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The Sandhills Global Event Center, known as the Lancaster Event Center until December 2023, is a public non-profit fairgrounds-style event complex located in Lincoln, Nebraska owned and operated by the Lancaster County Agricultural Society. It was originally built to provide a permanent home for the Lancaster County Fair and other community events.
Akers is an unincorporated community in northwestern Shannon County, Missouri, United States. It is located approximately eighteen miles northwest of Eminence in the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. Akers houses a campground and access to the Current River. Since there is no bridge within the community, there is a small ferry that allows ...
The first Nebraska "State" Fair occurred while Nebraska was still a U.S. territory, from September 21–23, 1859 in Nebraska City. [2] Another event wasn't held until October 7–9, 1868, by which time Nebraska had become a state. The fair was again held in Nebraska City in 1869, before moving to Brownville in 1870 and 1871.
E bank of Current R., S of Powder Mill Ferry, Ozark National Scenic Riverways 37°08′42″N 91°10′12″W / 37.145°N 91.17°W / 37.145; -91.17 ( Buttin Rock Eminence
This page was last edited on 24 December 2023, at 09:31 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Tickets to events will be sold at Western Red Brewing, at 19186 Jensen Way, and Vinland Marketplace, 18996 Front Street. ... Carlisle II ferry making Bremerton-Poulsbo trips for Frosty Fest. Show ...
Brown was the first pioneer to see the potential for a city on the site, and the landing became a popular gathering site for the first settlers of the Nebraska Territory. [1] Named after a solitary tree on the Nebraska bank of the river, the Lone Tree Ferry became central to the founding and development of the City of Omaha. [2]
The Lytton Ferry across the Fraser River in British Columbia, Canada, is a reaction ferry using an overhead cable and traveller, visible in the upper right corner. At one time over 30 reaction ferries crossed the rivers of British Columbia , primarily the Fraser River and the Thompson River .