In 1873 when a young Robert Cozad (later Robert Henri) stepped off a Union Pacific Rail Road train at Willow Island, Nebraska with his family, little could he have known how much his life would be changed by his experience on the Great Plains.
When he left Nebraska eleven years later, at the age of nineteen, he was a strapping youth with a Western swagger which can still be seen in late nineteenth century photographs. Many a Robert Henri aficionado, admirers of his art, and biographers have speculated about how his Nebraska experience affected his future career.
There is no doubt that his career was guided in part by his having spent part of his most formative years on the frontier exposed to the rawness of the environment and the difficult challenges that those early settlers faced.
This is the story of Robert Henri's Nebraska experience.
Peter Osborne has done it again with his most recent book Nebraska Sign-Posts. He captured not only an interesting part of Nebraska history, the growing pains of a new town along the Union Pacific Railroad, but also the lesser-known youth of famous painter, Robert Henri. The book is a satisfying combination of local history and a story of Bob Cozad (later to become the artist, Robert Henri) and his family, growing up in the Great Plains of the Midwest in the late 1800's.
Crystal Werger, Executive Director, Dawson County Historical Museum