Areas Served

Nebraska is a state touched by South Dakota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, and Wyoming. The population is 1.9 million, and the capital is located in Lincoln, with Omaha being its largest town. The dissected till plains part of the state have rolling hillsides, and Omaha and Lincoln are located there. Western Nebraska belongs to the great plains and is a treeless prairie. Eastern Nebraska features a humid continental climate, and western Nebraska is semi-arid. The eastern part is on central time, and the western is mountain time. The Missouri, Platte, Niobrara, and Republican Rivers flow through the state. The highest area in Nebraska is 5,424 feet.

Nebraska came to be a state in 1867. The capital city was initially in Omaha but was moved to Lincoln later on. Nebraska's populace expanded in the last quarter of the ninetieth century as the prairies opened to settlers. Inventions like barbed wire, windmills, and the plow additionally contributed to population growth.

Edwin Perkins of Haskin created Kool-Aid in 1927. Cliff Hillegass of Rising City started Cliff's Notes. Berkshire Hathaway and Warren Buffett call Omaha home. Mutual of Omaha, TD Ameritrade, InfoUSA, West Corporation, Woodmen of the World, Valmont Industries, Union Pacific, and Kiewit have HQs in Omaha. Ameritas, Sandhills Publishing, Nelnet, Hudl and Duncan Aviation call Lincoln home base. The Union Pacific's Bailey Yard in North Platte is the world's biggest.

Stuff invented in Omaha include the pink hair curler at Tip Top, butter brickle ice cream and the Rueben sandwich at the Blackstone Hotel, cake mix, center-pivot irrigation at Valmont, Raisin Bran at Skinner Macaroni, Top 40 radio at KOWH, and the Frozen Dinner at Swanson Foods.

Villages around Lincoln were annexed for many years and came to be different areas. These towns consist of University Place, Belmont, Bethany, College View, Havelock, and West Lincoln. The city has had 45 neighborhoods. Downtown Lincoln has more than doubled its resident populace in the last ten years, elevating residence and lease costs.