Our initial interest in Cozad was due to a report about “divine” pie served up by a café in this small Nebraska town. When we looked into it, we discovered that Cozad is also located on the 100th Meridian – which happened to be a major goal during the building of the first transcontinental railroad. Cozad’s 100th Meridian marker gives an excellent description:
"The 100th MERIDIAN
The 100th longitudinal line west of Greenwich was the major goal set by
Congress in building the first transcontinental railroad. Construction of the
Union Pacific track reached the Meridian on October 5, 1866. To celebrate this
record–breaking achievement against terrific odds, appropriate ceremonies were
enacted on this ground on October 26, 1866. A “Great Excursion From Wall Street
To The 100th Meridian” brought 250 notables including railroad and territorial
officials, congressmen, financiers, and newspaperman on the first passenger
train to run west of the Missouri River. A large signboard proclaiming “The
100th Meridian 247 Miles From Omaha” stood for many years close to the track on
the Meridian, but finally disappeared, and in 1933 was replaced on the original
site with a monument of native stone by the Cozad chapter of the DAR.
In 1879 John Wesley Powell, U.S. Army, in his report for the geological survey
recognized the 100th meridian as the natural demarcation line extending
northward from the western shore of the Gulf of Mexico. Evaporation from the
Gulf waters supplies most of the rainfall east of the Meridian. West of the
meridian precipitation comes largely from the Pacific which is generally
insufficient for agricultural needs without irrigation. Here on the 100th
meridian, Humid East Meets Arid West."
Bonus! It's on the Lincoln Highway! |
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