Lincoln, Nebraska

Lincoln, Nebraska Flag of Lincoln, Nebraska Flag Official seal of Lincoln, Nebraska Lincoln, Nebraska is positioned in the US Lincoln, Nebraska - Lincoln, Nebraska The town/city is the economic and cultural anchor of a substantially larger urbane region in the southeastern part of the state called the Lincoln Metropolitan and Lincoln-Beatrice Combined Statistical Areas.

In 1867, the village of Lancaster became Nebraska's state capital and was retitled Lincoln.

As the town/city is the seat of government for the state of Nebraska, the state and the United States government are primary employers.

The University of Nebraska was established in Lincoln in 1867.

Lincoln Public Schools amid the school year of 2016 17 provided support for approximately 3,200 students from 118 countries, who spoke 68 different languages.

Main article: History of Lincoln, Nebraska Further information: Timeline of Lincoln, Nebraska history Lincoln was established in 1856 as the village of Lancaster and became the governmental center of county of the newly created Lancaster County in 1859. The village was sited on the east bank of Salt Creek. The first pioneer were thriving to the region due to the abundance of salt.

By the close of 1868, Lancaster had a populace of approximately 500 citizens . The township of Lancaster was retitled Lincoln with the incorporation of the town/city of Lincoln on April 1, 1869.

In 1869, the University of Nebraska was established in Lincoln by the state with a territory grant of about 130,000 acres.

Patrick attempted to derail the move by having the future capital town/city named after recently assassinated President Abraham Lincoln.

In the end, the motion to name the future capital town/city Lincoln was ineffective and the vote to change the capital's locale south of the Platte River was prosperous with the passage of the Removal Act in 1867. The plat of the village of Lancaster was not dissolved nor abandoned; Lancaster became Lincoln when the Lincoln plat files were rather than September 6, 1867. To raise cash for the assembly of a capital city, a prosperous auction of lots was held. Newcomers began to arrive and Lincoln's populace grew.

Volga-German immigrants from Russia settled in the North Bottoms neighborhood and as Lincoln period with the expansion in population, the town/city began to annex suburbs nearby.

The Burlington and Missouri River Railroad's first train appeared in Lincoln on June 26, 1870, soon to be followed by the Midland Pacific in 1871 and the Atchison and Nebraska in 1872.

In the early years of air travel, Lincoln had three airports and one airfield. Union Airport, was established northeast of Lincoln in 1920.

Arrow Aircraft and Motors declared bankruptcy in 1939 and Arrow Airport closed roughly a several decades later. An existing Arrow Sport can be seen on permanent display, hanging in the Lincoln Airport's chief passenger terminal. The airfield was north of Salt Lake, in an region known variously over the years as Huskerville, Arnold Heights and Air Park; and was positioned approximately inside the half of the West Lincoln Township. The air field was a stop for United Airlines in 1927 and a mail stop in 1928. As train, automobile, and air travel increased, company flourished, and the town/city prospered.

The populace of Lincoln increased 38.2% from 1920 to a populace of 75,933 in 1930. In 1942 the Lincoln Army Airfield was established at the site.

In 1966, the base was closed and Lincoln took in the airfield, including the base's old housing units to the west. The base became the Lincoln Municipal Airport under ownership of the Lincoln Airport Authority.

The airport was later retitled the Lincoln Airport.

The authority shared facilities with the Nebraska National Guard, who continued ownership over some portions of the old Air Force base. In 1966, Lincoln took in the township of West Lincoln, incorporated in 1887.

West Lincoln voters rejected annexation by Lincoln until the state council passed a bill in 1965 allowing metros/cities to annex encircling areas without a vote. In 1956, Bankers Life Insurance Company of Nebraska announced plans to build a $6 million shopping center next to their new ground on the east-side outskirts of Lincoln.

The Nebraska council in 1969 legislated laws for urban renewal and shortly after that Lincoln began a program of revitalization and beautification of the city.

With the beautification and urban renewal projects, many historic buildings were razed in the city. In 2007 and 2009, the town/city of Lincoln received beautification grants for improvements on O and West O Streets, west of the Harris Overpass, commemorating the history of the D-L-D. Vietnamese refugees, from the fall of Saigon in 1975, established a momentous ethnic improve with businesses along the 27th Street corridor alongside Mexican eateries and African markets. Lincoln was designated as a "Refugee Friendly" town/city by the U.S.

