Travelwithall is where you can find airline ticket reservations for your travel destination to Nebraska Travelwithall is where you can find lodging accomodations for your travel destination Travelwithall is where you can arrange car rentals for your travel destination to Nebraska

Nebraska Getaway & Hotel Guide

HOME | Africa | Asia | Australia | Canada | Caribbean | Europe | Latin America | Mexico

Travelwithall Nebraska destination, getaway, and travel guide is where you can make hotel reservations and find information and tips on travel to Nebraska. This hotel guide will help our readers find the perfect lodging accommodations in Nebraska, where you can shop and compare rates. Whether you are traveling with your family on a leisure holiday vacation or visiting for corporate business, our Nebraska hotels guide will help you find a hotel room that suits your specific needs. Free searchable list of available resorts, hotels, motels, inns, lodges, vacation rentals and other accommodations by city in Nebraska. This is where you can find available luxury five star resorts, comfortable four star hotels, clean three star lodges, convenient two star inns, and budget one star motels in NE.

Though modern transcontinental travelers tend to see Nebraska in much the same light as did the early pioneers, heading west during the Gold Rush - as just another dreary expanse of prairie to get through as fast as possible - this flat and sparsely populated state in fact encompasses quite a few places of interest. However, its most appealing cities, commercial Omaha and the livelier state capital, Lincoln, are separated by a good three hundred miles of underwhelming, livestock-rearing flatlands from the western Panhandle, where the landscape finally erupts into giant sand hills and valleys, broken by towering rocky columns and hemmed in by sheer-faced buttes.

43 Cities With Hotels in Nebraska

  • Ainsworth
  • Alliance
  • Beatrice
  • Bellevue
  • Blair
  • Boys Town
  • Central City
  • Chadron
  • Columbus
  • Crete
  • Doniphan
  • Fremont
  • Gering
  • Gothenburg
  • Grand Island
  • Hastings
  • Imperial
  • Kearney
  • Kimball
  • Lexington
  • Lincoln
  • McCook
  • Morrill
  • Nebraska City
  • Norfolk
  • North Platte
  • Ogallala
  • Omaha
  • Papillion
  • Paxton
  • Scottsbluff
  • Seward
  • Sidney
  • South Sioux City
  • Syracuse
  • Tecumseh
  • Thedford
  • Valentine
  • Wahoo
  • Washington
  • Wayne
  • West Point
  • York
  • Western Nebraska was still embroiled in vicious and bloody battles against Native Americans long after the east had been settled; from the first serious uprising in 1854, it was 36 years before the US Army could make white control unchallengeable. Close to the South Dakota state line, Fort Robinson, where Crazy Horse was murdered, remains one of the West's most evocative historic sites.

    Without navigable rivers, Nebraska had to rely on the railroads to help populate the land. During the 1870s and 1880s, rail companies, encouraged by grants that allowed them to accumulate one-sixth of the state, laid down such a comprehensive network of tracks that virtually every farmer was within a day's cattle drive of the nearest halt. Thus the buffalo-hunting country of the Sioux and Pawnee was turned into high-yield farmland, which today has few rivals in terms of beef production.

    Nebraska Travel Guides

    Lincoln, 58 miles southwest of Omaha, serves as an oasis of culture for a large chunk of the plains. At night, when the students emerge, its compact downtown comes into its own. Of its alphabetical array of broad boulevards, O Street is the main drag; 13th and 14th streets are packed with bars and places to eat. Dwarfing the rest of downtown, the central tower of the 1932 Nebraska state capitol, 1445 K St, protrudes 400ft into the sky. Topped by a 20ft statue of a sower on a pedestal of wheat and corn, its appearance is an adventurous departure from the usual architecture of state capitols. For once there's no golden dome, and the superb iridescent murals in the foyer are a welcome alternative to old portraits, flags and emblems. From the fourteenth-floor observation deck you can survey the flatness of the surrounding farmland.

    Omaha airport offers the best domestic links, though planes from other cities in the region also fly to Lincoln. Several Greyhound buses traverse I-80 each day on the coast-to-coast marathon, stopping at all the major towns. Amtrak trains, traveling through the night, follow a similar route and call at Omaha, Lincoln, Hastings, Holdredge and McCook. Driving on I-80 can get tedious; if you're not in a rush, Hwy-2 is a good alternative.


    Did you find what you were looking for?
    Search this site or the whole internet with the power of Google

    Google
     
    Web Travelwithall.com

    This article was derived fully or in part from the Nebraska article from Travelnow.™ Fullfillment services by Hotels.com.™

    Other States: [ AK | AL | AR | AZ | CA | CO | CT | DC | DE | FL | GA | HI | ID | IL | IN | IA | KS | KY | LA | ME | MD | MA | MI | MN | MS MO ]
    [ MT | NE | NV | NH | NJ | NM | NY | NC | ND | OH | OK | OR | PA | PR | RI | SC | SD | TN | TX | UT | VT | VA | WA | WV | WI | WY | VI ]