement. When quite young he was sent the wayside. Songbirds stir the morning air with lilt from swinging to St. Louis to be educated something quite out of the ordinary toughs of noble trees century old trees, many of them. Every- new, will make speeches both at Omaha and Bellevue, and it is ex pected that many pioneers will come from various parts of the state. It Is to be a most Important event, from a historical standpoint, and as the date approaches keen interest is aroused once again in the romantic story which goes to make up Nebraska's early history a story of primitive ways in primitive days, a story of empire builders who rowed upstream in skiffs to reach the then western El Dorado, a story of Indian fights, a story of diamonds in the rough, a story of white man's triumph over seemingly insurmountable obstacles in an unexplored region. While it la true that the Astor fur station was established at Bellevue 100 years ago, this does not Indicate that the settlement of Nebraska proper dates so far back. Indeed, it was not until along In the 'SOs that actual settlement begun. Fur stations, be it under stood, were mere outposts or advance guards of clvlllUatlon, and It was a quarter century or more following the Astor regime at Belle vue. that the homemakers came. Even then they came numerically weak, but they were heroic and enough of them remained to blaze the way for other. fWbn John Jacob Astor and other early-day tradesmen settled upon Bellevue as an ideal trading post, there was no "Nebraska." Perhaps old Blackbird, the celebrated Indian chief, came more ..... ... farly than anyone else to actual rulershlp of the country which took high rank as a man of afterwards became Nebraska, but theoretically, anomalous as it may affairs. The county of Sarpy sound In this present age, William Heary Harrison, governor of the WM named in bis honor, and then territory of Indiana, was ex-offlco the first governor of Ne- n the organisation of the braska. because, for governmental purposes, Nebraska was at that town of Bellevue, believed at . . .A. ..V.J A. V II- ... ix. . - nl lI.k . I .... . .. me time to oe tne ruture The Astor settlement at Bellevue in 1810 attracted the attention of other traders and ndventurers, and in 18 23 there came up the river from St. Louis a young man, Peter A. Sarpy, who was destined to become a most unique, as well as prominent figure in the subse quent history of Nebraska. Of French extraction, reared in St. Louis, where he was an associate of the Chouteaus, the Cabanncs among either whites or Indians in those days and that education gave to him a polish, also a breadth of mental vision, which dis tinguished him from other Indians of his day. He was the son of Lucien Fontenelle, descendant fcf French nobility, who came to Ne braska among the first settlers and, following the custom of the country, married an Indian woman from the Omaha tribe. The where, any direction you look, you are Impressed with the sublimity of nature. Half an hour or so of this trolley flight through awe-inspiring scenes, and you hear the conductor cry: "Bellevue!" You step from the car to the platform of a modern trolley sta tion. Overhead hangs an arc light, telling you plainly that old Bellevue rare old Bellevue has been invaded by progress and body of Logan Fontenelle was recovered from the battlefield and and other first families, he acquired considerable polish, as polisli was burled on a high bluff overlooking the Missouri river in the was accounted In those days. He came to Bellevue as clerk for one outskirts of Bellevue, at which post he had rendered service to the of the fur companies, and a little later succeeded to the manage- government as official interpreter prior to his election as chief of that where once the tallow dip was the only light in use after sun. ment. He was of small physique, wiry and capable of great physical the Omahas. .down, the electric bulb now scintillates its white rays In marked strajn. He at once became friendly with the Indians, and gained the Almcst every paragraph of early-day Nebraska history brings In contrast to the many lingering remnants of the primitive yet to ba title of "Great White Chief." Following the example set by Manuel Lisa, who had pre ceded hlra to Nebraska, Peter Sarpy married an Indian woman. He was, however, a widower at the time of this marriage, his first and second wives having died. He re mained In Nebraska, even after the fur trade waned, and 7 time attached to Indiana, and Its capital waa Vincennes. With the governor a thousand miles away, no railroads, no telegraph, and not even regularly established mail service, It Is obvious that the governor seated in bis chair In faraway Vincennes exercised but little Jurisdiction over bis distant ward- 4 Assuming that Coronado, In 1541, was the first white man to look upon Nebraska and on this point there is some difference of moved to Plattsmoutb, where, oWJm among historians It Is a matter of authentic record that In 1885, be died. His body TVvV.st white men to actually leave tangible evidence of their was taken to St. Louis, where, presence here were Pierre and Paul Mallet, leading a company of in Calvary cemetv'ry, it rests metropolis of Nebraska, he took active part. In 1882, Omaha in the meantime hav ing wrested from Bellevue the site of government, Earpy Bellevue in Nebraska's History The first white settlement in Nebraska was at Bellevue. The first Posloffice In Nebraska was established at Bellevue. The first Masonic lodge in Nebraska was organized at Bellevue. The first printing press brought to Nebraska was used at Bellevue In publishing the Palladium, Nebraska's first newspaper. The first white child of Nebraska waa born at Bellevue. The first seat of territorial government was tempor arily located at Bellevue. The first territorial governor of Nebraska died at Bellevue. The first teachers' institute west of the Missouri river was held at Bellevue. The first school in Nebraska was opened at Bellevue. The first religious service of Nebraska was beld at Bellevue. at one angle or another the name of Bellevue. Well may this beautiful old village be deslgnsted as the cradle of Nebraska history. Perhaps no other locality In Nebraska is so rich In historic lore. Have you ever visited Bellevue? seen in Bellevue. Turning from the hum of the trolley wires and the arc lamp, you look out upon a motley array of buildings some new, some old. a few very, very old. For Instance, the Presbyterian church dates back to the '50s, although by reason of damage wrought by the recent cyclone, some up-to-date repairs have been made upon the lower of the old house. Over in another part of Bellevue stands a log cabin which was the original home of Rev. William Hamilton, missionary, who came to Bellevue in 1854. This historic structure If not, no matter if you live Is now used by J. S. Betz, commonly known as "Grandpa," at a in the furthermost corner of paint shop. Electric lamps dangling over log cabins rather anom- the state, the journey is well alous mixture, isn't it ? Yet, that Is exactly what you see if you visit worth your while, if you sre "Grandpa" Betz's paint shop, incidentally, it may be recorded a Nebrasksn interested In Ne- herein that no less interesting than the log cabin and Its historic braska history. association is its present venerable occupant, for "Grandpa" Bets. Bellevue college occupies. a now in his 88th year, is as spry as the average city-bred man of sightly eminence overlooking thirty years his Junior. i "Yes, I be busy meat all the time," said the aged Mr. Betz, "and I am all the happier because 1 work. Joe Medill, the great editor, once said: 'It Is better to wear out than to rust out,' and I agree with him. Yes, I'm 88 years old, but, pshaw, that's nothing. You ought to see Judge Gow he's ten years older than I be." "Grandpa" Bets wag engaged in painting a window screen when his visitors from The Sunday Bee tailed to see him. He kept right the townsite. The Institution covers several acres of beauti ful hillcrest and has an array of splendid buildings. It is one feature of the modern side of Bellevue. Less than an hour's ride by trolley csr from the center of Omaha, the place 1 easily ac- .(Continued on Page Two )