Paul Hammel
Nebraska Examiner
Gov. Jim Pillen, who is soon to control the state’s historical society, wants to pick his own director.
Pillen last week called for applicants for the job of director of History Nebraska, setting a July 3 deadline for a position that paid its last top administrator $164,800 a year.
In doing so, the governor abandoned a search process by the History Nebraska Board of Trustees, which had identified four finalists by January.
The board was ready to begin interviewing finalists when a bill was introduced in the Nebraska Legislature to change History Nebraska from an independent state agency, managed by its director and board, to one overseen by the governor.
Under the measure passed by the Legislature, LB1169, the governor appoints the director subject to the approval of state lawmakers. The director serves at the pleasure of the governor under the bill, which becomes law on July 18.
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In the past, they served at the pleasure of the History Nebraska Board of Trustees, a 14-member panel partly elected by History Nebraska members and partly appointed by the governor. That board now becomes an advisory committee to the director.
Sean Flowerday
Courtesy photo
Sean Flowerday of Lincoln, the current president of the Board of Trustees, said that the board had offered the governor to pick from among the four finalists already vetted. Pillen, though, opted to conduct his own selection process, which is his prerogative now under the new law.
Flowerday said those four finalists have been forwarded to the governor to be considered in his selection process.
“At this point, we’re just trying to make it as smooth of a process as possible and make it as easy as we can on the staff while keeping the agency operating,” he said. “We’re waiting to see what changes the administration wants to make, and we’ll do our best to work with those.”
Interestingly, Pillen’s news release referred to History Nebraska under its old name, the Nebraska State Historical Society. A governor’s spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to a question about whether that signaled a possible return to the old name or if it was unintentional.
Trevor Jones
Trevor Jones, the former director, implemented the name change in 2018 to reflect a more “friendly name that showed what we do.”
The proposal to change governance grew out of recent turmoil at the historical agency. That included the resignation two years ago of Jones, an audit critical of a $270,000 diversion of funds orchestrated by Jones, and then the filing of a felony theft by deception charge against Jones by the Nebraska Attorney General’s Office.
Jones, 52, awaits trial in Lancaster County District Court after his attempts to get the charges dismissed were rejected. He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted. Jones has pleaded not guilty.
State Sen. Steve Erdman of Bayard, who introduced the bill shifting the governance of History Nebraska, had said the Jones affair and a past embezzlement case involving an assistant agency director called for more oversight of the historical society. Some members of the board of trustees disputed that there was a current lack of oversight, but the Erdman bill passed easily, on a 39-4 vote.
The future of a fundraising foundation set up by Jones, the History Nebraska Foundation, remains unclear. That foundation currently lacks an executive director and Flowerday said there have been no discussions to hire a replacement.
Jones had set up the new foundation amid a spat with the long-running and better-funded Nebraska State Historical Society Foundation over the use of donated funds. The History Nebraska Foundation was intended to replace the established foundation, however, the new entity never gained traction or donations — the $270,000 diverted to it by Jones, allegedly illegally, was the largest.
Jill Dolberg, who had headed History Nebraska’s historic preservation office, has served as interim director since Jones resigned.
Dolberg
Courtesy photo
At least four other states, including neighboring Iowa and Kansas, have historical societies in which the governor picks the director, according to the American Association for State and Local History.
Nebraska’s historical society had operated as an independent entity since its founding in 1878.
Applications for director of History Nebraska can be submitted via the website: https://governor.nebraska.gov/board-comm-req or mailed to: Office of the Governor, P.O. Box 94848, Lincoln, NE 68509-4848.
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25 of Lincoln’s grandest old houses
Beattie Miles house
The Beattie/Miles house, 6706 Colby St., is significant in the area of architecture as the finest extant example of a Queen Anne-style residence in the community that was known as Bethany Heights (now part of Lincoln). This house is also significant for its important association with the founding of Nebraska Christian University and settlement of Bethany Heights. The Beattie/Miles house is the last remaining building that was associated with the college and retains its historical integrity.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Fairview
For 15 years, Fairview at 4900 Sumner St. was the Lincoln home of William Jennings Bryan, a nationally known political leader and orator. Bryan held lawn parties, public receptions and political rallies at Fairview. Designed by Lincoln architect Artemus Roberts and built in 1902-03, the house is a fine example of the Queen Anne style in transition and incorporates Neo-Classical Revival elements in its design.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Hitchcock house
The Hitchcock house, 2733 Sheridan Blvd., is a two-and-one-half story Colonial Revival style residence constructed in 1922. Local architect Jesse Boaz Miller designed this symmetrical, stucco house, which features a central block with a gabled roof and flat-roofed side wings. In addition, there is a matching carriage house and extensive early landscaping, including a large limestone “alcove.”
