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In response to westward migration and the call for a trans-continental railroad Franklin Pierce signed the
Kansas-Nebraska Act on May 30, 1854 creating the Nebraska Territory. The ensuing controversy over the location of the
Territorial Capital in Omaha was not resolved until after Statehood in 1867, when the Legislature voted to move the State
Capital south of the Platte River to the western edge of settlement in the new state. The new Capital City was to be home
to Nebraska's Capitol, the University, Penitentiary, and State Hospital. Following a scouting trip by the three member
Capital Commission to select a new capital site, the village of Lancaster was chosen. The small community was renamed
Lincoln and construction of the first State Capitol begun. Nebraska's current Capitol stands in contrast to the two territorial and two state capitols to precede it. |
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The Nebraska State Capitol, the product of a nationwide design competition won by New York Architect Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue in 1920, is described as the nation's first truly vernacular State Capitol. The present building, the third to be erected on this site, was the nation's first statehouse design to radically depart from the prototypical form of the nation's Capitol and to use an office tower. Constructed in four phases over ten years from 1922-1932, the building, with furnishings and landscaping, was completed at a cost just under the $10 million budget and was paid for when finished. To decorate the building, Bertram Goodhue selected Lee Lawrie, sculptor; Hildreth Meiere, tile and mosaic designer; and Hartley B. Alexander, thematic consultant for inscription and symbolism. |
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