In 2000, Lincoln was the twelfth-largest resettlement site per capita in the country. As of 2011, Lincoln had the biggest Karen (Burmese ethnic minority) populace in the United States, behind Omaha. As of the same year, Nebraska was one of the biggest resettlement sites for the citizens of Sudan, mostly in Lincoln and Omaha. In recent years, Lincoln had the biggest Yazidi (Iraqi ethnic minority) populace in the U.S. The boom housing market in south Lincoln created new housing developments including high end housing in areas like Cripple Creek, Willamsburg and The Ridge.

Construction on the citywide network was to begin in March 2016 and was estimated to be complete by 2019. Telephone and cable TV service would also be included, making it the third business to compete for such services inside Lincoln.

In April 2016, Windstream Communications announced that 2,300 customers in Lincoln had 1 Gigabit per second internet with an expected expansion of services to 25,000 customers by 2017, making it the first business to have ultra-fast internet available inside the city. Lincoln has a total region of 92.81 square miles (240.38 km2), of which 91.45 square miles (236.85 km2) of it is territory and 1.35 square miles (3.50 km2) is water, as stated to the United States Enumeration Bureau in 2015. Lincoln is one of the several large metros/cities of Nebraska not positioned along either the Platte River or the Missouri River.

Main article: Lincoln, Nebraska urbane region Lincoln is in two urbane statistical areas as defined by the United States Enumeration Bureau.

The Lincoln Metropolitan Travel Destination consists of Lancaster County and Seward County. Seward county was added to the urbane region in 2003.

Lincoln is also in the Lincoln-Beatrice Combined Travel Destination which consists of the Lincoln urbane region and the micropolitan region of Beatrice.

View of south Lincoln from the top of the Nebraska State Capitol (2012).

See also: Neighborhoods in Lincoln, Nebraska Lincoln's neighborhoods include both old and new development.

Some neighborhoods in Lincoln were formerly small suburbs that Lincoln later annexed, including University Place in 1926, Belmont, Bethany (Bethany Heights) in 1922, College View in 1929, Havelock in 1930, and West Lincoln in 1966. A number of Historic Districts are positioned near downtown Lincoln, while newer neighborhoods have appeared primarily in the south and east. As of December 2013, Lincoln had 45 registered neighborhood associations inside the town/city limits. Based on 30-year averages obtained from NOAA's National Climatic Data Center for the months of December, January and February, Weather Channel ranked Lincoln the seventh-coldest primary U.S.

Climate data for Lincoln Airport, Nebraska (1981 2010 normals, extremes 1887 present) Lincoln is the second-most-populous town/city in Nebraska. The U.S.

Government designated Lincoln in the 1970s as a refugee-friendly town/city due to its stable economy, educational establishments, and size.

Since then, refugees from Vietnam settled in Lincoln, and further waves came from other countries. In 2013, Lincoln was titled one of the "Top Ten most Welcoming Cities in America" by Welcoming America. Lincoln Public Schools precinct office Lincoln's economy is fairly typical of a mid-sized American city; most economic activeness is derived from the service and manufacturing industries. Government and the University of Nebraska are both large contributors to the small-town economy.

For March 2017, the Lincoln Metropolitan Travel Destination (MSA) preliminary unemployment rate was 2.6% (not cyclicly adjusted). With a tight workforce market, Lincoln has seen rapid wage growth.

Healthcare and medical jobs account for a substantial portion of Lincoln's employment: as of 2009, full-time healthcare employees in the town/city included 9,010 healthcare practitioners in technical occupations, 4,610 workers in healthcare support positions, 780 licensed and vocational nurses, and 150 medical and clinical laboratory technicians. Several nationwide company were originally established in Lincoln; these include student lender Nelnet, Ameritas, Assurity, Fort Western Stores and Hobby - Town USA.

The Lincoln region makes up a part of what is known as the greater Midwest Silicon Prairie. In 2013, Lincoln ranked No.