Nebraska State Historical Society
Murphy Sheldon house
The Murphy-Sheldon house, 2525 N St., was built about 1889. It is significant as one of the most ornate examples of the Queen Anne style in Lincoln, and one of the most intact, with its rare surviving features including its elaborate main porch, carriage porch, carriage house and interior elements.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Yates house
Built in 1891 from a design by architect Ferdinand C. Fiske, the Yates House at 720 S. 16th St. is prominently located on a large corner lot in Lincoln. The house is a two-and-one-half story frame Late Victorian/Queen Anne residence with Eastlake design influence. The house retains a high degree of integrity in its elaborate detailing, massing and extensive ornate porches.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Tyler house
The Tyler house, 808 D St., was built in 1891 for William Tyler, who established the W.H. Tyler Stone Co. in Lincoln. Tyler built the dwelling as a showplace to demonstrate various residential uses of stone. James Tyler, a talented architect and brother of William, designed the brick and sandstone dwelling according to the formal characteristics of a typical Queen Anne dwelling, with Richardsonian Romanesque motifs.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Calhoun house
This two-and-one-half-story asymmetrical frame house, 1130 Plum St., built in the Queen Anne style is located in Lincoln. Constructed in 1889-1890, it closely follows a published “pattern book” design. The house has a steeply pitched cross-gable roof with decorative shingling in each of the gable ends.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Whitehall
The Neo-Classical Revival style house, 5903 Walker, was built for Olive White, widow of C.C. White, owner of the Crete Mills from 1888 to 1895. Mr. White was a member of the Nebraska Wesleyan University’s Board of Trustees for many years and an avid supporter of the institution. After her husband’s death, Olive White moved to Lincoln, where she built the residence in 1910 near the Wesleyan University campus. Since 1926, the house has been used by the state of Nebraska as a home for children.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Eddy-Taylor house
The Eddy-Taylor house, 435 N. 25th St., is a fine product of the Queen Anne style executed in brick. Constructed about 1891 by a local developer, Ambrose Eddy, the house was sold in 1902 to William George Langworthy Taylor, a distinguished member of the University of Nebraska faculty.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Ferguson house
Built in 1909-11, the Ferguson house at 700 S. 16th St. is an excellent example of the Renaissance Revival style. It was designed by Cleveland architects Searles, Hirsh and Gavin. William Henry Ferguson was a Lincoln capitalist and entrepreneur, probably best known as a successful grain merchant.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Gillen house
The Frank and Emma Gillen house, 2245 A St., is a two-and-one-half story, period revival-style single-family residence in Lincoln. The brick- and stucco-veneered house was originally constructed in 1903-04, then substantially remodeled to its present appearance in 1918-19. A garage was constructed as part of the 1918-19 remodeling. The interior and exterior of the house remain almost entirely intact.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Guy A. Brown house
Constructed in 1874, the Guy Brown house at 219-221 South 27th St. is a two-story vernacular wood frame residence. It stands as a rare remnant of Lincoln’s original residential development and is one of the first-generation homes in the city. It is an illuminating example of Italianate house design with considerable historic integrity. The house was converted into a duplex in the 1930s. The modifications of the 1930s are significant in their own right, without obscuring the original design.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Harris house
The house, 1630 K St., is a fine example of the Neo-Classical Revival style. The large frame dwelling was built in 1901-3 for Sarah F. Harris, widow of George Harris, who served as a land commissioner for the Burlington and Missouri Railroad. He was responsible for inducing immigrants to purchase land along the Burlington Railroad in Nebraska. John F. Harris, a son, donated the land that became Pioneers Park in honor of his parents in 1928.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Kennard house
The Italianate brick house, 1627 H St., was built in 1869 as the residence of Secretary of State Thomas P. Kennard, one of three commissioners who selected Lincoln as the state capital. In 1965, the state Legislature designated the Kennard House, located in Lincoln, as the Nebraska Statehood Memorial and directed the Nebraska State Historical Society to restore it.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Kiesselbach house
The Kiesselbach House at 3232 Holdrege St., constructed in Lincoln in 1913, is significant for its association with Theodore Alexander Kiesselbach, a pioneering Nebraska researcher in corn and other crops. Among other accomplishments, he developed the corn hybrids that significantly increased farm production and income throughout the state. No other historic property is as clearly or closely associated with Kiesselbach and his research.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Lewis-Syford house
