The Barada Hills of Nebraska
The Barada Hills of Nebraska
The Barada Hills of southeastern Nebraska have a unique and colorful history. These bluffs along the Missouri river, located primarily in Richardson County in southeastern Nebraska, are named after Barada town founder Antoine Barada. Antoine was the son of French Count Michael Barada and Laughing Buffalo, a member of the Omaha Tribe. The Barada Hills were documented in 1804 during Lewis and Clark's expedition, and again by Prince Maximilian and artist Carl Bodmer nearly 30 years later. The Barada Hills of Nebraska is a collaborative project that began in 2003. Pairing the watercolors of John Frederick Lokke and poems by Jan Chism Wright, the exhibition highlights the rich and subtle beauty of the area, capturing remnant echos of times gone by as well as the ongoing evolution of the land and its inhabitants.