Boot Hill. Ogallala, Nebraska
These pictures are from the summer of 2002.
Boot Hill was the final resting place for many early westerners who helped make Ogalalla a booming cowtown in the 1870's and 1880's. Although one of the first burials here was a mother and child, many came by running afoul of the law -- some for stealing another man's horse. Others were killed by re-fighting the Civil War or for questioning the gambler's winning hand. Most were buried with their boots on, thus the name Boot Hill. Their bodies, placed in canvas sacks, were lowered into shallow graves and marked with a wooden headboard. Some of the bodies have since been removed -- only the unknown or the unclaimed remain in this western cemetery.
|
|
Boot Hill. Nebraska Historical Marker
|
Samuel David "Lep" Sanders
|
Samuel David "Lep" Sanders, one of the earliest cowboys who rode the long trail north from Texas to Ogallala.
|
Samuel David "Lep" Sanders, one of the earliest cowboys who rode the long trail north from Texas to Ogallala.
|
Pedro. September, 1876
|
|
Remains of prehistoric American Indians and 1800s Pioneers Intered Here May 25, 1993
|
Mrs. Mary Bleasdale, 1883
|
Mrs. Mary Bleasdale, 1883
|
Boot Hill Burial Ground, Ogallala, Nebraska
|
Boot Hill Burial Ground, Ogallala, Nebraska
|
|
Unknown, September 10, 1878
|
Wm. Coffman, Shot 1875
|
Boot Hill Burial Ground, Ogallala, Nebraska
|
Boot Hill Burial Ground, Ogallala, Nebraska
|
Pauper, 1887
|
|
Boot Hill Burial Ground, Ogallala, Nebraska
|
|
|
|
|
|
Add Comment