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Climate data for McCook, Nebraska (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1894–present) ... operating its California Zephyr daily in both directions between Chicago and ...
US 83 enters Nebraska south of McCook, where it meets US 6 and US 34. It continues northward to North Platte , where it intersects I-80 and US 30 . After leaving North Platte in a northeasterly direction, it turns north near Thedford and goes north through the Sand Hills to Valentine .
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Red Willow County, Nebraska, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
When the U.S. Numbered Highway System was created in 1926, much of the current US-6 in Nebraska was US-38. The route was slightly different in the Omaha area, as it turned east from 204th Street onto Q Street to go through what was the city of Millard .
At Haigler, it meets Nebraska Highway 27, which connects with K-27 in Kansas. It continues east to Benkelman, where it intersects and overlaps with Nebraska Highway 61 and briefly turns north. After leaving Benkelman, the overlap ends, and U.S. 34 continues northeast through Max and Stratton before meeting Nebraska Highway 25 in Trenton.
The McCook Public-Carnegie Library, also known as the McCook Carnegie Library, is a historic building in McCook, Nebraska, United States. It was built as a Carnegie library in 1905, and designed in the Spanish Colonial Revival style by Denver architect Willis Marean. [2] It housed the McCook public library until 1969. [2]
Widen US 385 to four lanes with median from L62A to Nebraska Highway 2 (NE 2) in Alliance, Nebraska; Improve US 385 into a super-2 facility to include 12-foot (3.7 m) lanes, 10-foot (3.0 m) shoulders, auxiliary turn lanes, and passing lanes from NE 2 to US 20 in Chadron, Nebraska. This should be constructed in accordance to the super-2 criteria.
The Senator George William Norris House is a historic house museum at 706 Norris Avenue in McCook, Nebraska.It was purchased in 1899 by George W. Norris (1862–1944), a Nebraska politician who championed the New Deal of the 1930s and the Rural Electrification Act.