You've Accessed: hotels near Scotts Bluff National Monument

Platte Valley Bank

The Death of Mni Akuwin – “Brings Water Home”

Mni Akuwin’s body rested, undisturbed, on this platform until 1876, when Spotted Tail had her remains moved from Fort Laramie and buried at what is now the Spotted Tail Cemetery in Rosebud, South Dakota.

Calamity Jane, Wild Bill, and the Three-Mile Hog Ranch at Fort Laramie

While visiting Fort Laramie, take a detour to view another facet of its long and fascinating history at a lesser-known and more scandalous slice of Fort Laramie.

Sandstorm Survivor: Blowout Penstemon – Western Nebraska’s Most Endangered Plant Species

The Blowout Penstemon (Penstemon haydenii) is a rare and resilient wildflower that thrives only in sand dune blowouts across western Nebraska, northern Colorado, and Wyoming.

Sheep Creek Silent Prairie, Broken Promises: The Story of Empire’s Black Settlers

At the turn of the 20th Century, newspapers rarely commented on the Black community in western Nebraska unless it was related to crime. They were among many Black people who decided to move west for freedom and a better life.

Discover Trails West

Where the Ice Ends: Bald Eagles on Nebraska’s Rivers 

Every winter, bald eagles transform Nebraska’s rivers and reservoirs into staging grounds for one of the Great Plains’ most dramatic natural events: the return of the bald eagles.

Where the Ice Ends: Bald Eagles on Nebraska’s Rivers 

Every winter, bald eagles transform Nebraska’s rivers and reservoirs into staging grounds for one of the Great Plains’ most dramatic natural events: the return of the bald eagles.

Fort Robinson: Where the Plains Remember 

Western Nebraska’s Pine Ridge country looks quiet today. Rugged buttes rise over the White River valley, cottonwoods trace the water’s bends, and pronghorn graze across the open hills. But beneath the calm lies a history every bit as dramatic as the land itself. This is Fort Robinson, one of the most storied military posts of the Northern Plains.

Hot Springs, South Dakota: Where Warm Springs Meet an Ice Age Graveyard

Tucked into the Southern Black Hills, Hot Springs, South Dakota, wears two coats at once: spa town and science hub. On one side of town, naturally warm, mineral-rich water still bubbles up as it has for millennia, the reason nineteenth-century visitors flocked here to “take the waters.”