2 Lincoln Public Schools 8,170 6 City of Lincoln 2,601 The Nebraska Air and Army National Guard's Joint Force Headquarters are positioned in Lincoln along with other primary units of the Nebraska National Guard. During the early years of the Cold War, the Lincoln Airport was the Lincoln Air Force Base; presently, the Nebraska Air National Guard, along with the Nebraska Army National Guard, have joint-use facilities with the Lincoln Airport. Since the opening of Pinnacle Bank Arena in 2013, Lincoln's emerging music scene has grown to the point where it is sometimes referred to as a "Music City." Primary venues for live music include: Pinnacle Bank Arena, Bourbon Theatre, Duffy's Tavern, and the Zoo Bar.

The Lied Center is a venue for nationwide tours of Broadway productions, concert music, guest lectures, and regularly features its resident orchestra Lincoln's Symphony Orchestra. Lincoln has a several performing arts venues.

Plays are staged by UNL students in the Temple Building; improve theater productions are held at the Lincoln Community Playhouse, the Loft at The Mill, and the Haymarket Theater.

For movie viewing, Marcus Theatres owns 32 screens at four locations, and the University of Nebraska's Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center shows autonomous and foreign films. Standalone cinemas in Lincoln include the Joyo Theater and Rococo Theater.

Main article: List of annual cultural affairs in Lincoln, Nebraska Annual affairs in Lincoln have come and gone throughout time, such as Band Day at the University of Nebraska's Lincoln ground and the Star City Holiday Parade. However, some affairs have never changed while new traditions have been created.

Current annual cultural affairs in Lincoln include the Lincoln National Guard Marathon and Half-Marathon in May, Celebrate Lincoln in early June, the Uncle Sam Jam around July 3, and Boo at the Zoo in October. A locally prominent event is the Haymarket Farmers' Market, running from May to October in the Historic Haymarket, one of a several farmers markets throughout the city. Main article: Tourism in Lincoln, Nebraska Tourist attractions and activities include the Sunken Gardens, basketball games at Pinnacle Bank Arena, the Lincoln Children's Zoo, the dairy store at UNL's East Campus, and Mueller Planetarium on the town/city campus. The Nebraska State Capitol, which is also the tallest building in Lincoln, offers tours.

Lincoln is home to the University of Nebraska's football team, the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

Other sports squads are the Nebraska Wesleyan Prairie Wolves, a GPAC and NCAA Division III autonomous University; the Lincoln Saltdogs, an American Association autonomous minor league baseball team; the Lincoln Stars, a USHL junior ice hockey team; and the No Coast Derby Girls, a member of the Women's Flat Track Derby Association. Main article: Parks in Lincoln, Nebraska See also: Trails in Lincoln, Nebraska Lincoln has an extensive park system, with over 125 individual parks.

The trail was assembled on an abandoned Missouri Pacific Railroad corridor which runs for 27 miles (43 km) from the University of Nebraska's Lincoln ground eastward to Wabash, Nebraska. 33rd Street and Sheridan Boulevard, Bicentennial Cascade Fountain, Hamann Rose Garden, Lincoln Children's Zoo, Veterans Memorial Garden, and Holmes Park at S.

Community parks include Ballard Park, Bethany Park, Bowling Lake Park, Densmore Park, Erwin Peterson Park, Fleming Fields, Irvingdale Park, Mahoney Park, Max E.

Roper Park, Oak Lake Park, Peter Pan Park, Pine Lake Park, Sawyer Snell Park, Seacrest Park, Tierra Briarhurst, University Place Park and Woods Park. Other notable parks include Iron Horse Park, Lincoln Community Foundation Tower Square, Nine Mile Prairie owned by the University of Nebraska Foundation, Sunken Gardens, Union Plaza, and Wilderness Park. Smaller neighborhood parks are scattered throughout the city. Additionally, there are five enhance recreation centers, nine outside enhance pools and five enhance golf courses not including private facilities in Lincoln. Four members are propel from town/city council districts; the remaining three members are propel at-large. Lincoln's health, personnel, and planning departments are joint city/county agencies; most town/city and Lancaster County offices are positioned in the County/City Building.

Since Lincoln is the state capital, many Nebraska state and United States Government offices are positioned in Lincoln.

