3We(tmrit lUitli tins first holttme of the lllest Jointer tlie staff has euhrahoreh to rerorh as fully as passible the (work af the school hnrtitq the near 1924-25. Hie trust that you hull halite this hook as a monument tn your school anh that in later years hear reminiscences hull he reflected to you through its paqes.
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fainting (Udnarite Blest Hark! the Pioneer is coming. Bringing lowly oxen with him To Nebraska’s fertile prairies. Along the Elkhorn’s winding course. Brings he the plow, cart, and cattle. Puts up the cabin on his homestead. Carving out a western empire From this virgin soil of promise. Way b ick in eighteen fifty-six— (Tame a settler, Benjamin Moore. Came he fearless, and undaunted With his family, to Dead timber, lie, the first of all the settlers. Had the vision of this Eden, Had the courage to settle here. 'Twas a hard and snowy winter. And the hardships then were crushing. But of wild game there was plenty. For the Great Spirit, had well blessed This fair valley with the red deer. And the antelope and bison, Furnishing them their sustenance. Then in the year of fifty-seven Our West Point village was laid out. Philadelphia at the first. As its maiden name was given. Fifty-eight brought our John Neligh And James C. Crawford to this spot. These first two then bought a sawmill. And the claim to this fair townsite. Traveling back to Omaha, John D. Neligh met some settlers With their ox-teams coming this way. Met he them upon the prairie, And he coaxed them and cajoled them To come to this new settlement. So came they to our eastern hill. And as they glimpsed this promised land. Down on their knees, those settlers went. Thanking God for John D. Neligh. In the summer of fifty-nine. Came three thousand of the Pawnee Up the Elkhorn valley creeping. On a plundering raid they were. Then was heard the dreaded war whoop And the rush and tramp of battle. While the terror stricken women And the children, feared the scalp knife; Fled for safety did the people. Gone, were they for several days. Till the white men had defeated And drove the red men all away. Came then two long years of famine. Many then left Cuming county. Now comes the time of sixty-eight When the grist mill was completed. And the boom did start to coming. Which increased the population. When his Spirit fled John Neligh, West Point had one thousand people. Pioving soundly his conviction. Pro ing his prophetic vision. Came the need of education And the teacher Mis. Crawford, With the number of tw’elve pupils. Now the iron horse comes creeping. Up the valley, see it coming; Carrying settlers ever faster, And reaching here in seventy. Now come the Germans and the Swedes. The Bohemians and the Danes, Seeking homesteads, and their freedom. To the melting pot of races. Cuming county's fifteen thousand
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