The Lewis-Syford house, 700 N. 16th St., was built sometime around 1878 during the apex of the Second Empire style and conveys architectural significance. The house is an excellent example of the Late Victorian period style, particularly for Lincoln, where the style is extremely rare. The Lewis-Syford house conforms to the strictures of the Second Empire style completely. It features a concave mansard roof punctuated by elaborate dormers with a miniature pediment. The windows on the first floor are all tall, narrow windows that are double hung. Two different scales of brackets are located under the narrow eave of the mansard roof. The building is elaborated upon with details of the romantic period, such as iron cresting and scrolled woodwork on the porches. Canted and projecting bays break up the flat planes of the surfaces of the facades.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Phillips house
The R.O. Phillips House at 1845 D St., built in 1889-1890, is one of Nebraska’s finest examples of the Richardson Romanesque architectural style. This style is characterized by heavy stone massing, an asymmetrical façade, irregular roof lines that commonly include a tower and arches springing from heavy piers. All are displayed prominently on the R.O. Phillips house. The interior is finished in wood or ceramic tile in various Victorian motifs and includes fifteen fireplaces.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Royers-Williams house
Constructed in the late 1880s, the Royer-Williams House at 407 N. 26th St. is a fine product of the Queen Anne style. The frame dwelling was originally built by Henry Royer, a carpenter, and later used as a residence by Hattie Plum Williams, a University of Nebraska scholar whose pioneering work in ethnic studies related to the Germans from Russia.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Ryons-Alexander house
The house at 1835 Ryons, built in 1908, is important as the residence of Hartley Burr Alexander, philosophy professor of the University of Nebraska. Alexander’s contributions in the fields of philosophy, architecture and anthropology are nationally and internationally recognized, while his contributions in literature and the performing arts were widely acclaimed. The builder of the house, William B. Ryons, was a longtime vice president of the First National Bank in Lincoln and son of Irish-born Joseph L. Ryons, for whom Lincoln’s Ryons Addition and Ryons Street were named.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Spalding house
The Frank M. Spalding House, 2221 Sheridan Blvd., is a two-and-one-half story Mission Style residence in Lincoln. It was constructed in 1908-10 as the first residence in the Sheridan Place addition. The house is an important work of master architect Ferdinand C. Fiske and is the best representative example of Mission Style architecture in the city. It retains lavish original interior finishes in wood and tile, and its exterior stone construction is very distinctive.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Thayer house
The John M. Thayer house, 1901 Prospect St., was constructed about 1887. The two-and-one-half story Queen Anne style residence was built for Nebraska Gov. John Thayer. Except for the years 1893-1897, Thayer resided in the house from 1889 until his death in 1906.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Watkins house
The Watkins house at 920 D St., built in 1887, is significant as the residence of Albert Watkins, an early Nebraska historian who wrote and edited one of the first scholarly histories of the state. He occupied the house for the final 36 of his 41 years in Lincoln. No other property exists that was as directly associated with Watkins, especially during the entire span during which he produced the Illustrated History of Nebraska. Furthermore, no other property as clearly associated with an early historian of Nebraska appears to exist.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Woods house
The Frank and Nelle Woods House, constructed in 1915-16 at 2501 Sheridan Blvd., is a uniquely large and well-preserved example of the Italian Renaissance Revival style in Lincoln. Designed by Chicago architect Paul V. Hyland, the house is situated on a very large urban lot, the most prominent setting in the innovative Woodscrest Addition. It retains a high degree of interior and exterior integrity, as well as significant features of its designed landscape.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Yost house
The Yost House, 1900 S. 25th St., was built in 1912. The two-and-one-half-story Italian Renaissance Revival-style residence is constructed of red brick and features a red tile hipped roof with broad eaves and heavy brackets.
Nebraska State Historical Society
Ziemer house
The house at 2030 Euclid, built in 1909-10 for Arthur C. Ziemer, is an excellent example of the Shingle style. The dwelling’s romantic external appearance provides a striking contrast with the use of almost totally classical motifs for the interior. Ziemer was an early resident of Lincoln, working briefly as an interior designer and later becoming a practitioner of Christian Science.
Nebraska State Historical Society
This story originally ran in the Nebraska Examiner.
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