A History of Audubon in Nebraska
October 2007 - Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center receives a
Blazing Star Award from the Nebraska Statewide Arboretum for significant contributions toward advancing the horticultural
use of native plants and the restoration of native plant communities in Nebraska.
October 2006 - Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center receives a
Tributary Award from the Lower Platte South Natural Resources District for dedication to environmental education.
September 2006 - A grand opening ceremony is held to officially open
the new education building at Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center. The 6,400-sq.-ft. structure was built to
accommodate more visitors, and provide more space for public and school programs.
Audubon purchases 168 acres of land just east of Spring Creek Prairie, bringing the property's total acreage to
808 acres. Preventing development on this property is critical to the health of this habitat complex.
Audubon purchases 200 acres of land just west of Rowe Sanctuary, south of the river. This land is directly along
the river and protects an additional mile of important sandhill crane roosting habitat.
May 2006 - Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center receives Environmental
Education and Awareness Award from Lincoln-Lancaster County Department of Health for the sustainable design and
construction of the new education building.
September 2005 - Ten more sites are selected as Important Bird
Areas. With the combining of several IBAs chosen in 2004 into one IBA, the state list now stands at 24.
August 2005 - Construction begins on the new education
building/visitors center at Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center.
December 2004 - The IBA technical review committee selects its
first group of 16 Important Bird Areas. Dedication ceremonies are held at two of the sites, Spring Creek Prairie
Audubon Center and Rowe Sanctuary.
August 2003 - Audubon Nebraska begins an Important Bird Areas
effort to recognize the best areas in Nebraska for birds and to educate everyone on the value of birds and the habitats
that support them.
June 2003 - Senator Bob Kerrey and Senator Jim Exon receive Audubon's Fred Thomas
Nebraska Stewards Award for their work on behalf of the environment.
May 2003 - Wachiska Audubon Society donates Wachiska Woods, a 16-acre
woodland adjoining Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center, to Audubon.
February/March 2003 - Inaugural crane season for new Iain Nicolson Audubon
Center at Rowe Sanctuary sees over 14,000 visitors, more than double the previous high for attendance.
February 2003 - The Wachiska Audubon Society celebrates its
30th anniversary.
January 2003 - Construction completed on the new Iain
Nicolson Audubon Center at Rowe Sanctuary.
July 2002 - Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center's trail ruts are
officially listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the nation's inventory of historic properties considered
worthy of preservation. The ruts are part of the Nebraska City-Fort Kearny Cutoff to the Oregon Trail and were
active in the 1850's and 1860's.
June 2002 - The $1.6 million campaign to build a 6,400-sq.-ft.
education/visitor facility at Rowe Sanctuary is successfully completed.
April 2002 - Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center receives the
Lincoln-Lancaster County Enviromental Eduication and Awareness Award in recognition of Audubon's efforts to provide
environmental educations programs to the community.
August 2001 - Rowe Sanctuary hires its first full time educator to
design and implement nature education programs for local schools.
Audubon Nebraska receives the national Friends of the Trail Award from the Oregon-California Trails Association
for preserving and protecting historic wagon ruts at Spring Creek Prairie.
2000 - Wachiska Audubon Society purchases 16 acres of land adjoining
Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center, enlarging the site to 626 acres.
1999 - Audubon Nebraska secures passage of its own legislation that bans
the location of large confined hog and cattle feeding facilities in the watersheds of our highest quality streams,
many of which support breeding populations of trout.
Approval is given to pursue a capital campaign to build an education center at Rowe Sanctuary.
The Audubon Society of Omaha receives the Omaha World-Herald's Conservationist of the Year Award for their efforts
on behalf of Heron Haven.
1998 - Audubon purchases the O'Brien Ranch, preserving one of the largest
parcels of tallgrass prairie left in the state. The ranch is renamed Spring Creek Prairie, and the organization embarks
on an effort to turn the property into a premier prairie education center and sanctuary.
The Big Bend Audubon Society absorbs the Grand Island and Hastings chapters.
1997 - Audubon opens a state office in Nebraska.
Helped by the participation of Audubon and the Platte River Whooping Crane Trust in the relicensing of Kingsley Dam,
the states of Nebraska, Wyoming, and Colorado sign a cooperative agreement to address endangered species issues on the
central Platte with a basin-wide approach.
1996 - Audubon Nebraska defends the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission's
application to protect flows for fish and wildlife on the Platte River. With only one week to respond to a secret
agreement between three of the seven members on the Commission and a powerful coalition of irrigators, power districts,
farm groups, and NRDs, Audubon ran a full-page ad in the Omaha World-Herald, which forced a delay and eventual
rejection of the agreement.