The town/city lies inside the Lincoln Public Schools school district; the major law enforcement agency for the town/city is the Lincoln Police Department.

The Lincoln Fire and Rescue Department shoulders the city's fire fighting and emergency ambulatory services while private companies furnish non-emergency medical transport and outlying areas of the town/city are supported by volunteer fire fighting units. The city's enhance library fitness is Lincoln City Libraries, which has seven chapters. Lincoln City Libraries circulates more than three million items per year to the inhabitants of Lincoln and Lancaster County.

Lincoln City Libraries is also home to Polley Music Library and the Jane Pope Geske Heritage Room of Nebraska authors. Lincoln Public Schools (LPS) is the sole enhance school precinct in the city.

There are six traditional high schools in the district: Lincoln High, East, Northeast, North Star, Southeast, and Southwest.

There are a several private parochial elementary and middle schools positioned throughout the community. These schools, like Lincoln Public Schools, are broken into districts, but most will allow attendance outside of boundary lines.

Private high schools positioned in Lincoln are College View Academy, Lincoln Christian, Lincoln Lutheran, Parkview Christian School and Pius X High School. At Lincoln Public Schools, amid the 2016 17 school year, the English Language Learners (ELL) program had 3,235 students from approximately 118 countries, who spoke approximately 68 different languages. Some of the most common first-languages spoken inside the program are Arabic, Burmese, Farsi, Karen, Kurdish, Nuer, Russian, Spanish, Ukrainian and Vietnamese. The top two first-language groups, as of 2016 17 school year, are Arabic and Kurdish speakers (35.3%), and Spanish speakers (28.2%).

From the 2010 11 to the 2016 17 school years, LPS saw Arabic and Kurdish ELL students increase by over 197%, from 321 Arabic and 63 Kurdish speaking students to 698 Arabic and 444 Kurdish speaking students. The continually increasing influx of refugees and immigrants to Lincoln over recent years, which has encompassed refugees/immigrants from Iraq, Mexico, Burma and refugee camps in Thailand, has caused LPS to hire additional ELL teachers at an increasingly rapid pace. Nine universities and universities are positioned inside the Lincoln boundaries.

The University of Nebraska Lincoln, the chief campus of the University of Nebraska system, is the biggest university in Nebraska, having 19,979 undergraduate, 4,517 postgraduate students and 510 professionals enrolled in 2014. Out of the 25,006 enrolled, 1,515 undergraduate and 970 postgraduate students/professionals were international. Nebraska Wesleyan was ranked the #1 liberal arts college in Nebraska by U.S.

Bryan College of Health Sciences offers undergraduate degrees in nursing and other community professions; a Masters in Nursing; a Doctoral degree in nurse anesthesia practice, as well as certificate programs for ancillary community professions. Universities with satellite locations in Lincoln are Bellevue University, Concordia University (Nebraska), Doane University and a yet-to-be-named satellite of Purdue University (formerly Kaplan University). Lincoln also hosts the College of Hair Design and Joseph's College of Cosmetology. Southeast Community College is a improve college fitness positioned in southeastern Nebraska, with three campuses in Lincoln and an enrollment of 9,751 students as of fall 2013.

The command posts of Nebraska Educational Telecommunications (NET), which is affiliated with the Public Broadcasting Service and National Public Radio, are in Lincoln. Lincoln is one of the several metros/cities without its own NBC affiliate; Omaha's WOWT historically served as the city's default NBC partner until 2014 when Hastings' partner KHAS-TV moved to KSNB-TV, making both available on cable (KSNB primarily serves central Nebraska). The town/city has an analog TV translator for 3 - ABN on channel 27, low power digital on channel 26; TBN low power digital on channel 29. There are 15 airways broadcasts licensed in Lincoln, not including airways broadcasts licensed outside of the town/city that serve the Lincoln area.

Most areas of Lincoln also receive radio signals from Omaha and other encircling communities.

