Grand Island Location
Unit 2 - Community Geography
Grand Island Location and History
Front: Peter Stuhr, Christian Menck, Herman Vasold, Anna Thomsson, Detlev Sass, Heinrich Schoel, and Cay Ewoldt.
Back: William Hagge, Joachin Doll, Catherina Doll, Marx Stelk, Fred Hedde, Margaretha Joehnck, and Hemrich Joehnck
How did we get here? The first French explorers and fur traders who recorded our part of the Platte River wrote that one of the islands was fifty miles long. They named this island "La Grand Isle" and from this, Grand Island got its name.
The people who came to settle and begin this community had some choices made for them by the people who arranged for them to come. Over thirty people came to make a community opposite the large island in the Platte River. Most of them had come to the United States from Germany and were living in the same part of the city, Davenport, Iowa.
The people who made the decision about where the settlers would live was a group of banking people who formed a town company. The company was called Chubb Brothers and Barrows. They thought that the national capital would be moved to the center of the nation. The town company leaders also thought that a railroad would be built along the Platte River and they wanted the town to be near that river.
On May 28, 1857 the settlers left Davenport, Iowa and they reached the where they would make their new homes on July 4, 1857. They built four log houses near each other for protection using trees which they found on the islands in the river. Those homes were located right next to the land that the Swift Company uses for their business today.
The town company leaders had been right in their thinking that a railroad would be built through this area. In 1866 the Union Pacific Railroad built tracks through the Platte River Valley of Nebraska. The tracks were north of the first Grand Island settlement so, slowly the people and businesses moved closer to the railroad tracks.
Heinrich Egge and Homestead 1867
Historical Photos courtesy of Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer
Grand island in 1867
Grand Island in 1874
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