1995 - The Wildcat Audubon Society plays a major role in raising funds
and community support for the completed Wildcat Hills Nature Center. The facility is opened for limited use by the
Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.
1994 - The Wachiska Chapter obtains a conservation easement on the Wulf
Prairie, which marks the start of an effort to preserve prairies throughout the 17-county region the chapter serves.
1993 - Audubon co-sponsors an event at the University of Nebraska library
commemorating John James Audubon's 1843 expedition up the Missouri River. The event includes a showing of Audubon prints
and talks by his great-granddaughter.
1992 - The Audubon Society of Omaha succeeds in saving a 25-acre wetland
in the middle of the city, naming it Heron Haven.
1991 - President Bush signs legislation designating the Niobrara River as
a National Wild and Scenic River, rewarding years of effort by Nebraska's Audubon volunteers to achieve the designation,
which included taking trips to Washington, D.C. to testify.
1990 - Nine years of Audubon opposition to the Two Forks Dam culminates
when the Environmental Protection Agency rules against construction.
The Audubon Society of Omaha receives extensive publicity for "bar hopping," as they come to the Rowe Sanctuary to remove
woody growth from the islands and sandbars on the river.
The National Audubon Society acquires 218 acres on the Niobrara River to preserve as a sanctuary (which later becomes
the Fred Thomas preserve owned by the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission).
1989 - Crane River debuts on The World of Audubon. Narrated by Leonard
Nimoy, the film highlights the importance of the Platte River for cranes and other wildlife, as well as the various
threats from additional water projects such as the Two Forks Dam near Denver.
1988 - The Audubon Society of Omaha teams up with the Raptor Recovery
Center and the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission to release 22 peregrine falcons on the roof of the Woodmen Tower in
Omaha.
1986 - The Norden Dam on the Niobrara River is de-authorized, much to the
delight of many Audubon members whose tireless efforts were instrumental in helping to preserve the river.
Governor Bob Kerrey signs a proclamation designating April as Audubon month, commemorating the 200th birthday
of John James Audubon.
1985 - To give Audubon chapters a statewide voice and a means to network,
chapter leaders form the Nebraska Audubon Council.
The National Audubon Society hires a manager for Rowe Sanctuary and Audubon members volunteered workdays to help
improve the sanctuary.
1981 - The Wachiska Chapter holds its first annual Prairie Festival.
1980 - Audubon helps to organize landowners along the Niobrara River
to oppose construction of the Norden Dam.
1978 - The Wildcat Audubon Society is chartered as an Audubon chapter,
taking its name from the beautiful Wildcat Hills near Scottsbluff. The roots of the chapter extend back to 1952, when
the group first formed to be a nature club. Chapters were also formed in northeast Nebraska and north central Nebraska
near the Niobrara River.
Led by Ernie Rousek, the Wachiska Chapter leases Nine-mile Prairie from the Lincoln Airport Authority, starting a
sequence of events that will culminate in the preservation of the historic prairie by the University of Nebraska
Foundation.
1976 - The Wachiska Chapter establishes the Raptor Recovery Center as a
Bicentennial project.
1975 - Water projects that would have further drained vital flows
needed by sandhill cranes, whooping cranes, and other migratory waterfowl were being proposed for the Platte River.
Led by Audubon, the Midstate project, the largest and most threatening of the proposed diversions, is defeated in a
local referendum. This effort led directly to the formation of the Big Bend Audubon chapter in Kearney, as well as
chapters in Grand Island and Hastings.
1974 - National Audubon Society purchases the Lillian Annette Rowe
Sanctuary near Gibbon, preserving four miles of the finest remaining crane habitat on the river. The sanctuary was
also the first land to be protected for migratory waterfowl on the central Platte.
1973 - The Wachiska Audubon Society forms in Lincoln and serves 17
counties in southeast Nebraska.
1971 - The Omaha Birding Club votes to become the Audubon Society of
Omaha, the first officially chartered chapter in the state.
1970 - The first Spring River Conference is held in Grand Island. The
conference would soon move to Kearney and eventually be renamed the Rivers and Wildlife Celebration. It is one of the
longest-running wildlife events in the country.
1913 - The National Association of Audubon Societies partners with
the City of Valentine to construct the bison enclosure at the Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge. In the early part
of the century Audubon was instrumental in bison preservation due to the efforts of its vice president, who was also
president of the American Bison Society.
|