The Lincoln Journal Star is the city's primary daily newspaper. The Daily Nebraskan is the official paper of the University of Nebraska's Lincoln ground and the The Daily - ER Nebraskan is the university's biweekly satirical paper. Other college newspapers include the Reveille, the official periodical ground paper of Nebraska Wesleyan University and the Clocktower, the official weekly ground paper of Union College. Lincoln is served by I-80.svg Interstate 80 via 7 interchanges, connecting the town/city to San Francisco and Teaneck, New Jersey in the New York City Metropolitan Area. Other Highways that serve the Lincoln region are I-180.svg Interstate 180, US 6.svg U.S.

The easterly segment of N-2.svg Nebraska Highway 2 is a major trucking route that joins Kansas City (Interstate 29) to the I-80 corridor in Lincoln. A several additional minor State Highway segments reside inside the town/city as well. The Lincoln Airport (KLNK/LNK) provides passengers with daily non-stop service to United Airlines hubs Chicago O'Hare International Airport and Denver International Airport as well as Delta Air Lines hubs Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport and Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

Lincoln is served by Black Hills Stage Lines for county-wide bus service between Omaha, Denver and points beyond. Megabus, in partnership with Windstar Lines, provides bus service between Lincoln and Chicago with stops in Omaha, Des Moines, Iowa City and Moline. Amtrak provides service to Lincoln, operating its California Zephyr daily in each direction between Chicago and Emeryville, California, using BNSF's Lincoln Denver route through Nebraska. The town/city is an Amtrak crew-change point. Rail freight travels coast-to-coast, to and through Lincoln via BNSF Railway, the Union Pacific Railroad, Lincoln's own Omaha, Lincoln and Beatrice Railway Company and an Omaha Public Power District rail spur. Lincoln was once served by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (Rock Island), the Missouri Pacific Railroad (Mo - Pac) and the Chicago and North Western Transportation Company (C&NW).

Power in Lincoln is provided by the Lincoln Electric System (LES).

The LES service region covers 200 square miles (520 km2), serving Lincoln and a several other communities outside of the city.

Water in Lincoln is provided through the Lincoln Water System. In the 1920s, the town/city of Lincoln undertook the task of building the Lincoln Municipal Lighting and Warterworks Plant (designed by Fiske & Meginnis).

The building worked as the chief hub for water from close-by wells and power in Lincoln for decades until it was replaced and turned into an apartment building. Most of Lincoln's water originates from wells along the Platte River near Ashland, Nebraska. Wastewater is in turn collected by the Lincoln Wastewater System.

Landline telephone service has had a storied history inside the Lincoln area.

The Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph Company, established in 1880, consolidated with Aliant Communications and shortly after that consolidated in 1998 with Alltel. In 2006, Windstream Communications was formed with the spinoff of Alltel and a merge with VALOR Communications Group. Windstream Communications provides telephone service both over Vo - IP and conventional telephone circuits to the Lincoln area. Spectrum offers telephone service over Vo - IP on their cable network. In addition, expected to be instead of by 2019, ALLO Communications will furnish telephone, tv and internet service over their future fiber network to all parts of the city. Lincoln has three primary hospitals inside two community care systems serving the city: Bryan Health and CHI Health St.

Lincoln has two specialty hospitals: Lincoln Surgical Hospital and the Nebraska Heart Institute. A U.S.

Department of Veterans Affairs Community-Based Outpatient Clinic (CBOC) is positioned in Lincoln (Lincoln VA Clinic, part of the Nebraska-Western Iowa Health Care System). Urgent care clinics are positioned throughout the city. List of citizens from Lincoln, Nebraska List of mayors of Lincoln, Nebraska Official records for Lincoln kept at University of Nebraska Lincoln (Weather Bureau) from January 1887 to December 1947, Lincoln Municipal Airport from January 1948 to June 1954, Lincoln University (campus) from July 1954 to August 1955, the Weather Bureau in downtown from September 1955 to August 1972, and at Lincoln Municipal Airport since September 1972. "Campus Guide: Lincoln lexicon".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places of 50,000 or More, Ranked by July 1, 2015 Population: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2015 United States Places of 50,000+ Population".

"1889 History of Lincoln Nebraska Chapter 11".

Lincoln Bar Association (May 1, 1970).

"County-City Building, Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska".

"Lincoln Lancaster County".

"1889 History of Lincoln Nebraska Chapter 12".

"Lincoln, Nebraska, United States".

"Lincoln's Founding".

"Lincoln: History".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Detroit, Lincoln and Denver (DLD) Highway".

Nebraska State Historical Society / Nebraska Department of Roads.

"Lincoln's Aviation Past".

"Arrow Aircraft and Motor Corporation (Lincoln, Neb.)".

"Nebraska Trailblazer No 18 Aviation in Nebraska" (PDF).

"Jim Mc - Kee: From Lincoln airport to Lincoln neighborhood".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Nebraska Trailblazer, Aviation in Nebraska" (PDF).

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Lincoln West "O" Historic Highway Project" (PDF).

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

"Lincoln designated Welcoming City for immigrants".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Revised Specifications 2014 Transit Development Plan City Of Lincoln, Nebraska Startran Request For Proposals" (PDF).

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

"Labor Area Summary; Lincoln MSA" (PDF).

"Lincoln Career, Salary & Employment Info".

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

"The History of the Former Lincoln Air Force Base".

"Lincoln Air National Guard Base".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"About the Lied Center for Performing Arts Performing Arts Theater Events Entertainment Lincoln Nebraska (NE) Lied Center for Performing Arts".

University of Nebraska Lincoln.

"Lincoln Community Playhouse About Mission Statement".

"Rococo Theatre Lincoln, Nebraska".

Lincoln, NE.

"Lincoln Marathon and Half-Marathon The Course".

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Sunken Gardens".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Explore the Building and Plan a Visit Nebraska State Capitol Lincoln, NE".

"Chapter 27.56 Capitol Environs District Lincoln Municipal Code" (PDF).

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

"Nebraska Wesleyan University Prairie Wolves Athletics Affiliations".

"The Official Site of the Lincoln Saltdogs Home".

"Lincoln Stars Junior Hockey Club".

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Parks and Facilities".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Parks Antelope".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Bicentennial Cascade Fountain Lincoln Public Art Inventory".

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Hamann Rose Garden".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Children's Zoo, Camps Lincoln NE".

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Parks Holmes".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Parks Pioneers & Golf Course".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Pioneers Park Nature Center".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Parks Alphabetical List".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Parks Iron Horse".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

"Lincoln Parks & Recreation Parks Wilderness".

Lincoln Parks & Recreation.

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

"Lincoln Public Schools 2013 2014 High School Attendance Areas" (PDF).

Lincoln Public Schools, Nebraska.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln City Libraries, Nebraska.

About Lincoln Public Schools.

Lincoln Public Schools, Nebraska.

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

Lincoln Public Schools, Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Public Schools, Nebraska.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Public Schools, Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

University of Nebraska Lincoln.

"University of Nebraska Lincoln Factbook 2014 2015" (PDF).

Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Nebraska Wesleyan University Student Life".

"About the College Lincoln, Nebraska (NE) Bryan Health".

"Lincoln Bellevue University".

"Concordia University Nebraska College of Graduate Studies" (PDF).

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Channel 8 KLKN-TV 8.1 and 8.2 Program Schedule - News; Weather and Sports for Lincoln, NE; KLKNTV.com".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"About the Lincoln Journal Star Services".

"Nebraska Department of Roads Lincoln South Beltway As of December 2013".

"General Highway Map, Lancaster County, Nebraska" (PDF).

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

"Pilot & Charter Services Lincoln Airport".

The Lincoln Airport Authority, Nebraska.

"Megabus bringing service to Lincoln on March 1".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Lincoln, NE Train Station (LNK) | Amtrak".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Lincoln Water System".

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Lincoln Wastewater System".

City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

Lincoln Journal Star.

"Broadband High-Speed Internet Provider in Lincoln, NE 68502".

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

Lincoln Journal Star.

Lincoln, NE.

"Lincoln, Nebraska Urgent Care and Walk-in Clinics".

1889 History of the City of Lincoln, Nebraska.

Visions of Lincoln; Nebraska's Capital City in the Present, Past and Future.

Lincoln, Nebraska

Categories:
Cities in Nebraska - Lincoln, Nebraska - Cities in Lancaster County, Nebraska - Populated places established in 1856 - County seats in Nebraska - Lincoln urbane region - History of Lincoln, Nebraska - 1856 establishments in Nebraska Te